osdir.com
mailing list archive
Mozy Online Backup: 2GB Free. Automatic. Secure.

Subject: A citizen response to the recent attacks on freedoms in the name of intellectual property - msg#00019

List: culture.internet.nettime

Date: Prev Next Index Thread: Prev Next Index
Multiply and share, use, improve...
Collective response provoked by the latest attacks on our digital rights
in Spain and Europe and in view of the upcoming G8 summit that will try
to enforce "protection of intellectual property" (sic). This letter is
also being sent to governments and 287 authorities.

*GREED BREAKS THE SACK
IN FAVOUR OF A FREE CULTURE OF CITIZENS WHO SHARE:
7 solutions/facts plus one.
A citizen response to **the recent attacks on freedoms in the name of
intellectual property.*


Over the last few months we've witnessed several attacks on freedoms in
the name of intellectual property. We also recently had the chance to
read the manifesto "Rights for All on the Internet" (available in
Spanish on the website of Spain's RIAA equivalent, the SGAE
http://www.sgae.es/recursos/documentacion/Manifiesto_Derechos_para_todos_en_Internet.pdf),

which is being perpetrated by the self-baptised "Coalición de Creadores
e Industria de Contenidos", or "Coalition of Artists and the Content
Industry" (an umbrella group bringing together five of the country's
main royalty management associations and cultural industry corporations
-- SGAE (artists), Egeda (audiovisual production), Promusicae (music
producers), Adivan-Adican (video distributors and importers) and FAP
(intellectual property) --, which are, in turn, the Spanish lobby of the
major US film producers and distributors: Disney, Universal, Paramount,
Sony Pictures, Fox and Warner), and their declarations on the supposed
damage that filesharing or P2P networks are doing to culture.

This response has been written by housewives, businesspeople, internet
users, lawyers, judges, "distinguished" intellectuals, programmers,
unemployed people, professionals, scientists, artists, artisans,
workers, grandparents, teenagers, citizens in general -- we are part of
the millions of people who use these networks in Spain. We would like to
take the opportunity to clear up some of the things this "Coalition", in
extremely bad faith, are trying to distort through their declarations.


"The Coalition" and their like want to play a game in which the dice are
loaded. Their stance is simply the bluff of an industry that wants to
change the rules at the last moment in order to win the game.

The main problem is that there's more than economic dividends at stake.
We're also playing for the very idea of what culture is and for the
right to access to information (which has taken us a couple of centuries
to gain).


WHEN I SAID CULTURE...

We say the dice are loaded because this "Coalition", and the cultural
industry in general, uses the words "culture" and "creative production"
according to their own interests, in an attempt to redefine these
concepts for their benefit and their own, strictly financial interests.

When they say "culture", they mean "entertainment industry". When they
say "cultural production" they are talking about the "commercial
exploitation of some of their member's royalty rights". Basically,
they're talking about business dealings. When they talk about "pirates",
"plunder" and "pillage", they are referring to each one of us.
Only the intentional impoverishment of these concepts for their own
interests could be behind these declarations.

Apologies for the depressing comparison, but to change intellectual
property legislation in accordance with these distortions would be like
changing the coastal protection legislation for the benefit of a group
of real estate developers. Culture and beaches belong to everybody, and
the crisis in the cultural and real estate industries shouldn't make us
loose site of our shared heritage.



EVEN SO, IT MOVES...

A social phenomenon that is so widespread (13 million households and 70%
of all Internet users, that is, an absolute majority of the Spanish
population) can't be written off in such a simplistic way, specially not
by trying to make society aware of its "bad practice" through fear,
defamation threats and, as their latest campaign attempts to do, by
changing legislation to get the Courts that suit them.

In Spanish history, we have a flagrant example of a private institution
that managed to impose its point of view on society. It was called the
Inquisition, and it managed to impose its own interests for centuries
through book burning, by banning science and condemning thousands of
people to death.
It also managed to hold Western cultural and technological progress back
for a couple of centuries.
Although at least during that period there was no arguing about the
definition of "culture" (culture=religion).

But enough of comparisons with other centuries. Let's return to the
present - the information society.


THE INFORMATION SOCIETY

As we will see later, there is no way the information society can
coexist with the reforms proposed by "the Coalition" and the cultural
industry in general. In fact, the information society would disappear
only to be replaced by an "entertainment industry society".

More than at any other moment in history, the digital age allows
everybody access to the free circulation of knowledge and multiplies
opportunities for learning and creativity, for the benefit of all humanity.
Times have changed - all citizens have to be able to benefit from all
the advantages offered by the Network of Networks through the horizontal
exchange of information and culture. We have to adapt our means of
cultural production to this new form of democracy, and not the other way
around. Copying and its benefits are behind all of this.


CULTURE: IMITATION AND COPY

Why is copying demonised when it is the basis of all learning?

