Thursday, December 9, 2010

Final Mashup









This selection stems from different sources in Chapter 12: Harms.
To fight “piracy,” to protect “property,” the content industry has launched a war…as with any war of prohibition, these damages will be suffered most by our own people…is this war justified?
There is no good reason why this time, for the first time, the law should defend the old against the new, just when the power of property called “intellectual property” is at its greatest in our history…in the next ten years we will see an explosion of digital technologies…there is a vast amount of creative work spread across the internet. But as the law is currently crafted, this work is presumptively illegal…creative people are being forced not to express themselves.
Overregulation stifles creativity. It smothers innovation. It gives dinosaurs a veto over the future. It wastes the extraordinary opportunity for a democratic creativity that digital technology enables. We drive this creative process underground by branding modern-day Walt Disneys “pirates.”
Can common sense recognize the absurdity in a world where the maximum fine for downloading two songs off the internet is no more than the fine for a doctor’s negligently butchering a patient? The consequence of this legal uncertainty, tied to these extremely high penalties, is that an extraordinary amount of creativity will either never be exercised, or never be exercised in the open…
If a different system achieved the same legitimate objectives that the existing copyright system achieved, but left consumers and creators much more free, then we’d have a very good reason to pursue this alternative – namely, freedom…
When forty to sixty million Americans are considered “criminals” under the law, and when the law could achieve the same objective – securing rights to authors – without these millions being considered “criminals,” who is the villain? Americans or the law? Which is American, a constant war on our own people or a concerted effort through our democracy to change our law?
COMPLETE LIST OF SOURCES (in order)
- “You Are a Pirate” song from Lazytown
- Gong and all other sounds from Freesound.org, licensed under Creative Commons
- Audiobook by Dave Winer, from Lessig’s “Free Culture”
- Walt Disney Silly Symphonies – King Neptune (1932) from YouTube user VarunaRyder
- Carl Orff – Carmina Burana
- Prohibition – To Drink or Not to Drink from Enyclopedia Britannica (Britannica on YouTube)
- Pikachu from knowyourmeme.com, unkown author – originally from Nintendo
- “Happy Gilmore” from Universal Pictures
- “Computer Explosion in Slow-Motion” from YouTube user HedgeTV
- Image of Judge Greg Mathis from gossipgamers.com
- “The Big Lebowski” from Gramercy Pictures
- “Dramatic Land of the Lost” from YouTube user zomglolcats
- “Glenn Beck – The Crying Game” from YouTube user Matt1up
- AT&T commercial “Rethink Possible”
- “Rip: A Remix Manifesto” by Brett Gaylor
- Girl Talk – “What It’s All About”
- “Team America” from Paramount Pictures
- “Dateline – To Catch a Predator” from NBC
- Walt Disney’s Mickey Mouse in “The Chain Gang” – 1930
- “The Dark Knight” from Warner Bros.
- “Rip: A Remix Manifesto” by Brett Gaylor

- “American Flag waving in the wind with full sun creating glow behind it. Veteran's day” from YouTube user MattDeHaven

- “Let the Mighty Eagle Soar” as performed by former Attorney General John Ashcroft

Sunday, November 28, 2010

Lessig Passage--Chapter 12: Harms

"To fight 'piracy,' to protect 'property,' the content industry has launched a war...As with any war of prohibition, these damages will be suffered most by our own people...Is this war justified?...There is no good reason why this time, for the first time, the law should defend the old against the new, just when the power of the property called 'intellectual property' is at it greatest in our history...In the next ten years we will see an explosion of digital technologies...There is a vast amount of creative work spread across the Internet.  But as the law is currently crafted, this work is presumptively illegal...Can common sense recognize the absurdity in a world where the maximum fine for downloading two songs off the internet is more than the fine for a doctor's negligently butchering a patient?  The consequence of this legal uncertainty, tied to these extremely high penalties, is that an extraordinary amount of creativity will either never be exercised, or never be exercised in the open...If a different system achieved the same legitimate objectives that the existing copyright system achieved, but left consumers and creators much more free, then we'd have a very good reason to pursue this alternative--namely, freedom...When forty to sixty million Americans are considered 'criminals' under the law, and when the law could achieve the same objective--securing rights to authors--without these millions being considered 'criminals,' who is the villain?  Americans or the law?  Which is American, a constant war on our own people or a concerted effort through our democracy to change our law?"

