Article written by myself: Net Neutrality and Open Source
I have received a few e-mails about this article from telcom trolls trying to get me to change my position on these topics because of this article. Since it went live on my website, I have gotten over 100 hits. I spent at least a week writing this article. It all stemmed from reading the ‘back of the package’ info for the song Flickr by Jonathan Coulton. That was a great article. It definitely should have raised the standard of the quality of the work LW showcases. I really wish that were true.

Article written by a LW blogger: Gaz’s Dwarf Fortress or Kieran’s articles
I went back through the whole year to find one. Of all of the articles for the year trying to find one that wasn’t written by myself that continued to entertain and was very well-written and presented, I found four. One was Dwarf Fortress written by Gaz. That one was very fun and really stuck out with me especially since it was later talked about on the TSG forums. The other three were all of Kieran’s articles. His writing was definitely some of the best we have seen. He is a great asset to the staff, and I hope he keeps writing for us when he has the chance.

New show on broadcast television: Community
Joel McHale, Chevy Chase, and Ken Jeong. Do I need to say more? To those of us have been to (or will soon return to) community college: yes, this show is 100% accurate. I am not joking for once in my life, community college is exactly like this show. The fact that they have actual comedians playing every type of student seen in the series just helps ease the pain. The fact that the show is teamed with the rest of NBC’s Thursday comedy lineup (called Must See TV when I was growning up) helps make a viewing block that cannot be messed with.

Returning show on broadcast television: 30 Rock
The show deserves it’s three Emmy’s. It is the best comedy on any network, especially when compared to the other crap other networks show. With Community, they bookend the NBC comedy lineup and are the best shows on most Thursdays. Alec Baldwin is the best actor on television these days across all genres. The show is unbelievably well written and produced. It will remain a top show until they all get bored and move on.

New show on cable television: Stargate: Universe
Stargate x Battlestar Galactica. The series really really is a cross between the two. They even have a Baltar character. I loved the other Stargate series. Battlestar Galactica was the best show in the sci-fi genre. I like that Stargate is using elements that made Galactica great. This is definitely a new direction for Stargate. I hope it works for them.

Returning show on cable television: Dirty Jobs or Deadliest Catch
Two great shows that do a great job of showcasing careers that nobody wants. Dirty Jobs has continued to bring unique and interesting jobs to light. The camel farmers, goose pluckers, and diaper cleaners were all among the jobs shown this year. So many great memories. So many ruined cameras. The drama on the Bering Sea is always interesting to watch. There is always so much on the line and death is always possible. The After the Catch special adds to the drama. We got to meet the captains’ wives this season, and I hope the trade of Jake for Jake is actually done. That would be great. I can’t wait for more episodes of both.

New (to me) anime series (that I will eventually finish): Toradora!
Hyakko is a very close second. I am moved by almost every episode for some reason. It usually has to do with Taiga doing something very touching. I guess I click with her. May be because I have a moe for smaller girls. I just sort of connect with the show as much with Hayate no Gotoku. Taiga is such a good, cute, and fun character. She shows a lot of Kugamiya Rie’s development. Very fun show. Hyakko is also another great show. Torako is such a fun character. The show is short and simple and very worth the time investment. A lot of great voice actresses make appearances too.

Movie: Star Trek
I love that movie. I have been a Trekkie for a long time. After the last few Next Generation era movies were hit or miss (as all pre-Abrams Treks were to date), I was wary of this movie. Then I saw Cloverfield and was convinced of Abrams’ skill in making a great movie. Star Trek Got so much right in reinventing Trek as well as keeping a lot of the cornier elements alive. The criticisms for the movie were all copy and paste from past Trek movies and the cast was well picked. Shatner was a moron for not taking the role that was eventually revealed in the scripts that came out. He would have been perfect. The movie was the best Trek since First Contact. (Like First Contact, it had a Star Wars cameo. R2-D2 appeared in place of the Falcon this time.) PS: The rating for the movie according to Rotten Tomatoes is 95% or almost four times the rating for New Moon.

