TidBITS#952/03-Nov-08
=====================
  Issue link: <http://db.tidbits.com/issue/952>

  The big news this week is that TidBITS publisher Adam Engst survived 
  the New York City Marathon on Sunday, ensuring that there will be 
  future issues. Turning to the stuff we really cover, AT&T is now 
  offering free Wi-Fi to iPhone users, Apple has opened iPhone 
  developer forums, and LogMeIn is testing a tool that lets you 
  control remote computers via an iPhone or iPod touch. Returning to 
  the world of the Mac, Adam relates at how it's possible to put 6 GB 
  of RAM in a MacBook or MacBook Pro, and Doug McLean reports on the 
  unveiling of Netflix's Mac-compatible Watch Instantly player. Also 
  this week, Glenn Fleishman examines the ground-breaking legal 
  settlement that will keep Google Book Search going. In the TidBITS 
  Watchlist, we cover the releases of Microsoft Office 2008 for Mac 
  12.1.4 Update, iKey 2.3.1, TextExpander 2.5, SpamSieve 2.7.2, and 
  Fission 1.6. 

Articles
    AT&T Offers Free Wi-Fi for iPhone, for Real This Time
    Adam Beats His New York City Marathon Goal
    Apple Launches iPhone Developer Forums
    6 GB of RAM in a MacBook or MacBook Pro
    LogMeIn Tests Remote Screen Sharing via iPhone, iPod touch
    Netflix Starts Deploying Mac-Compatible Media Player
    Take Control News: Create Better AirPort Wireless Networks
    Authors and Publishers Settle with Google Book Search
    TidBITS Watchlist: Notable Software Updates for 03-Nov-08
    Hot Topics in TidBITS Talk/03-Nov-08


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AT&T Offers Free Wi-Fi for iPhone, for Real This Time
-----------------------------------------------------
  by Jeff Carlson <jeffc@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/9836>

  AT&T is now providing free wireless Internet access to its 
  iPhone-owning customers at the company's hotspot locations, which 
  include thousands of Starbucks cafes, McDonald's restaurants, 
  hotels, airports, and more. News of this service appeared briefly 
  earlier in the year on AT&T's Web site and was then taken down (see 
  "iPhone Roundup: AT&T Wi-Fi, Out of Stock, International Carriers," 
  2008-05-10). iPhone owners are also being notified by text message, 
  so it's not likely an inadvertent posting error this time.

<http://www.wireless.att.com/learn/internet/wifi.jsp>
<http://www.starbucks.com/retail/find/default.aspx>
<http://db.tidbits.com/article/9609>
<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2008-10/attwifi.png>

  AT&T's Wi-Fi service typically costs $20 per month, but access is 
  free for many business, DSL, and fiber customers. In participating 
  Starbucks stores, connecting to the in-store Wi-Fi network makes a 
  special Starbucks category appear in the iPhone's iTunes Store app 
  for purchasing music (which requires a Wi-Fi connection).

  To use the service from an iPhone, go to the Settings app, select 
  "attwifi" from the list of available networks, and enter your 
  10-digit mobile number. After agreeing to the Acceptable Use Policy, 
  AT&T will send a free text message containing a secure link that's 
  valid for 24 hours at that location.

<http://www.wireless.att.com/learn/internet/accessing-wifi.jsp>


Adam Beats His New York City Marathon Goal
------------------------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/9842>

  It's good to have goals, like breaking 3 hours in the marathon, but 
  it's even better to crush them underfoot, as I did Sunday while 
  racing to a 2 hour and 48 minute finish in the New York City 
  Marathon, good for about 317th place out of 37,899 finishers. It was 
  perhaps the hardest thing I've ever done - not so much the actual 
  running, but the 4 months of hard training, capped by weeks of 
  meticulous preparations. I was relatively sure I could break 3 
  hours, but I had no idea I could run so fast for so long. (Tristan 
  apparently did, though, since his contribution to Tonya's email from 
  the night before the race was "Have a great marathon and get as 
  close as you can to 2 hours and 50 minutes. Or less.") 

  My sincere apologies to those of you who were either disappointed or 
  worried when you couldn't follow my progress on the New York City 
  Marathon Web site, but there was a snafu regarding my timing chip at 
  registration (see "Adam Running the New York City Marathon," 
  2008-10-27). So I don't have an official time or place yet, but I 
  alerted the marathon organizers and hope they can resolve the 
  problem soon.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/9829>

  Wonderful as this experience was, I don't think I'll be racing 
  another marathon any time soon. I simply don't have the time in my 
  life for the necessary level of training, and I'm not certain my 
  body can handle the strain over a long period of time. I'd rather be 
  running comfortably at age 70 than have a few more marathons under 
  my belt. And of course, it might be disappointing if my next 
  marathon was a lot slower.