We don't live in isolation, we live in a network. We are constantly
communicating, from the moment we're born and are socialised we
continuously absorb knowledge by imitating, copying and sampling.
There's no other way to do it. Knowledge comes about through imitation
and copying.

That's how our cultural imaginary is formed, and then it becomes our
source of inspiration and allows the creation of new ideas, works of
art, theories, etc. Any kind of cultural creativity or new knowledge is
based on this received tradition, which means that no new creation is
completely original or even possible without the existence of this
collective heritage.

This is extremely familiar ground for the big multinational companies in
the cultural world, which have always reaped profits from folktales and
traditional music and thus plundering our common heritage and the
creativity of those who create through the simple act of communicating
and storytelling.

In the digital, communication age, "digital" is our shared memories and
the networks that connect them.
"Digital" material is what the contemporary memory is made from.
If anything deserves to be called plundering it is the desire to
greedily make money from our natural way of learning - copying -- at the
very moment that it is flourishing.

This technological transformation is often compared to the invention of
the printing press, which revolutionised the diffusion of culture
through its capacity to produce copies in a way that was much faster
than ever before, and more faithful to the original than the most
highly-valued copyist of the time. Books that had been kept in
monasteries an available to a privileged few were brought within reach
of the public, in spite of the powerful opposition of a minority,
motivated by personal interests. It's true that copyists lost their jobs
and had to go into a new line of work, but who would be able to ban the
printing press today?


Something similar is happening in the digital age. The new technology
even benefits the entertainment industry, that small section of cultural
production that is fighting for its own private interests to the
detriment of the rest. Today, they are the minority who oppose the new
printing press, unfairly holding back the increasing free circulation of
knowledge.


PIRACY DOESN'T EXIST, PARENTS ARE THE PIRATES

It's simplistic and biased to try and divide the Spanish population into
those who copy and those who buy, because we all do both things at once.

It's like saying that those who cook without buying recipe books are
gastronomic pirates.

How many times do we have to say it? The fact that I use the Internet to
compile music and that this turns me into a music lover feeds my desire
to go to concerts and buy my favourites on CD. Only the record
industry's insatiable delirium could possibly think that people have to
buy the thousands of records available now, when they decide to consume.

It's not true that if we share we will stop appreciating artists and
originals.
Have people stopped buying El Quixote just because it's in the public
domain? Do people no longer by it because parents can pass their
children copies that had belonged to their grandparents?
Will people stop going to the cinema to see a new Almodóvar movie and be
moved (those who are moved by new Almodóvar movies)? Will Almodóvar no
longer be a millionaire? Highly unlikely. Will he be a bit less of a
millionaire? Does the entire country really have to care about the
fluctuations of Almodóvar's millions?

Culture is bound to keep producing community, emotions and wealth, as
well as investments, as it always has and always will. It will keep
copying itself to produce new originals, and maintain its power to
attract people wherever it pops up.
In the digital age, more and more people will dedicate themselves to
culture based on what they learn directly from others through the net.
People won't stop appreciating those who create. Just the opposite, they
become more familiar and closer to us. We all become creators.
We are losing appreciation, but not for the artists -- for the middlemen.


SO LET'S TALK ABOUT THE MIDDLEMEN: THE (RE)STRUCTURE

Until recently, the culture industry was the main intermediary between
artists and audiences. This intermediary is now the Internet.

This is the period of highest levels of production and consumption of
audiovisual media in history.

I can carry an mp3 player with thousands of songs in my pocket. On
MySpace I listen to new songs by music groups from far-flung corners of
the world.
Does this mean I'm being detrimental to the diffusion of culture?

The business opportunities that emerge from the greatest levels of
audiovisual consumption in history are immense. But the game rules
involve active users that access information directly, without turning
to the slow, expensive system of middlemen.

In a world of consumer-producers in which everybody can easily access
culture and its means of transmission and production, the culture
industry as we know it has entered a dead end street. It has to
restructure itself.

It is up to the companies themselves to restructure the industry in an
innovative way, by investing in the new possibilities rather than trying
to hold them back, without hindering fair competition and the creation
of new jobs in the way it is doing now.
Citizens shouldn't bear the costs of this restructure through
indiscriminate and legally dubious levies. And the industry shouldn't
paralyse the progress of society in general, destroying its creative
ecosystem just when it is flourishing like never before, making citizens
pay once again.


THE LAMENT OF THE WEEPERS: RECORD SALES ARE FALLING

They could well be.
But there is no decline in the opportunity to undertake new investments
and make money (which is what ultimately concerns them).
A local example: Rodolfo Chiquilicuatre (Spain's abominable Eurovision
representative) has earned millions of euros without selling a single
record, mostly through the sale of ringtones and the thousands of hits
on his videos and copies and off-shoots on sites like YouTube. Could a
phenomenon like this have existed without the Internet and mobile
technology? Does anybody have the nerve to say he hasn't generated
money? Haven't consumers been the main distributors of this product?

