p2p projects

  • convert forms to pdf or scribus
  • “world without prisons”
  • fix/update website theme
  • prison issues blog news

pages print quota donation

yo geoff. write a post on pagestoprisoners.org about students donating their print quota to pages. link to files. mary is uploading pdfs. link to directions about printing double sided. corinna said that if you fill out a short survey at the information commons, you can get 50 extra prints added to your quota. send an e-mail with the link to the post to midwestpagestoprisoners@lists.riseup.net. Also cc Corinna.

working draft of p2p faq

Q: What types of books do you need donated?  Where can I send donations?
A:

Thanks for writing and for your interest and support.  The books that we need the most are:

* Dictionaries and Thesauri
* Books on learning spanish, Spanish-language books, Spanish to English dictionaries
* Books on African-American studies/issues
* GED study books
* Books on Art/Drawing

As many prisons have restrictions on hardcover books, paperback books are preferred,  but we certainly won’t turn away hardcover books.

You can send book donations to

The Midwest Pages to Prisoners Project
c/o Boxcar Books and Community Center
310A S Washington St.
Bloomington, IN 47401

Q: I want to help out Midwest Pages to Prisoners, but I don’t live in the Midwest.  How can I help?
A:

You may wish to save on postage and help out more locally by sending the books to a project that’s closer geographically to you.  http://www.freewebs.com/books4prisoners/resourceslinks.htm is a good, up-to-date list of active prison books programs.  Unfortunately, there don’t seem to be any active groups listed in New Jersey, though there are some active ones in New York and Pennsylvania.

Also, starting a prison books program yourself isn’t terribly hard.  A Philadelphia-based prison books project has compiled a handbook about starting prison books projects.  You can find information about this publication at http://www.booksthroughbars.org/content/Materials2_3.htm.

Finally, there are a number of ways you can engage in prison issues beyond just sending books. Many jails or prisons have opportunities for people to volunteer with educational programs.  You could try calling a jail or prison in your community and asking for the person in charge of education for information on such opportunities.  This may take some persistence on your part to get involved in this way, but it is ultimately possible.

Also, if you are comfortable working with faith-based organizations, many religiously-affiliated groups engage in prison issues.  In particular, more progressive religious groups like the Unitarian Universalist Church or The Religious Society of Friends (Quakers) work with some pretty interesting programs.  A minister with the UU church here in Bloomington works with a program that audiorecords incarcerated parents reading books and giving messages to their children.

Also, you may want to look into groups working with victim-offender reconciliation or restorative justice programs in your community.  Such groups attempt to create a dialogue between those who have been convicted of crimes and those affected by those crimes and is an interesting alternative to the traditional models of the prison system.

Finally, there are a number of groups that deal more generally with prisoners rights, supporting prisoners, and supporting the families of prisoners.  Many of these groups don’t seem to have a huge public profile, but if you keep abreast of the news, particularly independent media, you can get a good idea of who is working on prison issues in your community.

interesting potential disaster sample

Lord Acton once said, “power tends to corrupt, and absolute power absolutely.”  He could have gone on to say “and by the way, powerlessness also corrupts, and absolute powerlessness absolutely.”  That is, people who are opposing the government and feel they are getting no place tend towards bitterness, tend toward hatred.  They fight national righteousness with personal self-righteousness.  And, they become … Well, let me put it this way.  It seems to me that if you love the good, you have to hate evil, or you’re sentimental.  But if you hate evil more than you love the good, you become a damn good hater.
– Rev. William Sloane Coffin on NPR’s Fresh Air (Link)

This quote is 2:50 into the show. I might want to use this for STFU.

disaster thank-you list

recording: jrd

music equipment: cathy!, erin tobey …

materials for record: mary

multi-media: boxcar books, ifa, ryan woods, richard, joanne

settin up shows: dave dean, fluffy, ali, greg harvester, carl, mike

houses/show spaces: house gone wylie, ducks in a stack, curch space, 11th street

brent for covering for kevey in the kitchen

Should bands encourage illegal downloading?

This is something that I was asked to write possibly for a magazine article, as a member of a band that offers content for download.

To me, file sharing or copyright doesn’t seem like the greatest cultural concern. Iraq is occupied, people are detained in camps in Guantanamo Bay and many other places, there is a really complicated debate about immigration in the US, and there are wars and disasters that are adversely affecting peoples’ lives all over the world. But, I like media, and I like culture, and media has informed me about a lot of the issues that I just mentioned and culture has given me a framework to begin sorting out my feelings and ideas about these issues. So, things that effect our ability to create media and culture merit at least a little discussion.

The downloading of media, illegal or otherwise, is the reality that we face as media producers and consumers. Rough mixes of our latest recordings that we only gave to a few friends, somehow made their way onto the Internet and folks were singing along to new songs at shows before the record was even released. So, the real question isn’t “should bands encourage downloading?”, because it’s going to happen. The real question is, “what should bands do in a world where media is easily reproduced and shared?”

The band that I play in, Defiance, Ohio, has approached this issue by making audio files of every song that we’ve ever released freely available on our website. Having the files available from an “official” location, rather than just being available on a peer-to-peer (P2P) file sharing network, lets people see more information about the band, our ethics, ideas, and lyrics, where they can see us play, and where they can buy our records. Downloading the files from our website gives them context to the songs that just doesn’t exist on a P2P network. In a SoulSeek download window, a Defiance, Ohio song doesn’t really seem much different from the pirated files of any other band.

