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More Movie Poster Photoshopping Craziness

May 7th, 2007 | 1 Comment | Posted in Movies

One of the most popular posts I’ve ever done is this one, noticing the changes in clothing for Jessica Alba’s character in the first Fantastic Four movie between the movie and the poster, as well as the increasing of Keira Knightley’s cup size on the movie poster for King Arthur. I’ll leave it as an exercise for the reader on why that was such a popular post but I’ve got a new one for you, and it’s a doozy.

The very cool site PosterWire has a comparison between 2 versions of the poster for the new Harry Potter movie. In one, Emma Watson has a noticeably different shaped torso than the other. The thing with this is, Emma Watson is 17 years old. It doesn’t shock me that the poster designers do this to adult female stars. It’s lame, but I’m past being shocked by it. But to do it to a 17 year old girl is just disgusting. From reading the comments at Reddit (I’m not linking directly to the page on Reddit to spare you the pre-adolescent nerdboy “discussion”), I gather this is being labeled a mistake but Photoshop didn’t mess with this girl’s physique on it’s own. Somebody did it, and the fact that it got used, even accidentally, probably doesn’t mean that the artist did it without approval. The further problem with this stuff is that nobody is going to complain. Emma Watson and her parents probably can’t complain for fear of hurting her career. Even if people get up in arms over it, the promo company will just say it was a mistake and move on to the next adult actress’s poster. And nobody is going to skip the Harry Potter movie so nobody will take even a second to think about it and how sick it is.

New Digital Rights Protests, Just Like The Old Ones

May 2nd, 2007 | No Comments | Posted in Business, Geekery, Movies

Digg on HDDVD “key” posts

Recently one of the keys that is used to encrypt the new high-def DVD discs was found and released online. Using this key you can decrypt the movie and put it on a computer or otherwise get around the idiotic restrictions the movie companies have put on the discs. This is obviously troubling to the movie companies since the HD encryption schemes were said to be “un-hackable”. hahaha.

So this key has been floating around and the movie companies have started issuing what are called “DMCA notices” to websites printing the key. These notices are the result of a law, the DMCA, that says you can’t get around restrictions on copyrighted stuff. This is a horrible law and has been used in even more horrible ways to restrict many people from doing various projects, giving speeches, etc. The notice says you have to take down the offending material and the website Digg had been fighting its users all day about them trying to post the key on the site. Finally, Digg relented and has stopped fighting its users and will not comply with the DMCA notices in this case. Good on them I say.

But what interests me about this is how similar it is to the situation a few years ago around the DVD key that was released which allowed the creation of applications to read regular DVDs, again to the chagrin of the movie industry. That also involved a released key, basically just a series of numbers, and attempts to take down the number. However, that was before the DMCA. Before the industry had a real legal tool to use to try to get people to remove this number from their website. In the DVD case, they tried and failed to use the standard copyright infringement against people, which didn’t work and which backfired just as in this case as people who would have never heard or cared about the key heard about the controversy. Now that the movie industry has the DMCA though, they could have actually stopped this information from being released. That’s the danger of the DMCA, it is a tool used solely to information from flowing. Has the key been found by an academic who set out to “release” it in a paper or a presentation, they could have been stopped. People like to think that information is always going to be replicated infinitely out on the net but with laws like the DMCA, the information can be stopped before it even reaches the net.

Also, with the previous DVD key release, the geek community rallied behind the release of the key. Tshirts were made with the key numbers on them, people even got tattoos of the key. Now though, the DMCA forces sites like Digg to fight its own users on this stuff. It’s not like the guys at Digg were itching to rile up their users or delete stuff from their site. They had to, under the law. Even if the notices end up being bogus (as some people are saying since the key is really just a number), Digg had to remove it.

The DMCA is a gift to big media companies and serves no one but them. It stops innovation, silences speech, holds back progress, and much more. This incident should serve as yet another example of why the DMCA needs to be repealed. I hope that the big blowup about this with Digg and the many other sites involved leads to real change. Eventually the DVD key issue went away and a great many new projects and applications sprung up around DVDs. The industry will surely fight for their “right” to stop people from knowing this key so they can try to control HD-DVDs a little longer but just like with DVDs, they’ll fail in spite of the new legal club they have to bludgeon people with.

Here’s a good article on the DMCA notices

Spam and (Un)Popularity

May 2nd, 2007 | No Comments | Posted in Geekery, Personal

I just implemented a new whitelist system for my email that has pretty much eliminated all the spam I was getting into my Inbox and I’ve discovered a weird side-effect. I’m a lot less popular than I once was. I used to keep my home webmail open all the time and every time I’d flip over to that tab in Firefox I’d have a bunch of email to go through. Now that I’ve gotten this whitelist going and only email I specifically allow into my Inbox gets in there, I get a lot less real email than I thought I was getting. Now I can not check my home email but 2 or 3 times a day. The fact that I was seeing tons of email in my Inbox fooled me into thinking I was getting  a bunch of real email. Strange but very useful.

It’ll be a geeky post but soon I’ll go over my whitelist setup. It’s not something most people will be able to setup but it’s turned out very well so I want to share it. If you have Postfix with Sieve email filtering going this is a good compromise between getting a million spams and losing real email to a spam filter. Stay tuned for more details and some Perl code. Admit it, you can’t wait!

On Atheism

May 1st, 2007 | No Comments | Posted in Personal, Religion

A quote by George Santayana, “My atheism, like that of Spinoza, is true piety toward the universe and denies only gods fashioned by men in their own image, to be servants of their human interests.”

From this article on a PBS series on atheism.
I’ve always liked what Frank Lloyd Wright said when asked about his personal religious belief: “I put a capital N on Nature and call that my church.”

I love how the people in the article speaking out against this series and atheism argue that this is anti-Christian and shouldn’t be allowed based on that. Just showing an alternative to religion doesn’t say anything one way or the other about religion. The idea that you can’t show or learn about something because it might offend people who don’t believe it is just stupid. And as I always think, if your religion is so weak that you have to be afraid of people learning about an alternative, you need to reexamine your faith.