  Big thanks to Tonya and Tristan for their support during the months 
  of training, to my many friends in the Ithaca running community for 
  their much-appreciated advice and camaraderie, and to everyone who 
  sent an email or tweet of encouragement. Our neighbor and TidBITS 
  reader Kathie Hodge even left an envelope in our mailbox with a good 
  luck card and a four-leafed clover, and long-time TidBITS friend 
  Chris Pepper and his wife Amy and daughter Julia cheered me on at 
  the 7 mile mark (I'm the guy in the red shorts in Chris's photo). As 
  much as I had to retreat inside myself to maintain my pace after 
  mile 20, all the public support up to that point was instrumental.

<http://www.flickr.com/photos/chrispepper/2995030013/>

  The combination of elation and pain after the race took me by 
  surprise, and although I'm used to talking with fellow runners after 
  races, I was also pleasantly surprised at just how New Yorkers in 
  general opened up and became downright chatty as soon as they saw my 
  race number on the walk, subway ride, and ferry trip back to my aunt 
  and uncle's house on Staten Island. It's nice to see such an event 
  make the big city feel more like a small town.

  Now it's time to focus on healing the damage I did to my body - 
  pretty much every muscle below my rib cage hurts when I move. I'll 
  be downing lots of water and nutritious food, stretching to the 
  extent I can, and massaging out all the trigger points that are 
  causing much of the pain. I hope to be back on the roads and trails 
  soon for some easy runs.

  To leave you with something of general utility, I'll note that one 
  side benefit of all this training is that I've developed a 
  significantly deeper understanding of muscular anatomy and have 
  found that trigger point therapy (a form of massage you can do to 
  yourself) is tremendously useful at addressing all sorts of pain. 
  Trigger point therapy is certainly no panacea, and is itself 
  uncomfortable, but I've had great success with it addressing plantar 
  fasciitis pain in my right foot, knee pain due to IT band syndrome, 
  and even back pain due to working at the Mac for too many hours in a 
  row. If you want to learn more, I highly recommend "The Trigger 
  Point Therapy Workbook: Your Self-Treatment Guide for Pain Relief, 
  Second Edition," by Clair Davies and Amber Davies, thanks to its 
  real-world advice and easily followed directions. Also useful is 
  "Trigger Point Therapy for Myofascial Pain: The Practice of Informed 
  Touch," by Donna Finando and Steven Finando, which has better 
  diagnostic pictures but far more technical text aimed at massage 
  therapists.

<http://www.amazon.com/dp/1572243759/?tag=tidbitselectro00>
<http://www.amazon.com/dp/1594770549/?tag=tidbitselectro00>


Apple Launches iPhone Developer Forums
--------------------------------------
  by Glenn Fleishman <glenn@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/9835>

  Apple has opened up the Apple Developer Forums for talking about 
  iPhone software development. The free forums, currently in beta 
  testing, are available to anyone signed up for iPhone development 
  via its three programs: standard, enterprise, and university. 
  Standard developers pay a $99 fee, which includes the right to 
  submit software for release through the App Store, while businesses 
  pay $299 for the right to develop software that's distributed within 
  a company. Those signed up just to access the iPhone Software 
  Development Kit (SDK), which requires no payment, are not allowed 
  access.

<http://developer.apple.com/devforums/>

  Apple was widely criticized by programmers for keeping a 
  non-disclosure agreement (NDA) in place following the release of the 
  iPhone 2.0 software. This NDA prevented any public discussion of 
  development issues, restricted the distribution among companies of 
  software code, and put a damper even on private interactions, many 
  developers said.

  The NDA was dropped informally a few weeks ago (see "Apple Allows 
  Developers to Talk about iPhone Software," 2008-10-01) and the legal 
  agreement was updated last week. The removal of the NDA covers only 
  software and features that have been publicly announced and 
  discussed, such as the current release of the iPhone operating 
  system.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/9793>


6 GB of RAM in a MacBook or MacBook Pro
---------------------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/9839>

  After a few weeks of Internet conversation and testing, it turns out 
  that recent MacBook and MacBook Pro models - both the 
  just-introduced aluminum-and-glass models and the two previous minor 
  updates - can address not just 4 GB of RAM, as Apple's technical 
  specifications pages state, but 6 GB of RAM. 

<http://forums.macrumors.com/showthread.php?t=573906>

  (To identify if your MacBook or MacBook Pro is new enough, run 
  System Profiler and in the Hardware Overview screen, check the Model 
  Identifier line. After the model name are two numbers, separated by 
  a comma, as in "3,1". If the first number is 3, 4, or 5, the Mac 
  should be able to handle 6 GB of RAM.)

  The laptops both have a pair of DIMM slots. The current MacBook and 
  MacBook Pro models require a new form of high-speed memory called 
  DDR3, running at 1066 MHz. The previous models use DDR2 RAM running 
  at 667 MHz. Standard configurations have either 2 GB or 4 GB of RAM, 
  achieved by installing a pair of either 1 GB or 2 GB DIMMs.

