Wednesday, July 8, 2009

Manifesto of the Pirate Party (as spoken by it's first elected official)

Copyright laws threaten our online freedom

By Christian Engström

Published: July 7 2009 18:10 | Last updated: July 7 2009 18:10

If you search for Elvis Presley in Wikipedia, you will find a lot of text and a few pictures that have been cleared for distribution. But you will find no music and no film clips, due to copyright restrictions. What we think of as our common cultural heritage is not “ours” at all.

On MySpace and YouTube, creative people post audio and video remixes for others to enjoy, until they are replaced by take-down notices handed out by big film and record companies. Technology opens up possibilities; copyright law shuts them down.
EDITOR’S CHOICE
Curb on content threatens France Telecom - Jul-07
E-retailers find big brands hard to touch - Jul-07

This was never the intent. Copyright was meant to encourage culture, not restrict it. This is reason enough for reform. But the current regime has even more damaging effects. In order to uphold copyright laws, governments are beginning to restrict our right to communicate with each other in private, without being monitored.

File-sharing occurs whenever one individual sends a file to another. The only way to even try to limit this process is to monitor all communication between ordinary people. Despite the crackdown on Napster, Kazaa and other peer-to-peer services over the past decade, the volume of file-sharing has grown exponentially. Even if the authorities closed down all other possibilities, people could still send copyrighted files as attachments to e-mails or through private networks. If people start doing that, should we give the government the right to monitor all mail and all encrypted networks? Whenever there are ways of communicating in private, they will be used to share copyrighted material. If you want to stop people doing this, you must remove the right to communicate in private. There is no other option. Society has to make a choice.

The world is at a crossroads. The internet and new information technologies are so powerful that no matter what we do, society will change. But the direction has not been decided.

The technology could be used to create a Big Brother society beyond our nightmares, where governments and corporations monitor every detail of our lives. In the former East Germany, the government needed tens of thousands of employees to keep track of the citizens using typewriters, pencils and index cards. Today a computer can do the same thing a million times faster, at the push of a button. There are many politicians who want to push that button.

The same technology could instead be used to create a society that embraces spontaneity, collaboration and diversity. Where the citizens are no longer passive consumers being fed information and culture through one-way media, but are instead active participants collaborating on a journey into the future.

The internet it still in its infancy, but already we see fantastic things appearing as if by magic. Take Linux, the free computer operating system, or Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia. Witness the participatory culture of MySpace and YouTube, or the growth of the Pirate Bay, which makes the world’s culture easily available to anybody with an internet connection. But where technology opens up new possibilities, our intellectual property laws do their best to restrict them. Linux is held back by patents, the rest of the examples by copyright.

The public increasingly recognises the need for reform. That was why Piratpartiet – the Pirate party – won 7.1 per cent of the popular vote in Sweden in the European Union elections. This gave us a seat in the European parliament for the first time.

Our manifesto is to reform copyright laws and gradually abolish the patent system. We oppose mass surveillance and censorship on the net, as in the rest of society. We want to make the EU more democratic and transparent. This is our entire platform.

We intend to devote all our time and energy to protecting the fundamental civil liberties on the net and elsewhere. Seven per cent of Swedish voters agreed with us that it makes sense to put other political differences aside in order to ensure this.

Political decisions taken over the next five years are likely to set the course we take into the information society, and will affect the lives of millions for many years into the future. Will we let our fears lead us towards a dystopian Big Brother state, or will we have the courage and wisdom to choose an exciting future in a free and open society?

The information revolution is happening here and now. It is up to us to decide what future we want.


This article was posted on Financial Times.com and you had to register to view it. Which seems contrary to the ideas expressed within, thus I am reposting it here.

Monday, July 28, 2008

It's been awhile...

I've been working full time this summer, and I feel somewhat guilty for not posting--but I'm still here and the blog should be back at full capacity--i.e. one post/per month :)--by the end of the summer. I'm heading into my senior year, so I'll keep you all posted on that, but for now I've been to busy to do anything with this.

Monday, April 21, 2008

Promotional Video for my Alma Mater:

This is a video that Saint John Vianney recently put out to encourage more young men to give seminary a try. I went to SJV for two years, and it was an amazing experience. I'd highly recommend taking a visit if you're at all interested:



And, part II:

Sunday, April 13, 2008

King William St:

The full room may as well be empty
for all the loneliness within:
A disco ball spins, unmoved on a dirty
thread. The girls shouting and dancing
in the broken light, seem unreal. I wonder
who they may be. On the other end of the
darkened room, the men play their eternal game.
One bounces the orange ball into a red cup,
the other drinks a little more—numbed just
a little more—and as I walk in, they seem too
happy to see me. Like the damned in Dante's
Hell. Further up and further in—we come to
the most interesting people of all:

A girl in the corner, her hair done up,
holds back tears as her heart is torn
by a drunken man, the only one
who didn't think she's cute, the
only one for whom she cares.
A different girl looks at her phone,
wondering how to reply to a cryptic
text, one boy pretends to be drunk,
so that he'll fit into the mindless crowd
He still hasn't found her, the one he's looking
for.

