CopiaSystems Universe

If we ignore it - will it go away?

Posted by: bjaz @ 11/14 2005, 10:50

This is a sensitive issue - one I am sure that many will take me to task on.  I just can't help but shake my head here though and wonder.  The problem is a folk song that is being performed by a school choir in Michigan.  The song has its roots in American Slavery and is a song sung by slaves in the south when working the cotton fields. 

Folks are upset that this sort of song is being taught and performed by students.  I will admit that there is a right way and a wrong way to recognize our past - this appears to be a blind blunder into the wrong way.  But it raises a much larger question - Should we pretend that it never happened.  There seems to be such a desire to avoid any talk of American Slavery to the point of forgetting it ever happened. 

It is a blight on man kind when one enslaves another.  If we are not allowed to discuss this and learn from it without fear of offending one another, then we are destined to forget the past - and by forgetting we will not learn, and by not learning we may repeat it.  Lord willing this should never happen.

This situation needs to be a catalyst to teach our children, not in shame or fear or a mislead notion of indignity – but in honesty about ourselves and our past.  It was not pretty, but it did happen and it was our past.  If we don’t acknowledge it we can’t move on.

That is why I am bothered when I read this:

BERKLEY, Mich. (AP) - A black parent and the NAACP are criticizing a middle school's decision to perform a song that they say glorifies slavery.

The song, "Pick a Bale of Cotton," is on the folk music choir program Wednesday at predominantly white Anderson Middle School in the Berkley School District.

The song's lyrics include, "Jump down, turn around, pick a bale of cotton. Gotta jump down, turn around, Oh, Lordie, pick a bale a day."

Greg Montgomery told The Detroit News that he complained to school officials, and when he was dissatisfied with their response, decided to pull his 11-year-old daughter, China, from singing.

"It's mind-boggling that people don't understand sensitive issues," he said.

China said: "They were bringing back the memories of how African-Americans picked cotton, and it wasn't a good memory. It was disrespectful to African-Americans."

To me – it is mind boggling that we do not all grow together and learn from each other.  It is mind boggling that we want to sweep under the rug the past and hope it really never happened – and far more important – it won’t happen again.

It makes me wonder: If we ignore it, will our past go away?

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Want to read the original story?  Here is a link.

Sony gives a little ground on Copy Protections

Posted by: bjaz @ 11/14 2005, 10:48

More on this sillyness about antipiracy software that Sony has embedded into many of its current Music CDs it is now shipping:
 
Quote from the AP:

"WASHINGTON (AP) - Stung by continuing criticism, the world's second-largest music label, Sony BMG Music Entertainment, promised Friday to temporarily suspend making music CDs with antipiracy technology that can leave computers vulnerable to hackers.

Sony's announcement came one day after leading security companies disclosed that hackers were distributing malicious programs over the Internet that exploited the antipiracy technology's ability to avoid detection. Hackers discovered they can effectively render their programs invisible by using names for computer files similar to ones cloaked by the Sony technology."

Seems that this action was taken not long after the following comments were made by a senior HomeLand Security official:

"It's very important to remember that it's your intellectual property, it's not your computer," Baker said at a trade conference on piracy. "And in the pursuit of protection of intellectual property, it's important not to defeat or undermine the security measures that people need to adopt in these days."

He did not cite Sony by name when making the comments.

You can read the whole story here:

http://apnews.myway.com/article/20051112/D8DQJN3G2.html

My only question in all this is - why didn't Sony act sooner - and even more to the point why do they event think they have the right to put this software on my PC in the first place. I say "Sony - keep your stinking paws of my hard disk!"

The NEW FreeForms Plus

Posted by: bjaz @ 11/14 2005, 10:36

Here is a sneak peek at the new FreeForms Plus that I am currently working on. It is an unofficial fork of the FreeForms form creation program that ships with Liberty Basic. I have forked the version that Alyce Watson recently posted.

Image of FreeForm Plus in early development

When done this version will be offered free and as open source to the community, continuing the tradition that Carl began with the original FreeForms.

This version is unique in its use of a real windows toolbar and its ability to integrate module coding with the form as the form is developed.

Check back here to get updates on the progress of the project over time.

- Brad

Does SONY have the right to modify your computer?

Posted by: bjaz @ 11/14 2005, 06:29

This is silly and stupid. Sony BMG music has put a Windows based application on thier music CD's that is suppose to manage thier digital rights. It installs itself onto you PC and then you can not remove it. Any attempt to remove it will cause your PC's CD Drive to fail to operate.

That is stupid. America (and the world) you decide who has these rights and can exercise them - you vote with your pocketbook - SIMPLY do not buy SONY BMG music any longer. They will get the message.

Check out the newest threat - this copyright software is being used by Visus writes to gain access to your computer and exploit it. An excerpt from the article:

"A controversial copy-protection program that automatically installs when some Sony BMG audio CDs are played on personal computers is now being exploited by malicious software that takes advantage of the antipiracy technology's ability to hide files.

The Trojan horse programs - three have so far been identified by antivirus companies - are named so as to trigger the cloaking feature of Sony's XCP2 antipiracy technology. By piggybacking on that function, the malicious programs can enter undetected, security experts said Thursday."


Here is the whole story: http://apnews.myway.com//article/20051111/D8DQB2IG4.html

 
 
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