Bloggers: You Can Still Get $$$ Out of Newspapers
I miss the days when bloggers were still ripping off all their content from big media conglomerates. Now the MSM is stealing from bloggers, and it's like there are no standards anymore.
Photographer Kari Kuukka catches the big media five-fingering a photo:
My good friend and colleague Matti Matikainen called me up couple of hours ago and said:" Guess what? LA Times, Daily Mail, Tech Crunch etc. just crabbed my image from the net and printed it. Didn't ask for permission, did not offer to pay for it, nothing… they just printed it."
I checked – and yes, there it was: all over the world, probably dozens of sites. Matti's image from last night, just grabbed from the Iltalehti website. Image itself is nothing particular: it is a basic picture of Mrs. Vesterbacka in the presidential palace last night. She is the wife of Peter Vesterbacka, creator of Angry Birds – and the dress is – shall we say – personal and thematic.
But nobody asked for permission to use this image. I mean nobody. Oh, there was one publication from Norway which contacted Matti earlier today and did ask, but when he said the price (100€) they considered it too expensive and backed out.
My advice to either Matikainen or Kuuka would have been to contact the L.A. Times and alert them to the repurposed picture. Regular readers know I have few kind words for the L.A.T., but I will say that the paper's lawyers – hard women who take great pride in the IP case law they have established and the hapless content-framers they have sued into submission – are scrupulous about paying a few hundred bucks to the victim when the Times itself violates somebody else's copyright.
Sure enough, Kuukka updates his post with news that the L.A.T. appears to be the only one of the big media picture-swipers that paid up:
Even LA Times commented below. The financial aspect of the matter in now taken care of – thanks to Polaris (Picture Agency) and Mr. Markku Vuorela. Thus, NPPA lawyers will cease to push the matter further as it is under control in that respect.
However, the point was never about the money . We both agreed in the phone: it isn't about the money, it's about the rules and values the media plays with and reflects back to its readers.
A commentary below put it very well in its last sentence, referring to this kind of practice of newspapers/sites – a commentary as an answer to the conversation of Mr Martin Beck of LA TImes and me were having:
"Why would any newspaper want to tell the audience: "we are printing stuff that's worth.. well.. nothing"?
The magical mystery tour of my own career has brought me to a position where I believe the copyright monopoly – constitutional validity notwithstanding – was a terrible historical error that retarded rather than promoting the progress of science and the useful arts while providing meager (at best) benefits to authors and inventors. Here's a roundabout column on that topic. Nevertheless, if absurdly restrictive intellectual property laws exist, they should apply to everybody, so kudos to Beck and the L.A. Times for coughing up some shekels. ("The point was never about money." Where do people get this shit?)
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the conversation of Mr Martin Beck of LA Times and me I were having
If you really want to correct Finns on their English, do it on their blog.
I feel like Andy Rooney is writing here now 😉
Apparently at least one Cracker writer reads Reason (or at least did for this article), check out the links in part 3:
http://www.cracked.com/article.....es_p2.html
rd
I have it on good authority from several liberals that all libertarians are racist crackers.
Of course they are, PS. The only people who aren't racist, are liberals.
Stolen photos, huh? At the risk of belaboring a point, I've noticed that too:
http://www.windypundit.com/arc.....atter.html
Awwww...someone's butt hurts 🙁 Sad face.
When I first started reading Reason, Virginia Postrel was editor-in-chief, but when she moved on to other things, Nick Gillespie took over. Most of us readers didn't know much about him, and it soon became a running joke that everything the magazine did was "better when Virginia Postrel was in charge." The truth is, though, that Reason is still a great magazine, and Nick Gillespie did a lot to make sure that not just a handful of libertarians knew it.
Subtle, but I'll have to take a raincheck, it's a little early to imbibe.
You should have at least gotten a hat tip for yer pic.
The only pic that matters is lobster girl.
Wow, OK man sounds like a plan to me dude.
http://www.ano-vpn.tk
Fail!
I'm doing the best I can OK dude?
So, OT, I was watching the Eric Holder CSPAN footage after the fact. He basically went from his department engaging in unethical behavior (i.e., providing material aid to terrorists in order to create a rationale for restricting American civil liberties) to describing how they might be able to not commit so many crimes if they had a bigger budget and got some more regulatory powers passed. Any possible sympathy or open-mindedness I might have had vanished there. Holder is dead to me. But.
Here's my question for the criminal lawyers here (Troy was a prosecutor, right? And there are probably others.) Is this not straight-up extortion? This is not a case where his department failed through inaction that could arguably be blamed on lack of authority or resources. They explicitly authorized the sale of guns to smugglers and let them go. If they didn't have the budget or the regulatory authority to interdict a weapon, they should never have explicitly told gun dealers to sell them and assured them that the guns would be recovered. Where exactly does it fall short of literal, statutory extortion?
