Lloyd Dunn on Thu, 30 Sep 1999 19:10:05 +0200 (CEST) |
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<nettime> GRAYDAY PARODY WEB SITE LAMBASTS COPYRIGHT ISSUE |
-------- Original Message -------- Subject: [rumori] GRAY DAY Date: Wed, 29 Sep 1999 14:54:45 +0000 ( ) From: Steev <steev@detritus.net> To: rumori@detritus.net GRAYDAY PARODY WEB SITE LAMBASTS COPYRIGHT ISSUES; A CALL TO DEFEND THE INTERNET 9/29/1999 DATELINE--Silicon Valley, Calif. On October 1, an organization called the Digital Divas hopes to celebrate the second annual GreyDay, an event promoting increased copyright security on the Internet. Touting their omnious "grayed-out" web site, the Digital Divas expect a greater turnout than last year's pro-copyright event which received hundreds of thousands of visits and earned coverage from the New York Times, Wired News and the Village Voice. Not everyone on the Web, however, will be at the right event. Earlier this week, a team of Silicon Valley software programmers and graphic designers revealed their own send-up of the official GreyDay page: www.grayday.org. The disgruntled code warriors are calling their alternative "GrayDay" and have painstakingly created a counterfeit version of the original GreyDay site. But whereas GreyDay.org urges "netizens to imagine "what if" copyright infringement leads to a lack of creativity on the Web, the spoof site GrayDay.org implores visitors to imagine "what if there was no WWW... no Internet." According to the authors of GrayDay, the call for more copyright laws to cover the Internet is antithetical to the very purpose and history of the Internet and the Web. "The Web has made possible by the free exchange of not just ideas but elaborate creations like the first Web browser [Mosaic] or the most popular Web server software [Apache]," says Cecil Parc, a spokesperson for the creators of GrayDay.org. "It's ironic," adds Parc, "that the minority of graphic designers and major corporations who are now trying to take over the Web with absurd copyright demands are acting like greedy Johny-Come-Lately'strying to forcibly get a slice of a pie that's been free for years." Although the half-dozen computer types behind GrayDay.org call themselves "Tell-all Computer Programmers & Internet Professionals" or "TCP/IP" for short, they will not reveal their real names because they claim to "represent the millions of people on Earth who have benefited and will continue to benefit from the free exchange of ideas which is the hallmark of the Internet." For industry insiders, even their name is a geeky rebuke to heightened copyright sensitivity as TCP/IP also stands for the "Transmission Control Protocol and Internet Protocol", a complicated piece of code at the heart of the Internet which was literally given away, without copyright, in 1981 by programmers at the U.S. government's Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency. GrayDay.org's organizers hope that their elaborate hoax will encourage people who enjoy or rely upon the Web to learn more about the "non-copyrighted" history of the medium. They also encourage the public to take an active role in protecting the Internet and the World Wide Web -- "neither of which would exist today," the group points out, "if they had been developed by persons who were fixated by copyrights." ---------------------------------------------------- Rumori, the Detritus.net Discussion List to unsubscribe, send mail to majordomo@detritus.net with "unsubscribe rumori" in the message body. ---------------------------------------------------- Rumori list archives & other information are at http://detritus.net/contact/rumori ---------------------------------------------------- # distributed via <nettime>: no commercial use without permission # <nettime> is a moderated mailing list for net criticism, # collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets # more info: majordomo@bbs.thing.net and "info nettime-l" in the msg body # archive: http://www.nettime.org contact: nettime@bbs.thing.net