The restructured culture industry will keep making money, that much is
clear.

Record sales are falling? Yes. Audio tape sales fell too.

It's absurd for the culture industry to want to remain the same, as
though the Internet had never been invented.

It's not in crisis, that's a lie. SGAE (the Spanish RIAA equivalent)
makes record-breaking profits year after year. While the professional
weepers mourn the losses that we Internet users are causing through
something that no Spanish law has classified as a crime, the rights
management associations are living through a golden age.

If street vendors start offering CDs by an unknown group along with
Madonna CDs, it will mean that the profits of culture are finally being
distributed more fairly: Madonna will keep selling millions of records
and travelling on her - perhaps slightly smaller - private jet, and the
unknown group, who deserves to have its talent recognised without
passing through any company's profitability filters, will have the
chance to grow and become known, to gave audiences at their concerts,
generating culture, knowledge and economy.


LOST PROFIT IS COUNTING YOUR CHICKENS BEFORE THEY HATCH
Digital information is the memory of our time. If I buy a record or a
book, or watch a consumer product on TV, I have every right in the
world to make a private copy for non-profit purposes and share it.
It would be absurd and impossible if someone asked me to wipe my memory
of the film I've just seen. It would be even more absurd if I had to pay
every time I talked about it. Attacking digital copying is like banning
people from talking to other people about their memories, not allowing
people to repeat what they've heard, stopping people from lending books
to friends or humming a song. Basically, it means banning communication
in the communication age. Strange, right?

One of the cornerstones of the lament of the industry weepers is the
idea of "lost profits". The theory goes like this: if I download a song,
I'm not buying it, therefore that revenue is never produced and this is
known as lost profits.

Let's do the maths:

Say I've bought (yes, bought) an mp3 player with a capacity to store
40,000 songs. If I had to fill it by acquiring the music through an
online sales platform like iTunes, which charges an average of 1 euro
per song, it would cost me 40,000 euros. But being a responsible
consumer, I should really buy the entire records by my favourite artists
from a local music store like VIRGIN (note: this is joke, but local
music stores died out 20 years ago). A new release costs approximately
22 euros, which would imply an outlay of 88,000 euros, or around 15
million pesetas in the old currency.

How horrifying to realise that the most valuable thing we own are the
contents of our mp3. We stop sleeping, frightened, thinking of the
hordes of thieves who could steal our prized treasure. But this is all a
lie, or rather, a fantasy: the fantasy of the farmer who counts his
chickens before they hatch and imagines how much money he will make from
them. The calculations of the culture industry and royalty management
associations are absurd, simplistic and malicious. If they were
realistic, we would have fortunes in our pockets. We would be
millionaires on one thousand euro salaries who store everything and
nothing on a few data bits.

One of the basic laws of the economy (especially for non-essential goods
and services) is that products cost whatever users are prepared to pay.
The industry's greedy desire to extract profit from everything that
moves doesn't realise that if their idea of taxing all exchanges were
implemented, it would die of thirst, a victim of its own desires.

In the times we are living in, our wealth lies in information and
culture. We have previously unimaginable levels of freedom of
expression. Thanks to P2P, we can be millionaires in terms of the
millions of people we can share our thoughts with or sing a song to.
With millions of others, we can listen to Amy Winehouse's latest record
and then write something completely different. This is the social wealth
we want to talk about -- about the kind of society it builds, the kind
of creative people it shapes and the benefits it generates.


SELLING THE CAR TO BUY PETROL

Here is an example:

Viacom takes legal action against YouTube because Viacom isn't happy
about excerpts of its programs being posted on the Internet (even though
it's recognised as "the right to quote"). What is it so unhappy about?
Maybe it doesn't like the fact that a program it has already broadcast
is reproduced as memory - YouTube is a "digital memory", a collective
archive of users -- thus bringing more advertisers and audiences to
Viacom? Or perhaps it's complaining about the money it's not making when
people re-watch the excerpt without generating the profit that would
never be generated if it wasn't possible to re-watch it for free?
Internet users are their own best publicists. They do it well, and for
free. If Viacom had to carry out the same operation, it would probably
end up being less "profitable".

This is what the obsession with lost profits means: selling the car to
buy petrol.


NEVER AGAIN WITHOUT P2P

Although they try to give a different impression, the Internet is full
of artists. Only a tiny percentage of them have any connection to the
culture industry.

If P2P networks are criminalised, we all lose: we lose freedom, we lose
privacy (it's not science fiction: a court ruling has recently ordered
YouTube to
reveal the identities of millions of its users in order to protect the
"lost" profits of the multinational Viacom), we lose wealth and freedom
of expression. Everybody knows this. Why do we have to keep repeating
it? What interests are being defended?

