Forwarded from NoGoolag
https://www.vice.com/en_us/article/akzeb5/this-senator-is-seemingly-obsessed-with-threatening-the-internet-archive
#InternetArchive
In the wake of a raging pandemic, the Internet Archive has been working overtime to preserve internet history and expand the public’s access to digital library collections. That recently culminated in the creation of a National Emergency Library that made 1.4 million ebooks available to the public at a time when traditional libraries pose a health risk.
Increasingly, the organization’s reward has been a parade of headaches. Both from the entertainment industry and their loyal allies in Congress.
Last week, the archive’s emergency library was forced to dramatically scale back the effort thanks to a publisher lawsuit and political pressure from politicians like North Carolina Senator Thom Tillis, who accused the organization of violating the country’s often draconian—and frequently ridiculous—copyright laws.
Now Tillis is taking aim at another Internet Archive effort, the Great 78 Project.
The Great 78 Project is a communal effort geared towards the preservation, research and discovery of the 3 million 78rpm discs produced between 1898 and 1950. Often made from far more fragile shellac than the resin commonly used today, many of these recordings are fragile, and the digitization effort has created a historical archive of some amazing work.
#InternetArchive
In the wake of a raging pandemic, the Internet Archive has been working overtime to preserve internet history and expand the public’s access to digital library collections. That recently culminated in the creation of a National Emergency Library that made 1.4 million ebooks available to the public at a time when traditional libraries pose a health risk.
Increasingly, the organization’s reward has been a parade of headaches. Both from the entertainment industry and their loyal allies in Congress.
Last week, the archive’s emergency library was forced to dramatically scale back the effort thanks to a publisher lawsuit and political pressure from politicians like North Carolina Senator Thom Tillis, who accused the organization of violating the country’s often draconian—and frequently ridiculous—copyright laws.
Now Tillis is taking aim at another Internet Archive effort, the Great 78 Project.
The Great 78 Project is a communal effort geared towards the preservation, research and discovery of the 3 million 78rpm discs produced between 1898 and 1950. Often made from far more fragile shellac than the resin commonly used today, many of these recordings are fragile, and the digitization effort has created a historical archive of some amazing work.
Vice
This Senator Is Seemingly Obsessed With Threatening the Internet Archive
While the country deals with a pandemic and mass protests, Sen. Thom Tillis has repeatedly sent letters to the Internet Archive that warn its projects may be illegal.
Being anti-copyright is one of the positions I hold very dearly. It's anti-art and anti-progress, all to put money into the hands of the distributors, not even the creators.
Forwarded from The Black Lives Revolution (BLM)
The Appeal
U.N. to Hold Debate On U.S. Police Violence
After families of people killed by police asked the organization to investigate racist American policing, 54 African nations called for a debate on the treatment of Black Americans. The debate will happen today.
Forwarded from Syndiegram (FiberSinthe says Black Lives Matter)
Today is Juneteenth, a holiday that commemorates the emancipation of the last (non-penal) slaves in the United States.
Unfortunately, we've fallen far since the civil war. Private ownership of slaves exists in the United States, once again, today. Anyone with sufficient money and connections can privately operate a prison, giving them unadulterated access to the labor of whichever prisoners they house inside.
Private prisons contain around 9% of the prison population of the united states. When you do the math, that's over 190,000 privately owned slaves in the united states.
That said, this also means that the other 91% of slaves are ""publicly owned"", providing free labor for state and municipal governments. For those keeping track at home, that's around 1.8 million people held as slaves.
We can, should, and must abolish policing and prisons.
We must revoke the loophole in the 13th amendment that allows slavery as punishment for a crime. We must disband existing prisons, which operate essentially as slave concentration camps. We must disband police entirely, and compose a new system that values justice over white supremacy. And we should have done all this a long fucking time ago.
Happy Juneteenth. Let's get it done. All power to all the people.
Unfortunately, we've fallen far since the civil war. Private ownership of slaves exists in the United States, once again, today. Anyone with sufficient money and connections can privately operate a prison, giving them unadulterated access to the labor of whichever prisoners they house inside.
Private prisons contain around 9% of the prison population of the united states. When you do the math, that's over 190,000 privately owned slaves in the united states.
That said, this also means that the other 91% of slaves are ""publicly owned"", providing free labor for state and municipal governments. For those keeping track at home, that's around 1.8 million people held as slaves.
We can, should, and must abolish policing and prisons.
We must revoke the loophole in the 13th amendment that allows slavery as punishment for a crime. We must disband existing prisons, which operate essentially as slave concentration camps. We must disband police entirely, and compose a new system that values justice over white supremacy. And we should have done all this a long fucking time ago.
Happy Juneteenth. Let's get it done. All power to all the people.
Forwarded from /r/latestagecapitalism