Music Industry to Abandon Mass Suits

December 19th, 2008

News from the Wall Street Journal

via the indie-pop list

Music Industry to Abandon Mass Suits
By SARAH MCBRIDE and ETHAN SMITH
Wall Street Journal

After years of suing thousands of people for allegedly stealing music via the
Internet, the recording industry is set to drop its legal assault as it
searches for more effective ways to combat online music piracy.

The decision represents an abrupt shift of strategy for the industry, which has
opened legal proceedings against about 35,000 people since 2003. Critics say
the legal offensive ultimately did little to stem the tide of illegally
downloaded music. And it created a public-relations disaster for the industry,
whose lawsuits targeted, among others, several single mothers, a dead person
and a 13-year-old girl.

Instead, the Recording Industry Association of America said it plans to try an
approach that relies on the cooperation of Internet-service providers.

—————————————–

The complete article may be read at the URL above.

Minister Vernon Coaker apologises for misleading MPs over police injuries at Climate Camp

December 17th, 2008

I know some people hate cut-and-paste news blogs, but I just wanted to make sure at least a couple of people know about this. My personal feeling is that MPs should be holding police to account on behalf of their constituents, not being the police’s apologists.

Via email:

Via The Guardian:

http://www.guardian.co.uk/politics/2008/dec/15/greenpolitics-police

*Minister Vernon Coaker apologises for misleading MPs over police injuries

*Home Office minister says sorry to parliament after Guardian reveals most police injuries from climate protest were from insects or heat

A minister has apologised to parliament for telling MPs that 70 police officers were hurt during a climate change protest after the Guardian revealed that most of the injuries were inflicted by insects or the heat.

Vernon Coaker, the Home Office minister, told MPs at Commons question time today: “I was informed that 70 police officers were hurt and naturally assumed that they had been hurt in direct contact as a result of the protest. That clearly wasn’t the case and I apologise if that caused anybody to be misled.”

The apology followed a Freedom of Information request from the Liberal Democrats, which showed that no officers in the £5.9m police operation at Kingsnorth power station in Kent during August had been injured by protesters. Instead, police records showed that their medical unit had dealt mostly with toothache, diarrhoea, cut fingers and “possible bee stings”.

David Howarth, the Lib Dems’ justice spokesman, asked Coaker to “revise his conclusion” that the policing was “proportionate and appropriate”.

“Large numbers of protesters were injured at the hands of the police, especially by baton injuries,” he said.

Coaker said that he would be meeting with representatives of the Association of Chief Police Officers to discuss the “lessons to be learned” from Kingsnorth and that the National Police Improvement Agency was carrying out an inquiry into the handling of the demonstration.

Labour’s David Taylor said: “When people expressed concerns about the vigour and resources devoted by the police to the Kingsnorth climate camp we were told that it was justified because there were dozens of injuries that occurred. Unless the protesters are to be held responsible for wasps and the weather, aren’t we to conclude that the justification used at that time was wholly bogus and vacuous?”

===================================

http://www.guardian.co.uk/environment/2008/dec/15/kingsnorth-climate-change-environment-police

*Those Kingsnorth police injuries in full: six insect bites and a toothache

*• Kent force admits no officers hurt by protests
• £5.9m police operation ‘colossal waste of money’

John Vidal, environment editor
The Guardian, Monday 15 December 2008

When climate camp protesters descended on the site of the Kingsnorth power station for a week-long summer demonstration, the scale of the police operation to cope with them was enormous.

Police were accused of using aggressive tactics, confiscating everything from toilet rolls and board games to generators and hammers. But ministers justified what they called the “proportionate” £5.9m cost of the operation, pointing out that 70 officers had been injured in the course of their duties.

But data obtained under the Freedom of Information Act puts a rather different slant on the nature of those injuries, disclosing that not one was sustained in clashes with demonstrators.

Papers acquired by the Liberal Democrats via Freedom of Information requests show that the 1,500 officers policing the Kingsnorth climate camp near the Medway estuary in Kent, suffered only 12 reportable injuries during the protest during August.

The Home Office has now admitted that the protesters had not been responsible for any injuries. In a three-line written answer to a
parliamentary question, the Home Office minister Vernon Coaker wrote to the Lib Dem justice spokesman, David Howarth, saying: “Kent police have informed the Home Office that there were no recorded injuries sustained as a result of direct contact with the protesters.”

Only four of the 12 reportable injuries involved any contact with protesters at all and all were at the lowest level of seriousness with no further action taken.

