Showing posts with label blogging. Show all posts
Showing posts with label blogging. Show all posts

Wednesday, January 5, 2011

It is January 5th and already I'm dreading 2011

Hi all. Just a quick update here. School is getting back into the swing of things and this quarter is shaping up to be particularly nasty. I'm thinking that the academic adviser at Strayer was full of beans having me take a 400 level course before taking a 300 level one. I guess I'll find out how fast I can tread water eh?

300 courses before 400? No! Dive right in! You'll be fine.

I'm planning on finishing the next post in my GPS Map series soon, this weekend most likely. Post #4 deals with assembling shapefiles in GPSMapEdit and it's going to be a whopper of a post. GPSMapEdit is a great little program once you work through all of its eccentricities but it certainly has a bunch of those. For instance it has no New command. You cannot create a blank file, you also cannot save a blank file. This makes creating a blank map template a bit more difficult.

Anyway I'll be finishing that post and moving on to Post #5 in which I'll explain how to get your custom map into Garmin MapSource. I'm also going to create a quick and dirty outline for general reference that doesn't include as much explanation.

Another plan that I'm kicking around is taking a Saturday and doing a day hike down at Raccoon Creek State Park in PA. I want to grab a GPS track of the trail I hiked in November 2009. Of course my ability to do that depends heavily upon my course load. Library here I come!

So, anyway look for the rest of my GPS Mapping series and hopefully another RCSP trail report coming up soon! Take care.

~Occasional Hyker

Friday, November 5, 2010

The "Cook's Source" Kerfluffle - Copryright and Blogging

I just read an article on NPR by Linda Holmes titled The Day The Internet Threw A Righteous Hissyfit About Copyright And Pie which relates the recent story about Cook's Source magazine recently getting caught reprinting material gleaned from the Internet.

According to the article a food blogger by the name of Monica Gaudio found one of her blog posts in an edition of Cook's Source magazine, a free but ad supported periodical. Although the magazine gave Ms. Gaudio credit for writing the article, she was obviously upset that her material had been used without her permission and sent emails off to Cook's Source to inform them of that fact. Cook's Source editor, Judith Griggs, replied with an astounding email that leaves one shaking their head in disbelief.

Griggs claimed in her email to Gaudio that Gaudio should be pleased that her blog post had been chosen by Cook's Source for the magazine because it was now "professionally edited" and published. Griggs also claimed that the web is considered "public domain" and anything on it was fair game. Umm... no.

The Internet is a wild place with no police to enforce the rules, but there are rules and copyright is one of them. It may seem otherwise since both copying and reposting are rampant; heck just look at Facebook feeds, mine included. I have tons of pictures on my Facebook page that are not my own. It does seem though that a line has emerged on the Internet as to "fair use" of copyright. If you are copying or reposting for purely entertainment purposes, such as on a forum, then the masses see it as OK. If you are trying to generate revenue with other people's work, then it is not OK. Then there are the gray areas. When I make this post, it shows up on my Facebook page. This blog has ads (not that I am making money off of them, they were a 'why not' decision) so technically all of that reposted copyrighted material on my Facebook page could be considered as "revenue generating" because I post my blog to it. Of course I don't make a dime off of Facebook, I simply use it to let my small group of friends know when I make a new post. Am I infringing copyright?

Like can happen on the Internet, this story of an injured blogger and an arrogant editor caught and spread around the world. The idea that the all content posted on the Internet is public domain incensed many and the Web Vigilantes came out en masse. Turns out this incident of Cook's Source swiping content from the web was not an one off event. The faceless Internet masses found article after article that had been taken from the web without permission, though with credit given to the authors. The more troubling finding though were the photographs that were reprinted in the magazine with out compensating or crediting anyone at all.

According to the NPR article, no comment has been gleaned from Cook's Source nor Ms. Griggs, but the Internet has spoken. Cook's Source's Facebook page has exploded with the angered denunciation of the denizens of the Ethernet and I'm sure Cook's Source will have problems with marketing and ad sales in the future. There are so many facets to this story, the arrogance of the editor, the vigilante administration of "justice", the power of communications in the modern world, that it just fascinates me.

I hope you enjoy reading the linked article and I hope it gives you something to ponder like it did me.

~Occasional Hyker