  So what if you replaced one 2 GB DIMM with a 4 GB DIMM? The answer 
  seems to be that the MacBook and MacBook Pro both operate reliably 
  with 6 GB of RAM, as long as it's the same type and speed of RAM. 
  However, reports indicate that the next logical step - installing a 
  pair of 4 GB DIMMs for a total of 8 GB of RAM - does not work 
  properly. As yet, it's unclear if the problem could be resolved in 
  software (such as by Snow Leopard, the next major update to Mac OS 
  X), or if there are hardware issues. 

  There are some downsides to jumping to 6 GB. First, you must install 
  mismatched DIMM sizes (one 2 GB DIMM and one 4 GB DIMM). When 
  working with a pair of identical DIMMs, the Mac can take advantage 
  of its dual-channel architecture to increase the speed with which 
  data can move from RAM to the CPU. However, for most usage patterns, 
  a dual-channel architecture provides only a slight speed 
  improvement, and losing that is probably outweighed by the benefit 
  of reduced virtual memory disk swapping.

<http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dual_channel>

  At the moment, there is another problem: price. Ramjet just 
  announced the first 4 GB DDR3-1066 DIMM for the recently released 
  MacBook and MacBook Pro models, and it's not cheap, at $599. In 
  comparison, a 2 GB DDR3-1066 DIMM costs only $75 from Ramjet. For 
  the previous generations of the laptops, a 4 GB DDR2-667 DIMM is a 
  lot cheaper, at $159.99 from Newegg. Personally, I'd wait for the 
  price to come down on the 4 GB DDR3-1066 DIMM.

<http://www.ramjet.com/ItemDescription.asp?Item=MBALX4G>
<http://www.ramjet.com/ItemDescription.asp?Item=MBPX4G>
<http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16820231202>

  And lastly, I must stress that this is an unsupported configuration, 
  and I have not tried it personally. If you have problems and call 
  Apple for help, they will be entirely justified in giggling at you. 
  Don't say you weren't warned!


LogMeIn Tests Remote Screen Sharing via iPhone, iPod touch
----------------------------------------------------------
  by Glenn Fleishman <glenn@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/9834>

  I'm constantly beset by the need to reach a computer that's not 
  within reach: a server located 15 miles to the south, a laptop at 
  home, or a "headless" system (no monitor attached). LogMeIn is one 
  of the tools I rely on to complement Timbuktu Pro and Back to My 
  Mac's screen sharing. LogMeIn's Mac OS X version, a free 
  screen-sharing utility, lets me manipulate my computers remotely, 
  even those inside my ostensibly locked-away home network.

  The company has now announced a limited beta test of LogMeIn 
  Ignition, an extension of their system, which relies on client 
  software and centrally coordinating servers that they run, to the 
  iPod touch and iPhone. 

<https://secure.logmein.com/welcome/IgnitionPreview/>

  The App Store currently offers some remote-access packages, although 
  these rely on VNC. VNC is built into Tiger and Leopard, but it 
  requires directly reachable IP addresses, whether you use port 
  mapping or have a public IP address on the computer you want to 
  connect to. LogMeIn can traverse NAT and other obstacles to 
  end-to-end connectivity.


Netflix Starts Deploying Mac-Compatible Media Player
----------------------------------------------------
  by Doug McLean <doug_mclean@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/9832>

  [Updated 03-Nov-08 to account for the opening of Netflix's public 
  beta. -Adam]

  A few weeks ago I reported on Netflix's blog announcement that the 
  company hoped to make its Watch Instantly feature accessible to Mac 
  users by the end of 2008 (see "Netflix Mac Support News and More," 
  2008-10-08). Netflix has now backed up their claim by unveiling 
  their new media player - based on Microsoft's Silverlight 
  technology. While it may seem surprising that the long-awaited 
  solution to this Mac-access problem comes by way of Microsoft, you 
  probably won't be surprised to learn that the root of the problem 
  lies in digital rights management (DRM) technology requirements from 
  the studios. According to Netflix:

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/9803>
<http://netflix.mediaroom.com/index.php?s=43&item=288>
<http://silverlight.net/>

    "Apple does not license their DRM solution to third parties, which has made this more difficult, but we are working with the studios and content owners to gain approval for other solutions. As soon as a studio-approved DRM for the Mac is available to us, whether from Apple or another source, we will move quickly to provide a movie viewer that enables you to watch movies from Netflix instantly on your Mac."

  The new Netflix player will use Microsoft's PlayReady DRM - new in 
  Silverlight 2.0 - to prevent users from doing anything but watching 
  the content. Netflix's current player relies on a Windows-only DRM 
  system.

  For those hearing about Microsoft Silverlight for the first time, 
  it's a technology akin to Adobe Flash in that it's embodied in a Web 
  browser plug-in and can display animations, audio and video, and 
  interactive applications. Silverlight was first put to the test this 
  past summer in streaming the Beijing Olympics for NBC. The player 
  streamed thousands of hours of live coverage with generally 
  successful results. 

