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  • 17Apr

    By PatB
    Contributing Writer, [GAS]

    The Swedish trial of the four members of Pirate Bay is now over, and the pirates are going to jail.  Frederik Neij, Gottfrid Svartholm Warg, Carl Lundstrom and Peter Sunde were found guilty and were sentenced to a year in the slammer for violating copyright and running the most notorious file sharing site on the web. 

    From the BBC here:

    A court in Sweden has jailed four men behind The Pirate Bay (TPB), the world’s most high-profile file-sharing website, in a landmark case.   Frederik Neij, Gottfrid Svartholm Warg, Carl Lundstrom and Peter Sunde were found guilty of breaking copyright law and were sentenced to a year in jail.  They were also ordered to pay $4.5m (£3m) in damages.

    Record companies welcomed the verdict but the men are to appeal and Sunde said they would refuse to pay the fine.

    Speaking at an online press conference, he described the verdict as “bizarre. “  “It’s serious to actually be found guilty and get jail time. It’s really serious. And that’s a bit weird,” Sunde said.   “It’s so bizarre that we were convicted at all and it’s even more bizarre that we were [convicted] as a team. The court said we were organised. I can’t get Gottfrid out of bed in the morning. If you’re going to convict us, convict us of disorganised crime.

    “We can’t pay and we wouldn’t pay. Even if I had the money I would rather burn everything I owned, and I wouldn’t even give them the ashes.” 

    The damages were awarded to a number of entertainment companies, including Warner Bros, Sony Music Entertainment, EMI, and Columbia Pictures.

    The Pirate Bay’s first server is now a museum exhibit in Stockholm.  No copyright content is hosted on The Pirate Bay’s web servers; instead the site hosts “torrent” links to TV, film and music files held on its users’ computers.

    Way to stay defiant, Sunde.  Maybe that attitude and a pack of smokes can get you more time “in the yard” in the Swedish jail. 

    Look, even if Pirate Bay never hosted a single file, there are pieces of information, that once assembled, become illegal.  That is a concept that online anarchists like Sunde can’t come to grips with.  Showing people how to violate copyright laws is an example of this concept.  Compiling privacy information by a government to be used to track people would be another.

    Casey Lynn had a previous Pirate Bay post on [GaS] here.

  • 17Apr

    The good news for lovers of webcasting is that a federal appeals court has ruled that the medium is a form of broadcasting with equal status to that of television. The bad news is that that ruling was made to ban webcams from covering a music filesharing case.

    The defendant, Boston University student Joel Tennenbaum, had asked for the hearing to be streamed live through the Harvard Law School website, a request the case judge approved in January. However, the Recording Industry Association of America successfully argued on appeal that doing so would violate local court rules banning broadcasts since 1996.

    Tennenbaum’s lawyer insisted that those rules – brought in to ban TV broadcasts – were not relevant to webcasting. He said the difference was that an unedited internet broadcast would not add the type of emotion or hype which would come from television coverage such as news bulletins. The appeals court rejected that argument, saying the difference between TV and webcasting was “one of degree, not kind”.

    One of the appeal court judges supporting the decision said he was forced to uphold the law, but that it made for a “disagreeable” outcome. Kermit Lipez said there were “no sound policy reasons” for banning a webcast and said it was questionable whether the law was still relevant today.

  • 17Apr

    Twitter

    It’s no secret that much of the link-sharing that goes on these days happens on Twitter instead of blogs, so here are some of the links I shared over there this week. I’m not sure how regular a feature this will be, however, so follow Copyblogger on Twitter for all the real-time linky goodness.

    How to Set Up A Blog (For the Long Run) - Michael Martine dishes out a useful run-down of getting your blog on. Good stuff.

    Marketing Your Website Without Search Engines - Maki of DoshDosh nails the right mindset for effective online marketing… what would you do if there were no search engines?

    Great Insights from a Creative Entrepreneur - Wonderful interview with John Unger that demonstrates the emerging class of highly-creative and artistic entrepreneurs.

    FTC To Clamp Down On Social Media Marketing - If you thought social media marketing would remain an unregulated virtual version of the Wild West… think again.

    How to Think About Long vs. Short Copy - Jeff Sexton does a great job of demystifying the whole long copy thing, and reveals how to make it context appropriate.

    Stoicism 101: A Practical Guide for Entrepreneurs - My friend Ryan Holiday guest posts at The Blog of Tim Ferriss. A must read for aspiring and existing entrepreneurs alike.

    7 Ways to Power Up Your Landing Page Headlines - The headline says it all. Good stuff from web veteran Nick Usborne.

    By the way, Jon Morrow and I are releasing a free report next week. The topic is one that is highly relevant to content producers and online marketers—outsourcing. You may be surprised by our take on it… so be sure to look for the announcement post.

    Oh yeah… and subscribe to Copyblogger if you haven’t yet. :)

    About the Author: Brian Clark is Executive Editor of Copyblogger and co-founder of DIY Themes, creator of the innovative Thesis Theme for WordPress. Get more from Brian on Twitter.


