meta-roj

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Tuesday, October 14, 2003

meshugga beach party

(via blah3 and metafilter)

meshugga beach party

who knew?

(disclaimer: i worked with a surf-rock band once upon a time)

posted by roj at 8:41 am  

Tuesday, October 14, 2003

vinyl video

i introduce, or re-introduce, for your viewing pleasure…. vinyl video.

it’s an old thing, and i know how much the internet loves the new, but…. this is a little nod to the thread of determinism here on the meta-roj blog.

posted by roj at 5:08 am  

Tuesday, October 14, 2003

patriots will not compromise ideals

another nod this morning, for a patriot, akma.

this government was structured to provide americans with a better government than we would give ourselves. where has it gone?

posted by roj at 4:56 am  

Monday, October 13, 2003

pick up a guitar, stud

(via bubble generation)

why rock guys get all the girls

For years, scientists have pondered why attractive women throw themselves at rock stars and not, well, scientists. It’s about the music, writes Nicholas Wade.”

this scientist suggests that it may be the music, or then again, it may be because rock stars are on stage and within “throwing range” while the scientists are in labs and thinking about it.

posted by roj at 7:06 pm  

Monday, October 13, 2003

in search of legal interns

i’d like to find a couple law school student volunteers/interns to come work with me on a contingent basis. if any of you happen to be in law school (or even pre-law), or know such a person… i’ve got plans to use up the rest of your “free time,” make a run at solving part of a really ugly problem, and maybe make a few pennies along the way.

come and get me.

posted by roj at 5:50 am  

Monday, October 13, 2003

the light gets hotter on sunncomm

someone who occasionally drops into this blog (and someone on whom i’ve commented both in agreement and disagreement, which is a good thing) – left me a little teaser (see comments) in one of my posts on sunncomm.

sunncomm, you might recall was defeated by a shift key and got a bit indignant about being exposed in the light.

normally, i wouldn’t get too involved in such things, but the implications – legal, ethical, and business practice – seem to me to make a wonderful set of object lessons in how dangerous it is to depend on darkness in the modern world. these lesson i pretty much left unspoken in my previous comments on sunncomm, so i’ll spell them out for you now.

lesson, the first

banking on stupidity and ignorance is a bad idea. sunncomm’s business model (at least as far as mediamax cd3 audio cd copy protection is concerned) was obviously to bank on the stupidity of the music listening public. since the music listening public isn’t sunncomm’s customer (directly), i can’t legitimately get on my soapbox and scream “don’t count on a stupid customer!” but wait….

the record labels were sunncomm’s customers. as reported earlier, there was a bit of spin at the beginning of this fiasco from at least one label (bmg) – one of those “oh yeah. we knew that.” statements that just screams for a rebuttal. well, anyway. sunncomm either sold bmg their widget based on its [easily defeated] capabilities, or bmg banked on the music listening public’s stupidity. so, that’s at least one strike, maybe two. let me say this again. banking on stupidity and ignorance is a bad idea.

lesson, the second

at this point, your widget is in deep trouble, quite probably unrecoverable trouble. even if you can still find stupid cd purchasers, the labels know that they were had, so it’s going to be very hard to get enough credibility back to keep any deal alive. you can let it fade into oblivion, or you can call the lawyers. lawyers are trained to solve problems. and you have a big problem. fortunately, there are laws for just this sort of situation, and while i may personally question the wisdom of these laws, the sad truth is that they exist. so a lawyer is going to suggest you use them.

our next object lesson, lawyers make bad policymakers (and this was a policy, not a legal decision point). i’ve hinted at this before, but the short version is that sunncomm picked the wrong tool for this problem.

so sunncomm’s next mistake was pouring gasoline on the fire with a knee-jerk “call the fbi! sue the bastard!” reaction. regardless of the merits of the case, a wise person might notice the potential repercussions here. all over the web, in a matter of hours, sprouted the posts and articles on “every keyboard violates the dmca” and such. now i’m sure it’s not this simple, and i don’t want to get too boring with this post, but the net result is that the world had turned its light onto sunncomm…

lesson, the third

one of those lights was barry ritholtz, who has an economic and market perspective that he shares with the world. armed with a company name and a buzzing story on the web, this kind of person does a little homework. sure. i commented on the drop in value of the stock – and i even included a chart, but analysis – not my bag.