Those who want to apply the Sarkozy model that criminalises filesharing
on the net (P2P) totally overlook the thousands of artists who allow
their work to be copied by using free licences. They also ignore the
privacy of all Internet users and the democratic benefits of breaking
the control of information. The biggest communication tool ever created
by human beings, the library of Babel that humanity has long dreamed of,
could end up becoming the largest form of social control ever created.

Restricting P2P networks doesn't defend a few poor millionaire artists
and the helpless entertainment industry. It limits, fragments and holds
back the tool that has changed the way we understand the world.

Do we really want to follow in the footsteps of Pakistan, China, France
and Sudan?

Do we want to live in a country in which governments are afraid of their
citizens?
Will we allow Mickey Mouse to condition the future of knowledge and culture?
_____________________________
*Therefore, we hereby DEMAND:
7 necessary and urgent measures to protect and boost the knowledge
society for the good of everybody (every single person, really ;))

1. That any restrictions placed on filesharing (P2P) networks be
considered to be an act of obscurantism and an attack on the fundamental
human rights guaranteed by our constitution and covered by countless
international treaties that have been ratified by the Spanish state.
Our rights to knowledge, learning, access to culture and freedom of
expression would be seriously undermined if limits were to be placed on
the tools that society currently has at its disposal.

2. That royalty management associations become what they really are:
private associations that ONLY AND EXCLUSIVELY manage the "accounts" of
their members, that is, the royalties of a section of artists. That they
allow free competition, like any private organisation, and that under no
circumstances private entities be allowed to delve into the privacy and
the pockets of citizens for their own private benefit (see the Tower of
Music in Valencia, among thousands of other examples).

3. That artists be paid equally and fairly, whether or not they are
members of royalty management associations. That artists, if they wish,
be paid mainly for their actual creative work, not for the explotation
it generates.

4. The immediate abolition of the "canón digital", a digital levy that
indiscriminately sanctions citizens in the name of "compensating"
artists for a crime that isn't a crime when, in reality, it is collected
for the benefit of a few private individuals who rarely produce the work
themselves and even more rarely produce anything related to Culture.
Only dictatorships make people pay simply for being considered likely
suspects.

5. That the periods in which works become part of the Public Domain
benefit creativity and society. Allowing more than one generation to
live from somebody's work is a way of encouraging parasitism and
creative stagnancy. It deactivates reinvestment and instead of favour
people, as it was designed to do, it ends up benefiting mainly large
multinational companies that distort the original work. We ask that work
becomes public domain within a reasonable period of time, according to
the kind of work, with a maximum of 30 years.

6. The defence of the "right to quote" as a vehicle for democratic
expansion of the information society.

7. The elimination of the concept of "lost profits" in any area relating
to cultural production.*
_________________________________________________________________________

And one more thing:

Because free and collaborative culture is the Culture of our time,
because it's a fact, because there's no turning back....

EXGAE presents:

The awards that will sweep the Grammys, the Goyas, the Max...
The 1st non-competitive awards in the history of Culture...
The 1st international Culture awards in the digital society...

*The OXCARS
eXcellence is sharing

Tuesday October 28, 2008, Sala Apolo - Barcelona*

Multiply and spread.

More details:
http://exgae.net




Was this page helpful?
Yes No
Thread at a glance:

Previous Message by Date: click to view message preview

Soviet Antarctica: Ice, Ice, baby...