I think many people would agree that the value of cultural products like songs can be far more than the six dollars you might pay for our new record, or the thousands of dollars cited in numerous RIAA lawsuits. At the very least, it’s safe to say that it’s a very subjective assessment. Giving away our songs as gifts on the Internet, in addition to selling them on CD or LP, lets people decide what the value is, for them, and how they want to respond to the gift. Some people might think the songs are total crap and delete them, others may choose to buy the CD, others may write us a note telling us their thoughts on our music, some might put the songs on a mix tape for a friend, others might be encouraged to make their own songs and share those on the Internet.

In addition to making the songs available for download, we’ve released these files under a Creative Commons license (see http://www.creativecommons.org for more info) that empowers others to redistribute, reuse, and, and remix our songs under certain reasonable conditions. I hope that all the artists and writers that are using tools like the Creative Commons licenses will encourage people to not just consume media, but to create something themselves, and to share the things they make in kind. I just read a really awesome comic book, “Tales from the Public Domain: BOUND BY LAW?” that talks about rethinking copyright, fair-use, the public domain, and how all these issues contribute to our culture. The comic is available as a free download at http://www.law.duke.edu/cspd/comics/ and anyone interested in how copyright policy affects our culture should check it out.

Does giving away our songs for free on the Internet mean we’ve sold fewer records? Who knows? Maybe. However, I really like the fact that I’ve met people from France, from Iceland, from Russia, Japan, and Australia, from small towns in the US that I’ve never heard of, people from all over the world, through the music that we make. I don’t think that would have been possible had we not made our music so freely available. Many people have written and said that they really appreciate that we offer the songs as downloads, and a few have been encouraged to do the same for the things that they make. Finally, hosting our files on a site like the Internet Archive (http://archive.org), and just making them easy to reproduce and share, in general, makes it possible that a hundred years in the future, after CDs, LPs, and MP3s have gone the way of the 8-track, after we’ve long since ceased to be a band, and ceased to be living people, that someone who might have interest in Defiance, Ohio could listen to our songs. Ultimately, making our songs available as downloads has been a good decision.

So, we’ve chosen to address the whole issue of illegal downloads by just making our songs available to download and share legally. As for bands that encourage illegal downloading, it seems contradictory and confusing that to do something as natural and simple as sharing a part of our popular culture, to do something that’s encouraged, one has to do something illegal. Hopefully, this contradiction will give everyone the opportunity to think about how we value culture, how we share things that are important to us, and whether we, as a culture of people who make, distribute, and enjoy media make choices that reflect those values.

Free Culture Workshop Meeting Notes

Video Screening

References

  • http://www.archive.org/details/movies

Technical Workshop

  • Remixing
    • Media Change as Remix (Audiorecord Poetry, upload to librivox or Audiorecord CC text and upload to archive/ourmedia)
    • Combine spoken word with music and sound effects to make audiomontage
  • Using CC licenses
    • Tagging audio files with CC metadata and uploading to archive.org/ourmedia.org
    • making your blog CC
    • flagging Images on Flickr as CC
  • Finding open content
    • Yahoo CC search
    • Images: sxc.hu, openphoto.net, Flickr
    • Sound clips: freesound project

Remix Collaboration

Introduce idea of making a remix publication at the first class.  People can network to make it throughout the week.
Length: 2 days, 2 hours each.  1st day is history/philosophy second day = hands on technical use, political action
Time constraints

Towards beginning of fest

Collaborate with filmmaking workshop to release their content as CC
Cultural Environmentalism – James Boyle

Other Topics

  • Non-digital free culture
    • Example: performances of copyrighted plays have to get permission.
  • Viral licenses
  • CC/Free Culture Business Models

Hand out live CDs, open content CDs on Tuesday the 11th, also at the open content
video screening

TODO

  • Research political action
  • Downhill battle
  • EFF
  • legislation that effects copyright
  • Research free culture business models/paradigms

Bloomington event promotion list

All Events

  • Bloomington Alternative, editor@BloomingtonAlternative.com
  • Herald-Times: The Scene (weekly supplement), getout@heraldt.com
  • Bloomington’s Cultureweek (monthly), editor@cultureweek.com, 334-7743
  • The Ryder (monthly), theryder@theryder.com, 339-2002.
  • WFHB: calendars@wfhb.org or fill out form at http://cgi.wfhb.org/calendars/index.php
  • WFIU: Fill out form at http://www.publicbroadcasting.net/wfiu/events.eventsmain?action=submitEvent
  • Let’s Go! calendar (letsgo@terrorware.com)
  • PIX Message Board: http://pix.hijinx.nu
  • Boxcar Books website, MySpace, and Mailing List
  • IDS Happenings: Fill out form at http://www.idsnews.com/happenings/addevent.aspx
  • Bloomington Vibe: editor@thebvibe.com

Cultural Events

Volunteering Events

http://www.artlives.org/mediadirectory.html has a more comprehensive, but not always relevent list of central Indiana media contacts.