Variety: “Germany’s upper house of parliament on Friday approved a controversial copyright law, which makes it all but illegal for individuals to make copies of films and music, even for their own use. The Bundesrat pushed aside criticism from consumer protection groups and passed the law, which makes it illegal for anyone to store DVDs and CDs without permission. The law also covers digital copies from IPTV and TV broadcasts. “
Month / September 2007
Twenty Minute Roundup
- To paraphrase Groucho Marx, we’re going to speed things up here. If a blog readership orders a one-hour roundup, I’ll give it to them in twenty minutes. If they order a twenty minute roundup, I’ll give it them in ten minutes. If they order a ten minute roundup, I’ll give them my RSS feeds and let it work out for themselves. Time is limited. So here goes.
- Dan Green on the “marketplace of ideas” nomen. Since I have moved to New York, I have been contending more and more with people who view books as nothing more than a commodity and are not well-read and more taken with scarfing down canapes and free drinks at junkets than engaging with authors and books on even a remotely intellectual level. Even accounting for the reality that publishing is an industry, Dan’s words are well worth considering.
- Bill Benzon offers a provocative open letter to Steven Pinker about shared knowledge and stories.
- The Last Starfighter: The Musical. (via Jason Boog)
- On pumping out twenty books in six years. (via Slushpile)
- UC Santa Cruz plans to put its Heinlein archive online. I’d like to see more universities do this.
- Uncovered: A disturbing juxtaposition of Black Canary.
- You down with OED? Yeah, you know me. Crosswords, mothafuckahs!
- Tonight, 6:30 PM at the Bowery Poetry Club: Levi Asher and some other guy.
- Someone has stolen Erin O’Brien’s hat!
- Shame is the New Fame and related article.
- It appears that YA authors are using high school newspapers to market their books. I have a slight ethical problem with this, but there is currently no time to offer a lengthy argument. Perhaps later. (via Bookshelves of Doom)
- Timbaland on One Life to Live.
- I don’t see anything particularly wrong with the Harvard Classics approach to education, but is five minutes a day really enough time to take in a classic?
- And, finally, call me a prurient cad, but I’m extremely curious about the future of this man’s potency.
Juggle Juggle
Smells Like Cordite
It’s the Books, Stupid
An anonymous comment at the National Book Critics Circle blog:
Has book coverage started on Truthdig? If it has, it’s very invisible on the home page. Second, those of us who are interested in literature and literary culture wish all you folks would stop talking about yourselves for a few minutes and start reviewing some more books. Most of you work from assignment, so you can’t necessarily be blamed, but since we can read any book review we want these days, why do we have to read so many reviews of the same twenty books every week. That this “campaign” to save book reviewing takes up so much of your attention is only further evidence of how important you all think you are. It’s actually the books that are important and so many of them–books that are often far more interesting than the few that you sheep are all getting your two cents in about every week–just disappear without a bit of attention. If literature is to survive, it has to do something that movies don’t do, it has to move forward, it has to grow. This hammering away at Delillo, Chabon, Díaz by all of you at once is downright boring. Folks who read are looking for a disovery, not the same old same old. Your homogeneity spells the death of culture in this country. If, indeed, we ever had one.