They leave before things get ugly.

Saturday, April 12, 2008

The Temptation of Adam (one of my favorite songs)

Tuesday, April 8, 2008

John Henry Newman on Purpose:

God has created me
to do Him some definite service
He has committed some work to me
which He has not committed to another

I have my mission
I may never know it in this life
but I shall be told it in the next

I am a link in a chain
a bond of connection between persons
He has not created me for naught
I shall do good - I shall do His work
I shall be an angel of peace
a preacher of truth in my own place
while not intending it
if I do but keep His commandments

Therefore I will trust Him
whatever I am, I can never be thrown away
If I am in sickness, my sickness may serve Him
in perplexity, my perplexity may serve Him
If I am in sorrow, my sorrow may serve Him

He does nothing in vain
He knows what he is about
He may take away my friends
He may throw me among strangers
He may make me feel desolate
make my spirits sink
hide my future from me - still
He knows what He is about

Saturday, April 5, 2008

Islam and Christianity:

Just two years ago, Pope Benedict XVI asked for a rational discourse with Muslims in his Regensburg Address, and for Islam to reject radical forms of assimilation--i.e. Jihad)

The Regensburg Lecture identified the linked problems at the center of a lot of turbulence in world politics today: the detachment of faith from reason (as in jihadism) and the loss of faith in reason (as in much of western Europe and too much of American high culture). The former leads to the notion that God can and does command the irrational, such as the killing of innocents; the latter leaves the West intellectually disarmed in the face of the jihadist challenge. At Regensburg, the pope also gave a pluralistic world a vocabulary with which to deal with these grave problems: the vocabulary of rationality and irrationality. Whether these issues are understand in the world's chancelleries and foreign ministries in the terms in which the Holy Father understands them is another question altogether. (George Weigel)
His speech was highly controversial, and widely misunderstood, but it seems to be a very conscise, accurate analysis of the state of the world as it is. Anyone who wants to understand the dynamic which exists between Christianity, Islam and Western secularism should read it.
...............................................

More recently, a prominent Italian Muslim, Magdi Allam was baptised by Pope Benedict at the Easter Vigil Mass. I heard about this from George Weigel, and Tom Peters. It also prompted a violent response from the Muslim community, with Osama Bin Laden calling for terrorism against the pope and Danish cartoonists who were part of a seperate hullabaloo a few years ago.
...Bin Laden says in a new message posted on the Internet that Europe would be punished for the cartoons and was part of a "new crusade" in which Pope Benedict was involved.... Here for the full story
Anyways, this is all cause for concern--and hope(as Benedict chides christians known for their dour outlook on the world). And just today, I ran across a source of hope in this whole big struggle that is the life of the church from age to age. A letter from recent convert Magdi Allam to his new Christian brothers:

Dear Director, you asked me whether I fear for my life, in the awareness that conversion to Christianity will certainly procure for me yet another, and much more grave, death sentence for apostasy. You are perfectly right. I know what I am headed for but I face my destiny with my head held high, standing upright and with the interior solidity of one who has the certainty of his faith. And I will be more so after the courageous and historical gesture of the Pope, who, as soon has he knew of my desire, immediately agreed to personally impart the Christian sacraments of initiation to me. His Holiness has sent an explicit and revolutionary message to a Church that until now has been too prudent in the conversion of Muslims, abstaining from proselytizing in majority Muslim countries and keeping quiet about the reality of converts in Christian countries. Out of fear. The fear of not being able to protect converts in the face of their being condemned to death for apostasy and fear of reprisals against Christians living in Islamic countries. Well, today Benedict XVI, with his witness, tells us that we must overcome fear and not be afraid to affirm the truth of Jesus even with Muslims. (The whole letter is available here.)

Saturday, March 29, 2008

spring

The world outside is so,
full of unfulfilled promises
pregnant with expected meanings
and lovely for the true light which
makes one squint upon leaving
the caves, men still live in,
or on looking out a window
from a darkened room.

Thursday, March 27, 2008

Homer.

So I'm currently taking Greek 202. We're reading the odyssey in greek. One of the homework assignments was to do an oral performance of 20 lines in meter from the Odyssey. This is one of my classmates doing his presentation. It's pretty cool. You can almost visualize the ancient Greek bards like Homer performing this poem in the same way with their lyres.

Wednesday, March 26, 2008

ctrl-alt-del

Most of what we write
is scratched out, by our
retiring fingers, the
things we feel but don't
want to say.

I guess that things have
always been thus, but
I wonder if every stroke
of the backwards key
might someday leave
only an empty sheet
the law of entropy
upheld

(select all, backspace)