The Blog




My ranting at Kim Cameron about open source support of Infocards got a mention in Doc's draft here. Sadly it didn't make the cut in the final copy here.

Most of the noisy people in the blogging world have a common problem. And it can be summed up by the question "what did I write and who replied". Our conversations are now fragmented across the web in mailing lists, blog comments, bulletin board forums, IRC, Skype group chats as well as our own blogs. There's now a huge problem in tracking all this stuff and remembering to check if anyone replied or even find the reply when it's on somebody else's blog. We're all developing piecemeal and ineffective strategies to cope by doing things like subscribing to "our name" in aggregators like Technorati and Google Blogsearch.

Allied to this is a need to bring all the writings together in one place so that other people can see who we are. Marc's "Digital Lifestyle aggregator"[1]. Again we're developing independent tools that go a bit further than my personal blogroll or reposting the comment on our blogs. Things like automatically importing flickr, del.icio.us, last.fm data into the sidebars.

Has Identity 2.0 got anything to say about this? Is their some strategy where we can put a positive marker in our scribblings so that automated processes can find them all and bring them all back together? Even a cursory thought about this shows some significant problems to be overcome. Not least of which is identity impersonation.

[1] Which of the big portals is going to turn the "My XXXX" page on it's head and turn it into a "Your XXXX" page. "My XXXX" is so 1998 and all about grabbing sticky eyeballs. It's little more than a bigger and bigger personal menu. It's meant for your eyes only. "Your XXXX" is for other people. It's a bigger and better and more informative AboutMe page. And it's a perfect platform for an Identity Provider.

Originally posted on the Identity Gang mailing list. Comment from Johannes Ernst about LID here.

Tagzania - Tagging the planet

Yet another Social Tagging service. With added Geolocation goodness.

Passel.org - Trac

YAIS - Yet Another Identity System. Worth watching though.

Tim O'Reilly has posted Web2MemeMap on Flickr

Dave Winer says (as you'd expect!) "Note that the thing that's really going, the juggernaut that's powering the growth of the new applications of the web, isn't on the O'Reilly map. Web 2.0 is really simple, it's RSS 2.0."

I think Dave is right but only partially. There is a key thing missing off Tim's map and that's "Simple APIs and Simple Data formats.". All the best work in Web 2.0 is being done with ReST API calls returning very simple XML and often RSS. If there's a choice between ReST, XMLRPC or SOAP, the overwhelming majority of developers drop down to the simplest possible solution and use ReST.

A simple URL parameter based filter or query scheme, returning XML data in RSS is extraordinarily powerful and easy to use.

Which brings me to Amazon and eBay. Please guys, give us RSS as well your more full featured APIs. I really want simple RSS feeds of My Wishlist, My Lists, My Recommendations, My posts on eBay, My Purchases.




Societies worse off "when they have God on their side" : RELIGIOUS belief can cause damage to a society, contributing towards high murder rates, abortion, sexual promiscuity and suicide, according to research published today.

According to the study, belief in and worship of God are not only unnecessary for a healthy society but may actually contribute to social problems.

The study counters the view of believers that religion is necessary to provide the moral and ethical foundations of a healthy society.

It compares the social peformance of relatively secular countries, such as Britain, with the US, where the majority believes in a creator rather than the theory of evolution. Many conservative evangelicals in the US consider Darwinism to be a social evil, believing that it inspires atheism and amorality.

Many liberal Christians and believers of other faiths hold that religious belief is socially beneficial, believing that it helps to lower rates of violent crime, murder, suicide, sexual promiscuity and abortion. The benefits of religious belief to a society have been described as its "spiritual capital". But the study claims that the devotion of many in the US may actually contribute to its ills.

The paper, published in the Journal of Religion and Society, a US academic journal, reports: "Many Americans agree that their churchgoing nation is an exceptional, God-blessed, shining city on the hill that stands as an impressive example for an increasingly sceptical world.


Here's the full PDF.

Gobby Cross platform SubEthaEdit
I can't seem to find out what the networking requirements are. [from: del.icio.us]




Another attempt at the same thing.

One part of the question is whether different expressions of the same idea are worth the same. Should I pay more for a CD than a restricted bandwidth MP3 or a low bandwidth ringtone? The media industry appears to think they are all equally valuable and should be the same price. So what is it they actually own and what is it they are actually selling us?

