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Archive for July, 2009

The Battle Over Music Downloading. . . . Plus, Paul on Economic Crisis

One of the most dizzying effects of internet infancy was the availability of free music. A consumer utopia seemed to lay before us, where digital files would essentially be held in common and all music could be ours for free at the click of a button. The music industry began collapsing, and has been continuing to do so ever since.

Joel Tenenbaum might be the marker in history that says that era is over. Charged with downloading music from Napster and Kazaa (starting in 1999), he faces fines for every song he downloaded. In the only other case prosecuted thus far a downloader was fined $1.9 million for downloading 28 songs. A huge fine for what seems like a small crime.  Complaining about injustice, however, is not killin’ it. When the technology to take media for free came out, the anonymous online population used it.  Now that the technology to “take it back” exists, the music industry police will use that.  Youtube, for instance, has soundwave records for every copyrighted song that exists.  If you try to upload a video with copyrighted sound, it will robotically detect it and mute your piece.   I suppose we have to admit that’s fair play.

I downloaded Toto’s “Storms of Africa” in 2005.  Wonder how much I owe?

Sued for a “tweet” . . .Plus, Paul Discusses the Need for Endurance in Daily Life.

Just a few days ago in Chicago a twitterer named Amanda Bonnen was charged with defamation by her former landlords, for an 11 word “tweet” about the mold in her upscale chicago apt. She wrote the following: “Who said sleeping in a moldy apartment is bad for you? Horizon Realty thinks it’s ok.” The suit could end up costing her $50,000 if she’s found guilty.

Before the internet era, casual comments like the one above could be freely exchanged during lunch breaks, while waiting in line etc. Now, with Twitter’s shorthand and 140 character limit, we make the same off-hand casual comments, except with permanent records and a vast unknown audience. In short, Twitter leads us to state things in the same flippant way we once did in the lunch line. We have to be more careful about this as we continue to use social networking to express ourselves.

Fortunately for Ms. Bonnen, Horizon Realty doesn’t have much leg to stand on in this case, and is certainly out of public favor for taking such action. “We’re a sue first, ask questions later type of organization,” a representative for the company said in the Chicago Sun Times. That is  pretty hilarious, isn’t it? Like a decent poem about the aggressive litigious instincts of Americans. I suppose there are certain situations where I might even say that was killing it, but not here. Horizon realty has shot itself in the foot big time, and I’m guessing they’ll lose current and future tenants because of this. They claim the tweet could have been read by a million people (on some level possible I guess) even though only 20 people saw the original post. They also need to be able to prove that their apartments really don’t have mold in order to prove Ms. Bonnen’s tweet is a falsehood and therefore a viable defamation of the company. The ironies rear their head for this one. First, you have to think of the Internet itself, which promises such free and unfettered communication, yet also gives us more reason than ever to censor ourselves. It’s a traceable record and you’ve no idea who sees what. But the biggest irony in all this is that by filing a big news lawsuit against a single twitter user, Horizon Realty brings MUCH more negative attention to themselves than if they just let the little tweet lay out to evaporate. This misstep is further hammered home by the fact that twitterers appear to have each other’s back. After the story broke, hundreds of clever and empathetic twitterers reposted Bonnen’s original tweet as a dare to Horizon Reality: Why don’t  you just sue us all? Always there is Power in numbers, and twitterers clearly have some group-driven ingenuity too. Horizon Realty will lose their suit, I’m fairly sure; they will lose tenants, and ultimately they will lose the one thing they sought to protect – their reputation.  All in all a good example of exactly how not to kill it!

Paul Discusses Being Called an Asshole. . . and Kevin Costner

Here’s part of an interview series I did with Goatsilk recently. Special thanks to Shannon the Cat.

Naked Rain God Plowing. . . Plus, Paul Discusses Adapting To And Shaping Your Environment

Maybe you’ve heard by now about the village in East India where all the unmarried daughters are plowing the fields naked in order to embarass the weather gods into making it rain. I say yes, fantastic, that’s 100% Killin’ It! Though science of course poo-poos such a mystical belief in the power of nakedness, or ritual, there is something so intuitively true about “switching it up” when you’re in a rut. Whether you call it custom or “naked rain god plowing,” the point is you don’t just sit back and wait for things to come your way – even if what you’re waiting for is good weather. You break your mold. You break your social norms. You do it because you sense that breaking them is sometimes more important than keeping them. That’s Killin’ It.

38-Year-Old Lance Armstrong Yields To 26-Year-Old Alberto Cantador. . . Plus, Paul Discusses His Personal Battles With Aging

Last week began with 59 year-old golfer Tom Watson – painfully – giving away what would have been a historic victory to the younger athlete, Stewart Cink. Similarly, by weeks end, 38 year-old Lance Armstrong, fresh out of a 3.5 year retirement, finished the Tour de France in what for him is a very unfamilar place: 3rd. We watch the sun set on every champion’s reign, don’t we? That’s life, that’s time, that’s age.