Earlier this year, I went to Antarctica to shoot a film about the sound of ice. One of the things I noticed first and foremost, is how much the different nation states had "scripted" their territorial competitions in Europe into claims onto what is essentially a moving and ever transforming landscape. For me, Antartica's ice was a perfect metaphor for today's contemporary geo-political flux. In the course of doing more research for the project, I found some extremely rare Soviet footage that will be included in my film. It's footage from the Soviet Antarctic Expedition of 1955. I decided to incorporate the film into my film (I work by sampling, after all), and remixed the subtitles to show a "post-modern" ironic take on the way the European nation states scripted their research in colonial terms - the most outrageous being Nazi Germany's "Neuschwabenland" aka "New Swabia" where Third Reich pilots dropped Nazi flags as territorial markers over Antarctica to claim the ice in 1938-1939. Here goes: it's going to be in the style of a silent movie - we have weird footage of the first Soviet expedition, and it will be a kind of science fiction type intermission in the middle of my film - very "propaganda" a la Stanislav Lem's Solaris or Boris and Arkady Strugatsky - two of the Soviet Union's top science fiction writers. By the way, all of the text below will be translated into old school Soviet propaganda fonts for the film. The trailer for my film is at: http://www.djspooky.com/art/terra_nova.php Paul aka Dj Spooky Terra Nova - A Film By Paul D. Miller aka Dj Spooky = = ======================================================================== A montage of silent film tray cards reads as follows in the film script: Scientific Revolution in Antarctica!!! The Soviet Union Leads the way!!! In the grand tradition of The People's Quest for Revolutionary Struggle, the Supreme Soviet reviews plans for an Antarctic Expedition to further progress human understanding of the polar regions of the world. On the eve of the International Geophysical Year (IGY) in 1955, the First Soviet (Complex Antarctic Expedition of the USSR Academy of Science) started its way to the coasts of the frozen continent. The Academy of Science and the Ministry of Marine Fleet of the USSR addressed the Government with the suggestion to organize the Expedition. General administrative duties were placed on the Presidium of the USSR Academy of Science: the institution that supervised the Arctic and Antarctic Research Institute and was known to have accumulated vast experience in the Arctic studies. The spectacle of science leads to a propaganda war for the moon, the stars, and after Sputnik, control of the resources of the last place on earth with no government: Antarctica. The spectacle precedes the expedition. At the Antarctic Conference in Brussels in 1955, the Soviet delegation an nounced about the intention to build the main base in the coastal section from 85 E to 105 E and establish research stations at the South geomagnetic Pole and at the Pole of relative Inaccessibility. The magnetic pole is a moving fiction scripted on the blank surface of the ice. It moves every year, and becomes a beacon that can never be attained. The geomagnetic pole is one more scientific fiction made into a tool to create more land claims for the Great Nations. To bring science to the Antarctic lands, the Presidium of of the USSR Academy of Science created a research plan to study the effect of electromagetism in the polar regions. For that time, the Soviet plan seemed to be almost fantastic. The site of location of the South geomagnetic Pole and the Pole of relative Inaccessibility was a myste rious «white spot» for the explorers. The participation of the Soviet Union and the suggested plans immediately gave value to the Antarctic research operations. The nation state is a fiction to be mapped onto the blank space of the ice. The main objective of the first expedition was to build the base and the basic geophysical observatory at the Antarctic coast. Among the other tasks was general geographical study of the areas of supposed operations and organization of perma nent observations in the observatory. Three vessels were assigned for transportation of the expedition – two similar diesel-electric ships «Ob» and «Lena» with displacement 12600 t., cargo capacity 4500 t. and rated power 8200 h.p. each; the third vessel «Refrigerator No.7» with displacement 2200 t was intended only for delivery of perishable provision to the coastal base. The port of expedition departure, Kaliningrad received supplies and equipment arriving by trains from all the parts of the Soviet Union. All the country took part in preparation and fitting out the expedition. The cargoes arrived up to the very last moment of the vessels’ departure. On November 30, 1955 the first vessel – flag-ship «Ob» left the port of Kalinin grad carrying onboard 127 expedition members, 75 crew members and 3782 tons of expedition cargo, including two airplanes LI-2, one AN-2 and helicopter MI-4. The First Complex Antarctic Expedition of the USSR Academy of Science was headed by Dr. Mikhail Somov, Doctor in Geography, Hero of the Soviet Union, AARI scientist- explorer of Central Arctic. The aviation detachment of the First CAE was equipped with 4 planes and 2 heli copters; the land detachment- with 13 caterpillar tractors C-80 and bulldozers, 4 cater pillar cross-country vehicles GAZ-47, 10 trucks with the bodies specially fit out to carry the expedition radio stations, repair shops, portable electric plants, as well as car GAZ-69. Besides, the expedition members brought along the sledge and 50 husky dogs. On January 5, 1956 the diesel-electric ship «Ob» approached the Antarctic coasts and moored at the narrow fast ice strip of the Farr Bay. Soviet people touched the Antarctic continent for the first time. A site for foundation of the first Soviet research station was found. The next day unloading operations were started. Unloading from was going on several days in terrupted with frequent storms, fracturing of fast ice and snow roads to the barrier. Ceremonial inauguration of the first Soviet observatory on the Antarctic coast under the name of «Mirny» took place. Starting from the date of inauguration, regular meteorological observations and transmission of weather forecasts have been carried out continuously up to now. Other types of scientific observations – geomorphological, geothermal, aerologi cal, geomagnetic were also carried out at the «Mirny» observatory. Ship-based expedition headed by leaves Mirny in order to fulfil oceanographic survey along the eastern coast of the Antarctica up to Balleny islands. A few words about the first (in the history of Soviet research in the Antarctica) continental march that left the base Mirny . The program of the work on the march included meteorological, aerological, magnetic, glaciological and geomorphological observations, seismic measurements of glacier cover thickness. The route of the first convoy was laid in the directions where the continental bases Vostok and Sovetskaya would be founded in the future. The march was fulfilled in extremely severe conditions. The convoy was able to cover only 10 km in the first day going up all the time in deep and loose snow. Heavy sledge with fuel tanks in some cases had to be pulled out by two tractors. During the next year 1957, several sledge-tractor convoys were fulfilled using the new ten trucks that were delivered to the Antarctica by 2 CAE. The expedition fulfilled, as a rule, seismic sounding of ice cover, measurement of height values, magnetic, gravimetric, meteorological observations and glaciological studies. By the end of the year, the expedition reached the area of geomagnetic pole where the Vostok station was founded. The station is working up to now, with small intervals. The Russian people, by organizing expeditions to the Arctic and Antarctic areas, contributed the information and data so valuable for the science, that no other nation had ever contributed. All victory to the people's revolutionary struggle for new land, in a new world! The nation state is a fiction to be mapped onto the blank space of the ice. The ice is a physical clock, it moves at a geological tempo to a rhythm made of human fictions. We write the script, and it in turn, writes us. Meteorological, aerological, magnetic, glaciological and geomorphological observations, seismic measurements of glacier cover thickness - all become tools in the game of land claims. All victory to the people's revolutionary struggle for new land, in a new world!

