Thursday, March 24, 2011

Fresh Audio Entertainment

Today I was hankering for some fresh audio content for my commute, having somewhat burned out on Adam Carolla and This American Life, and Radiolab, my standard go-tos for easy listening and thoughtful ideas.

This time I had a fresh idea for how to find a new podcast, wanting to avoid the iTunes podcast chart, since it is already so centralized and homogenous that it seems nearly as much a self-fulfilling prophecy of popularity as television or film. Having been on a spree of excellent subreddit choices, I decided to look for a podcast subreddit.


411 on Subreddits: Reddit is a voting-based social news aggregator. "Sub"-reddit pages allow anyone to begin posting links or text on any specific topic, as dictated by the sub-reddit's name. Some of my recent favorites include Homebrewing, Arduino, Starcraft, and Comedy. There is a subreddit for virtually every interest.

To no real surprise, there sure was a Podcast subreddit, and I was in luck, because on the front page there was a podcast I'd never heard of, with an exclusive interview with Rainn Wilson on his new movie, "Hero."

The interview itself was amply interesting, but I couldn't get enough of the interviewers. Most of the young-person podcasts I've heard so far are sloppy and unprofessional, if not obnoxiously awkward, but this one had a really enthusiastically geeky rapport, between two Seattle friends who start each episode by opening and evaluating a new microbrew, and going on to discuss all their latest forays in the subcultures of movies, tv, video games, board games, and even web memes and subreddits.

Their discussion was incredibly sharp and poignant, and I could relate to both hosts as if they were intelligent friends. One even has the voice and cadence of an off-the-cuff David Sedaris.

So, without further ado, I've got to share my latest Podcast find, Personal Arrogants. I hope you enjoy.

Monday, June 4, 2007

Russia tries to guard AK-47 idea


Since it was copyrighted in 1999, there has been no active enforcement ceasing the illegal manufacture of AK-47s, the weapon of choice of insurgent groups around the world. But now, there is.

Guitartabs.com gets shut down

The RIAA has been trying for a while, and now they have succeeded to shut down guitartabs.com. This move essentially says that not only are recordings of music owned, but the melodies themselves are also owned. Hopefully nobody will start enforcing what you can whistle, or I'm SCREWED!

Tuesday, May 29, 2007

Japan makes online music storage illegal!

You read it right, in Japan you can't store music online! This includes private personal networks, file sharing apps, servers??? In a day where more and more of our personal data is going on the web, are we still going to have to carry around hard drives full of our purchased intellectual property?

Saturday, May 26, 2007

Ohio State Caves to RIAA

In a move typical of the Ohio state administration, they are now completely complying with the RIAA. There's not really a case where the university could be sued, much like an ISP, but the administrators seem oblivious to that.

Tuesday, May 22, 2007

Lawyer says: Microsoft, BRING IT!

This man is not impressed by Microsoft's attempts to enforce 235 patents, so he's starting a movement of Linux users saying "You think we're breaking your patent? Then sue us." This is quite a move from the old "hope the FBI doesn't raid my mom's house" Napster cases of yesteryear. Will Microsoft bite? Or are they just pounding their chests to scare away the guppies?

Sunday, May 20, 2007

The Case for Intellectual Property

The New York Times is running a story on Intellectual Property must be treated as preciously as physical property.

Pirate Bay=Going for It

The world's most popular BitTorrent tracker Pirate Bay announced they will be opening a YouTube-like site, but with "no censorship" (read: no copyright enforcement). Pirate Bay has flaunted its "international immunity" in the past, but now we're going to see just how far a website can go by residing in a liberal nation.

Friday, May 18, 2007

International Immunity

No matter how hard the U.S. enforces copyright or threatens sanctions, some countries still facilitate piracy, and it ain't going away fast.

Latest DRM cracked a week before its release

In a move proving the futility of Digital Rights Management, the new HD DVD anti-piracy measures are well behind the mouse of piracy.