The gist of the problem is in two parts.

1) Automated recognition of an idea (software, audio, video) even when it is in multiple encodings. eg. How do you tell that a 32Kbps stream, a 192Kb Mp3, an AAC file from iTunes, a FLAC file, a CD WAV, a mobile ringtone are all the same song. Or that a DVD, a DIVX, an AVI, or the same from a handheld camera in a movie theatre is the same video. And worse, that a 10 second sample of that song within a hip hop remix comes from the same idea. The industry has been focussing on watermarking and DRM used as a marker on a specific expression of an idea. But increasingly we transcode that expression (if only to remove the DRM) and in the process remove the marker. Intuitively (and legally), the rights remain the same. It's the same song. But automating that is hard.

2) Separating the trade in rights from the trade in ideas and the expression of those ideas. Analogous to futures and options trading independently from the underlying shares. What if I could buy the rights to listen (or perform or broadcast) to a piece of music separately from obtaining a physical CD or a downloaded Mp3? We could allow P2P file sharing to happen. In fact we would encourage it in order to get free distribution. But there's a big hole when we try and think about enforcement and control of the rights trading.

There's much to think about here. If we solve the recognition problem, we still have to solve the enforcement problem. But I think it puts a new slant on the copyfight.

On a purely personal level, I would like to buy the rights to obtain and listen to about 10-20 new albums a month but without saying where those came from or what format they're actually delivered in and where the rights holder is frequently individuals or independent record labels. And I'd like to be able to transfer some of those rights to my children and to offset the cost by reselling the ones I don't want on eBay or Amazon.

As soon as you start transcoding you open up all sorts of awkward legal questions. I've got a big CD collection which has now all been ripped to MP3. Inevitably my kids listen to it. And as they got laptops some of it migrated onto them. Then they went off to Uni.

Cory pointed me to this Kuro5hin article that proposes an open OSS DVD format for high definition music that is in a copy friendly format. But this is just dragging us back into an argument where some expressions of an idea are worth more than others. I want to move beyond that and ignore the format being used. Either I have the right to listen to the song or not. Either the owner of the rights to that song has the right to sell it to me or not. Once I have that right and a master copy, I should be able to transcode that master copy into whatveer format I see fit and play it on whatever device I see fit.

Still confused here. It makes sense but it still doesn't allow room for a meaningful business model around trading those rights rather than trading specific bit streams or physical expressions.




Further to my last post.

In order to trade the rights to an idea independent of the expression of an idea, we need to be able recognise that expression.

In the audio world, we've been trying schemes involving, watermarks, embedded DRM, cryptographic hashes, markers in the start of red book CDs. All of these involve adding a marker to a specific expression. But this doesn't actually agree with the case law surrounding rights, patents and plagiarism. As humans we think we can identify a 32Kbps MP3 or a FLAC lossless copy as being the same song. We can probably identify a remix (the MTV Video version) as being the same song. With a bit of an effort we can identify all the samples in a bit of remixed hiphop. And so we have the example of the RIAA suing people based on filenames when the file is actually a Linux utility and not a top ten track. And their utility for checking P2P programs and audio/video on your machine makes no attempt to identify which files are licensed or even what they are and hence whether they need to be licensed.

So identifying a specific idea within an arbitrary expression of that idea reliably with automation is a hard problem. Perhaps we should be looking at technology like Shazam, that can make a good stab at getting a song title and artist from a snatch of music recorded by a mobile phone.




Burningbird » The Clean Industry : As for me personally, I wouldn't mind eventually incorporating something such as LID into my weblogging tool, to enable people to edit their comments without being dependent on IP address. I also wouldn't mind a good identity system that I could use for a set of similar services, such as specific social services or group membership, or for the online newspapers I subscribe to.

First some terminology for people not in this conversation. Identity Provider (IP): A system that provides identity services. Personal Identity Provider (PIP): An IP run by one person. Service Provider (SP):

I, and others, have a vision of an identity infrastructure where everyone ran their own PIP. And where a big proportion of SPs from Wordpress and MT upwards supported and used that infrastructure. Everyone should have an "About Page" with an API to provide single signon and identity provision.

I see three big problems to this happening.

