When UK dub legend Adrian Sherwood announced that he
would be releasing his third solo album this summer, many an
audiophile’s ears perked up. Sherwood’s work as a producer for the likes
of Primal Scream, Depeche Mode, The Cure, Nine Inch Nails, Einstürzende Neubauten and Skinny Puppy
has long cemented his legacy as a sonic perfectionist who lent a
brilliant sheen to the noisier realms of electronic music and darker
experimental indie outfits. While Survival & Resistance won’t be released until August 17th (on Sherwood’s own On-U Sound
imprint), we’ve managed to get an exclusive mix from the man himself,
featuring tracks from the highly anticipated LP. Lucky, lucky you
Listen HERE
Monday 16 July 2012
Vanishing Voices
One language dies every 14 days. By the next century nearly half of the roughly 7,000 languages spoken on Earth will likely disappear, as communities abandon native tongues in favor of English, Mandarin, or Spanish. What is lost when a language goes silent?
TUVA:
[ ezenggileer ]
to stirrup | to sing with the rhythms of a riding horse
The words used to describe styles of throat singing—an art among Tuvan herders—perfectly capture their distinctive sounds. Ezenggileer evokes the pulsing rhythms of galloping on a horse.
MORE
TUVA:
[ ezenggileer ]
to stirrup | to sing with the rhythms of a riding horse
The words used to describe styles of throat singing—an art among Tuvan herders—perfectly capture their distinctive sounds. Ezenggileer evokes the pulsing rhythms of galloping on a horse.
MORE
House Quietly Reintroduces a Piece of SOPA
Even
after millions rallied against the passage of SOPA/PIPA, the House is
still quietly trying to pass a related bill that would give the
entertainment industry more permanent, government-funded spokespeople.
The Intellectual Property, Competition, and the Internet Subcommittee of
the House Judiciary Committee recently held a hearing on Lamar Smith's
IP Attaché Act (PDF),
a bill that increases intellectual property policing around the world.
The Act would create an Assistant Secretary of Commerce for Intellectual
Property, as well as broaden the use of IP attachés in particular U.S.
embassies. (The attachés were notably present in Sec. 205 of SOPA—which was also introduced by Smith.)
The major issue with this bill—and all similar bills—is that the commissioning of people in the executive branch who are solely dedicated to "intellectual property enforcement" caters to Big Content. The IP attachés are charged with "reducing intellectual property infringement" and "advancing intellectual property rights" around the world, but not to critically engage IP complexities and limitations. From our perspective, this bill is nothing more than the government giving Hollywood traveling foot soldiers.
The presence of people with such a narrow cause as "intellectual property enforcement" fosters a single perspective in the federal government. In an environment where the deep-pocketed copyright lobby is pushing through favorable legislation on both a domestic and international level, this is the last thing we need. As Techdirt and Public Knowledge rightly state: trying to squeeze bits of SOPA past the people—the same people who rejected the bill earlier this year—is an awful idea. Big Content and sympathetic congressmen may think we've stopped watching their actions in Washington, but let's prove them wrong by remaining vigilant about these bad bills.
SMITTX_084_xml.pdf
Adi Kamdar @'EFF'
The major issue with this bill—and all similar bills—is that the commissioning of people in the executive branch who are solely dedicated to "intellectual property enforcement" caters to Big Content. The IP attachés are charged with "reducing intellectual property infringement" and "advancing intellectual property rights" around the world, but not to critically engage IP complexities and limitations. From our perspective, this bill is nothing more than the government giving Hollywood traveling foot soldiers.
The presence of people with such a narrow cause as "intellectual property enforcement" fosters a single perspective in the federal government. In an environment where the deep-pocketed copyright lobby is pushing through favorable legislation on both a domestic and international level, this is the last thing we need. As Techdirt and Public Knowledge rightly state: trying to squeeze bits of SOPA past the people—the same people who rejected the bill earlier this year—is an awful idea. Big Content and sympathetic congressmen may think we've stopped watching their actions in Washington, but let's prove them wrong by remaining vigilant about these bad bills.
SMITTX_084_xml.pdf
Adi Kamdar @'EFF'
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