Your Happening World (15)

Easter weekend happenings:

  • The Dutch government has released (almost) its entire internet presence under a Creative Commons Zero licence, putting it in the public domain. As Dutch internet law expert Arnoud Engelfriet explains (in Dutch, natch), they didn’t need to do this as by law any government work is in the public domain, but this makes it explicit.
  • A few days ago Nick Cohen was busy upbraidign an obscure student for publishing a thesis critical of the work of Canadian Women for Women in Afghanistan. This after he helped smear Amnesty International not a mere two months ago. Now he’s after Joanna Lumley for erm helping the Ghurka veterans getting their pensions. There’s no pleasing the guy.
  • Christian wannabe-terrorists are weird.
  • Jamie points out that being shocked at Catholic Church officials comparing the uproar about pedo priests to anti-semitism is just what they want. The discussion now revolves around what the Church says instead of what it does…
  • Lenny on the role the courts play in the class war.

BA gets deeper in trouble with the unions

Unions in Denmark, Sweden and Norway are going to take action in support of the BA strike:

ITF General Secretary David Cockroft said: “BA is a world organisation and conflict within it has world repercussions. Our member unions have watched the failure of negotiations between management and union and they have been unanimous in recognising the risk of a downward spiral across the aviation sector and the potential for damage to the company, its image, passengers and workers that failure represents.”

He continued, “We and our members intend to resist what has come to look very much like an attempt to break the union, and resist the drop in standards across the industry – probably starting in Spain after any BA/Iberia tie-up – that it would usher in if allowed to happen.”

Having the strike spread outside of the UK will do a lot to make BA hurt. One of the ways BA has been able to limit damages so far is because it partners with other airlines and can depend on their crews for those flights. If union involvement from outside the UK can stop this, BA will have a lot less flights departing as planned. See the below video for a handy explanation.



It’s good to see that unions in other countries recognise the danger of letting BA win and are prepared to make sacrifises to stop them. Unions have long realised that with globalised capital, labour needs to be globalised as well, but it has been much harder to put in practise. One of the few succesful multinational union campaigns I can think off of the top of my head is that of the harbour workers fighting the deregulation of European ports — hopefully the BA campaign will be another one.

Water, water everywhere, so why buy bottled?



Bottled water is one of the worst (legal!) scams business has foisted on us: selling the exact same product as we can get nearly for free out of our taps and marketed as if we’re better, more caring and slightly hip people for buying it. If you buy it, you’re an idiot and killin g the planet.

The secret copyright negotiatons – revealed!

One of the great but largely ignored battlefields of 21st century politics is intellectual property. The relentless march of technology ™ means copying data today, in whatever form it takes, is as hard as it’s ever going to be, to put it in Cory Doctorow’s words. Cheap harddrive storage, fast internet and easy to use filesharing technology has made it much easier to find, get and store any kind of media you’d like, from this weeks comics to bootleg recordings of 1970 pop festivals to the latest Hollywood blockbuster to whatever weird hybrid some kids have thought up in their bedroom yesterday. Any company or person whose business depends on controlling the right to copy is therefore fucked. The monopoly on copyright has been irrevocably broken, at least technically.

How do you deal with that, as an industry built on the assumption that copying is hard and is therefore worthwhile to control? Letting go of this control is hard, when you’ve spent your entire life fighting to get it and keep it. It’s no wonder then that Hollywood, the music industry and the various other industries built on this assumption have instead chosen to make copying harder legally, the more it became easier to do technically. Before we had tape cassettes it was so difficult to copy your favourite record it was pointless even trying, so no legislation was needed to stop home copying. Once Philips made copying music as easy as putting on an album on your home entertainment system and then press “record”, suddenly we get increasingly Draconian legislation making it illegal. This process has obviously only accelerated in the internet age, which brings us to our current situation.

Technology not only makes copying easier, but also surveillance — if it’s easier to download, it is also easier to see what we’re downloading… What the big content monopolists now want to do is to use technology to retake control, by getting governments around the world to spy on us to make sure we’re not getting things we haven’t paid for and then punishing us if we have. The way they do that is through ACTA, the Anti-Counterfeiting Trade Agreement. Intended to stop both commercial and home copying, it’s being negotiated in secret by the content industries with our governments, but without any legislative oversight or input from us. It’s purely intended to serve the interests of Hollywood and co, by making it very very easy to get copyright “infringers” taken down, but hard to appeal and in which no balance has been struck between the legitamite desire of content producers to make money of their work and the public interest in having information freely/easily available. As you know Bob, originally copyright was set up as a state given monopoly to encourage authors and publishers to, well, publish, while recognising that this monopoly should be finite in order to enable dissemination of information. This last consideration has almost entirely disappear from modern copyright, thanks to monopolist lobbying and ACTA is the ultimate expression of it.

Because the negotiations about it have been held in secret, it has been difficult to know what ACTA will entail. There have been rumours and a few leaks, but nothing concrete, until recently. The entire text of the current draft proposal has been leaked and even better, has been wikified.. With this leak it finally became clear just how dangerous ACTA is for us, as Margot Kaminski explains: for example, if ACTA is passed in its current form, it will making copying.downloading not just a civil, but a criminal offence….

Wave goodbye to bluefin tuna

Fuck. No fishing ban on bluefish tuna — species expected to die out:

The conference of the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species (CITES), which closed in Doha on Thursday, could not agree to a ban on international trade in Atlantic bluefin tuna. No limits will be set for the fish to end up in Japanese sushi.

The rejection in the Qatari capital has already been dubbed “Tunapocalypse Now”. Five species of hammerhead shark suffered a similar fate at the summit in Doha. They didn’t make it onto CITES’ ‘Appendix I’, the list of species in which international trade is banned. Fins of these sharks are a common ingredient in Asian soup, but the rest of their body is often tossed overboard.

Japan, which annually spends hundreds of millions of euros importing bluefin tuna, emerged as the victor in Doha. North African nations such as Libya and Tunisia, whose regimes profit from the tuna trade, were also satisfied with the convention’s outcome. The big losers are the US and the EU, even if some European countries, namely France, Spain and Malta, are home to sizable tuna industries that will doubtlessly have celebrated the convention’s results.

Everybody loses

All things considered though, everybody loses. Scientists now regard, as a real possibility, the extinction of the Atlantic blue fin tuna and some species of shark. They have predicted a sudden and irreversible drop in population levels in the coming years. This happened to the, once immense, Atlantic cod population that used to live off the North American coast in the 1990s.

Emphasis mine. It’s no good just cursing the Japanese for this; as the article points out, the same sort of thing happened to cod, through the greed of American, Canadian, British etc. fishers. To be honest, even if the ban had gone through it would still have been like slapping a plaster on a gaping chest wound. Fishing in general is just not sustainable as we’ve known for decades.