New game for the Wii: NSMBW
In the land of crap, the gold bar is golden. With all of the crap and faux sequels that came out for the Wii this year, the top choice is obvious. There wasn’t much to get excited about for the Wii this year. At E3, this and Spirit Tracks were their only big games coming out in 2009. As you can read in my recent review of the game, this was a surprisingly well put together game. All of their next great games will be next year at the soonest (starting Jan 26th with No More Heroes 2: Desperate Struggle), so Nintendo has to hold on to what little successes they have now.

New game for the 360: Batman: Arkham Asylum and Assassin’s Creed 2
I’m not a FPS fan, so ODST and L4D2 are out. Rhythm games are crap so Rock Band and Guitar Hero are out. Of the rest, Arkham Asylum and Assassin’s Creed 2 were my favorite games on the console. Ghostbusters was a great game too, but these two were better. I love going around and stabbing people in this depressing holiday season. The story is a very good and deep one. Assassin’s Creed 2 is a great game overall. Batman is like being in a comic book. A comic starring the voice actors of the cartoon. But, this is not based on a comic book. It is one of the most awesome games ever. Some moron at Gamespy said it was stupid that there is no comic or movie tie-in for the game. That was what made the game better. Two great games. If it came down to is, Batman wins because no one can beat Batman.

New game for the DS: Pokemon Platinum
Take everything good about Diamond and Pearl and make them better. Fix a lot of the bad areas. Add many more Pokemon. Add new features. Add wifi events. Yummy, yummy wifi events. Free, rare Pokemon. Aside from those and many graphical enhancements, this is pretty much like Diamond and Pearl. Except for Spirit Tracks, there wasn’t too much to get very excited about in the DS area this year.

On the PSP and PS3:
I have only recently gotten these systems so I cannot properly give them a best new game yet. Next year, we all know they are going to be Final Fantasy XIII and Final Fantasy Agito XIII.

Podcast: Penny Arcade/PvP/Wil Wheaton D&D Podcast Series 3
The only other contender in this realm was Memories of the Futurecast. I started listening to this podcast with episode 2 during PAX. I went back and listened to to the first two series to catch up. Every week as a wait until the next episode. Then came the last episode. That damn last episode. It is hard not to blame Binwin for what happened, but he doesn’t deserve all the blame or any hatred. It was an honest mistake of his. He was too wrapped in vengeance. Aeofel was being too good of a friend. They broke the cardinal rule and split the party. Mistakes were made. Recent tweets hint on the return of AQI. Series 4 should follow. That and Memories of the Futurecast Volume 2 are two podcasts to look forward to this coming year.

Song: Jonathan Coulton’s The Future Soon
Coulton ain’t new, and the song ain’t new. I just felt that this song best captured how my year has been. I’m a pathetic loser that has interests in science and technology with only glimpses at the idea of what love is. I also have the desire to make giant robots and use them mostly for good… eventually. Oregon and Iran get wiped off the map first then I go totally Iron Man with looser morals and more hatred for humanity. A nerd can dream. (If it proves my point any more that I could be the person in the song, I am currently on a Mac writing this in WordPress on Chrome with a Vocaloid theme and watching an open source Twitter program and listening to Code Monkey after The Future Soon. My Rei plushie is right next to me in case I need to hug someone that I want to hug.) [On a side note: it is almost 2010, shouldn't Ikari Gendo have cloned his wife by now? I'll give anything for one of those clones. If you have seen the show, you know who I am talking about.]

Book I actually read (out of the few I finished):
I am not sure I finished a book that qualifies for this. I’ve read mostly textbooks or graphic novels this year, as with any year. Some of the Japanese archaeology books were pretty cool. The books on physics are cool too since physics is only one step below mathematics which is less than or equal to God depending on your cardinality proofs. My textbook that I used to build neutron stars and white dwarfs was pretty cool too, but I read most of that last year. Oh! Wait! Reboot!
Book I actually read (out of the few I finished): Physics of the Impossible
The pompous and arrogent Michio Kaku proves that most of the cool sci-fi tech can be made some point in the future and all in languages you philistines can understand. This is a very great read. Pick it up.

