000615.html

Submitted by Bill St. Clair on Mon, 28 May 2001 12:19:24 GMT
Beware the ides of June... (yeah, I know)

Dan Enright of one dan's opinion noticed, as did I: Orlin Grabbe's website missing. Try it, it's missing: http://www.aci.net/kalliste/. I sent him email this morning, but got no response and no bounce.

University of Rochester via ScienceDaily Magazine - Technology First Aimed At Heavens Now Makes "Super" Human Vision Possible: adaptive optics allows much better vision correction. And it's automatic. No more, "Which is better, number 1 or number 2?" I want it. [/.]

Courtney Love at Salon.com - Courtney Love does the math: Ms. Love tells us how the recording industry works. Almost nobody gets paid except the big recording companies. Unlike with books, the recording company owns the recording, not the artist, in perpetuity thanks to some land-mine legislation passed a little while ago. [script]

Today I want to talk about piracy and music. What is piracy? Piracy is the act of stealing an artist's work without any intention of paying for it. I'm not talking about Napster-type software.

I'm talking about major label recording contracts.

...

What the hell is content? Nobody buys content. Real people pay money for music because it means something to them. A great song is not just something to take up space on a Web site next to stock market quotes and baseball scores.

...

If you're going to start a company that deals with musicians, please do it because you like music. Offer some control and equity to the artists and try to give us some creative guidance. If music and art and passion are important to you, there are hundreds of artists who are ready to rewrite the rules.

Ben DiPietro of AP via Cannabis News - Hawaii Decriminalizes Marijuana for Medical Use: With Gov. Ben Cayetano's signature, Hawaii becomes the first state to legalize medical marijuana via legislation. Yay! [cn]

Ted Oehmke at Salon.com - The war on information: more on the Ecstasy Anti-Proliferation Act of 2000, S.2612, which still hasn't appeared on Thomas. [cn]

Jeff Stark at Salon.com - "Grass": a review of the new movie, narrated by Woody Harrelson. It's currently showing in only New York and San Francisco, for $50 as I remember from a poster I saw at {@MMM2000}. It begins a 20 city run tomorrow. Rats, I've got other stuff to do this weekend or I'd drive to Boston and see it at the Brattle in Cambridge. [cn]

Erin Emery at the Denver Post - Activist's jury leaflets delay trial: After an activist handed them brochures urging them to "judge the law itself and vote on the verdict according to conscience," the judge dismissed 70 potential jurors and delayed the trial. Disbar the pig. [market]

Patrick Poole at WorldNetDaily - Tennesseans stage tax revolt: A massive demonstration at the state capitol in Nashville has stopped the legislature from implementing an income tax. Bravo! [wnd]

Jim Abams at Capitol Hill Blue - House Passes E-signature Legislation: It is very near the end of the process for legislative approval of S.761, the Millennium Digital Commerce Act (or maybe it's now called the Electronic Signatures in Global and National Commerce Act). It passed the senate last November, a changed version passed the house and then went to a joint committee. It is expected that the Senate will pass the newest house version and Klinton will sign it. The original senate version of this bill looked pretty straightforward. I can't make much sense out of what the house turned in into, however. Ron Paul voted against it. He probably had good reason (like maybe the constitution doesn't authorize the federal government to say anything whatsoever about contracts). [wnd]

David Carter-Tod built a Web-based Base64 Converter. It worked for the one encode/decode sequence I did. [script]

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