Tuesday, November 2, 2010

Revised 2nd Web Writing

Damn Right, Rebel Proud:
Community, Convergence, and Participatory Culture
Among the Fans of Hank Williams III
Fans of Hank Williams III are a die-hard bunch—you don’t just like his music, you live by it.   The official Hank III website has provided an accepted gathering place for his “Hellbilly” followers to interact with one another through the internet forum known as the Hank III Cussin’ Board.  The growth of this forum, as well as the website as a whole, has led to the strengthening of the Hank III fan community. Fans share media of all kinds, and some have taken participatory culture and community to an indelible extreme—converging flesh, ink, and all things H3, known as “III’s Army of Tattoos.” 
Shelton Hank Williams III was born on December 12, 1972, in Nashville, TN.  The grandson of country legend Hank Williams and son of Hank Williams Jr., Shelton did not immediately follow in the country footsteps of his forebears.  He played in multiple punk and hardcore bands around the southeast, but in 1996 steep child support payments pushed him to sign with Curb Records, a Music City giant that deals mainly in cloying pop country.  Hank III’s music is best branded as neotraditional or outlaw country, psychobilly, and honky-tonk, featuring songs about drinking, drug use, and all-around, good old-fashioned hell-raising.  Hank became increasingly frustrated with the control Curb had over his music, and began using his quickly growing website to sell “F*** Curb” t-shirts that fans eagerly bought up.  He was finally released from contractual obligation with Curb in the spring of 2010.  
Like Hank III, his fans are cut from the same outlaw cloth. The various discussion forums on the Cussin’ Board reflect the specific interests of the “F***ed Up Dysfunctional Hellbilly Family” that tie them together as a community.  There are forums for show announcements, reviews, and discussions about metal and country bands, as well as guitar tabs and lyrics for Hank III’s music.  Musical instruments, gear, and technique are discussed.  Photos, videos, audio recordings, and reviews from Hank III and Assjack shows are posted (Assjack is Hank’s metal band).   Members are encouraged to post photos of themselves, their pets, and where they live.  One of my personal favorites is a forum entitled “Redneck Rides,” all about “muddin’, hot-roddin’, and hot-rod muddin.’”  (For those who aren’t familiar with muddin’, also known as mud bogging, mud racing, mud running, and mud drags, click here).  Sports, hunting, and fishing are delved into.  There is even a “Fightin’” forum, where members, who are cautioned to “enter with a thick skin and plenty of cuss words,” can duke it out over politics, religion, or whatever else makes them ill—anything goes. 
            With 7,735 members, 70,546 total posts, and 2,027 topics, the ever-growing Cussin’ Board has become a participatory multimedia platform that links the Hank III fan body together into a tight-knit community, and in turn links them more closely to Hank himself.   According to Michael Wesch, the web is not just about information, but about “linking people” and “linking people in ways that we’ve never been linked before…in ways that we can’t even predict.”  Without the internet and the Cussin’ Board, it would probably have been impossible to get thousands of Hank III fans in one place to discuss all things Hellbilly.  Sure they will meet up at concerts, but the participatory nature of the internet forum allows members to share thoughts, videos, artwork, recordings, and photos, strengthening the links connecting them. Furthermore, Wesch does not think of media as content or even as tools of communication.  Media forms mediate human relationships, and when media forms change, human relationships change.  The Cussin’ Board has allowed Hank III Hellbillies to form a culture and community of their own making, rather than just being fans that meet up at concerts.
Barry Wellman’s idea of networked individualism jives nicely with Hank III and his fans.  An inversion culture is formed when increasing individuality leads to a need for community, more independence creates stronger relationships, and escalating commercialization makes people long for authenticity.  Hank III, by fighting Curb records and the fluff music of pop country (commercialization), found a more authentic sound for his music that was widely appreciated.  His fan base is made up of independent and individualistic people who appreciate authenticity in their music. His fans then created relationships and a community on Hank III’s website and message board, ala inversion culture.
            Over the years that I’ve visited Hank III’s website, I’ve noticed a growing trend.  People began sending in pictures of their tattoos—which soon became pictures of Hank III tattoos—song titles, his name, his portrait, album artwork, and various other interpretations of all that is Hellbilly.  More and more fans were sending in photos of their Hank III tattoos.  I realize this could be seen as a chicken or the egg argument, but I feel that the posting of these pictures actually provoked more people to get Hank III tattoos.  If you’re a true fan, you mark yourself for life, then post a picture of your tattoo in the Hellbilly Ink forum on the Cussin’ Board, or in III’s Army of Tattoos photo collection.  
This is a rather strange situation of convergence at work.  Digital media, in this case photos of tattoos viewed on a website, specifically Hank III oriented tattoos, inspired people—they left their computers and went to their local tattoo shops, got inked, and started the whole process over again.  This is reminiscent of Henry Jenkins ideas of convergence and participatory culture.  In my mind this trend among fans is participatory culture2, going beyond the normal posting and sharing of digital media, whether it is text, videos, or photographs.  Fandom, visual media, the internet, music, and community converge indelibly in the Hank III tattoos of Hellbilly's the world over—a convergence subculture all its own.
Hank III’s official website and the Cussin’ Board have created a platform for his fans to engage in participatory culture and convergence, strengthening their community as a whole and tying them ever closer to Hank III, his music, and their Hellbilly identity.  They truly are damn right and rebel proud.