Graphic novel: Kenjiro Hata’s Hayate no Gotoku Graphic Novel #7
Nagi put Tama in a washing machine. I love Futurama. To quote Free Waterfall Sr from Futurama: ‘We have them trapped like a tiger in a washing machine.’ The GN also features the [holiday doesn't exist] episodes, the Negima! reference issue, and Nagi’s date where Hayate is hidden on every page. All of that is in addition to the usual pure brilliance in comic, anime, internet and video game references. Oh! And the student body officers episode too. That features the moments that class president Izumi (aka Karin to Karin fans) fell for Hayata-kun.

DVD/BluRay: Star Trek
Second place goes to the release of the new Evangelion movies in the US. Since I now have a BluRay player (I love my PS3) [I never said they were a bad console. I just said they were too expensive and had hardware issues.], I can watch BluRays. I don’t normally buy video media since Hayate no Gotoku and Code Geass are the only series out on DVD that I collect. Into the Wild Green Yonder was a great movie as well. I had been waiting for Rebuild of Evangelion since the first moment I have heard of it. You can tell I am serious about a series if I don’t ‘acquire’ it in advance. But, Star Trek had a great release. All of the extras, as well as the DVD and digital copies were a great addition. Sorry Eva. There is always next year when you should be giving me Evangelion 2.0 and 3.0… unless Toradora! or Hyakko is out in the US by then. If that is the case… Well, Tron Legacy would have a December 2010 or January 2011 BluRay at the soonest… Hmm. Then Lucas owes us Star Wars on BluRay… Well. Damn. A lot of good crap is coming to BluRay by 2011. I guess that is one side effect of Obama, getting the BluRay industry to say ‘Yes We Can! (make consumers buy the same thing again)’

Webcomic: Penny Arcade
Daisy Owl, Looking for Group, and How I Killed Your Master were the top contenders as well. There were a lot of great moments in a lot of great webcomics. The ones listed are barely a cap of the iceberg of comics with great moments (the big LOLbat reveal in PvP for one). I felt that once again Penny Arcade were the kings. Just scanning through the first two months, there are many awesome moments in just such a short time. Love them. Plus, Jim and Omin didn’t kill Aeofel. Sorry Scott.

Sporting event: Omegathon 09
MLG is a sport. Therefore, the decathlon of gaming is the top event. I only made it to two of the events: The Beatles: Rock Band and the finals of Skeeball. They were pretty freaking awesome. The Omegathon is the gaming competition attached to PAX. The game tests the gamers in several areas: console gaming, PC gaming, tabletop gaming, rhythm gaming, and all-around gaming. Gamers have to prove themselves across all areas, thus no casual gamers would survive. The tabletop game is usually a board game, Connect Four if memory serves. Mario Kart Wii broke down, so they had to do Double Dash instead. That should have been a harbinger of things to come. Skeeball took over a hour to get working just so that it could break down after every other game. How the frak did they find a real Skeeball game?! That was too awesome. The best part was when Mike and Jerry did battle and Gabe schooled Tycho. It was great. Rock Band was Rock Band. Absolutely nothing special. At all. Because if you’ve seen one rhythm game, you’ve seen them all.

Japan-related event: The life-sized Odaiba Gundam
I was tempted to troll through all of my wacky links I posted throughout the year, but then one thing stuck out in my mind: the 40-meter tall Gundam. It wasn’t just any Gundam. It was Gundam. The original. For lovers of classical anime, especially those of us who grew up on Voltron, seeing Gundam at life-sized was a dream come true. Now all they need to do is make it move then fly then arm it with a laser cannon and everything will be perfect.

Event: January 20th, 2009 at 1200 (noon)
I really hope non-politcos get that. If you don’t, that was the exact moment Barack Obama became the current US President. I couldn’t stop smiling for a week after that moment. The other great event of this year was my graduation from Cal Poly SLO with a Bachelor of Science in Physics. I was depressed by the end of that day, so it definitely wasn’t my favorite event. I also flipped while at PAX, but we’ll get to that later.

Convention: PAX
Going to PAX was the greatest thing that happened to me since my Japan trip. I’ve watched PA TV a few times already since It lets me relive stuff I went through those days. I miss it so much. I finally found a place where everyone from the top-down are exactly like me. I really cannot describe what it is like to have the feelings I felt while at PAX. If you are watching PA TV, skip to part 2 of the pilot. Skip to 4:50 when Freezepop is on stage. Look at the sea of lights. Those are DS Bigs, DS Lites, DSis, PSPs, cellphones, and even some crazy fucker with a MacBook Pro waving to the music like lighters in just the generation before mine. Those are my people.

