martes, 21 de diciembre de 2010

#Sindejodete

Después de escuchar este acalorado debate en Cadena Ser entre Alex de la Iglesia, presidente de la Academia Española de Cine, y Victor Domingo, presidente de la Asociación de Internautas me ha quedado todo bien claro. La Ley Sinde, además de ser producto de las presiones del lobby de la industria musical de EE.UU. al gobierno español, viene con otro disfraz.

Alex dice que hay páginas que se están lucrando con el trabajo ajeno. Alex va más allá: acusa a las telefónicas de ser las grandes beneficiadas con todo este asunto. Y es verdad. Por poner un ejemplo, Series Yonkis, que se lucra del trabajo ajeno con los banners o la publicidad que quiera introducir. Esto es obvio porque los servidores no se mantienen de forma gratuita, y menos con tal volumen de datos y de tráfico como los que maneja esta web. Pero como dice Victor Domingo, la página, según la resolución del juez, es legal, y se han sobreseguido otros casos como éste en varias ocasiones.

Hay un vacío legal, es totalmente cierto. Pero si el problema es éste supuestamente, ¿por qué no abres una web similar, querido Alex, con carácterísticas similares a Series Yonkis y así seáis vosotros los que os lucréis con vuestro propio trabajo? La respuesta es simple: porque eso no es lo que se quiere combatir con la Ley Sinde. No nos lo vendas así. El problema sigue siendo el mismo, y es que la piratería está destruyendo la industria discográfica y cinematográfica. Eso es lo que os preocupa y es lógico que lo hagáis. Se supone que yo tengo que vivir de esas industrias el día de mañana también, pero creo que ir detrás de la gente en plan cobrador del frac para cobrarles los derechos de autor es un modelo desfasado, al igual que lo es privar al ciudadano de algo que ya se le ha ofrecido gratuitamente. Por eso tanto revuelo. Y por más leyes que se hagan, por más sistemas para pillar a los que descargan, hecha la ley, hecha la trampa. Pan para hoy y hambre para mañana.

Ah, por cierto, he acabado de escribir el post y la Ley Sinde ha sido rechazada en el Congreso. Sorry. Try again...

miércoles, 15 de diciembre de 2010

WikiRebels


Last night I watched WikiRebels: a documentary and that clarified me a couple things I had in mind before I could make my statement about this controversial topic. I'm sceptic about what media shows to us all, anyhow I don't believe they misinform us on purpose, but there's nothing they can do instead. In any case, they're mere intermediary.

At this point, I have to say I don't agree with the point of view of WikiLeaks. I do know that truth has to prevail always, but this has been a flag to put on the same spot many different things they shouldn't be there. For instance: Collateral Murder, the video that shows how did the Reuters' journalists die on Iraq shot by US Army.

-First: some people of the group are holding AK-47. If you are in the Iraq war (even if you're journalist) you have to smart up and think that going with an armed group down those streets could be (at least) dangerous. Check the short video again by 3:35.

-Second: they (the journalists and the people who setted them free) shot something or someone in a certain moment. Check the video at 4:15. This is giving more reasons to army to open fire.

-Third: when that guy survives and he is crawling, soldiers don't shoot him, they're just expecting if he is taking a weapon or something that would make him dangerous for the troops. That's when the van shows up, and the shooter is always requesting permission to engage (well, at this point a guy's voice appears and he really wants to shoot, but he doesn't show up anymore and they eventually did the right thing and waited for the permission to engage).

-Fourth: the journalists made the decision of driving a van through those dangerous streets with two kids inside.

-Fifth: the video editor zooms in on minute 16, but the shooter couldn't zoom in more than it is. And when the video zooms in there are two white circles that don't seem like children at all. Maybe just two white packages at the most.


After all, we can get this straight: If you're journalist and you're walking down those streets at war with a white flag in your hand and you get shot, that would be insane. But you are actually going with a group of armed iraqis with AK-47 and RPG's, and if it's not risky enough, you bring children to battlefield. In this case, I think US Army did right. And we're all obviating the fact that being a soldier and have to kill people is not as easy as in a videogame. They will live all their lives eaten up with that. Julian Assange said about this: "
Why do it? Well, there are two reasons. One: Because it's fun to kill people. If you've been in that environment, removed from all the effects of killing people for a long time. It's a videogame, like in high school. The other is they brag after a kill streak. About how many people they killed, and go back to base, and go 'Hey, I killed thirteen today'". All mixed up with some Adagio for the Strings.

Anyhow, I'm not excusing US army from all its behaviour. They've screwed it up many times, specially with all that cases of torture. But they cannot do whatever they want cause there are rules, and Collateral Murder shows they have to get permission before shooting and they're always following orders.
There are many people supporting what Assange is doing right now, but they do it blindly, though. First and foremost, because Julian doesn't agree with what he used to, or that's what Daniel Domscheit-Berg (previously known under the pseudonym Daniel Schmitt and effective number two in WikiLeaks) said about Julian: "If you preach transparency to everyone else, you have to be transparent yourself. You have to fulfill the same standards that you expect from others. And I think that's where we've not been heading into the same direction philosophically anymore" after quitting the project as several others as well. Just like Herbert Snorrason: "Eventually this ended with Julian and me arguing about basicaly his dictatorial behaviour which ended in Julian saying to me that if i had a problem with him, I could just piss off, I quote".

I'm not saying he's a bad man, but just not the pure angel some think he is, and like any of us has his own interests. About the rape charges against him, I think he's not guilty, simply because that was all a mess and they have to stop him whatever the cost, besides the women who accuse him haven't talked proper yet and seems all the allegations are a long way from being settled.


Anyhow, I won't download that torrent that would reveal something big in case Julian disappears. We're all knowing what's inside if it turns out he dies, just cause Internet is still free. Still.




sábado, 4 de diciembre de 2010

Obviously


¿Sherlock Holmes con Blackberry? Sí. Ésta es la arriesgada apuesta de la BBC. Un moderno Sherlock Holmes, pero si vamos a jugar a ser modernos, lo somos del todo. Porque como ya ocurrió con el Sherlock Holmes de Guy Ritchie (que a mi parecer, está más perdido que un pulpo en una higuera), no se puede vestir a alguien ni situarlo en un contexto de finales del XIX y que el personaje piense y actúe como si acabara de salir de ver Avatar en 3D.

Pero BBC lo ha vuelto a hacer. Ha consegido replantear el concepto de Sherlock e inscribirlo en el contexto actual, pero a la vez siendo lo más fiel posible al personaje original de Conan Doyle (donde las carreritas, las gilipolleces de tipo duro y las gracietas quedan fuera).