The other injuries reported included “stung on finger by possible wasp”; “officer injured sitting in car”; and “officer succumbed to sun and heat”. One officer cut his arm on a fence when climbing over it, another cut his finger while mending a car, and one “used leg to open door and next day had pain in lower back”.

A separate breakdown of the 33 patients treated by the police tactical medicine unit at the climate camp shows that three officers had succumbed to heat exhaustion, three had toothache, six were bitten by insects, and others had diarrhoea, had cut their finger or had headaches.

Coaker claimed in a parliamentary debate in September that the police had acted “appropriately and proportionately”, despite hundreds of complaints over unnecessarily heavy policing and calls for an investigation of police conduct by MPs, MEPs, councillors and members of the public.

Norman Baker, the Lib Dem MP for Lewes, who had called previously for an investigation of police tactics, said: “I personally witnessed unnecessarily aggressive policing, unprovoked violence against peaceful protesters, an extraordinary number of police on site, and tactics such as confiscating toilet rolls, board games and clown costumes from what I saw to be peaceful demonstrators.”

The list of items deemed potentially dangerous by police and seized from protesters included glue, marker pens, board games, cushions, carpet, wood, paint, and scissors as well as bicycle locks which could have been used to lock protesters to fences. Police also seized anything that could have been used to set up camp, including spades and duct tape, generators and hammers and nails.

Howarth said: “That the minister could defend as ‘proportionate’ a £5.9m policing operation in which there was not a single injury to police officers caused by the protesters beggars belief. The threat posed by environmental direct action is being systematically overblown by both the government and the police.

“I hope the government and the police will now stop trying to portray peaceful protesters as somehow equivalent to terrorists or violent extremists. In light of this new evidence, one has to ask, were climate campers so heavily policed because they posed any genuine threat of violence, or because they posed a challenge to government policy?”

Nick Thorpe, a spokesman for the climate camp, said: “Policing of peaceful protest has become increasingly heavy-handed. We saw thousands of officers swarming around a legal camp in a colossal waste of public money. The police and the government claimed there was a ‘violent minority’ of protesters but this Home Office admission reveals this as a complete fiction.”

Plane Stupid and Non-Violent Direct Action

December 16th, 2008

I’m quite pleased with this email I sent to the Green Party (of England and Wales) email list and it some good responses, here it is again, edited slightly for grammar and style and with names removed.

[When discussing the legitimacy of Direct Action] I’m not even sure the violence or non-violence is at issue. Whether you agree with any type of direct action is a personal issue. As a party, however, [The Green Party of England and Wales' position is this]:

3. OBJECTS AND AIMS
The object shall be to promote the aims of The Green Party, which are:
a) to develop and implement ecological policies consistent with the
Philosophical Basis of the Party as expressed in the Manifesto for a
Sustainable Society;
b) to that end to win seats at all levels of government;
c) to organise any non-violent activity which will publicise and further the
first two aims.

Did the Stansted protest further those two aims? I would say, absolutely not. And it has the potential to hinder them. However it wasn’t [the Green Party] (as far as I’m aware) that were involved with the Stansted protest. Plane Stupid’s aims will be to reduce the impact of Human behaviour on Global Warming and in particular to limit human fossil-fuel-powered air travel. Did this action further those aims? I would say not. Although it did publicise them, that publicity seemed, to me, to be hugely negative.

[At least one person compared] the Climate march on the 6th December with this direct action at Stansted. Perhaps marches are not as effective [as Direct Action]. It’s a different question. But it would have been very embarrassing if it had been publicised and no one showed up… On the other hand, of course the Stansted protest got coverage. Overwhelmingly negative. The protestors came across as smug, self-indulgent, and middle-class/out-of-touch, and so will [the Green Party] if we commit to supporting (plainly) stupid and counter-productive actions simply because we support NVDA across the board for any cause we agree with. If we penalise the people we want to vote for us, they will not vote for us, and they will not support our aims. We need direct action on corporate and government bodies that promote run-away (and run-way) expansion for the aviation industry. And we need to deal with voters on a human level. When rail is drastically over-priced and air travel drastically under-priced, people as a whole do not have freedom of choice.

Lifestyle-wise, [many Green Party members constitute] a minority of a minority. We can’t expect people to suddenly convert to a lifestyle of austerity. I doubt if the majority of [Green Party members] do… We need to get people to do small things that have zero impact on their day-to-day and larger things that have a small impact. We need travel to be subsidised where it is better for the environment, and re-priced where the true cost is not reflected in the price. We can’t force people to go along with our vision, though. And we don’t want to be seen as kill-joys or fascists.

Because we’re not.

And we don’t have to be.