Thursday, October 14, 2010

Damn Right, Rebel Proud: Community, Convergence, and Participatory Culture Among the Fans of Hank Williams III









Fans of Hank Williams III are a die-hard bunch—you don’t just like his music, you live by it.   The official Hank III website has provided an accepted gathering place for his “Hellbilly” followers to interact with one another through the internet forum known as the Hank III Cussin’ Board.  The growth of this forum, as well as the website as a whole, have led to the strengthening of the Hank III fan community. Fans have also taken participatory culture and community to an indelible extreme—converging flesh, ink, and Hank III media, known as “III’s Army of Tattoos.” 

 Shelton Hank Williams III was born on December 12, 1972, in Nashville, TN.  The grandson of country legend Hank Williams and son of Hank Williams Jr., Shelton did not immediately follow in the country footsteps of his forebears.  He played in multiple punk and hardcore bands around the southeast, but in 1996 steep child support payments pushed him to sign with Curb Records, a Music City giant that deals mainly in cloying pop country.  Hank III’s music is best branded as outlaw country and psychobilly, featuring songs about drinking, drug use, and all-around, good old-fashioned hell-raising.  Hank became increasingly frustrated with the control Curb had over his music, and began using his quickly growing website to sell “F*** Curb” t-shirts that fans eagerly bought up.  He was finally released from contractual obligation with Curb in the spring of 2010.  


An idea of Hank III's music and what he thinks about pop country.
           
Like Hank III, his fans are cut from the same outlaw cloth. The various discussion forums on the Cussin’ Board reflect the specific interests of the “F***ed Up Dysfunctional Hellbilly Family” that tie them together as a community.  There are forums for show announcements, reviews, and discussions about metal and country bands, as well as guitar tabs and lyrics for Hank III’s music.  Musical instruments, gear, and technique are discussed.  Photos, videos, audio recordings, and reviews from Hank III and Assjack shows are posted (Assjack is Hank’s metal band).   Members are encouraged to post photos of themselves, their pets, and where they live.  One of my personal favorites is a forum entitled “Redneck Rides,” all about “muddin’, hot-roddin’, and hot-rod muddin.’”  (For those who aren’t familiar with muddin’, also known as mud bogging, mud racing, mud running, and mud drags, click here).  Sports, hunting, and fishing are delved into.  There is even a “Fightin’” forum, where members, who are cautioned to “enter with a thick skin and plenty of cuss words,” can duke it out about politics, religion, or whatever else—anything goes. 
            
 With 7,735 members, 70,546 total posts, and 2,027 topics, the ever-growing Cussin’ Board has become a participatory multimedia platform that links the Hank III fan body together into a tight-knit community, and in turn links them more closely to Hank himself.   According to Michael Wesch, the web is not just about information, but about “linking people” and “linking people in ways that we’ve never been linked before…in ways that we can’t even predict.”  Without the internet and the Cussin’ Board, it would probably have been impossible to get thousands of Hank III fans in one place to discuss all things Hellbilly.  Sure they will meet up at concerts, but the participatory nature of the internet forum allows members to share thoughts, videos, artwork, recordings, and photos, strengthening the links connecting them. Furthermore, Wesch does not think of media as content or even as tools of communication.  Media forms mediate human relationships, and when media forms change, human relationships change.  The Cussin’ Board has allowed Hank III Hellbillies to form a culture and community of their own making, rather than just being fans that meet up at concerts.


