CD Wow agrees to stop selling CD-Roms from outside the EEA --
I'd say it was a mighty blow against consumers - from the Register --
The British and Irish record industries have struck a mighty blow for [sic] consumers by forcing online retailer CD Wow to stop selling CDs imported from outside the EEA.Upshot: customers will have to pay an extra £2 for each CD. Currently, CD Wow charges £8.99 for CDs. CD Wow's price increases could mean a big fall in sales for the company, considering that its prices will now be more expensive than many supermarkets.
And boy, is the music industry happy. "It is not the consumer that will suffer, just CD Wow's profit margins. They made a lot of money out of cheap CDs," one insider told the FT.
Source: The Register
January 21, 2004 in Civil Liberties | Permalink
2xbrothers
January 9, 2004 in Civil Liberties | Permalink
Reply to open letter, - Sean Dolphin, Chair of Fingal Council
Mr Sean Dolphin has posted a reply to the letter sent to him from newmediacuts. Here is the text.
Many thanks for your e-mail Tim.
Regarding Ireland AM during the week, if you feel you were mislead then I
apologise.
On September 10th, the first day in which Fingal Co Co decided not to lift
untagged bins, I went to Portmarnock where a bin lorry was blockaded in
St. Anne's Estate. I subsequently travelled along the route that bin lorry
was to take, and over 90% of the bins presented for collection had been
tagged. The figure prior to this had been 63% according to my info, and
the point I was making was that I believe that figure had risen to over
90%, and certainly if the reported large increase in big tag sales is to
be believed than this is a fair comment.
Certainly the notion that this campaign represents some kind of mass
movement is plainly incorrect.
What the vast majority of people I spoke to take exception to is their
right to a competent and efficient refuse collection being denied by a
minority of people, very many of whom aren't even from Fingal. I agree
with this assessment.
To be fair, what is equally misleading on your part is to suggest that Mr.
Higgins and Ms. Daly are in prison because of their political viewpoints.
Their campaign was both undemocratic and misdirected, and they are in
prison as a result of their contempt for the law and the authority of the
court.
One thing we can agree on: I have never voted for Fianna Fail, and that
trend is set to continue....
Yours sincerely
Sean Dolphin
September 22, 2003 in Civil Liberties | Permalink | Comments (1)
Issues from the Waste Heartland
Two public representatives - Clare Daly and TD Joe Higgins - got one month's jail yesterday, for the peaceful protesting against the new waste charges adopted by Fingal Council in Dublin. I met Clare several times last year - she helped greatly in our campaign to close off any plans for an incinerator in Lusk when I was working on the LuskPeople.com web resource.
I am angered by Clare's jailing, and interpret it to be a gross abuse of state power - she is a committed and honest politician, a people's broker who works tirelessly on behalf of the people who elected her to the Fingal council. A month's jail, when a fine might have sufficed, is unfair and most draconian in its nature, yet it might still serve to motivate and catalyse thousands of people to action -- against a Government that believes its own press releases a little too much, and that treats it's electorate in a most cavalier and charlatan fashion.
Most of the local people in Lusk that I have spoken to see the new bin tag system - where a prepurchased bin tag must be attached to the wheelie bin before it is collected - as unjust and yet another tax on an already sorely-taxed PAYE worker. There is general and genuine anger and resentment among a populace that has had it's fair share of waste - the Ballealy landfill dump for Dublin is just a mile away.
There is mistrust too, that this charge has been introduced as a precursor to privatisation. Most people here see Waste Management as a Government responsibility, and not one that should be proferred on to a private company interested in profit.
Minister for the Environment, Martin Cullen, accused Clare of 'political grandstanding' yesterday - the day that this mother was jailed for her sincere, democratic views. Since Clare was elected to Fingal Council on an anti-bin tax ticket, how could that possibly be?
There are the first signs of a campaign of misinformation directed to the Socialist Party - of which Clare and Jim are members - that is more intense than normal, as illustrated in Minister Cullen's statement and also in TD Jim Glennon's statement calling for Jim Higgins to resign from the House. Could it be that the more astute in the Government view the anti-bin tax campaign as a very tangible focal point for opposition to this Government, that crosses social, economic and political divides?
