Entries Tagged as 'free speech'

Meeting the Buddha.

As far as I know, I have never had my words stolen. No one has ever- to the best of my knowledge- taken my work and either claimed it was their own or simply given away work for which I had hoped to get paid. I can only imagine how devastated I would feel– like a sucker punch to the soul. It’s never happened to me, but it’s happened to people I know, people I care about.

It is, however, impossible to stamp out every injustice. Social problems do not go away, they merely asymptotically approach zero. And with social problems, much like engineering, the 90/90 rule applies. So the question isn’t “how do we kill piracy?”, but rather “how do we mitigate the harm of piracy?” The proposed Legislation “Stop Online Piracy Act” would attack a social mosquito with a nuclear weapon.

I’ve written a lot about memes over the years. Briefly, though, they are the social counterparts to a biological gene. Memes, like genes, can be thought of as having a desire for propagation. They propagate by being fit to survive in a certain cultural milieu. Fire is a meme. Pictures of cats with funny captions are memes. The underlying philosophy of SOPA- indeed, of all asserted strong rights to intellectual property- is that it is possible to own memes. This is flatly impossible. The meme that memes can be owned is a cultural virus that must be eradicated.

Genes do not spring de novo into existence. They evolve from what has come before. A sudden random mutation of a tiny chromosome creates a new genetic expression that may well be better than what has come before. Without it’s progenitors, the new gene wouldn’t be possible. So too with memes. Newton wasn’t just being an asshole when he told a small scientist that he (Newton) was “standing on the shoulders of giants”. He was also acknowledgement the debt he owed to those who had come before him, who’s work he had used as a springboard for his own.

Current American intellectual property law understands this. It “secur[es] for limited Times to Authors and Inventors the exclusive Right to their respective Writings and Discoveries.” It also carves out a Fair Use exemption. People have the right to their own work (for a limited time), but others have the right to create derivative works. People can rent cultural space by being the first to do a particular thing, but others can grab off a piece of that thing and use it to comment on society at large, or on the work itself. We cannot own memes, we are merely the vessel through which memes flow.

SOPA is billed and sold as a method of stopping people from squatting on a meme that society is letting someone else rent. It would do more than that. SOPA would kill fair use. SOPA would create a process by which people or corporations could claim ownership over specific memes, and shut down the sites which host derivatives of those memes. If SOPA passes, it would freeze (and possibly reverse) memetic- and therefore social- evolution.

The understanding imperfect ownership of memes has been under attack for a long time. The Sonny Bono act (and it’s later upholding in Eldred v. Ashcroft) began to assert permanent ownership over memes. With this new iteration- SOPA- we see the assertion of perfect control over what can be done with memes.

SOPA does not solve the problem which does exist, and exacerbates an entirely separate problem. It needs to die. Contact your Representatives and Senators.

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In Solidarity

theuptake on livestream.com. Broadcast Live Free

In my last post I expressed some frustration with the protests. I wish to assure my fellow liberals that not only do I empathize, I sympathize. The math is as inescapable as it is disturbing. We absolutely need to change that math, because “not as bad as the Republicans” isn’t a bar anyone should feel comfortable making their voting line. It will, yes, require a (hopefully peaceful) revolution to fix.

Perhaps Wisconsin’s days of peaceful rage will be the first strike in a wider movement to reclaim and fix our broken institutions. Perhaps not. One way or the other, it’s the Good Fight. I can’t be there in person. But in solidarity with them, I’m leaving a live stream of the fight up on my blog.

GL HF, ladies and gentlemen. GL, HF

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In Which I Publicly Lambast an Opinion Expressed on Facebook

Village Idiots picketing fallen soldiers’ funerals…Yeah, I’m talking to you! Do you know WHY you are allowed to do that? BECAUSE THE DEAD SOLDIER YOU ARE TRASHING, GAVE HIS OR HER LIFE SO YOU WOULD HAVE THE FREEDOM TO EXPRESS YOUR STUPIDITY! Feel free to copy and post-I did because I wasn’t afraid to express my undying gratitude to every single service person past, present and future. GOD BLESS OUR SOLDIERS!

