Showing posts with label movies. Show all posts
Showing posts with label movies. Show all posts

Monday, November 30, 2009

A Word About Child's Play Charity And Donating This Christmas


This Christmas, there are a number of excellent charities to donate to, should you feel inclined to do so. I donate to a few assorted charities here and there throughout the year, but Child's Play is a bit different for me. In my experiences of donating, I knew that I was donating to a good cause, but never felt any personal or vested interest in the causes I was donating to. With Child's Play, for me specifically, I really feel like it's a cause I can personally get behind.

Since 2003, Child's Play has raised over $5 million dollars in donations of toys, games, books, movies and more for sick kids hospitals around the world. As a gamer, and as someone with a lot of younger family members that I've taken care of throughout the years, its a cause I can really empathize with. Hospitalized children don't spend all day being treated, and the downtime can get boring and at worst, detrimental to the recovery of a child. Providing hospitalized children with any form of entertainment can go a long way to boosting a child's spirits and ultimately, their recovery. There aren't that many charities out there like it and this one is powered by like-minded people, which makes the act of donating to the cause more powerful to me.

Last year, I bought Rock Band downloadable songs where all the proceeds raised by the songs went to Child's Play. This year, I went through their Amazon Gift List system and donated Lego Indiana Jones for the Wii to The Hospital For Sick Children in Toronto. While my contributions aren't nearly as large as the $132,000 raised by the Desert Bus For Hope marathon, I'm sure my contributions will go towards a few smiles for children that really need it. From here on out, I'll make a conscious effort to donate to the cause when I can.

With all that said, it would be awesome if you donated to the cause too. However, I'm not forcing you to do anything. I would be happy if you donated to any charity this holiday season, especially one you feel strongly about. Anything we can do to make the holidays brighter for others is a win for everyone.


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Thursday, May 7, 2009

MPAA Gives Teachers Stupid Solution to Creating Educational Clips


MPAA shows how to videorecord a TV set by Vimeo user Timothy Vollmer


The Copyright Office is currently going through proposed exceptions to the Digital Millenium Copyright Act. One proposed exception concerns teachers, who would like the legal approval to rip DVD's and edit them for classroom use. To me, that sounds totally fine. However, if the Motion Picture Association of America were to say no, I'd probably say mean things to them, but recognize that copyright law is what it is.

However, instead of giving a "yes" or "no" answer, they showed off the video above, in which they try to convince the rulemaking comittee that videotaping your television with a camcorder is an acceptable alternative to ripping and editing video. Are you kidding me?

I'm no expert in copyright law. I understand that copyright law is a mess right now, and as technology destroys the entire model that copyright law was built upon in the first place it's only going to get tougher. But I know enough to say that FILMING YOUR TELEVISION IS NOT THE ANSWER!

I understand why they think it's the answer. This way, you only take the chunks you need, and the quality is worse. But having teachers film their televisions isn't going to solve anything.

The MPAA's draconian process takes longer, more equipment, crappier quality, and sacrifices the quality of education to the students to protect a mixtape of clips that is useless outside the classroom? The MPAA has a lot more to worry about than teachers putting together teaching materials.

There was a quote I found on boingboing that put it best:
In the words of media literacy researcher Martine Courant Rife, that's like typing up a quote from a book, taking it outside, chiseling the words in a rock, photographing the rock, scanning the photo, and running OCR on it. And for what?"
I'm not sure what the real answer is to copywrites in the 21st century. But it seems like both the MPAA and the RIAA strike-out every single time they've tried to impose their power on the new world of media, whether that's suing children for downloading, trying to make people feel bad for getting a movie for free, and now this. If they want to be seen as the protectors of intelligent property rather than out-of-touch executives on a power trip, they'll need to come up with some better solutions than what they've shown during the last decade.


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