Many are aware of the 'polluter pays' policy. But without adequate support for the doorstep recycling of waste, restrictions on excess packaging sold to domestic households 'over the counter' in shops and supermarkets, and the fact that this method of waste disposal is not 'annualised' per household - instead we have charge-per-bin-presented - many also find this system to be unfair, unjust , anti-family/household, and doing little to actually reduce the volume of waste while increasing the quasi-council/privateer coffers.
It is also becoming obvious that Fingal council have managed the public perception as to the introduction of this charge very poorly. The public palette for extra charges might have been softened slightly had we been presented with recycling bins - promised many years ago - hand-in-hand with this charge. Instead we see nothing new for our money.
Many people in Lusk and throughout North Dublin are shocked by the jailing of public representatives yesterday. No amount of 'public perception management' will undo the injustice of the jailing of two honest politicians, while so many on the other side of the political divide who have admitted to crooked dealing and car-park-handshakes have never seen the inside of a court room.
Clare Daly will be elected as a public representative for Dublin North at the next General Election, should she decide to run.
Yesterday's events have assured this.
September 21, 2003 in Civil Liberties | Permalink | Comments (0)
An Open Letter to Sean Dolphin, Fingal County Council Leader
Dear Sean,
As a resident and tax payer in Lusk, I write to express my concern at the
recent turn of events in the bin charge campaigns. We now have two public
representatives who have been thrown into prison for their political
viewpoints, quite ironically on the day that Robert Emmet was sentenced to
death some 200 years ago - for his political viewpoint.
I also saw you on TV-am the other morning, and I am fortunate to be quite
knowlegable in the bin charge campaign, having followed in closely for the
last few months. I was the main mover behind the LuskPeople and No
Incineration Lusk campaigns, so as waste charges go I more or less know
what I am talking about. I thought that you mislead people by saying 99
percent of people are paying for their bin tags, your own people in the
council had been saying 66% earlier in the week. It is not a small
minority, as you said, who are refusing to pay for their bins to be picked
up, but a large proportion of tax payers and residents who see this as yet
another way to screw the PAYE worker in this country.
Jailing publicly elected politicians and people who are against this tax
and protesting in our democracy against the introduction of this tax will
only serve to motivate thousands of people like me to fight against this
introduction even more so. Martin Cullen said yesterday that Clare Daly
was 'political grandstanding' - she was actually elected to Fingal County Council on a
no bin tax ticket, so I find his comments as insulting to the
intellligence of the electorate and general taxpayer as can be.
I will never vote FF/FG again. I know many others who are lifelong
Fianna Fail/FG supporters who will never vote for those parties again.
Believe me, Clare Daly will be our next public representative for Dail Eireann - at
the expense of a FF or FG seat.
I usually pay for my bin tags. Yesterday I did not - under protest. My bin
was not collected.
Sincerely
Tim Kirby - Lusk North Dublin
September 20, 2003 in Civil Liberties | Permalink | Comments (0)
Contact numbers for anti-bin tax campaign - Fingal
Email your messages of support for Joe and Clare, demand that they be released and demand that the bin tax is abolished.
- William Soffe - County Manager - [email protected]
- Sean Dolphin - Fine Gael Chair of the Council - [email protected]. Phone him at [code from NI and Britain] 003531 or 01 890 5025 (w)
- The Council address is - Fingal Council, County Hall, Main Street, Swords, Fingal County Dublin. Phone 003531/01 8905000
- Fianna Fail - Tel 003531 or 01 6761551 Email: [email protected]
- Progressive Democrats - Tel 6794399 Email: [email protected]
For further information, Cllr. Ruth Coppinger (FABTC Secretary) at 087 673 0187
September 20, 2003 in Civil Liberties | Permalink | Comments (0)
Anti-bin tax campaigner Clare Daly jailed for a month
In what might prove to be the catalyst to further,more widespread protests in the anti-bin tax campaign, Socialist councillor Clare Daly has been committed to Mountjoy jail for a month, along with TD Joe Higgins, for their part in the anti-bin tax campaign, widely reported in newmediacuts.