<http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Silverlight>
<http://www.nbcolympics.com/video/>

  Unfortunately, as Mac users attempting to watch Olympic video 
  discovered, the new Netflix player works only on Intel-based Macs, 
  leaving older PowerPC-based Macs in the lurch. Netflix claims that 
  Intel-based Macs account for about three quarters of the company's 
  current Mac-based subscribers. So while a fix for the majority of 
  Mac users is certainly better than nothing, it's a shame for that 
  remaining 25 percent to be denied access. It's hard to imagine that 
  Microsoft will extend Silverlight back to PowerPC-based Macs in the 
  future.

  Although Netflix initially limited access to the beta of the new 
  player to new subscribers, the company has since opened the beta 
  program to anyone who wants to sign up. Have at it, but remember, 
  since it's a beta, you shouldn't expect perfect performance out of 
  the gate. 

<http://www.netflix.com/WiMessage?msg=58>


Take Control News: Create Better AirPort Wireless Networks
----------------------------------------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/9838>

  We are pleased to announce the release of the significantly 
  rewritten "Take Control of Your 802.11n AirPort Network," the latest 
  in our line of Glenn Fleishman's Take Control titles about AirPort 
  wireless networking. With his usual good-natured enthusiasm, Glenn 
  has created a fully updated ebook about AirPort networking, covering 
  not only the practical details and real-world steps that you need to 
  set up a fast, reliable, and secure wireless network, but also lots 
  of details of interest for everyone from the beginner (basic 
  terminology and concepts) to the experienced user (tricky IP 
  addressing scenarios, IPv6, and software base stations). The 
  242-page ebook (perhaps our most comprehensive yet!) is available 
  for $15, although those of you who already have one of Glenn's 
  AirPort books should have already received email about free or 
  discounted upgrades. Topics covered include:

<http://www.takecontrolbooks.com/airport-n.html?14@@!pt=TB952>

* Real-world advice - with diagrams - about setting up the 802.11n 
  models of the AirPort Express, AirPort Extreme, and Time Capsule

* Advice on whether the 2.4 GHz or 5 GHz band is best for your network

* Tricks for including older 802.11b and 802.11g Wi-Fi gear without 
  damaging performance

* Step-by-step instructions on connecting from Macintosh and Windows 
  clients 

* Details about handling complex Internet addressing configurations

* The ins and outs of sharing USB disks, including a Time Capsule

* Help with connecting shared printers to Leopard, Tiger, and Windows

* A discussion of networking with and configuring an Apple TV

* How to set up a multi-base-station network to extend the area of 
  wireless coverage

* The scoop on the up-and-coming IPv6 standard for handling IP 
  addresses

  Although the ebook focuses on Mac OS X 10.5 Leopard, it also covers 
  Mac OS X 10.4 Tiger, Windows XP, and Windows Vista.


Authors and Publishers Settle with Google Book Search
-----------------------------------------------------
  by Glenn Fleishman <glenn@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/9837>

  Google wants to index all knowledge, and it thought that scanning a 
  few tens of millions of books might be a good addition to the 
  compendium of billions of Web pages, PDFs, and Word documents they 
  already offer. The only trouble? Most of the books they wanted to 
  scan are still under copyright protection. This caused the 
  Association of American Publishers (AAP), the Authors Guild, and 
  other organizations to gnash their teeth - and file lawsuits.

  Last week, Google and a host of these complainants agreed to a 
  settlement that a court must still approve. Google will contribute 
  piles of cash - $125 million - to settle outstanding issues and fund 
  a new copyright clearinghouse that will enable authors and 
  publishers to receive funds for online viewing of works. 

<http://books.google.com/booksrightsholders/>

  The settlement also clears the way for far greater access to 
  _orphaned works_: books (and other material) that remain protected 
  by copyright, but which are out of print or out of production, the 
  party owning the rights is nowhere to be found, and the works 
  largely unavailable even through lending libraries.

  Unlike the outcome of many lawsuits about copyright and access, this 
  settlement could be a big win for authors, publishers, readers, and 
  libraries. Could such a thing be possible?

  (Full disclosure: I am a member of the Authors Guild. Although I did 
  not support the particular form of the Authors Guild lawsuit, 
  neither did I cancel my membership as a result of the legal action.)

  [Editors' disclosure: With our Take Control hats on, we've worked 
  with Google Book Search for years, and it pains me to say that the 
  experience has been nothing but frustrating, with literally months 
  of delay between uploading a fully searchable PDF - no need to scan 
  anything - and having it posted. Plus, although Google's support 
  people responded quickly to our queries, they were universally 
  useless at addressing any complaints, such as posting delays or the 
  existence of guaranteed broken links to Amazon.com for our titles, 
  given the fact that Amazon doesn't resell our ebooks. I certainly 
  hope that the settlement will mean increased exposure for Google 
  Book Search and our content, and additional sales. -Adam]


**The Backstory** -- After a couple years of prep work, Google 
  announced in 2004 its Google Print program, later renamed Google 
  Book Search, as well as its Library Project, the controversial part. 