    Thesis Theme for WordPress

  • 17Apr
    The online phone service will spin off as an independent company next year, giving it a greater ability to redefine itself. Local search could be one way to do this, tying Skype in with a local search engine with click-to-call functionality. ...
  • 17Apr

    French prankster Remi Gaillard brings us a real-life version of Pac-Man, and leaves chaos behind! If you enjoy this sort of thing, see a dozen more real-life video games here.

    [via Metafilter]

  • 17Apr

    Blogs have eliminated the reason for most business books to exist. If you can say it in three blog posts and reach more people, then waiting a year and putting in all that effort seems sort of pointless. The chances that your effort will be rewarded with income in proportion to the time you put in are pretty low.

    This has raised the bar for what it takes to write a decent business book. I really enjoyed The Peter Principle years ago, but I think we can all agree that today it would be better as a blog.

    The best non-fiction books today either deliver a complex message that takes more space and attention than a short series of blog posts can deliver, or they are convenient packages to spread an idea from person to person in a more powerful way than an emailed link can. Books can take their time and build an argument, while blog posts are constantly fighting the reader's ability and desire to click away.

    The irony? The market demands that you summarize your book in a blog post.

    We're hesitant to buy a book (which is a far better value than just about any form of media) if we don't think we're going to like it. I guess that's built in from childhood, cause you get in trouble if you don't finish a book, and who wants to finish a book they don't like?

    At least once a week, someone emails me a lousy review someone did of a summary of one of my books. Not the book, but what they thought the book was about based on a blog post summary of the book.

    Critics and shoppers are doing the same thing about your spa, mp3 player and insurance company. We now review the blog post version of it, not the actual experience. "I heard the service at this restaurant was lousy." How's that for condensing four years of hard work and training into a sentence?

    And then we complain when the long version doesn't pack enough punch, seems too short and isn't transcendent enough for those that persevere.

    This is irony (we say we want long and deep and rich but we also insist that it be condensed to a sentence) so it's not clear what you should do about it as a marketer, other than to accept that it's going on.

  • 17Apr

    By Casey Lynn
    Contributing Writer, [GAS]

    snakesDuring a passenger flight in Australia, four pythons escaped from the cargo area during the flight. Fortunately for the passengers, though unfortunately for all of us writing punchlines, this went unnoticed until after the plane had landed. A reptile expert searched for the snakes but never found them… the plane was eventually fumigated and sent back on its way.

    Which leads one to wonder: what happened to those snakes? Are they going to show up in some poor tourist’s luggage? I’m suddenly having Arachnophobia flashbacks. As if flying weren’t bad enough.

    Airlines: Didn’t Samuel L. Jackson teach us anything? Put the people and the snakes on separate flights.

    Other things from movies I would not like to see on real planes:

    - Decepticons
    - Inflatable Pilots
    - Serial Killers
    - Spiders
    - Tom Cruise

    [Image Source: Flickr]

  • 17Apr
    YouTube added a new tab titled "Shows" that highlights TV shows. "Today we're excited to announce a new destination for television shows and an improved destination for movies on YouTube, where partners like Crackle, CBS, MGM, Lionsgate, Starz and many others have made thousands of television episodes and hundreds of movies available for you to watch, comment on, favorite and share," announces the YouTube blog.

    The list of TV shows, which are mostly available in the US, includes: "Harper's Island", "The Addams Family", "Happy Tree Friends", "Married with Children", "Star Trek: The Original Series", "Mythbusters", "Alfred Hitchcock Presents", "The Tudors" and others. The list of movies is less impressive and it only includes some Bollywood movies, documentaries, MTV movies and a very small number of interesting movies (the classics "Heidi", "The Little Princess", "Animal Farm", "Fitzcarraldo").



    YouTube's move towards long-form professional videos is another attempt to monetize the service, which costs more than 1 million dollars a day, according to some estimates. YouTube will use third-party players from services like Crackle and will even allow content providers to bring their own ads. "YouTube has agreed to display the films using a video player from Crackle, Sony Pictures' own video site. The studio will control all the advertising for the films and Crackle will also get credit for the traffic," according to CNet.

    Sarah Lacy has a plausible explanation for these changes. "Smart entrepreneurs realize user generated content still matters, it just doesn't directly translate to revenues. UGC is the core of why so many people are on these sites and without the eyeballs, the tech platforms don't have as much negotiating leverage with Hollywood. Without Hollywood, it seems, they may not get revenues anytime soon."

    I'm not convinced that YouTube will be able to repeat Hulu's success, but hopefully the latest efforts won't alienate YouTube's community and YouTube will continue to find the right balance between professional and amateur content. After all, YouTube's goal was to "empower people to become the broadcasters of tomorrow".


  • 17Apr

    imgAreaSelect is a jQuery plugin that enables you to create selectable areas on images which is a widely used technique for cropping images.

    Once an area is selected, you can get the x-y coordinates & apply any actions on that part of the image like cropping or implementing effects.

    jQuery Image Select Plugin

    The plugin is very flexible & offers options like:

    • aspect ratio
    • max height, max width
    • opacity
    • whether it can be resize or not
    • keyboard support & more..

    There is also an image crop tutorial using imgAreaSelect & PHP that can be found here.

    Special Downloads:
    Free Admin Template For Web Applications
    jQuery Dynamic Drag’n Drop
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  • 17Apr

    Chris just published this free manifesto. This PDF is what generous looks like.