Next Message by Date: click to view message preview

THE LABORATORY PLANET N°2

LA PLANETE LABORATOIRE / THE LABORATORY PLANET The Laboratory Planet is a periodic journal of philosophy of science and critics of technics, published in two versions, english and french, and distributed by a network of reader-distributors. The editors are Bureau d'études and Ewen Chardronnet. Since the Second World War, the world has been progressively transformed into a full scale laboratory. 1 The model of a "laboratory world" has been added to the model of a "factory world". This developing laboratory-world promotes the manipulation of the living according to the doctrine of “acceptable risk”. The radicalisation of competition and the “short-falls” in planned investments result in tests in "real-life conditions". The journal explores the apocalyptic scenarios prophesising justifying the demiurgic experimentation of a world that has become a laboratory. The Laboratory Planet wants to devellop the consciousness of its readers that the rational organisation of this laboratory-world has become an irrational organisation threatening those who have created it. http://www.laboratoryplanet.org The Laboratory Planet N°2 is out ! "Hope is not needed to act." "Nothing is true, everything is permitted." This slogan, which did so much harm during the twentieth century, reinforces our conviction that the most forceful ideas are not necessarily the truest or the best but are those that can imposer leur monde. Among them are the ideas that frighten people today. They form what we might call a cognitive concentration camp, a camp whose depth, diversity and size are far from having been completely explored. This kind of concentration camp is generated by all political technology that promotes, induces, manufactures or develops the anthropological type whose existence is indispensable to its working and its reproduction. The power of institutions in techno-scientific societies resides in their capacity to create and name social reality, which is forged by their experts in order to control, and then to impose on all this tissue of fictive entities – these weapons of mass distraction, while consigning to oblivion the fact they have been produced. To these techniques of cognitive capture is today added a range of knowledge and of means making it possible to intensify the reflex-behaviours that promote the 'good' functioning of the administrated societies, to project a psycho-civilized society and to dream of a remote-controlled population. Human beings, having reached the limits of their biotope, the 'exterior' colonisation being for the moment at an end, the planet having shrunk away, the colonisation of inner life is today undergoing a new phase of expansion. The biometric control of the population through the mass distribution of legal and illegal drugs, the creation of consensual hallucinations by the skilful management of information and its cognitive reception, and the daily psychotronic conditioning by the constant growth of the electromagnetic environment, make of city-dwellers individuals possessed, subjected to a psycho-power armed with psycho-technologies. In this concentration camp environment, what is the place of freedom of thought? Is it just a fossilised residue of bourgeois society? A special version of the cognitive concentration camp? But can we speak without presupposing it, at least theoretically? In its most radical form, freedom of thought needs its own theory of knowledge. Because if the theory of knowledge can imposer un monde, a cognitive concentration camp, it can also knock down the fences, at the risk of summoning up a chaos that cancels out the very possibility of having a world, and produces the most effective cognitive straitjacket ever known. This is why all theory of knowledge also presupposes a capacity to sail through troubled waters. This capacity ne renvoie pas strictly speaking to a metacartography, since it ne retourne pas d'une cognition. It is more an ethical and, we could say, a spiritual aptitude, calling on imagination, inspiration and intuition to uncover possible future ways to break down the walls of a world that has closed in on itself like a tomb. Texts by Bureau d'études, Brian Holmes, Konrd Becker, Ewen Chardronnet, Michel Tibon-Cornillot, Yves Edel, Nicolas Bonnet, Lionel Sayag. If you want to receive the journal or become distributor, please contact us : ewen-n+LsquliYkMdnm+yROfE0A@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx bureaudetudes-Re5JQEeQqe8AvxtiuMwx3w@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx 23/09/08 : the issue 3 of the journal will question the emergence of a new polar geopolitics, the spectre of the exploitation of the polar natural ressources, geo-engineering being commonplace in the name of the fight against the greenhouse effect (experiments modifying the climate on a very large scale, transforming the chemistry of the oceans, creating rivers, emptying lakes, etc.), experimentations in the ionosphere in the context of plasma research, the planetary nuclear destruction grid, etc.