<http://books.google.com/googlebooks/newsviews/history.html>

  Google started partnering with major publishers first, followed by 
  smaller houses - a total of 20,000 so far - to make their books 
  available in some form online.

  Google's bigger objective was to partner with major academic 
  libraries around the world, scan books using high-speed techniques 
  it had invented, and use optical character recognition (OCR) 
  technology to turn the scans into searchable text. 

  Google Book Search made it possible for anyone to search the 
  contents of any scanned book and, depending on the copyright status 
  of the book and other factors, view or even download some or all 
  pages. (Microsoft started two similar programs which avoided many 
  copyright issues, but the company shut those projects down in May 
  2008.)

<http://www.libraryjournal.com/article/CA6564275.html>

  This behavior rankled many because Google claimed the right to scan 
  copyright-protected books because the company wasn't per se 
  distributing the books, even though it had full digital copies. 
  Google maintained - in a rough approximation - that because it was 
  working under contract with libraries that owned physical copies of 
  the books, that making archival digital copies was perfectly 
  legitimate, as was turning the copyrighted works into text and 
  images that weren't revealed in whole on the Web.

  The various parties aligned against Google disagreed, and filed suit 
  in 2005.


**The Variety of Works under Discussion** -- Part of what publishers 
  and the Authors Guild found problematic, and part of how the 
  settlement on which parties agreed was designed, centers around 
  separating works into three categories: public domain, in 
  copyright/out of print, and in copyright/in print.

* Public domain works are no longer covered by copyright, and may be 
  used in essentially any form and any fashion. Many publishers, 
  notably Dover, reprint public-domain works in various forms and 
  compendiums. Copyright holders can also release all rights on works 
  they control, placing a creation in the public domain. Google Book 
  Search makes the full text available, including for download.

<http://store.doverpublications.com/by-subject-literature-dover-thrift-editions.html>

* Books that are in copyright, but out of print, are often called 
  _orphan works_ when the owner of the rights can't be found or 
  there's no clear owner, as when a writer dies without an estate; 
  there are also plenty of books that writers and publishers can't 
  find a way to get back into print or wouldn't consider bringing back 
  into print due to low sales or other complexities. This broad 
  category covers books that are no longer stocked or available from 
  the commercial book trade, although sometimes individual authors buy 
  remainders from a publisher - the last in-stock copies that a 
  publisher was intended to turn into pulp - and sells them through 
  hard effort. The copyright for out-of-print books may be owned by a 
  living person or his or her estate, by a trust, by a publisher, or 
  by a company; or it may be entirely unclear who (if anyone) owns the 
  copyright, which is likely the case for many works created before 
  the 1980s. Out-of-print works make writers cry, because their 
  hard-wrung prose - fiction or non-fiction or reference - is 
  unavailable, even if the market desires it, because the economics of 
  print publishing have until recently put their children in the 
  gutter. Google Book Search makes the full text searchable, with 
  snippets of context presented.

* Active books are in copyright and in print. Books that are actively 
  sold by publishers through booksellers or directly, even if they're 
  30, 40, or 70 years old, fit in this category. Publishers often 
  refer to their frontlist, books that are relatively new and actively 
  promoted, and their backlist, titles still in stock and available, 
  and which may even sell well, but which aren't promoted. The same 
  searching and results are allowed as with out of print titles. (By 
  the way, Amazon's special-order books program, launched at the same 
  time as the bookseller's overall store in 1995, was the first simple 
  way to obtain in-print books that weren't routinely stocked by 
  either bookstores or book distributors. Prior to Amazon, special 
  order books required time and effort on the part of a bookseller, 
  and were often regarded as a giant pain to fulfill.)

  These three categories raise the question: what's covered under 
  copyright, anyway? I'm glad you asked. 


**Copyright's Increasing Longevity** -- Copyright law in the United 
  States has been tweaked quite a bit since the right was granted in 
  the Constitution, and because of this, there's quite a bit of 
  complexity involved. The U.S. Copyright Office has a brief 
  explanation, as well as a more extended discussion of terms. 

<http://www.copyright.gov/help/faq/faq-duration.html#duration>
<http://www.copyright.gov/circs/circ15a.html#works>

  If I can try to boil the discussion down for published works 
  copyrighted in the United States:

* Everything copyrighted - registered with the Copyright Office - 
  before 1922 is in the public domain.

* Nearly everything registered as under copyright starting in 1922 was 
  under copyright initially for a term of 28 years, which could be 
  renewed on the 28th anniversary through the Copyright Office for 
  another 28 years.