I’ve seen this a lot. It sort of offends me. Let me explain why:

70 years ago, the Nazis and the Japanese wanted to murder us. Curtailing our freedom of expression was a minor, minor thing. 95 years ago, Pancho Villa wanted to.. I’m actually not sure what he wanted to do. But it had more to do with murdering us than taking away our rights to criticize a government.

199 years ago, the British actually _did_ make a serious attempt at conquering America, and… today citizens of various Commonwealth nations enjoy a very broad and expansive freedom of expression.

No, the biggest threat to free expression faced by Americans is from our own government. That is a threat against which the military cannot and must not stand. If our military were to take arms, and our soldiers were to die in opposition to policies enacted by our elected officials… America would be in a great deal of trouble.

There is, however, one organization which can protect the rights of Americans to free expression. No only can they protect us, but they _do_ protect us. Every day the ACLU stands vigil over every attempt to curtail free speech. The military stand as proud protectors of our physical bodies, and they do a magnificent job. It is the ACLU, however who guard America’s spirit.

I have contributed to their work. Have you?

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You Ought to Have a Church, George, For Times Like This

Jamelle Bouie has some thoughts on atheists in Congress. Specifically: why there are none. The whole thing is worth a read, but I’ll just yank a sample section:

For an “unaffiliated” House candidate, the landscape is a little less harsh. Since nonbelievers tend to live in urban areas, it’s conceivable that an openly atheist candidate could find a large enough base to support a primary or general election run against more religious competitors. Even still, given the relatively small number of unaffiliated, this isn’t very likely.

I think this partially ignores– or forgets, or is ignores of– the mechanics of running for office. I don’t think Jamelle is wrong, but I think there’s something he fails to consider.

People don’t simply decide one day that they’d make a great politician. They see a problem, they talk about it, they fume about it, and eventually one of their friends and neighbors tells them to shut up and fix it already. But to get there, they need a network of friends and neighbors. Politicians are invariably the most connected members of their community. The major function of a religious organization? Connecting people. Churches are a major source of community building. Synagogues will hold singles mixers. Churches do charity dinners, and mosques will, um, do music nights*. Even most of the pagans and atheist I know will choose to get married in a Church (usually Universalists Unitarian) because the infrastructure is pre-existing.

It’s not that atheists and agnostics don’t have strong networks of friends, but campaigns- especially local ones- are won and lost by meeting people. If a church attender and a non-church attender square off for city council, the attender will have just a few more people to meet every week, one more avenue of attack, one more tie to the community. That adds up. And who tends to win congressional elections? People who hold local office. A small difference in community support can utterly demolish someone’s chance for higher office.

All of that, before we even mention the self-described anti-atheist bias of the American electorate.

*Yeah, I stretched that alliteration to the breaking point. Sorry.

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Drunken Lullabies

I was listening to this song by the floblots, and had never heard of Anne Braden. Naturally wikipedia was able to help…

If this is accurate, an American was thrown in jail for selling his house to another American. Power was used to maintain injustice. I am always and forever terrified of being on the wrong side of power– and so for that reason I’ve always been _very_ supportive of free speech.

The problem comes when people who have no interest in discussion seek to drown out the voices of those who do. Speech is then used against itself to the edification of no one. For a free-speech fetishist like myself, this presents a problem: how do I keep a conversation moving when the trolls show up– without destroying the right of a troll to speak. After all: the person may not be a troll, but merely have (true) ideas I find repugnant. What if I am on the wrong side of history?

One solution which presents itself is disemvoweling. “Offending” comments are still there, and if there is truth, it will shine through. But no one will struggle to read asshole comments. I think it’s a good compromise. If there is a better idea, please let me know in the comments…

(updated within 30min. of posting. For clarity)

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