Digg Joins Data Portability Group

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Digg made a post to the company’s blog yesterday announcing their officially joining the DataPortability.org Working Group. Digg follows Facebook, Google, Microsoft and many other companies in getting on board to discuss protocols that will make it easier for users to move their data around the web, whilst still protecting their privacy.

The company posted more specifics about its embrace of data standards than almost any of the other participating companies has. "Digg already supports many of the open standards that let you use your data on sites other than Digg, including RSS, OPML, and hCard," wrote Digg’s Steve Williams. "We use RDF to embed the Creative Commons public domain dedication into each page. Just this week, we added MicroID, a Microformat that lets you prove to other services that you own your Digg user profile. We’ll be adding more open standards, such as OpenID, APML, OAuth, and XFN, in the coming months."

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Trent Ponders Music’s Downward Spiral

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To be perfectly honest, if you asked me where to find a thoughtful commentary on DMCA and musician’s digital intellectual property rights, the last place that would spring to mind would be Trent Reznor’s blog at nin.com.

However, that’s exactly what you’ll find, right now, if you head over there. Trent describes an ongoing project he’s had with re-mixing communities on the Internet, where he released the master recording files on the band’s website in an experiment to see what could come of it.

The results have been very pleasing to Trent, and he found what independent artists have known for years now: if you’re hard up for a sequel album, release your recording masters to talented amateur DJ’s, and bam, you’ve got a follow up album with a unique but familiar sound.

He liked it so much that he wanted create an officially sanctioned community around the remixing of NIN music, but ran into a fair amount of opposition from his record label. You may have heard of these guys: Universal.

They’re currently involved in lawsuits against Google and News Corp alleging that they’ve built businesses around exploiting the safe harbor provision of the DMCA, and that by setting up a user-generated content community for NIN, they’d be culpable for that same type of action.

That doesn’t man they don’t think it’s a great idea, though. They encouraged Reznor to move ahead with the project, but under the NIN brand, and ensured that should any DMCA allegations be brought against Universal, they would disavow all knowledge of the topic, and say that the band itself is culpable for the community violations.

Understandably, Reznor is a bit hesitant to launch it under his own name, and while he doesn’t specifically ask for legal advice, reading between the lines of his post, it seems that he might be open to a clever scheme that would prevent the pants from being sued off him.

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ICANN Council Rejects Domain Owner Anonymity

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The Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers (ICANN) voted against a proposal on Wednesday to grant internet domain owners anonymity.

Instead, the ICANN council voted 17-7 to continue studying whether it should abandon its policy requiring domain site owners’ personal or proxy information to appear on a Whois search. After nearly two hours of debate, the group voted to investigate formulating a policy that ensures “appropriate privacy safeguards for natural persons, lawful access to data for rights enforcement, consumer protection, law enforcement and anti-crime purposes.”

The council for the governing body of domain registrations, voted down a measure that would have allowed Whois reporting requirements to expire at the end of 2008.

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Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 2.0 UK: England & Wales
Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 2.0 UK: England & Wales