New software: Chrome
Okay, so Chrome isn’t the newest software, having been released last year. Chrome has become my favorite browser. It is faster and a lot smoother than any of the other browsers out there. It was made for the internet. There aren’t many good themes out there yet. (I’m using the Vocaloid one since my next favorite is the Good Smile Company one, and they ain’t that great.) Extensions can be enabled, and I know there are a lot of good ones out there, but I haven’t really hunted for them. And if I can say this completely uncensored when I heard that Chrome was available on Mac on Dec 8th, I practically came. Anything not to use Safari and it’s horrible slowness anymore.

New web-based toy: Wolfram Alpha
This is what wikipedia would be like if it were written by geniuses instead of morons. The mass of useless facts and magic math solvers and data analysis and pure nerditude makes Alpha the funnest toy any geek would want to play with. A few minutes on Alpha can quickly turn into a Turing test or a battle of wits until you get discouraged that the entry for ‘Penny Arcade’ doesn’t mention Gabe or Tycho.

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I always enjoy defining different generations based on the technologies they develop. Most recently, most of that definition has been about what computer technology we develop. My grandparents built ENIAC. My parents’ generation all were about IBM computers. Apple appeared as the definitive desktop between my parents’ and my generations. In this time, the internet was born and started taking shape. The key tool of HTML was created shortly afterwards, because nerds like making stuff look cool/like Star Wars. For my older brother’s generation, Windows became the dominate force, and that is what they developed from. My generation started on Macintoshes and moved to various Windows platforms. While on those systems, we started cracking the source codes behind those systems. We started going back to the roots of personal computers like the Apple 2 and started building our own computers. We also started developing our own software. We thought, ‘Hey. Wouldn’t it be cool to share this software with other programmers and see what they do with it? Oh look! There is pr0n on the internet!’ Taking our love of programming and the internet hand-in-hand (only with one hand though), they started sharing their programs with each other. We started shaping the computer world around us. That is just my personal opinion on the origins of the open source world.

This was the original starting point of this article. I was rocking out on Jonathan Coulton to pick up my mood while Dissidia was not doing actions I was inputting. I eventually got to the song Flickr. Check it out (Note: This song should be viewed and not heard or you are less from the experience):

I had read the notes on Flickr and found the reasons beautiful since they were inline with what Coulton was doing. All of the images used were under the Creative Commons license. Similarly, Coulton’s music is licensed under other CC licenses. Similar licenses are behind popular sites and services like Wikipedia, xkcd, DeviantART, Al Jazeera, and the White House. Such licenses determine the level of copyright protection on images and works shared via these services. The bare minimum requires attribution with various levels up to non-commecrial uses and stricter citation rules. Coulton’s music is licensed under non-commercial licenses, so people like myself who have legal copies can use the music for YouTube videos and the like as long as profit is not a motive, like if it were used in a commercial or movie or by another artist at a concert. This allows for easy and free distribution of images, videos, and other files with the general public.

As mentioned above, the White House has items licensed under CC. That is a pretty damn important thing. Obama is the first open source president. As many might recall, he had a scrap with his handlers about his Flickr accounts. From my understanding, that was resolved in his favor, as was his Blackberry issues. It has been one of Obama’s technology goals to make the US Government open source, from the White House down. As of a couple months ago, the only department in the executive branch that was not open source was State. Hilary was even pissed at the people running State for not even running Firefox. While I am not certain that Obama has made everyone switch to Linux, he did make the move to the more user-friendly and secure open source software for running the nation’s day-to-day business as well as updating computers that weren’t even Window 98 compliant.