Previous Message by Thread: click to view message preview

Soviet Antarctica: Ice, Ice, baby...

Earlier this year, I went to Antarctica to shoot a film about the sound of ice. One of the things I noticed first and foremost, is how much the different nation states had "scripted" their territorial competitions in Europe into claims onto what is essentially a moving and ever transforming landscape. For me, Antartica's ice was a perfect metaphor for today's contemporary geo-political flux. In the course of doing more research for the project, I found some extremely rare Soviet footage that will be included in my film. It's footage from the Soviet Antarctic Expedition of 1955. I decided to incorporate the film into my film (I work by sampling, after all), and remixed the subtitles to show a "post-modern" ironic take on the way the European nation states scripted their research in colonial terms - the most outrageous being Nazi Germany's "Neuschwabenland" aka "New Swabia" where Third Reich pilots dropped Nazi flags as territorial markers over Antarctica to claim the ice in 1938-1939. Here goes: it's going to be in the style of a silent movie - we have weird footage of the first Soviet expedition, and it will be a kind of science fiction type intermission in the middle of my film - very "propaganda" a la Stanislav Lem's Solaris or Boris and Arkady Strugatsky - two of the Soviet Union's top science fiction writers. By the way, all of the text below will be translated into old school Soviet propaganda fonts for the film. The trailer for my film is at: http://www.djspooky.com/art/terra_nova.php Paul aka Dj Spooky Terra Nova - A Film By Paul D. Miller aka Dj Spooky = = ======================================================================== A montage of silent film tray cards reads as follows in the film script: Scientific Revolution in Antarctica!!! The Soviet Union Leads the way!!! In the grand tradition of The People's Quest for Revolutionary Struggle, the Supreme Soviet reviews plans for an Antarctic Expedition to further progress human understanding of the polar regions of the world. On the eve of the International Geophysical Year (IGY) in 1955, the First Soviet (Complex Antarctic Expedition of the USSR Academy of Science) started its way to the coasts of the frozen continent. The Academy of Science and the Ministry of Marine Fleet of the USSR addressed the Government with the suggestion to organize the Expedition. General administrative duties were placed on the Presidium of the USSR Academy of Science: the institution that supervised the Arctic and Antarctic Research Institute and was known to have accumulated vast experience in the Arctic studies. The spectacle of science leads to a propaganda war for the moon, the stars, and after Sputnik, control of the resources of the last place on earth with no government: Antarctica. The spectacle precedes the expedition. At the Antarctic Conference in Brussels in 1955, the Soviet delegation an nounced about the intention to build the main base in the coastal section from 85 E to 105 E and establish research stations at the South geomagnetic Pole and at the Pole of relative Inaccessibility. The magnetic pole is a moving fiction scripted on the blank surface of the ice. It moves every year, and becomes a beacon that can never be attained. The geomagnetic pole is one more scientific fiction made into a tool to create more land claims for the Great Nations. To bring science to the Antarctic lands, the Presidium of of the USSR Academy of Science created a research plan to study the effect of electromagetism in the polar regions. For that time, the Soviet plan seemed to be almost fantastic. The site of location of the South geomagnetic Pole and the Pole of relative Inaccessibility was a myste rious «white spot» for the explorers. The participation of the Soviet Union and the suggested plans immediately gave value to the Antarctic research operations. The nation state is a fiction to be mapped onto the blank space of the ice. The main objective of the first expedition was to build the base and the basic geophysical observatory at the Antarctic coast. Among the other tasks was general geographical study of the areas of supposed operations and organization of perma nent observations in the observatory. Three vessels were assigned for transportation of the expedition – two similar diesel-electric ships «Ob» and «Lena» with displacement 12600 t., cargo capacity 4500 t. and rated power 8200 h.p. each; the third vessel «Refrigerator No.7» with displacement 2200 t was intended only for delivery of perishable provision to the coastal base. The port of expedition departure, Kaliningrad received supplies and equipment arriving by trains from all the parts of the Soviet Union. All the country took part in preparation and fitting out the expedition. The cargoes arrived up to the very last moment of the vessels’ departure. On November 30, 1955 the first vessel – flag-ship «Ob» left the port of Kalinin grad carrying onboard 127 expedition members, 75 crew members and 3782 tons of expedition cargo, including two airplanes LI-2, one AN-2 and helicopter MI-4. The First Complex Antarctic Expedition of the USSR Academy of Science was headed by Dr. Mikhail Somov, Doctor in Geography, Hero of the Soviet Union, AARI scientist- explorer of Central Arctic. The aviation detachment of the First CAE was equipped with 4 planes and 2 heli copters; the land detachment- with 13 caterpillar tractors C-80 and bulldozers, 4 cater pillar cross-country vehicles GAZ-47, 10 trucks with the bodies specially fit out to carry the expedition radio stations, repair shops, portable electric plants, as well as car GAZ-69. Besides, the expedition members brought along the sledge and 50 husky dogs. On January 5, 1956 the diesel-electric ship «Ob» approached the Antarctic coasts and moored at the narrow fast ice strip of the Farr Bay. Soviet people touched the Antarctic continent for the first time. A site for foundation of the first Soviet research station was found. The next day unloading operations were started. Unloading from was going on several days in terrupted with frequent storms, fracturing of fast ice and snow roads to the barrier. Ceremonial inauguration of the first Soviet observatory on the Antarctic coast under the name of «Mirny» took place. Starting from the date of inauguration, regular meteorological observations and transmission of weather forecasts have been carried out continuously up to now. Other types of scientific observations – geomorphological, geothermal, aerologi cal, geomagnetic were also carried out at the «Mirny» observatory. Ship-based expedition headed by leaves Mirny in order to fulfil oceanographic survey along the eastern coast of the Antarctica up to Balleny islands. A few words about the first (in the history of Soviet research in the Antarctica) continental march that left the base Mirny . The program of the work on the march included meteorological, aerological, magnetic, glaciological and geomorphological observations, seismic measurements of glacier cover thickness. The route of the first convoy was laid in the directions where the continental bases Vostok and Sovetskaya would be founded in the future. The march was fulfilled in extremely severe conditions. The convoy was able to cover only 10 km in the first day going up all the time in deep and loose snow. Heavy sledge with fuel tanks in some cases had to be pulled out by two tractors. During the next year 1957, several sledge-tractor convoys were fulfilled using the new ten trucks that were delivered to the Antarctica by 2 CAE. The expedition fulfilled, as a rule, seismic sounding of ice cover, measurement of height values, magnetic, gravimetric, meteorological observations and glaciological studies. By the end of the year, the expedition reached the area of geomagnetic pole where the Vostok station was founded. The station is working up to now, with small intervals. The Russian people, by organizing expeditions to the Arctic and Antarctic areas, contributed the information and data so valuable for the science, that no other nation had ever contributed. All victory to the people's revolutionary struggle for new land, in a new world! The nation state is a fiction to be mapped onto the blank space of the ice. The ice is a physical clock, it moves at a geological tempo to a rhythm made of human fictions. We write the script, and it in turn, writes us. Meteorological, aerological, magnetic, glaciological and geomorphological observations, seismic measurements of glacier cover thickness - all become tools in the game of land claims. All victory to the people's revolutionary struggle for new land, in a new world!

