:: NEWS COCKTAIL aka BlahBlahBlog ::

"Everything is being compressed into tiny tablets. You take a little pill of news every day - 23 minutes - and that's supposed to be enough." -Walter Cronkite, RE TV news. The Web has changed that for many, however, and here is an extra dose for your daily news cocktail. This prescription tends to include surveillance and now war-related links, along with the occasional pop culture junk and whatever else seizes my attention as I scan online news sites.
:: welcome to NEWS COCKTAIL aka BlahBlahBlog :: home | me ::
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[::..archive..::]
[::..What's all this then?..::]
"News is the first rough draft of history." -Philip L. Graham
[::..news to me..::]
:: google news [>]
:: wired news [>]
:: it news [>]
:: more it news [>]
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:: the news [>]
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:: buffy [>]
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:: places for writers [>]
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:: runwithscissors [>]
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:: this girl thinks [>]
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:: dania's dailies [>]
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:: the world ends @ 9, pictures @ 11 [>]
:: notes from the overground [>]
:: the end of free [>]
:: started the same day as this [>]
[::..other things..::]
:: myelin: blogging ecosystem [>]
:: alternative tentacles [>]
:: are we having fun yet? [>]
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:: the postcard project [>]
:: found magazine [>]
:: chuck palahniuk [>]
:: bill hicks! [>]
:: chomsky archive [>]
:: association of alternative newsweeklies [>]
:: the nation [>]
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:: the smirking chimp [>]
:: plastic - recycling the web in real time [>]
:: open secrets [>]
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:: beautify your lunch - eat an artist [>]
:: bartleby [>]
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:: imdb [>]
:: rotten tomatoes [>]
:: aboutcultfilm.com [>]
[::..random..::]
"Spending an evening on the World Wide Web is much like sitting down to a dinner of Cheetos, two hours later your fingers are yellow and you're no longer hungry, but you haven't been nourished." - Clifford Stoll

:: 6.26.2007 ::

:: "Day of Silence" ::

Internet Radio Goes Dark
From The Washington Post
By Marc Fisher

If you listen to music, news or other programming via the Internet, you're likely to find a soundstream of silence today. The Day of Silence is a one-day protest being staged by big corporate web radio outlets, innovative smaller companies that are trying to invent a new kind of showcase for recorded music, and individuals who've been flexing their creative muscles by starting up their own web radio stations.

The idea is to focus attention on a startlingly sharp increase--in many cases, more than double the current rates-- in the royalty payments that the Librarian of Congress and the Copyright Royalty Board have decided web radio stations must pay to artists and record labels for the right to play their tunes.

Webcasters from big music providers such as Yahoo and Rhapsody.com to webradio pioneers Pandora.com and Live365 to local broadcast radio stations that have found new audiences on the web--eclectic kcrw.com from southern California, acoustic WXPN in Philadelphia, or bluegrass and alternative rock on Washington's WAMU.org are all rolling down the aural shutters for the day.

Why should you care? In many cases, the new royalty rates will exceed the total annual revenue of the web stations. That means, obviously, that those stations would cease to exist when the new rates kick in on July 15. And pandora.com, which creates a unique radio station for every one of its many thousands of visitors (the service uses a recommendation engine to select music based on your existing preferences), would face the prospect of having to pay separate royalties for each of its customers--an immediate death knell. All protest-related hype aside, thousands of web stations would vanish virtually overnight.

Why is the government doing this? Largely because the recording industry wants to stuff the genie back in the bottle and roll back the extraordinary blossoming of music programming available on the web.


Read more here.

A L S O

Internet Radio Will go Silent on June 26
Slashdot

posted by me

:: 10:56:00 AM [+] ::
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