One of the biggest achievements of Obama’s technology policies has been the implementation of Net Neutrality in the FCC. This had been a long time coming, and that what happened with our one-handed programmers that didn’t go to the Dark Side, aka ATT, Verizon, Time/Warner etc. Net Neutrality is like Jesus to true netizens. (Analogy being that it comes upon us and preaches goodness, then 7 years later, when Obama is gone, it will be sacrificed to corporate greed and then worshiped as a cult with an eventual holy city forming in the shape of the word Google in Mountain View, California. There is also the persecution in its time, but I’ll get to that soon.) Net Neutrality means that anyone with a legal internet connection should be allowed to access the internet, whole internet and nothing but the internet so help them God. (Imagine a stack of Bible when reading that last sentence.) In other words, ISPs cannot fuck you over: no caps on data transfer (Time/Warner, Comcast, ATT), no blocking access to sites unless user and site pay for the privilege to be carried on your lines (Time/Warner, ATT), no ‘pay-as-you-go’ internet (ATT, Comcast), or, all encapsulating, NO FUCKING THE CONSUMER! Okay. So Net Neutrality really means that ISPs can’t screw you in the rear, but the companies on the other side of the policy get their chance to take your money instead. The pro-Net Neutrality side is commonly championed by Google with many other major internet-based businesses on their side. The anti-Net Neutrality side is commonly championed by ATT and other ISPs known for raping their customers in the butt with sticks the size of an aircraft carrier. Good ISPs and VoIP services were also on the pro-Net Neutrality side since they would benefit from the policy. The first moves toward the current policy were when the FCC told Comcast that they could no longer have data transfer caps on their internet services. Imagine a cap of 500 MB of data transfer a month and when you go over the cap, the ISP charges you hundreds more for basic internet services. Oh. And that 500 MB in and out. This pic represents exactly that. That was what Comcast was doing. And ATT. And Time/Warner. And others. Thankfully, the courts and FCC said that those companies had to play fair. Shortly afterwards, Comcast started floating ideas for other ways to limit their users’ access to the internet. The FCC then came into Obama’s hands. Next ATT (or/and Apple, but more likely just ATT) denied Google Voice (more on why (most/all) Android phones >> Palm Pre >>>>>>>>>> iPhone later). That caused a shit storm of Biblical proportions. ATT is going to lose that one especially since Google is being the grown-up and keeping everything they do, good and bad, more in the public spotlight than ATT’s (and maybe Apple’s) bullshit and siding with the FCC in everything. Even their most damning admission of ‘yes, we blocked some numbers’ has a very logical and acceptable reason that comes out worse for ATT and other carriers than Google if you read it correctly (or the way I did). [Before we get much farther, I am writing this on a MacBook Pro, but I am a Google Borg, not a Mac Cultist.] The FCC then announced plans to implement Net Neutrality. Shortly before Net Neutrality took effect (which was only recently!), one of the evil ISPs, either Comcast or ATT or Time/Warner or all/some of them, said that pay-as-you-go internet was the future. You don’t have to be a heavily active netizen like myself to know that this would have caused the entire internet to switch to an ISP that didn’t force that pay-as-you-go shit down then up then back down again your throats. Unlimited monthly access is how it is going to be or there will be hell. The FCC then implemented Net Neutrality. We have not yet seen the full consequences of their action. DSL providers will raise rates since they also make money from phone service and VoIP is killing landlines. I’d say DSL user would be screwed, but they were dumb enough to get DSL in the first place. They knew they were getting an inferior product. Cable and FIOS users may also see a price increase since sites like Hulu and others that offer television and movies on demand are cutting into television’s profitability, but I wouldn’t think they would be as threatened since they are getting converts to VoIP and bundling services to better serve the consumer. We’ll just have to wait and see what comes from Net Neutrality. Senator John ‘Major League Fucktard’ McCain from Arizona has already shown his colors and moved to try to make Net Neutrality illegal, but he is going against Google. And Google is win while we all know from November 9th that McCain is pure fail.

