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sj_zero | @sj_zero@social.fbxl.net

Author of The Graysonian Ethic (Available on Amazon, pick up a dead tree copy today)

Also Author of Future Sepsis (Also available on Amazon!)

Admin of the FBXL Network including FBXL Search, FBXL Video, FBXL Social, FBXL Lotide, FBXL Translate, and FBXL Maps.

Advocate for freedom and tolerance even if you say things I do not like

Adversary of Fediblock

Accept that I'll probably say something you don't like and I'll give you the same benefit, and maybe we can find some truth about the world.

Ah... Is the Alliteration clever or stupid? Don't answer that, I sort of know the answer already...

Sweet sweet longposting.

To hell with you, "(1/57)"!

Disney is a particularly good example of the benefits of a robust public domain: They made much of their fortune on derivative works of public domain works.

Disney didn't create Snow white, Pinocchio, Cinderella, Alice in Wonderland, The story Sleeping Beauty was based on, the little mermaid, Alladin's wonderful lamp, the hunchback of notre dame, or Hercules. They took works that were in the public domain and created new works based on those stories that were massively popular in their own right.

One of the reasons the Internet is so vibrant and creative compared to the establishment media is that it isn't really following the rules, so it takes content and remixes it or reimagines it and comes up with all kinds of completely new stuff. There's entire communities and subcommunities and sub-subcommunities doing that sort of thing, and if copyright were being properly applied then it would all immediately disappear.

Meanwhile, the establishment wallows in the one hundredth remake of Superman's origin story! We've got the copyright until 2033, might as well make the most of it!

(Turns out it wasn't life + 50 years, it was life + 70 years for works created after 1978 since changes to the copyright act made in 1998 which expanded the term from life + 50 years)

oof. VC bloodbath

Maybe we should nudge vpzom? It'd be nice if we could get friendica groups working and incorporating better with the broader fediverse. (Also, I should try peertube channels. Being able to subscribe via lotide like a community would be a game changer!)

I blame Canada for this!

I think as a teacher you end up hypersensitive about that sort of stuff.

It federates pretty well, but definitely lacks in some important ways.

I was able to follow a friendica group which was neat, but I haven't gotten anything from that list yet. I suspect that unless they put a subject in the header it ignores the posts.

I like lotide, but the whole space is pretty limited. I think lemmy did a good job of scaring the sort of people who might want to participate away and lotide doesn't do a great job of telling about itself despite being a great and very lightweight platform.

Great to see there's literally nothing else going on in the world.

Man, we should probably just disband congress since there's nothing going on worth paying any attention to but this!

That's embarrassing. Only send a dick pic to your entire class if you're ready to smugly grin at the rest of the class about it.

I don't feel like this video really shows anything particularly exciting... I could build a robot to play with playdough too...

The purpose of copyright law is to promote the arts and useful sciences according to the constitution which grants Congress the authority to create that class of law.

One microsecond after I'm dead, there is no span of time you can give me a monopoly on my works that will entice me to create another work.

You could make an argument that investors in my work should get a chance to recoup their investment for some time, but a fixed time should be able to accomplish that. Give someone 35 years to make back their investment, and if the person dies they can pass it onto someone else.

What's happening instead is that this absurd length of monopoly is meaning that works are being erased from history because the copyright length is so long there's no way most works are maintained that long despite having no commercial value. That's the opposite of the stated goal. You can make an argument that something without commercial value isn't valuable and it doesn't matter if it was destroyed, but we have examples where something that was allowed to enter the public domain back when that was possible became valuable after the public discovered it and started to make use of it.

I put my money where my mouth is, and the graysonian ethic has something written into the legal page that releases it into the public domain 15 years after first publishing.

Nevada-tan, nevar forgotten ❣️

"Men only want one thing and it's fucking disgusting"

>How white people criminalized the great African tradition of slavery

Oh shit!!

Google hasn't sold me a phone since the Obama administration.

"my theychild's first words were 'birthing person, please chop off my downstairs lockup'"

It's always important to design for humans.

wtf they stole my original content do not steal

I tend to agree with this, but a lot of people start to point fingers at one political party or another when in reality it's a cultural decline involving both the people and the parties.

The danger isn't one party or another, it isn't left or right, it's governments utilizing overwhelming power in violation of basic human rights in pursuit of even more overwhelming power. It doesn't matter who does it, they're wrong.

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