MESSAGE
DATE | 2015-11-09 |
FROM | Rick Moen
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SUBJECT | Re: [Hangout-NYLXS] ransomware - attacking apache
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Oh, just an afterthought on that: I was intending to simply delete and ignore your excuse of 'it might vanish off the Web in two weeks', but a couple of things about that rankled and, like most techies, I tend to take it personally when people try to feed me _blatantly_ bad justificaitons.
1. The 'it might vanish off the Web in two weeks' thing is not particularly credible on a strict basis of ephiphenomena: (a) News-story pages are highly unlikely to be absent from _both_ the original site and from obvious caching locations such as Google cache and Internet archive, unless (b) It's a site that specifically discourages caching because it _wants_ the content to vanish after a time. An example of point b would be _Los Angeles Times_ stories, which become subscriber-only after a few weeks by corporate policy. (You do not happen to link to _LA Times_ articles, in my experience.
Case b examples are quite rare. In practically all cases, obvious cache copies can be consulted.
2. There's a vital pair of words that apply to works published elsewhere including ones that vanish in a few weeks from the Web in accordance with the owner's policies: Not Yours.
My sister Michele refused to comprehend the concept of Not Yours throughout the last five years of our mother's life, when Michele and her brood moved into Mom's house to live off her for free and refused to move out when Mom demanded they do so. Every time Mom sought to give things away to people including me, knowing she wouldn't live much longer, Michele would throw screaming fits and act as if my mother had no right to give away Mom's own belongings. (No, Michele is not 13. She is 56.) During one of my semi-monthly visits (90 miles each way) to ensure that Mom's bills got paid and banking done, I found Michele rummaging through my knapsack and bags in the vesibule, and rather than apologise or look embarrassed, she went on a 5 minute justification speech where every sentence began with the word 'I'. At the end, I made no comment, moved my bags out to my car, and made a point of always leaving them locked inside my car on subsequent visits.
I was so appalled, that I made very sure I was entirely clear on what was Not Mine, just because when life gives you an example of behaviour to contrast with, you might as well go to town on eradicating any shadow of a resemblance.
Which brings me back to you. You have a pervasively sucky attitude towards what is Not Yours. If an author/publisher puts an article up on the Web, and then it vanishes in a few weeks, here is what you could ethically do about it -- and you already know this: You can grab the private archive copy you made, or grab a copy out of Google cache, or grab it from Internet Archive, and write to the author, saying 'I loved this piece and mourn for its absence from the Web. May I have permission to re-host it on my Web site with full attribution to you and preserving your copyright notice?'
If the guy says yes, you go ahead, and point your readers to the archive copy. If not, then you do nothing further because it's Not Yours.
As someone who gets paid for writing, I find your cavalier and contemptuous treatment of a large number of Not Yours works offensive. No, by deliberate copyright violation, you are not Sticking It to the Man. You are merely behaving like a spoiled child with what is Not Yours, and, like Michele's infantile behaviour, I disavow yours and wish to state that I am not part of it.
3. Taking as given, for the sake of discussion, that you have no problem ignoring authors' rights and redistributing Not Yours works, your assumption that you must therefore _push copies_ in their entirety out to all subscribers is obvious bullshit.
This part was particularly offensive, because it suggests you think somehow I've suddenly become stupid. Mama Moen didn't raise any stupid children, Ruben. _Obviously_, you 'it might vanish off the Web in two weeks' justification combined with a lack of morals concerning Not Yours property might justify you making a copy onto your Web site. And then you would publish to the mailing list 2-3 sentences to show why it's of interest, plus the URLs of the original article plus the URL of your archive copy.
We know you can do this because you have, y'know, a Web site. You _choose_ to hurl entire Not Yours articles at all of your subscribers anyway, but your (bad, ill-mannerered) excuse does not in any way require doing so.
You knew all of the above before you posted the bullshit excuses. The real background is that you behave like a jerk because you can, and because copyright stakeholders haven't yet caught up with you -- not because any compelling real-world needs require you to be that kind of jerk.
And no, I do not wish to have personal telephone calls at this ridiculous hour. Because it's late, and because I'm staying up only long enough to finish the tasks ongoing while I wait for them to finish and writing this while waiting. When I'm done, I'm going to bed. Taking a personal call from you would mean staying up later. Call at a reasonable hour like any sensible person.
Sheesh.
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