The core of Net Neutrality comes from the ideas of open source and open internet. We want to share what we have created. Limiting access to product is the worst business practice and downright evil. The evil ISPs mentioned suffer from a form of ‘Let them eat cake’-ism that makes corporations evil and hated. They broke the system and refuse to fix it. Products like Windows and OS X, while not open source, still recognize when there is a problem with their product and try to fix it. That is the difference between 20th/21st century companies like Microsoft and Google and 19th century companies like ATT. The spreading of freely modifiable content is not really new. Back when the Apple 2 was the premier computing platform, 8″ floppies were the way that programs were spread from computer to computer and almost everything was user modded content. The first computer games really spread like this because gaming companies weren’t really in existence back then. Hell, there is not port for the original Pong game since it was a purely hardware-based game. When companies started getting in the computer gaming business, open source gaming was still at the core. Doom has countless mods that still exist on the internet. Even the internet was a pure open source product. The builders at CERN intended HTML to be universally distributed so that users could create their own sites. [Another discrepancy: phone companies - founded by business men, costs money to access and until recently they held a monopoly on communications with limited options; computer companies - founded by engineers and programmers, costs money for the hardware, optionally not for the software and many options designed to fit the user; the internet - created by scientists and given to the world for free until ISPs run via the phone companies screwed the user.] Open source products have spread to almost all corners of everyday life. Linux is the most talked about open source OS. Firefox and Chrome are the best browsers on the market and free to download. They also feature countless free apps to modify their services to your whim. GIMP is the poor man’s Adobe suite. Open Office is the open source Microsoft Office. I run Adium which is like the Firefox of IM programs. Almost all of the good Twitter apps are open source. GMod allows many popular games from Valve to be manipulated. You can play TF2 on modded levels on certain servers. Wikipedia is all user-generated content. This article was written in WordPress which is an open source blogging software. Up until iTunes (and WMP got its shit together) put them out of business, all of the best MP3 software was open source. VLC is my preferred video program, while other open source programs round out the mix. Best of all is a word known as Google.

Google is the god of open source. Google is trying to offer everything to everyone for free. Gmail, Wave, YouTube, Analytics, Chrome, Blogger, Picasa, Google Maps, Google Earth, Google Moon, Google Mars, Knol, Google Talk, Translate, 411, Books, and everything in Google Labs are all free for public use! Their phone OS Android is also open source. Seriously, when a company starts putting books free on the internet and actually get books donated to them for the project, that is some serious shit when it comes to sharing information with the world. They just launched a new update for Google Maps on Android that allows our Android 2.0 phone to act at a navigation system. I think it is called Google Navigation. Except for their search engine, it took time, but all of their projects gained a following. Even though some of their products aren’t #1, Flickr > Picasa for example, they still offer open access to everything they build. It is because Android is open source that the iPhone will one day become #2. Or more appropriately since there are many different Android phones and the Palm Pre, the iPhone will be lucky to be the #3 mobile device.

Before we get to the hero, let’s meet the villains.

The Zune is Microsoft’s answer to the iPod. Both are music and video players fighting in the long battle between Microsoft and Apple. But no one care about Zune, except my friend Pedro’s friend David. The iPod has the greater marketshare since it has been around longer and offers a wide array of products from the Nano to the iTouch. Other companies offer similar players with different features than you would receive, but they are not as big competitors given the ubiquity of the iPod. The iPhone was Apple’s answer to the Blackberry, the popular mobile device that can handle business as well as phone use. Blackberry is still number one, but the iPhone has put a dent in it’s domination. What helped the iPhone stand out was the array of apps, programs that would be run only on the iPhone. Since the apps include games, social networking tools, and useful gadgets from levels to calorie counters, the iPhone has taken up a place of extreme popularity. Sadly, it is also the biggest piece of bro technology, making most iPhone users come off as douches, to use the proper terminology. The iPhone was originally open only on ATT, until hacked, but that goes without saying, and they have horrible rate plans. Since everyone wanted an iPhone, they were stuck getting horrible plans just to have their fancy phone. It has been a long battle to get a mobile device to challenge the iPhone. Blackberry is still going strong. The Palm Pre is another great device. It has better hardware, but the software needs some catching up to properly challenge the iPhone. Then came the G1. That was the first big Android powered phone. It and Android had a few kinks to work out, but they were smoothed well enough for the myTouch to be released. That is a more iTouch version of the G1, meaning smaller and not as powerful. When compared to an iTouch, the myTouch is a better machine in the long run. Google, being such a magnanimous company, still developed apps for the iPhone, Palm Pre, and Blackberry while working on their own products for Android. This brings us to the saga of Google Voice.