Ok, I will do it! For Cash!

December 13th, 2008

The Arthur’s Seat thing.

But I will blog about it here: http://www.gordonhodgson.co.uk/blog/

okthankyougoodbye

My Stupid Challenge

December 12th, 2008

Living in Edinburgh and having not taken enough advantage of the nice tiny mountains we have right in (near) the middle of the city, I thought it might be nice to spend a month hiking (walking) up Arthur’s Seat every day. Also, it’s not that difficult, but it is enough to cause a sweat and get the breath rate up (because I’m unfit) and theoretically it’s something I could do before work (I will pack deodorant in my bag).

December’s almost over and there are holidays coming up, so if I’m going to have a month-long challenge, I might as well start on January 1st and pretend it’s like a New Years resolution I only have to keep to for a month. I’m going to make it 31 hikes in 31 days, as there may be times where, for whatever reason, I can’t do it in the daylight for, so I’ll just have to make up for it by climbing twice on another day (I’ll try to keep to 7 a week, so there’s no massive backlog, but maybe no more than two a day just to make sure I have to have some horrible rainy times…). Does anyone think this is worthy of a charity sponsorship appeal? I don’t want to be presumptuous.

Anyway, this started when I went up yesterday on a whim, and today I went up and timed myself to see how well I could fit it into my daily schedule. The way I see it, it’s a nice wake-up, it’s like a free gym, and without all the embarrassment.

Today I was also working out which routes would be the quickest and least dangerous. I ended up going down a really stupid way and to avoid death from falling down a (small) mountain, I ended up re-enacting that bit in controversial Disney favourite Song of The South where Br’er Rabbit gets thrown in the Briar Patch. Except I don’t have Br’er Rabbit’s mad-spike-avoiding-skills and ended up getting spiked by scary Scottish plant-life a fair few times.

Anyway, here was how long it all took me:

Left for Arthur’s Seat
10:41

Arrived at Roundabout Near Base of Arthur’s Seat
11:10

Arrived at Main Base of Arthur’s Seat
11:12

Arrived at Base of Rocky Top of Arthur’s Seat
11:25

Arrived at Top of Arthur’s Seat
11:27

Heading Down
11:32

Back to the Base
11:48

Back to the Roundabout
11:52

At the top I took a picture of the triangulation pillar, with today’s news on my BlackBerry. It didn’t really work. I’ll come up with some better idea later, but here it is anyway for fans of blurry BlackBerry photos:

Arthur's Seat, 12th December 2008

If I was to go for charity-sponsorship it wouldn’t be for the physical skill or hardship involved (except that I’m totally unfit, but will hopefully be a bit fitter by the end), but for the discipline to get up early every day before work, and just to make me feel guilty enough to continue to do it. Oh and for the charity.

What do people think of Chest, Heart and Stroke Scotland? My grandmother used to do a lot of volunteering for the Heart and Stroke Foundation in Canada (amongst many other things), so it’s a bit of a sentimental link.

GreenFeedWiki

October 22nd, 2008

I’ve put up a Green Party wiki where open information on the party can be shared.

It can hold more philosophical discussions/FAQs/committee lists than wikipedia and the various GP websites are designed to hold.

At the moment it’s sort of an experiment to see how it goes.

Jim Jepps tells me that things like constitutions and policy statements should be fine up there, and expressed (and I agree) that it’s good to have resources that unite our sibling parties in the UK and elsewhere, so hopefully this resource would be useful.

My idea is that the page would be useful for Scottish, Welsh and English Green Parties (and NI too if they wanted). There’s no rules on that sort of thing, though but I supposed it’ll be mostly UK parties.

It could be nice to have summaries of party roles (e.g. GPEX and other national committees) and personality pages (frowned on on wikipedia as their subjects are often not globally notable).

The information is for the public and activists, and no pages are private, the only limitation I’ve made is to ban anonymous editing.

GreenFeedWiki

Caroline Lucas elected as First Leader of the Green Party.

September 5th, 2008

(thanks to Jason Kitcat)

Turnout was reportedly approximately 38% (info thanks to Rupert Read)

Only just got the news from Twitter, but I’m excited, and glad this is all over now… Will update with more stats as they come in…

Update 1: More twitters result for Caroline approximately 2550 votes to 210 (info thanks to Douglas Johnson)
This is approximately 92% but doesn’t take into account RON votes, as far as I can tell.

