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Lord Mandelson - Battling Piracy With Lunacy

So it seems our all knowing, all seeing Government have come up with a plan to tackle piracy by putting a stop to illegal file sharing on the internet.  Spearheaded by Lord Mandelson, the plan is to employ a three strike strategy to cut off the internet connections of those sharing files over P2P networks.  Read more from The Guardian here: http://www.guardian.co.uk/technology/2009/oct/28/mandelson-date-blocking-filesharers-connections

It Won't Work!

There are several flaws in this strategy.  One being that connection monitoring can only prove that you are sharing files.  It can't prove who owns the copyright on those files or even what format those files are so if like myself you are a content creator and you share your own intellectual property, you too could find yourself facing a block and losing your internet connection.  All hope is not lost, though as you will be able to appeal should you get shut down.  The problem there being that appealing is after the effect and the whole process, administration and all will take time.  Knowing good old British administration... Lots of time...  So if your connection is used for business purposes you will lose money, your ISP will be footing the bill for your shutdown so they will lose money, internet connection prices will rise and of course the tax payer will foot the bill for the appeals process.  So that could be rather costly all round.

It Will Save Those Affected By Piracy, Won't It?

No it won't.  If the Government think that teenagers doing the modern equivalent of home taping (those were the days) think that's what's denting profits they really haven't done their research very well.  Kids sharing files with their mates wouldn't buy the media in the first place so nobody is losing money there.  If anything, this kind of activity is actually good for marketing because it increases fan base and captures an audience for other revenue streams.  For the rest of us it's so easy and cheap to buy or stream media on demand thanks to services such as iTunes & Spotify that piracy just isn't worth the hassle these days.  What's really hitting the pockets of the copyright holders is the vast business of shady DVD sales from dodgy market traders and wandering salesmen (I choose my words carefully) who don't even use the internet as their stock is mostly either imported pirate goods or the real thing but stolen from the shelves of retailers.

Of course there are those that download files, burn discs and sell them and these people should be targeted BUT these people are the ones that will fairly easily (and I could tell you how) circumvent the monitoring put in place.  Kinda makes the whole thing pointless, doesn't it?

And The Outcome?

The upshot being that those prosecuted will not be the ones causing the problem, those paying for it will be us taxpayers and those committing the real crimes will still be getting away with it.

Nice one, Mandy.  You really thought this one through...

What Can We Do About It?

Not a great deal really but if we make enough noise, maybe someone will hear us.  If you blog, blog about it.  If you use Twitter, tweet about it.  If you use Facebook, I've set up a group where we can all rant together:
http://www.facebook.com/group.php?gid=168595036435

And don't forget to sign the petition here:
http://38degrees.org.uk/page/s/mandelsonweb

It's important that we act on this ASAP as Mandy appears to really want it.  Do your bit and write to your MP:
http://www.writetothem.com/

Let's not put up with this lunacy!

Filed under  //   38degrees   Category: Politics   bittorrent   competitions   facebook   file sharing   govenment   internet   labour   lord   lunacy   mandelson   open rights group   p2p   peer to peer   peter   piracy   politics   tech   techforce   threestrikes   torrent   twitter   warez   web   westminster  

Comments [7]

Play With Pictures - Product Review

Logo

Cutting images out of their backgrounds is hard.  Really hard.  All that zooming in and gently rubbing away with the eraser.  All that messing around with feathering and transparency.  All that fiddle farting about in general.  Then getting all those images together, scaling and rotating etc. to form a collage...  What a pain in the jackson!

Forget it.  Those days are gone.  Now we have "Play With Pictures" to do all the difficult stuff for us.  It really is very, very, very, very easy to use.  So easy in fact that it warrants use of a fourth "very".

So how does it work?

Once you've got the program open and set the canvas size (this is where you'll build your collage), you need to get your source image in there to make your first cutout.  You can do this either by hitting the "cutout" button (yes it really is that simple) and selecting a file or by simply dragging and dropping from anywhere.  You can literally drag things straight from the internet.  Pretty handy if like me you store all your stuff online.

Once the image has been dropped in the program does a bit of processing to find all the edges.  The accuracy of this part is somewhat dependent on the quality of the source image but it is more forgiving than you might expect.  This will leave you with a kind of jigsaw puzzle of image pieces.  You should be able to work out from this which bits you need to keep and which you need to lose.  Just highlight over the bits you don't want and they will be gone.  Don't worry too much about any rough edges or discrepancies there are manual erase and restore tools to sort out all that stuff.  When you're happy with your cutout, just hit the "add" button and it then added to your collage.

Moving, scaling and rotation are literally taken care of by dragging the image around in a logical manner.  Trust me when I say "it's obvious" because it really is.  It seems that "obvious" is a recurring theme in this application.

So what else do you get?

On top of that there are some basic post process tools like duplication, tinting (for matching skin tones and lighting etc.) and transparency just to make things fit a little better.

That's about as complicated as it gets really.

As an added bonus the guys behind the app are building a strong community on Facebook and Flickr enabling users to share tips and of course inspiration.  In case you don't find it easy there's a load of great tutorials on the website to help ease you in.

Now if that wasn't enough already...  They do competitions too!  Prizes thus far include things like cameras, iPods and digital photo frames.  You can find more info about them on the "Play With Pictures" blog.

Can I try it before I buy it?

Of course you can.  You can download a fully functional, time limited trial version from their website.

So what's missing?

One thing I feel is missing is Flickr integration.  As there's a Flickr group and it links to the community from within the app, it would be nice if you could download and upload directly from the application.  I'd also like to see a simple "blur" control to enable some basic depth of field matching for images in the collage.

I'd also like to see some basic deformations like skew & perspective in collage mode just to add a little more realism.

The all important verdict

I like it...  A lot.  It's so quick and easy, how could I not?  Within seconds I was cutting stuff out like a pro (well, nearly).  The price point is good for software of this nature too but I would advise that the developers extend that trial period a bit.  Although 15 days probably is long enough, the going rate is 30 days meaning theirs is sub par.

I say it's definitely worth a download and play even if you're not massively into "this kind of thing".  If you are into this kind of thing, just go and buy it.  Under £40 for a decent image tool...  How often does that happen?

The cold hard facts:

Website: http://www.playwithpictures.com/
Blog: http://blog.playwithpictures.com/
Twitter: @playwithpics
Price: £39.95 (inc VAT @ 19%)
Trial time limit: 15 days
Platform: Mac OS X / PC Win 32

Filed under  //   competitions   cutout   facebook   flickr   image   mac   os x   pc   play with pictures   review   software   techforce   windows  

Comments [1]