Google Voice is an iPhone app that allows web-based phone calls to be made, similar to how Skype works. Note: Skype has an app for the iPhone, as does Vonage, a VoIP company. For some reason, Apple and/or ATT (more than likely it was just ATT) denied Google Voice. The most likely reason was because it would have crippled the iPhone’s market by letting users make the web-based calls without having to go through ATT. As mentioned above, this unleashed a Category 5 shit storm. The FCC stepped in and basically told Apple: WTF?! Apple said it was ATT. So the FCC went to them an said WTF?!? ATT blamed it back on Apple. Then they dropped their cards and said it was Google’s fault. Google, complying with the FCC, admitted that they do have some numbers blocked out of their system, but they would be the ones most impacting the use of Google Voice. Those numbers are the ones the phone companies love since they are out of their coverage zones and/or heavy users so that is where they would be making a ton of money. The number users Google blocks is still less than the number of users ATT is screwing with those high rates. It is seeming like ATT is constantly losing face to Google and the FCC. I guess it is hard to win when the government was initially on the side of the people you were screwing.

Now, the Droid is poised to become a major mobile device.

The Droid is the latest in a soon to be very long line of phones that will be powered by Android, the open source mobile phone OS. Their competitors are the iPhone, Palm Pre and Blackberry and since T-Mobile has the G1 and myTouch and Verizon is getting the Droid and HTC Hero, there will be other Android phones fighting each other. The key to the optimism about the Droid and other Android-based mobile devices is because Android is open source and therefore open for developers to modify the source (which actually lead to Google getting pissed as one developer) and to make apps. The other mobile devises are more closed about their code, which is why Apple and ATT can regulate their apps like they do.

Now, while I have been extolling the virtues of the open internet, I have been dodging the issue of hacks, torrents and P2P. I have been trying to stay on the legal side of Net Neutrality. In fact, Net Neutrality specifically states legal access to legal sites and legal file transfers. The reason I have been trying to avoid torrents and P2P is because they are commonly seen as an illegal activity. Sadly, that is not entirely true. There are just as many legal torrent sites as there are illegal sites. File sharing, P2P and torrents relate back to Net Neutrality because the evil ISPs are commonly viewed that way from the eyes of P2P and file sharers. The reason Comcast, Time/Warner, and ATT limited data transfer and want to enact pay-as-you-go internet is because of the massive data transfer that has to go on for P2P, torrents, and even gaming. They tend to be the highest users of the internet and use their unlimited access and freedom to access legal sites to the maximum. In the pic above, that 500 MB limit is not even 25% of a single anime series. Most of the heavy users can go though 500 MB of data transfer in a day. There have been countless evidence produced that proved that ‘pirated’ music actually leads to more music sells and more profits for the music industry. Best part is when they catch you. They will sue for thousands of dollars and spend millions to get that. What protects some sites is their location. File transfer sites in other countries may not have the same copyright laws as in the prosecuting countries. It is sort of like the phenomenon of going to Hong Kong or Korea and spend a couple bucks to buy enough DVDs to rival Netflix. This is a sort of battle that has been going on for a long time and across technologies. Were people arrested for making a mix tape? Were people fined for recording an episode of The Simpsons? Do record companies make people erase their iPods? There have been means of acquiring copyrighted material without purchase and spreading the material to others. VCRs, DVD (and now BRD) burners, tape decks, and now DVRs all are used for making copies of copyrighted material. Yes, current digital material has copy protection… until you buy or download any of many legal ripping and mounting technologies. File sharers don’t see what they are doing as a crime. The reasoning is usually such: thieves – they take the original; pirates – they make copies and sell it for profit; your average file sharer – one person buys the original and distributes free copies. While not quite the same as open source distribution, it is still the trade of free items. Most file sharers even delete their copies after acquiring a hardcopy. When thinking of this argument, I am reminded of the television and movie industry attacking the VCR for making recordings off the television. There was a House Panel convened on the subject. One of the winning arguments came from Mr Fred Rogers. Mr Rogers made it legal to record TV shows, once more proving that Mr Rogers >>> Chuck Norris. Napster got what what was coming to it. Pirate Bay was screwed. And my sources will remain anonymous. Eventually, the file sharers will win, but we will have to do it on our own. If we had a Mr Rogers, we could win. Hell. If Mr Rogers was still alive, we’d at least have someone safe to go to still.

