The Frame

More stately mansions.



Apr 16

Book Notes: Remix by Lawrence Lessig

I found Remix more engaging, though less informative than Code. A different book, to be sure. Where Code focuses on the ‘architecture’ of innovations, Remix makes a mainstream appeal to renovate the copyright code and end the ‘war’ on piracy. In Lessig’s view, the battle between the RIAA and file sharing is not a zero-sum game. There are many ways to go about reform that would increase the public’s ability to engage with copyrighted content without harming the owners of the intellectual property.

Lessig’s problem is that his presentations are so effective that people are going to stop reading his books. Watching this video gives you all the highlights in less than an hour.

I do have one challenge to his argument. A large section of the book is about what it takes to succeed—or profit—in a “hybrid” culture. Lessig praises companies like Flickr for catering to their customers, for offering content freely and engaging a community. Because of Flickr’s willingness to offer a free product, his argument goes, they have built a valuable community and is able to profit while maintaining an enthusiastic community. But how much money are these companies really making? He throws youtube in the same category, omitting the fact that youtube has yet to turn a profit for google. For the most part, Lessig remains grounded in his optimism for the web, but when youtube is an example of success in the hybrid economy, perhaps we should curb our enthusiasm.



Mar 20

Writing in the Digital Age

(via: Wow: PEACE declared? (Lessig Blog))

Once again, Lessig comes through (or came through) with an incredibly entertaining yet informative keynote presentation. His new book apparently boils down to the argument that the current copyright laws are outdated and kill culture.

In other words, does making a literal version of the music video for Take On Me really hurt anybody?



Feb 17
“A little part of me died Sunday when conservative commentator Glenn Beck’s novel The Christmas Sweater debuted as number one on The New York Times best-seller list. It followed the recent death of two other little parts of me: one when the movie The Curious Case of Benjamin Button passed the two-hour mark, and another when my uncle used the phrase “That’s how I roll.”
The Cultural Obituary Page: 21 Things That Have Passed On - Esquire


Nov 16
“To be sure, these faults [a profoundly smug and incurious outlook] aren’t peculiar to the progressive and the hip, but Lander repeatedly and cleverly shows how some of White People’s favorite activities (watching political documentaries, “raising awareness,” foreign travel), which they complacently embrace as broadening, are in fact lazy and tend to be intellectually and politically stultifying: White People “like feeling smart without doing work—two hours in a theater is easier than ten hours with a book.”
Intolerant Chic - The Atlantic (October 2008) on Christian Lander and his blog/book Stuff White People Like
Page 1 of 1