This year the Tour de France torch was passed to the 26-year-old Alberto Cantador, a rider who has now decisively set the next benchmark for cyclists, ascending the Verbier Alp at a reported rate of 1850 meters per hour (compared to Armstrong’s 1700 meters per hour), and who will likely capture our imagination along with more Tour de France titles… as Armstrong’s achievements fade into the mists of history. As much as our hearts may wish it wasn’t so, this is the trajectory of excellence and achievement. Evolution has always met its promise of faster, stronger, longer, better, beings and machines. As much we tend to be fond of individual athletes, the Lebrons and Phelpses, what we’re truly tied to is the thrill of new superhuman feats. “That’s what the great thing about the tour is….it’s that the best man always wins,” Armstrong said in an interview with CNN’s Sanjay Gupta after the race. The moment when you see the next level of best… 1 inch higher, 2 seconds faster, 3 feet longer, is a revelation that there are no actual limits. One day humans might run as fast as cars and jump as high as grasshoppers. I’m serious. And that’s Killin’ It!

Why The Literalist Video Movement is Killin’ It. . . Plus, Paul Footraces a Mack Truck As A Way To Define Goals

Recently I noticed these “literalist” videos being passed around the Internet quite a bit.  The form consists of taking a music video and replacing all the original words with a humorously direct description of exactly what is being shown in any given scene.  Good for a laugh, you’ll find, but the format also gives us something to think about.  When you deflate the symbolism out of symbolic scenes, you gain a new appreciation for the video filming process, however brilliant or tacky.  From storyboard to editing room, the efforts expended on most music videos are immense, yet frequently not so well thought up or executed.  The literalist video movement, in it’s own genius way, re-invigorates redundant visual cliches like the casting out of white doves or wind blowing through drapes.  The literalist versions are even more inspiring to look at because they’re absurd without apology, modern, and clever.  My conclusion: when you take something old and tired and bring it back to life through creativity and style, you’re Killin’ It.

WalterCronkite

The Most Trusted Man in America 2.0. . . Plus, Paul on Rebellion

WalterCronkitestewart

I wonder if anyone else noticed this week that Walter Cronkite’s death coincided with The Huffington Post reporting that Jon Stewart is now America’s most trusted newsman. A comedian! How far we’ve come. Now we get the news in real time all day long, so the job of a reporter is done through facebook status updates, twitters, blogs, ireports, and youtube. As little as ten years ago we valued a professional “objective” and humorless voice to deliver us the nightly news; now we want an entertaining DJ who can take the things we already know and do something creative with it. Is that so bad? No, not at all. It’s an evolution of information handling. Shakespeare’s fools spoke the truth, and in their gut humans have always known that the person most likely to be telling the truth is also making you laugh. That’s Killin’ It.

New Experience: Watching The Solar Eclipse From a Rooftop in Mumbai!

Today’s Solar Eclipse went unwitnessed by millions who succumbed to the superstitions associated with this momentary disappearance of the sun.  Many stayed inside and closed the shades, worried that the literal darkness was a foretelling of personal misfortune.  Wow.  I don’t know whether I should feel like a fool, or just a foreigner, but I had the once in a lifetime opportunity to stare straight at it (with sunglasses!) from a rooftop in Mumbai, and I did.  It was like the top of a black snow-cone, a giant fire-rimmed pupil.  6 minutes of night when it should have been day.   

The bizarre has a gravitational pull.  Through embracing the unknown we discover clues about ourselves, some dormant essence awakens within us.  There’s nothing wrong with indulging superstitions, of course, but I find that these precious events can move us away from ideas and into experience.  That’s how you open your eyes. 

Killing It is revering oddity and admitting the abnormal into your life. 

Paul, as a Bridge Troll, Discusses The Solar Eclipse on Video.

A New Angle on Health Care Reform. . . Plus, Paul Demonstrates How to Exit a Moving Vehicle

Health Care. Dry and political. Clogged in the spin machinery like a sock wedged in the dryer door.  Pick your side, choose your partisan weapon and heave upon anyone who will listen. With all this chattering about who profits and who pays, you won’t hear this bottom line: Social Health Care is the spark needed to ignite the renaissance of the American workforce.

From the people I’ve talked to, health care is a big reason why people stay in jobs they dislike. They so fear spending even short periods without coverage that they remain paralyzed, unable to migrate to a job that is better aligned with their pursuit of happiness. The resulting workforce is a bureaucratic bulge that’s inefficient and uninspired.   The fundamental goal of the employment system should be matching person to position so that both are optimized.  Free people from the fear of ever going uncovered and watch a new work ethic be born.  That’s Killing It.