Update 2:

On a turnout of 37.9% (up from 20% for the principal speaker posts last year) of the 7,565 members I can announced that the results are as follows;

For leader;

Caroline Lucas 2,559
Ashley Gunstock 210

And for deputy;

Adrian Ramsay 2,785

(info thanks to Green Despatches)

My views on the Israeli boycott

September 4th, 2008

As originally posted to Greens Against The Boycott: here.

I include the image discussed and featured on the blog-post advertising the Green Left Fringe: Anti-Zionism: A Jewish Perspective

The reason that cartoon particularly caught my eye was that it reminded me of the British elections (1997?) where BNP members wore labels over their mouths complaining of being silenced by the State/media. The idea being, I suppose that this implied there was some sort of dangerous truth being censored, and to demonise the censorers, which was somehow supposed to increase the truth/value of the message…

In this case the image is even more of a straw man, and it’s simplistic and obvious.

The implication of the cartoon is that because some criticism of Israel is not antisemitic, that it’s oppressive/idiotic to imply that any is.

The content of the fringe is also troubling. I find the idea that a Jewish person gets put up as pro-boycott both racist and childish. Surely it’s obvious that individual people of all religions support every possible political stand, it’s racist to imply that it’s amazing that some Jews are capable overcoming their own personal problems in order to empathise with Palestinians, and it’s childish to be amazed by this?

This is not to say that I don’t think there are strong parallels between the Israeli situation and South African apartheid, or that people should be free to choose to boycott for personal reasons, or that all the anti-boycott arguments were in the most diplomatic way. But the arguments have to stand on their own, and the anti-boycott argument I’ve seen has been the most level-headed and rational one (sometimes).

Furthermore, it borders on disingenuous to imply that there is no racism involved (along a spectrum of possibly unintentional racism of showing off ‘the good Jew’ to sharing a platform with or supporting radical islamic groups who believe in the ‘Protocols of the Elders of Zion’). Some of us on the left previously have complained about the artists formerly known as ‘Respect’ pandering to homophobic Islamic groups, but somehow it’s less of a problem with Jewish people.

If I can support some of those aims of those Palestinian organisations and understand the desperation that motivates people to commit suicide bombings (without agreeing with their anti-Semitism), I can understand the same need for survival felt by the people of the state of Israel (and their way of dealing with the threat with an organised military) without making generalisations about the inhabitants. Because of course there are racists and sociopaths on both sides.

I imagine most of the difficulty lies with the problem of Israel being an intersection of race, religion, nation and (heavily armed) state which make the situation very complicated, indeed.

Thanks Raphael for helping to crystallise my views.

Oh, sweet catharsis.

Footnote (from the ‘Greens Against The Boycott’ post above):

The cartoonist is Carlos Latuff, runner-up of the revolting Iranian Holocaust Cartoon Competition in 2006 (Ahmedinejad kicking the cat – his idea of payback for the Danish publication of Mohammed cartoons in 2006).

Canada gains first Green MP! Left-Wing Hackers Break into Neo-Nazi Server!

September 1st, 2008

I’m way out of touch with Canadian politics, but am happy to see Canada has got a Green MP which should (amongst other things) allow the Green Party into election debates (the elections are likely to be called next week).

He was previously an independent (Parliament is in recess) but will not be challenged by the Liberal party (I’m not at all acquainted with the vagaries of Canadian Electoral convention, so don’t know if you need to have more than one MP to count as a party, or whatnot) so it will be interesting to see if he is returned in the next General Election (likely to be in October).

More from the CBC.

Thanks to Noel at The Green Room

And in other news:

Blood and Honour board hacked, and made available for all to download. News and downloads: here.

Left-Wing Hackers Break into Neo-Nazi Server

Left-wing computer hackers have reportedly broken into the secure server of one of the world’s largest neo-Nazi groups, copying more than 30,000 pieces of data.

Members of the anti-fascist left-wing group Daten-Antifa on Friday, Aug. 29, managed to break the access codes and enter the databank of Blood and Honour (B&H), a neo-Nazi organization that has been banned in Germany since 2000.

“Now some people in the far-right extremist scene are going to get very nervous, including activists from the NPD (Germany’s far-right National Democratic Party),” Guenther Hoffmann from the Center for Democratic Culture told the Frankfurter Rundschau on Saturday.

According to Daten-Antifa, 31,948 pieces of data were collected clandestinely from the B&H server, including 500 from Germany. This indicated that the international network is also used by members of the German neo-Nazi scene, which authorities had previously suspected.

Which is creepier?

August 29th, 2008

Democrats For McCain (see also Party Unity My A..)

or

Republicans for Obama

And are they both front groups?

Don’t ask me, I get my news from The Daily Show (who are covering both conventions and have full episodes available on their site)