             
 Barry Wellman’s idea of networked individualism jives nicely with Hank III and his fans.  An inversion culture forms in the sense that increasing individuality leads to a need for community, more independence creates stronger relationships, and escalating commercialization makes people long for authenticity.  Hank III, by fighting Curb records and the fluff music of pop country (commercialization), found a more authentic sound for his music that was widely appreciated.  His fan base, generally independent and individualistic people who appreciate authenticity in their music, created relationships and a community on Hank III’s website and message board.

Hank letting us know he "got a tattoo at a tender age."
            
 Over the years that I’ve visited Hank III’s website, I’ve noticed a growing trend.  People began sending in pictures of their tattoos, which soon became pictures of Hank III tattoos—song titles, his name, his portrait, album artwork, and various other interpretations of all that is Hellbilly.  More and more fans were sending in photos of their Hank III tattoos.  I realize this could be seen as a chicken or the egg argument, but I feel that the posting of these pictures actually provoked more people to get Hank III tattoos.  If you’re a true fan, you mark yourself for life, then post a picture of your tattoo in the Hellbilly Ink forum on the Cussin’ Board, or in III’s Army of Tattoos photo collection.  


     

        

This is a rather strange situation of convergence at work.  Digital media, in this case photos of tattoos viewed on a website, specifically Hank III oriented tattoos, inspired people—they left their computers and went to their local tattoo shops, got inked, and started the whole process over again.  This is reminiscent of Henry Jenkins ideas of convergence and participatory culture.  In my mind this trend among fans is participatory culture2, going beyond the normal posting and sharing of digital media, whether it is text, videos, or photographs.  Fandom, visual media, the internet, music, and community converge indelibly in the Hank III tattoos of Hellbilly's the world over—a convergence subculture all its own.
             
Hank III’s official website and the Cussin’ Board have created a platform for his fans to engage in participatory culture and convergence, strengthening their community as a whole and tying them ever closer to Hank III, his music, and their Hellbilly identity.


           
           

           

Tuesday, October 5, 2010

Can internet use trigger depression?

According to researchers in China, teenagers with unhealthy online habits may be at a greater risk for depression.  Read the article.

Monday, September 20, 2010

Ugly Website

So here is my ugly website.  It makes me want to puke.  So beware.

Monday, September 13, 2010

First Web Writing Assignment: Encounters of the Early Internet Kind

I first used the internet when I was eleven years old.  The year was 1996, and my family and I were living in Mountain Home, Idaho, an Air Force town of 9,000 residents.  My dad owned a government issue IBM laptop that probably weighed more than I did, while my mom used a Macintosh LC III.  A precursor to the iMac, the LC III featured an impressive 40 MB of RAM and a 40 MB hard drive.  The Macintosh was faster than my dad's laptop and was my preferred computer.

We used a dial-up modem with AOL.  To this day I grind my teeth when I think of the high-pitched grating noise of that modem.  I never really surfed the web, probably owing to the fact that it took 10-15 minutes for a single page to load.  I remember sitting rather impatiently while pictures and text loaded, but still being pretty excited by this new-fangled technology.

I mostly used e-mail to stay in touch with my father during his six month deployment in Saudi Arabia.  Letters took weeks to reach us and phone calls were few and far between.  I was very thankful that the internet, however excruciatingly slow, allowed me to talk to my dad on the other side of the world.  I remember learning about the Khobar Towers bombing and the 19 Air Force personnel killed in the attack.  Needless to say, my family and I were incredibly scared and concerned about my father's safety.  Within the hour we got an e-mail from my dad saying that he was alright.  I'm sure the phone lines were either jammed or down for security reasons, and that one e-mail saved us a lot of worrying and waiting.

Chat rooms were becoming popular around the time Mountain Home got its own internet provider.  My best friend Nicole and I would often hang out at her house, as her parents' computer was quite a bit faster than my family's.  We loved Yahoo Chat and would create "private" chat rooms, inviting only our friends in order to gossip.  We also picked up some pretty silly slang and abbreviations, calling inexperienced chatters "newbs" and writing things like ASL (age/sex/location), AFK (away from the keyboard), BAK (back at the keyboard), JAS (just a second), JK (just kidding), TTYL (talk to you later), LMAO (laughing my ass off), or if something was really funny, ROTFLMAO (rolling on the floor laughing my ass off).  The list goes on and on.  I don't even want to think about the amount of time Nicole and I spent in chat rooms, discussing nothing of any importance and frittering away time that could have been spent more productively, or at least in more interesting ways.