It's not extortion because he's not threatening to hurt the people who are in control of the money.
If he said, "expand my budget or my men are going to show up at your door shouting 'it's Guiliani time!'", that would be extortion.
It is a total dick move, born out of chutzpah and what appears to be a sociopathic inability to feel remorse.
In fact I think we all would be better off if he got a pointy clog up the ass.
I had some great peking duck in Amsterdam recently. The food in their china town is great and (relatively) cheap.
Also, better Jackie Chan:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2CtAHLGlRbI
thanks
Just wondering, would this be more correct?
Wait what? Paid by whom? Reason? Don't you know that Reason is a tentacle of the Kochtopus?
Let me put it this way: What's the process by which a person believes one thing their entire life, then goes to work for someone, and immediately begins forming new opinions about it? (Good thing he didn't get hired by Jezebel.) It's got to be one of the following. 1) Never gave it much thought and was persuaded by other Reason folks. 2) He has very malleable opinions about things. 3) Doesn't really believe it but is willing to argue it for money.
Yeah cause only a complete tool re evaluates their opinions based on their own observations and experience.
Thoughtful people continue believing the same crap that they were taught as teenagers despite all later contrary evidence
my own career has brought me to a position where I believe
You seriously think reason has a litmus test over copyright theory?
No. Litmus test would imply they only hire people who already have certain beliefs. TC said this:
my own career has brought me to a position where I believe
I'm asking what changed his mind.
The fact he's exposed to great libertarian thinkers who recognize that government grants of monopoly in the form of copyright and patents are unlibertarian?
A-Men
I would agree that copyright law, as currently highjacked by corporate/fascist kleptocrats, is no bueno.
As it existed for a couple hundred years, though, well, I suppose its just a coincidence that there was a historically unprecedented eruption of creativity and inventiveness.
You put any image on the internets, you're giving it to the world. Watermark it if you want credit.
Copyright 2011, Reason Magazine
"The point was never about money." Where do people get this shit?
They learned it from Randi Weingarten.
Ahem, Tim, are you saying Reason pays for each picture it uses in its blog posts?
I think what he is saying, in his "roundabout column," is that, since property rights have "retarded rather than promot[ed] the progress of science and the useful arts," [no proof of this sweeping assertion provided]; and if we're going to be stuck with these bad laws [protection of property rights], better to punish everyone equally, regardless of the righteousness of those laws. What's good for the goose...what goes around...etc.
It's similar to when paparazzi swarm around celebs and sell their images. Hard to feel sorry for celebs tho.
Speaking of money for nothing, MULTIPLIZER!
Keep in mind that these results are symmetrical. A policy with a high multiplier, such as government purchases, will reduce the gross domestic product by exactly the same amount if it involves spending cuts. A tax cut with a low multiplier will have an equally small negative economic effect if it is instead done as a tax increase.
---------
Recognizing the intellectual and political weakness of their position, Republicans have responded that there is nothing to stop rich people from sending checks to the Treasury Department to reduce the debt. About $3 million is annually donated to the government for this purpose. On Oct. 12, Senator John Thune, Republican of South Dakota, introduced legislation that would add a line on tax returns to make voluntary contributions to the Treasury. It was enthusiastically endorsed by the anti-tax activist Grover Norquist.
Reducing the deficit through voluntary contributions is not a serious idea. It would be a drop in the bucket, such contributions are not sustainable, and it would be unwise to have the government dependent on them because inevitably they would come with strings attached.
--------
But the idea that the rich cannot or should not pay more should be dismissed out of hand. They can and must pay more; the only question is how best to do it.
They can.
They must.
QED, motherfuckers.
Bruce Bartlett held senior policy roles in the Reagan and George H.W. Bush administrations and served on the staffs of Representatives Jack Kemp and Ron Paul.
How in the hell did Bartlett get a job with RP? He's obviously part and parcel of the "we can solve problems thru engineering of the tax code" group.
Yeah, as if the point of the voluntary contribution line was to actually close the budget gap. Not like it uncovers the extreme hypocrisy of plutocrats like Buffet who want taxes for us (especially people trying to move up in society) but not for him.
I will never understand why lefties worried about plutocracy cheer on a progressive tax code with its myriad deductions and credits- that is more plutocratic than any flat tax, as it keeps the rich rich and the poor poor.
"a terrible historical error that retarded rather "
I laughed.
This actually does make a lot of sense dude.
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