* Works registered starting 01-Jan-50 are grandfathered through a 
  variety of rules to extend their copyright with no renewal being 
  required. There are a lot of niceties involved, but this is the 
  general rule.

* Any work copyrighted from 01-Jan-78 on is under copyright protection 
  the moment it's created for the author's life plus 70 years, or for 
  95 years from publication for works owned by a company - so-called 
  "work for hire," in which a work was created by a statutorily 
  defined employee of a firm or institutions, or for which copyright 
  has been transferred by the individual or people involved to a 
  company. No registration is required, but it ensures both a proof of 
  ownership along with the maximum statutory damages (treble!) for 
  successful proof of violation. (Before the Sonny Bono Copyright Term 
  Extension Act of 1998, the duration was 50 years following death or 
  75 years for works for hire. This was also pejoratively known as the 
  Mickey Mouse Protection Act, because Mickey's appearance in 
  Steamboat Willie would have entered the public domain in 2000.)

<http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sonny_Bono_Copyright_Term_Extension_Act>

  A lot more explanation, which I'll avoid here, is necessary for 
  rules surrounding other countries' copyright regulations prior to 
  general international agreement in the 1970s about copyright terms, 
  and rules in the United States for anonymous, pseudonymous, and 
  unpublished works.

  If you read this carefully, you'll notice a gap. If a work was 
  registered starting in 1922 and before 1950, it would wind up in the 
  public domain if a renewal notice were not filed. It's unclear how 
  many hundreds of thousands or millions of works may have fallen into 
  that gap.

  But you can see that there's a giant divide. Before 1922, 
  essentially everything. After 1922, nothing that anyone paid 
  attention to.


**Fair Use** -- Copyright law contains a giant set of exemptions that 
  are supposed to balance the U.S. Constitution's language against the 
  public good. Article 1, Section 8, states that Congress shall have 
  power "To promote the Progress of Science and useful Arts, by 
  securing for limited Times to Authors and Inventors the exclusive 
  Right to their respective Writings and Discoveries."

  Many arguments have been made about what limited times means - 
  Stanford law professor Larry Lessig argued the Sonny Bono Act all 
  the way to the Supreme Court - but the idea that copyright is 
  intended not solely for the benefit of "authors and inventors" but 
  for society as a whole should be undisputed. (If you've followed the 
  actions of the movie and recording industries, and legislative 
  efforts to support their actions, you might believe that copyright 
  is all about ownership, not public good.)

<http://www.lessig.org/blog/eldredcc/>
<http://wiki.lessig.org/index.php/Against_perpetual_copyright>

  In that spirit, Congress defined exceptions to copyright, including 
  fair use, which have further been refined by practice and the 
  courts. There's a quadripartite test when a claimed fair use is 
  examined: the commercial nature or lack thereof; the kind of work 
  involved; the quantity of work used in relation to the original; the 
  effect on the market of the original work. The test doesn't require 
  every element to be met, but each part to be evaluated against the 
  whole. (You can read about this in more depth at the Copyright 
  Office.)

<http://www.copyright.gov/fls/fl102.html>

  Google has argued that its efforts at scanning copyrighted books and 
  making them available for search with only snippets of results meet 
  the smell test: Google was making no specific commercial return on 
  its book search (in fact, investing tens of millions into its 
  library-scanning efforts with libraries), that the works were 
  intended for public distribution, that snippets were infinitesimal 
  parts of books, and that the search giant was stimulating demand for 
  the books it provided results against. Google provided links to 
  purchase the books, and could thus track sales, too.

  The Authors Guild, among others, stated that simply the act of 
  creating electronic editions that were stored and distributed, 
  required permission from copyright holders, much less displaying the 
  results. With a little programming work, an interested party could 
  extract passages or entire books, too.

  Without being a lawyer specializing in this area, I believe it was 
  and remains impossible to determine whether Google or its one-time 
  opponents would have prevailed. They clearly would have created a 
  new sub-area of law, either affirming, denying, or making far more 
  complicated the notion of whether creating and owning copies of 
  copyrighted works were de facto violations of the law.

  But these one-time opponents are now at least somewhat supportive of 
  Google's efforts. What changed? Quite a lot, and in ways that all 
  parties, and we readers, stand to benefit.


**Out-of-Print Books and Book Rights Registry** -- The settlement 
  opens the way to allowing vastly improved availability of 
  in-copyright books by separating out-of-print and in-print books 
  into their respective categories, and collecting fees for all 
  snippet displays, page reading, and page printing. 

  Publishers, authors, and other copyright holders will be able to 
  opt-out of having out-of-print books included; by default, all 
  out-of-print books will be available, but parties can opt out. For 
  in-print books, those who own the rights will opt in. This allows 
  all of Google's existing partners to continue what they're doing, 
  and publishers to experiment by adding specific titles or simply 
  adding their entire catalogs. 