1) Technology and adoption. For this to work the infrastructure standards need to be completely open, and they need to be implementable in lowest common denominator environments. That means PHP, Perl, dotnet and C++ with native language libraries or widely adopted extensions. Many of the target PIPs and SPs are running on hosted systems with minimal access. And the client browser could be one of several runnign on one of several OS. We can do this now with technologies like XMLRPC and SAX/DOM XML parsing. But we can't really do it with SOAP or with stacks built on SOAP.

2) Trust. If everyone is running a PIP how can we trust any one PIP site without some other trust metric? We can probably ensure that passwords are cryptographically secure and not exposed. But we still have the same problems of lack of trust that we have now with Splogs, trackback and comment spam. As peel away the onion layers eventually we need either a trust authority or a web of trust structure as in PGP.

3) Account Syncing and data duplication. Almost all SPs will want to maintain accounts with additional data. And they won't want to do round trip calls to the underlying PIP every time somebody views a profile on the SP or the account data is needed for session management. This means we will have data in two places and have to start thinking about sync as well as seeding new accounts with data from the PIP.

I'm just finishing reading Charles Stross' Accelerando. Fantastic book by the way, full of in-jokes for the accelerationista. And then I came across this. Copyright in a digital world by Nicholas Bentley.

I don't agree with all his conclusions but hidden in here is a *big* idea. The separation of rights from the ideas that those rights control. I think this is similar and related to the separation of options from shares and is related to the separation of money from the gold standard. This allows a market to develop in trading rights, independent of the trading of the ideas. So a particular idea, in the form of a 5 minute track of music wrapped up into an MP3 can be freely copied while the right to perform that track is traded separately. Stani Yassukovich while heading Merrill Lynch Europe and inventing the Eurobond famously said that you can commodify anything and turn it into paper. Once in the form of paper, you could trade the paper independent of the commodity. This led to the explosion of financial instruments currently being traded in the financial markets. What we are about to discover is that we can commodify ideas and turn them into paper representing those ideas and rights to those ideas. We can then trade this paper independent of the idea.

What I can't get my head round is whether there needs to be control and hence DRM for this to work, or whether it can work in the same way that money does. And money in the modern world works largely due to a social contract and belief system that says that it does.[1]

The economics 1.0 solution to this conundrum is that what we are buying is the physical expression of the idea in the form of a piano roll, a vinyl record or up to 1990 a CD. Continuing this line of thinking into the realm of Economics 2.0 we're attempting to maintain this by controlling the distribution of the idea by imposing some form of DRM.

The problem is that as Cory Doctorow has said repeatedly not only does DRM not work, it *cannot* work. The crucial argument is that you can treat the DRM system as a black box and apply cryptography to it. The box contains an encrypted copy of the idea. The rights owner gives you a secret key which unlocks the box and releases a plain text copy. The holder of the box now has a plain text version and can discard the box. It's irrelevant what algorithm the box uses. It's irrelevant how secret the key is. The holder now has a plain text copy and is free to distribute it.

So no matter how we kick against it, we have to discard the ability to have strong control over the movement of ideas when they are expressed in digital form, no matter whether they are software, words, books, music, video or CNC programs. The question is whether we can do this while still maintaining a market for the rights over those bits. Nicholas Bentley suggests that we can find ways of getting "contributions" from people who (temporarily) hold rights over the idea to the people who "own" the idea. I suspect that the tragedy of the commons means that providing there's a reasonable chance of getting away with it, the majority of people will freeload and avoid contributing.

At this point I'm out of my depth and wondering if all I've done is reframe the arguments slightly and we're back into trying tip-jars, centralised and legally backed performance rights processes or government controlled taxes for redistribution to monopoly rights holders. Whatever it is, the days of first sale of anything that can be digitised are now over. All we're doing now is thrashing around trying to keep it going for as long as possible while we wait for society as a whole to admit this and for some alternative to appear.

So now what I need is someone or groups of people who are prepared to hack economic theory around a rights trading market. And while we're at it, working out how to commodify and trade "trust", "reputation" and "whuffie".

[1]From Robert Anton Wilson. What's the difference between a dollar bill from the federal bank, a dollar bill counterfeited by the Mafia and a painting of a dollar bill by Andy Warhol and a photocopy of a dollar bill? The key is that the Federal Bank have a magic wand which they wave over *their* dollar bills which makes them real. And we all believe that the Federal Bank has one of these magic wands and they're the only people who have one.