i was ready to let sunncomm off the hook. they did a 180, decided lawsuits and lawyers were a bad idea in this situation, and i was done with them. i’d learned a few lessons and maybe made a point or two. and here’s an important lesson for modern business – it may not be my thing, but if you get enough people’s attention, it’s gonna be someone’s thing.

it’s on the record

barry dug a little deeper (and got prettier charts, too – you should check them out). and in that digging, he raised some interesting questions about the behavior of the stock, a major buyback, and some unexplained major moves in the price. i wouldn’t call this a conclusion, but, in barry’s own words:

If any purchases were made in anticipation of material non public information, than who ever did so has much bigger problems than some grad student’s paper . . .

so a few strange things happen in a microcap stock, and i still don’t care too much. interesting, sure, but having basically washed my hands of the whole sunncomm business with my own lessons learned… this is an issue for regulators and shareholders. besides, i’m busy 🙂

someone remembers

but the light is on, and an anonymous internet entity appears with a very long comment to barry’s post.

you can’t take such an anonymous post seriously. really, you can’t. this is like triple-hearsay, unadmissable and generally on the quality-of-information spectrum somewhere around the level of seeing “peter jacobs blows goats! i have proof!” scrawled on a bathroom wall. the problem is that this particular bit of graffiti has sources that someone could check out. and, unfortunately for sunncomm, you can’t get back a secret.

like i said, i’m busy. and i wouldn’t even know whom to call to prompt an investigation of such material. but what we seem to have here, ladies and gentlemen, is an itty-bitty corporate scandal. i don’t have a whole lot of faith in the current administration’s record for bringing white collar criminals to justice (after all, we’re busy hunting down the terrorists), but maybe something will happen. maybe.

and if i hear about it, you can bet i’ll have some snide comment.

so the new problem for sunncomm is that a couple years ago, a few people probably got screwed on the stock. and they remember. and now there’s blood in the water, and the lawyers are circling.

update: i rushed through this, and totally screwed up the section breaks. they make more sense now, and i fixed a few redundancies.

posted by roj at 3:29 am  

Monday, October 13, 2003

Neil Postman

uncategorizable

posted by roj at 1:57 am  

Sunday, October 12, 2003

monetizing blog spam

long ago, i came to the conclusion that the only solution to spam was to increase the cost of doing business with spam. to that end, i’ve set a nice, reasonable price point for the time it should take me to clean out the blog spam.

those of you posting comments here on the meta-roj blog will notice that i’ve included new terms of service.

there’s been a lot of talk lately about blog spam, and i’ve been mostly unaffected, with one notable (and one not so notable) exception.

for the rest of you, that actually have something useful to contribute to the material here, don’t be intimidated (any more than you already were intimidated, anyway!)…

in the meantime, as a bit of an experiment, and before i get so much that it becomes unmanagable, i’ve decided to give this a shot.

posted by roj at 10:56 pm  

Sunday, October 12, 2003

Commercial Applications License Terms

Commercial interests posting material anywhere on this blog or website are subject to the following terms: Comments posted on this blog that are unrelated to the original post or existing comments and that include links or references to commercial sites will be charged US$150 per comment, payable within 30 days. Interest will accrue at a rate of 1.5% per month until paid in full. Balances remaining due more than 120 days will be forwarded to a collection agent. The posting individual and any commercial enterprises mentioned in the comment will be held jointly responsible for all fees and all expenses related to successfully closing open accounts, including, but not limited to, investigative and collection services.

Payment of these fees does not guarantee that your comments will remain visible to the public. All material on this blog is present at my sole discretion.

update: Revised version is here

posted by roj at 9:21 pm  

Saturday, October 11, 2003

Annalena Tonelli

caregiver

posted by roj at 9:20 am  
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