  If I read the settlement right, publishers who do not opt in to 
  allow in-print titles to be included by Google will simply have 
  their works removed if available or not added in the future. (A 
  complete set of links to resources can be found at the Authors Guild 
  site.)

<http://authorsguild.org/advocacy/articles/settlement-resources.html>

  Where this agreement goes far beyond Google's current program, 
  making it a win for Google, is that Google will now be able to 
  provide not just snippet results, but entire pages or books (for 
  viewing and printing). 

  Google would collect the fees and pass them on to the Book Rights 
  Registry, which will be run by a board of authors and publishers, 
  and be founded with $34.5 million of a $125 million settlement that 
  Google has agreed to pay - without admitting that any of Google's 
  claims are invalid. 

  Authors and publishers win by suddenly having a mechanism to 
  disseminate electronic editions while collecting for per-snippet, 
  per-page viewing, and per-page printing. Google has agreed to a 
  63-37 split in favor of the copyright holder.

  The public wins because the settlement calls for a free subscription 
  license for "designated" computers at all U.S. public and academic 
  libraries - a miserly 1 per public library building or either 1 per 
  4,000 or 1 per 10,000 students, depending on the institution type. 
  Google has also agreed to pay all printing royalty fees for 5 years 
  or up to $3 million, whichever comes first, for these qualifying 
  locations.

  Other institutions can pay for overarching printing and reading 
  licenses, and public libraries can upgrade to fuller licenses, too. 
  Without knowing what these more extensive subscriptions cost, it's 
  hard to know whether public libraries will be able to afford them. 
  Wade Roush of Xconomy, from whose writing I learned about the limits 
  on free library access, is down on the whole deal, partly due to the 
  scale of free access and partly due to the default pricing that 
  Google will set on out-of-print, in-copyright books.

<http://www.xconomy.com/boston/2008/10/31/in-google-book-search-settlement-readers-lose/>

  Anyone who researches a topic should benefit from the availability 
  of out-of-print works, as they comprise many millions of titles that 
  are rarely available in wide circulation. Ten libraries around the 
  world might have a particular book you need, but that doesn't mean 
  you can gain access to it.

  Google has also agreed to pay legal fees, and at least $45 million 
  to copyright holders whose works were scanned before a certain date 
  connected to the lawsuit.

  Now, of course, not all publishers or copyright holders are 
  represented by the parties involved, and some may choose to sue 
  separately in the future. The court might also require the parties 
  to appear in court, although courts prefer settlements.

  The only fly in the ointment is that copyright holders of 
  out-of-print but in-copyright works are being de facto opted in to 
  having their works available by virtue of this settlement, even if 
  they're not party to it. That should fly, because most of these 
  creators or owners can get no value out of their works at present, 
  and few people complain about receiving additional compensation. 
  Further, the creation of a clearinghouse gives a kind of imprimatur, 
  allowing a party that represents authors and publishers to make sure 
  out-of-print works see life again. 

  There was the notable case in the music world of James Carter, a 
  former convict whose voice was recorded on a chain gang in 1959 by 
  pioneering folk music collector Alan Lomax. In 2002, the song he 
  sang, "Po' Lazarus," was used in the opening of the movie "O 
  Brother, Where Art Thou?" The soundtrack sold 4 million copies.

  Carter, who left prison in 1967 and had led a quiet life since, was 
  tracked down after months of research by the Lomax archives, and 
  presented with a $20,000 check; he received $100,000 by his death in 
  2003.

<http://articles.latimes.com/2003/dec/08/local/me-carter8>


**Avoiding Collision with the Future** -- I'm a writer. I make my 
  living by sitting down and typing, as I am now. The notion of Google 
  appropriating my words without my permission or acknowledgment 
  always bothered me, even though I also accepted that there was a 
  fine chance that the company was operating within the legal 
  constraints of copyright law.

  I similarly was troubled by the Authors Guild partnering with what 
  is often its natural enemy, the AAP, in trying to prevent Google 
  from related activities, some of which seemed to benefit me and 
  authors, and others of which did not. (For instance, the AAP at 
  times has suggested that public libraries should pay fees to 
  publishers when they lend works. While this is the case in EU 
  nations, authors generally don't believe that publishers would pass 
  along these fees to authors; that's separate from the seemingly 
  un-American idea that public libraries pay royalties!)

<http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Directive_92/100/EEC>

  This reconciliation doesn't solve all issues, but it makes it much 
  more likely that independent authors and publishers survive and even 
  thrive by providing a broader marketplace, while also providing 
  greater availability of human knowledge. While the ease of access to 
  publicly promulgated information, like Web pages, has increased, 
  trends seemed to suggest that books would go down the path that 
  movies are still taking and music is slowly escaping from: being 
  available only in highly restricted ways that interfere with 
  technological progress.