Slashdot | Skype Security and Privacy Concerns Points to Scott Granneman at Security Focus

- Skype claims good encryption. But since the source is closed and has had no peer review we can't know if it's true.
- eBay is a US company and has a record of caving to US government requests.
- The FCC is pushing for wiretap capability in VoIP.

Doesn't give you a very warm fuzzy feeling, does it?




Just been surfing the BPI site. This is the UK version of the RIAA which has also been sueing people. These bits caused me to raise my eyebrows. Can you spot the Fnords?

Is downloading music illegal?
Downloading is when an internet user obtains a digital music file from the internet – in filesharing this source is another internet user known as an uploader. Unless this act of downloading is done from with (sic) the permission of the record label (for example, from a licensed service like iTunes), it is unauthorised copying and is illegal.

Uploading is when an internet user allows other internet users to access (and download) their digital music files. This phenomenon creates an enormous illegal library of music available for illegal download using filesharing services.

Copyright law provides that a person must have permission to make a copyrighted work (such as a sound recording) available for download on the internet. Doing so (i.e. uploading) without permission of the copyright owner (in the case of a sound recording, the record label) is against the law, regardless of whether the music was originally obtained legally or illegally by the uploader.

It is for the illegal act of uploading without permission that the international recording industry has commenced legal action against more than 14,200 people to date.

How can you tell which websites are legal?
Although there are some online music services that claim to be legal when they are not, a careful consumer should not find it difficult to identify legal music services.

Who are you suing?
After a prolonged period of warnings, the BPI has taken the decision to launch a programme of civil litigation against major uploaders – the “worst” filesharers in the UK.

The BPI is only able to identify copyright infringement at the level of the internet protocol (IP) address of the infringer; BPI then has to go to court to obtain an order requiring the relevant internet service provider to disclose to BPI the name and address of the owner of that internet account.

BPI then writes to the individuals concerned and offers them an opportunity to settle the legal claims against them before legal proceedings are issued.

How do you find major uploaders?
When filesharing, the uploader's computer transmits its internet location, so that the downloader's computer knows where to download from.

The BPI simply logs on to the internet like any other user and looks for downloads. When we download a sample track that track comes with details of the IP address of the filesharer who is offering it.. The BPI then obtains a High Court order that the internet service provider (ISP) which controls that particular IP address should disclose the identity of the owner of the computer in question. Having received those details, the BPI is able to initiate legal proceedings against the uploader.


Interesting that downloading from an illegal source is unauthorised copying and so illegal. That could get hard to tell as a consumer. And it appears to be hard for them to tell as well. I love the way "a careful consumer should be able to tell the difference." So when I can pay AllofMp3 via Paypal, and they say they have paid all relevant dues in their country, I can feel that I have taken due care in selecting them as my preferred download source then.

Apparently, in order to get the IP address and to verify illegal uploading they download a sample file. You might want to watch your logs then. Or disable sharing with unknowns. And they are less than clear about whether having files available is illegal as opposed to actually uploading. The fact that they do a sample download from you suggests that it's the second. And them doing that download looks curiously like entrapment.

Whatever, it's all just "demanding money with menaces".

http://www.skypejournal.com/blog/archives/2005/09/skypes_product.php

I've been saying that Google with Google Talk along with MSN, YM!, AOL and anyone else in the IM/VoIP field had better learn or relearn how to ship early and ship often. If Skype continue to add function and build out at this rate they will be very hard to contain.

Official Skype Video is scheduled for November. Social Networking and dynamic content (??) in Dec.




Beyond Cyberpunk! The Web Version
Have I read them all? Almost. [from: del.icio.us]

Open Rights Group: ORGnews Issue 1
ORG kicks off with a typically pithy letter from Danny O'Brien [from: del.icio.us]

Exactly how ambitious is Google?

- Building a carrier grade backbone network by buying up dark fibre.
- Building a Wifi Hotspot business complete with a VPN
- Getting into VoIP

This is all a long way from search. It's quite a long way from selling Ads. But it's an interesting use of a very big pile of cash.

So what do we call the nascent Google Telco? G&T? (Make mine a double with Bombay Sapphire).

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