I also briefly mentioned hacks. While I am not entirely pro-hacks, I do agree that they are illegal but sometimes needed. Most hacks I am referring to are ways of getting around DRM or open up blocked content. I don’t like how games like Spore had only a limited number of installs before it would lock up, and you would need another copy of the game. Fortunately, many companies learned form the massive backlash from Spore to make their games DRM free. Even iTune moved that direction, allowing your downloads in the iTunes Store to be transferred more easily. Devices like Homebrew Channel for the Wii or the R4 for the DS or Action Replays for most systems are purchasable items that allow customization and cheats to added to your games. The R4 allow allows for ports of games to saved on a memory card, thus not requiring you to buy games. My only interest in an R4 is for games I would not normally buy but since I don’t have one yet, I never will. While I am not really against cheating devises and the like (especially now that Miyamoto has them built into the games. Waiting for New Super Mario Bros Wii to try that out.), I believe you have to have some element of legality if you ever want service. Sure, it may blow to spend US$2k on a legal copy of the Adobe Suite, but it is easier to type ‘The GIMP’ into Google than having to find a good cracked version and not get busted.

Back from our digression, I want to talk about another important part of the modern internet: Universal Broadband. This is surprisingly liked by both big business supporters and freedom-loving netizens alike. Universal Broadband is exactly what it sounds like: access to unlimited broadband internet. Businesses love it since ISPs gain more customers, websites gain more customers, and maintenance crews gain infrastructure to get payed to build and repair. Netizens love it since it means there is high-speed internet access no matter where you go. Universal Broadband may also be linked to universal wifi. As of now, Universal Broadband should be the more important goal. (Wifi access is easy to get since good routers are cheap and most of the non-tech oriented (read: anyone over 50) might not have password protection on their routers.) Currently, the infrastructure in most industrial countries is slowly moving towards Universal Broadband. Sadly, the task tends to fall to ISPs and the process is slow. Government intervention does cause the process to move forward, and most recent presidents had a goal of moving towards Universal Broadband. Countries like Japan, Korea and Taiwan already provide such services, allowing their netizens to have cheap, high-quality, high-speed internet access.

Universal Broadband, Net Neutrality and Open Source software are all attempts at creating a more open and free society than we have now. While all of the ideas can be used by certain companies to increase their profits, that is not anything new or unexpected. Free to download programs that are open to modification gives users the freedom to build their computers as they see fit. The ability to freely access the majority of the internet grants users access to almost all of the available knowledge of the world. The transposing of printed media to digital allows the information to flow more freely and readily. Digital galleries share more art than an entire nation’s worth of museums. For those who live in a digital age, the freedom to use and shape the medium is a freedom worth fighting for. Many of those in the fight are part of the first gamer generations. We have been immersed in interactive entertainment, interactive art, all our lives. We are most adapted for this growing digital freedom. While we are not the ones in power yet, our influence has been heard and is growing. The efforts for Universal Broadband have helped spread high-speed internet to many areas in a nation as large as America. With ongoing work in this effort, the whole nation would have access to high-speed internet, like in Japan or Korea. Net Neutrality has lead to more consumer protections while widening consumer bases. The full scope of Net Neutrality’s effects have yet to be seen, but the hope for it’s benefits outweigh the risks. I really cannot recap why Open Source is better than Closed Source other than once again pointing out the battle between Google and Apple in the mobile device market, or the battle between Google and whichever company is doing the closed door developments that Google Labs are competing against openly, or the battle with Firefox being the better of the major browsers currently and with Chrome and Opera still being better choices than Internet Explorer and Safari, or the fact that there are companies out there that are producing programs and distributing them for little or no money that developers and users alike are free to modify as they see fit. These are three issues that all people should know and support. They are better than the alternative where companies are allowed to rape their customers with bogus ToS and DRM agreements or service contracts that raise prices without warning in the health insurance companies are allowed to do. If Americans and others in the world truly value freedom, these are three of the causes for and of freedom that are created by and will be faced in the 21st century, and they will succeed.

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This work by Elliot James Hayter is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 3.0 United States License.
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