Next Message by Thread: click to view message preview

Re: A citizen response to the recent attacks on freedoms in the name of intellectual property

Hi, I am still quite new to this list, I have not seen many responses to postings, so I am not sure, if there is room at all for a discussion? I'd like to comment on some of the 7 demands... simona.conservas.innmotion wrote: > 3. That artists be paid equally and fairly, whether or not they are > members of royalty management associations. That artists, if they wish, > be paid mainly for their actual creative work, not for the explotation > it generates. ?? not sure what you are referring to here. some monthly income? why should all artists be paid equally? who defines what an 'artist' is? and by whom should they be paid? by the government? are artists better than other people so that they are elegible to receive money, but other working people not? all humans should be paid equally and fairly in regard to their work, no? a creative sound artist's income (other than the basic income for social reasons) will come from live performances, from composing soundtracks for film or gaming industry, from royalties if a song is played on radio or television or maybe in a (dance)club (any commercial environment). Or by signing a contract with live nation or one of the big players of the entertainment industry, like the manufacturers of computers, portables, mobile devices, or cable companies, telecom and networking companies and all other companies that rely on "content" to sell their products). besides that, if people agree to honor cultural values ('actual creative work', as you call it) that can still be covered by budgets for artist fellowships, grants, governmental cultural sponsorings. Selling traditional sound storage media or selling music online could survive because of higher sound quality or, maybe, accessibility. besides that artists will have to live from 1000 other things, like advertisement contracts (covering related staredom outgrowth like creating fashion lines or cosmetics.) or teaching. > 5. That the periods in which works become part of the Public Domain > benefit creativity and society. Allowing more than one generation to > live from somebody's work is a way of encouraging parasitism and > creative stagnancy. It deactivates reinvestment and instead of favour > people, as it was designed to do, it ends up benefiting mainly large > multinational companies that distort the original work. We ask that work > becomes public domain within a reasonable period of time, according to > the kind of work, with a maximum of 30 years. what? 7, 5, 3, 2 years, even 1 year seems more appropriate to me. > 6. The defence of the "right to quote" as a vehicle for democratic > expansion of the information society. I would say we need legal arrangements not only for quoting but for everything that goes under "fair use": educational context, derivative work... as well as everything that is for private use. marius.
Sign up for updates to this mailing list. email:
Loading Comments...
Home | News | Patents | Sitemap | FAQ | advertise

Advertising by