  With this new agreement in place, it's possible that you could 
  publish a book, distribute it entirely through Google Book Search, 
  and earn some money - maybe even a lot of money if the book goes 
  viral - and bypass publishers entirely. That was the promise of the 
  Internet music, blog, and podcast revolutions, too. While it hasn't 
  come true for everyone, it's certain that many more voices are being 
  heard by many more people around the world. And that's a good thing.

  [Note: This article was edited to clarify the difference between 
  in-copyright, out-of-print works which are orphaned - no copyright 
  owner is known or can be found - and those that are not.]


TidBITS Watchlist: Notable Software Updates for 03-Nov-08
---------------------------------------------------------
  by Doug McLean <doug_mclean@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/9833>

* Microsoft Office 2008 for Mac 12.1.4 Update fixes a problem in 
  Entourage introduced in the recent 12.1.3 update where Exchange 
  accounts could not send or receive meeting invitations and 
  responses. Microsoft Office 2008 for Mac 12.1.3 is required for the 
  update to work. It's available as a standalone download or by 
  choosing Check for Updates from the Help menu in any Office 2008 
  application. (Free update, 16 MB)

<http://www.microsoft.com/mac/downloads.mspx?pid=Mactopia_Office2008&fid=910BDFBE-8575-4F3A-AF07-8E61FD153650#viewer>

* iKey 2.3.1r2 from Script Software is the first major update to the 
  popular keyboard macro tool in a long time, after a new programmer 
  took over the code. Version 2.3 fixes a number of user interface 
  problems that cropped up when running in Mac OS X 10.5 Leopard, 
  along with a Leopard-specific problem related to shortcuts that type 
  text. The subsequent 2.3.1 and 2.3.1r2 updates fix new issues that 
  caused problems in Mac OS X 10.4 Tiger. ($30 new, free update, 5.2 
  MB)

<http://www.scriptsoftware.com/ikey/>

* TextExpander 2.5 from SmileOnMyMac updates the typing shortcut 
  utility with several new features and some minor bug fixes. Added 
  features include customizable date and time math snippets - enabling 
  users to add or subtract years, months, days, hours, minutes, and 
  seconds from the current date and time. A new Internet productivity 
  snippet group includes AppleScript scripts that automatically 
  shorten URLs by utilizing online services such as TinyURL. And 
  finally, a Symbol snippet group adds the capability to enter 
  commonly used symbols such as copyright, trademark, euro, Command, 
  Option, and Control. Bug fixes are unspecified other than one that, 
  according to SmileOnMyMac's Web site, enables, "%- and %+ to abandon 
  or keep delimiter on a per-snippet basis." ($29.95 new, free update, 
  5.6 MB)

<http://www.smileonmymac.com/TextExpander/>
<http://tinyurl.com/>

* SpamSieve 2.7.2 from C-Command Software is the latest update to the 
  powerful Bayesian spam filtering software. Changes include improved 
  filter accuracy, enhanced performance, refined error reporting, a 
  training program bug fix that prevents the possibility of 
  interruption, and a break into two separate plug-ins for Apple Mail 
  - one for Mac OS X 10.4 and one for Mac OS X 10.5 and later - that 
  auto-install based on your version of Mac OS X. ($30 new, free 
  update, 5.6 MB)

<http://c-command.com/spamsieve/>

* Fission 1.6 from Rogue Amoeba updates the audio editor with several 
  new features and bug fixes. The most significant addition is the 
  MakeiPhoneRingtone feature that enables users to save any file, in 
  any format, as an iPhone ringtone. According to Rogue Amoeba's Web 
  site, other changes include "...the ability to Insert Silence into a 
  file, a command to set the exact location of the playhead, software 
  updates via Sparkle, and almost two dozen additional improvements 
  and bug fixes." To find the full list of changes in version 1.6, 
  from within the program go to Help > Fission Manual > Version 
  History. ($32 new, free update, 3.2 MB)

<http://www.rogueamoeba.com/fission/>


Hot Topics in TidBITS Talk/03-Nov-08
------------------------------------
  by Jeff Carlson <jeffc@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/9841>

**syslogd CPU Hog** -- A reader notices syslogd is burning up his CPU 
  cycles, and others notice the same thing happening with other system 
  processes. Is Safari somehow the cause? (6 messages)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/2271>


**Python shells with Windows?** After a MacBook fails, a spare Dell 
  takes its place. But the reader can't figure out how to write Python 
  programs under Windows. (7 messages)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/2273>


**Adeona -- Lojack-Like Application** -- Trying a recommended 
  application for tracking a laptop thief ends in frustration due to 
  the lack of meaningful documentation. (1 message)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/2274>


**Take Control of Your 802.11n AirPort Extreme Network** -- Adam 
  clears some confusion regarding the title of the latest version of 
  Glenn Fleishman's AirPort ebook. (2 messages)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/2275>


**Authors and Publishers Settle with Google Book Search** -- Readers 
  discuss the implications of Google's settlement, both in terms of 
  practical upsides for authors and also serving the greater good. (2 
  messages)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/2277>


$$

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