Within a year, chatting stopped being fun and games.  Spam bots began entering chat rooms posing as real people.  If you unwittingly chatted with a spam bot, you would eventually receive a link, which more often than not led you to a pornographic website.  Then there were the dirty old men, pedophiles that tried to coerce young children, boys and girls, into engaging in so-called cyber sex.  I was pretty grossed out and scared by all this, and stopped using chat rooms for good.

My first brush with the internet was bittersweet.  This initial encounter with a new technology contains elements of both Vannevar Bush and Nathaniel Hawthorne's visions of the future.

Bush's memex, "a device in which an individual stores all his books, records, and communications, and which is mechanized so that it may be consulted with exceeding speed and flexibility", sounds eerily reminiscent of computers and the advent of the World Wide Web.  Bush envisioned his memex working primarily for scientists, organizing their research, creating "trails" between items, and providing a faster means of communication in order to facilitate technological innovations that would benefit, rather than harm, humanity.

This focus on connectivity and communication harkens back to my early days of internet use, whether I was e-mailing my dad from 7,500 miles away or chatting with friends that lived right down the street.  Like science for Bush, the internet "has provided the swiftest communication between individuals".

However, my earliest encounters with the internet also had a dark side.  Like Hawthorne's airtight wood stove, the internet "is a great revolution in social and domestic life".  With the loss of the fireplace hearth, that "cheerful, homely friend of our wintry days", Hawthorne predicts a future where families will no longer gather together, where there "will be nothing to attract these poor children to one centre".

Rather than chatting with my friends online, we could have spent time together in person, seeing as how we all lived in the same town.  We wasted countless hours learning abbreviations for banal chat room phrases, talking about nothing, when we could have spent some time outdoors, with our families, or doing better in school.  Not to mention the threat of possible sex offenders roving the internet.  Our "one centre" was and in many ways still is a computer screen, and, as Hawthorne would say, "the world looks darker for it".

Many aspects of my early use of the internet, such as long distance communication, had a positive impact on my life, while wasted hours in chat rooms were not so beneficial.  The internet has connected the world, but it has also caused isolation, whether from family, friends, the outdoors, or in extreme cases, from reality itself.




Thursday, September 2, 2010

For the Sci-Fi Geeks...

This made me think of the Sci-Fi discussion groups started by some of the inventors of the internet, mixed with the geekdom of today and lolcats.  I love Dune, and I love this:

Possible Future Blog Assignment

I'd like to propose that everyone with a facebook account refrain from using the site for at least three days.  We could then blog about the effects of facebook abstinence, negative or positive.  Maybe you'll find that you spend your time more productively, focus more in school, spend more time outdoors, hang out with your friends in the real world, etc.  Or you might go through horrible cold-turkey withdrawals, not know what to do with yourself, go a little crazy, maybe end up in a methadone clinic.  You might not even be able to make it one day.  If you do sign in and use the site, let it be known on your blog.  No cheating allowed.

For those who don't have a facebook account, create one and use it everyday for at least three days.   Again, blog about any positive or negative effects from using facebook daily.  You might find long lost friends or become horribly addicted to social networking and Farmville.  Maybe you won't like it at all.

Check this out: The Ugly Effects of Facebook Withdrawal


Tuesday, August 31, 2010

Home Computers Help Discover a Neutron Star

The Einstein(at)Home project has announced its first major discovery: a fast-rotating pulsar called PSR J2007+2722. Einstein(at)Home is one of several scientific research projects using home computers that people make available. The research programs run in the background, using spare computing power that otherwise would go unused....(continue reading article here)

This is some crazy stuff...

Saturday, August 28, 2010

Things You May or May Not Have Seen...

Alright, here's some stuff.

Andy Samberg is becoming a genius in my mind.  His SNL digital shorts are quite hilarious.  This is one of my favorites

Drunk History is a great series of videos.  It's basically a very inebriated person discussing an historical event, which is then reenacted.  This is one of the latest videos.  John C. Reilly plays Nikola Tesla, while Crispin Glover plays his rival Thomas Edison.  Like politics, it's best not to discuss history while drunk.  *There is a bit of strong language.*