Mr Justice Iarlfhlaith O'Neill said he appreciated that Joe Higgins and Clare Daly breached court orders as part of a political campaign and their motivation was sincere.But he said they had been engaged in a deliberate and calculated contempt of the law and the authority of the court. He said this was regrettable and reprehensible in Mr Higgins' case as he was a member of the Dáil.
He sentenced them both to a month in Mountjoy Prison, beginning today. Mr Higgins and Ms Daly were led away from the courts by gardaí and are now being held in the Bridewell Garda Station.
As he was taken away, Mr Higgins said his committal to prison was an outrage.
Mr Higgins and Ms Daly have been leading a campaign against Fingal Co Council's decision not to collect rubbish from householders who have not paid their waste charges.
Speaking at a meeting yesterday, Clare said -- “While we were in the High Court on Wednesday the people of Cabra and Rivervalley blocked three more bin trucks. That’s the real story here, ordinary people protesting against the non-collection of rubbish by unelected and undemocratic County Council bureaucrats. I have a mandate from the thousands of non-payers and from the voters who elected me to campaign to get the bin tax scrapped. Threatening people with jail won’t stop the protests. We will stand by the thousands in the communities”.
It is ironic that this occurs on the 200th anniversary of the sentencing of a great Irish patriot - Robert Emmet. In his final speech before sentencing, he noted that history would be the judge of his actions, and that he was motivated from social, moral and political conviction. It is a terrible judgement on this country that politicians that act from the same motivations are treated severely compared to those politicians who have acted selfishly and corruptly - as we have seen from the host of tribunals that this country has spawned, and the lenient sentences for contempt of court and judgements [if any] that have been handed to the guilty. More news as it breaks.
September 19, 2003 in Civil Liberties | Permalink | Comments (0)
IE, Flash, and patents: here comes trouble
IE, Flash, and patents: here comes trouble Microsoft has again been told to cripple its market-leading browser in compliance with the Eolas patent lawsuit. IE/Windows will no longer be able to seamlessly play Flash, Quicktime, PDF, and other rich media formats. Other browser makers like Netscape and Opera may also be forced to cripple their browsers, making the web look like 1993 all over again. Clumsy, disruptive workarounds that diminish user experience might allow browsers to present rich media files, but site owners would have to pay for development -- and Eolas might sue anyway. The patent ruling will hurt everyone. Patents on the web are always bad, but this one stinks to Heaven. We find ourselves rooting for Microsoft. [Source: Jeffrey Zeldman Presents: The Daily Report]
C-NET has more information.
Microsoft has suffered another legal setback in the patent dispute with software developer Eolas and is now advising Web authors on workarounds, as new details emerge of its plans to tweak Internet Explorer.A federal judge last week rejected Microsoft's post-trial claim that Eolas had misrepresented the facts in the patent case, which claimed the software giant had stolen browser technology relating to plug-ins. The ruling came after a $521 million verdict against the software giant last month, and ends Microsoft's first attempt to challenge the result.
According to the Eolas website -
Vision
-- To create and develop the inventions that allow information technologies to enhance the quality of life for everyone.
Their tack will certainly enhance the quality of bank balances for web developers if this goes through.
Just like '99 all over again.
September 15, 2003 in Business, Civil Liberties, Interaction, newMedia Design | Permalink | Comments (0)
More details on RIAA Cases
In an irony only too fitting of an organization that profits from the very people it has been on a warpath against, the RIAA has alleged that P2P networks endanger children by luring them to illegal pornography, while being discovered that one of the federal law suits it has initiated was against a 12-year old girl.
The accused girl was identified by the New York Post as an honors student who lives in a NYC housing authorit apartment. The RIAA apparently settled her case for $2,000. One must wonder how many more disadvantaged twelve-year old girls the RIAA must extract thousands of dollars from before it will be satisfied. The shotgun approach of their lawsuits ensures that more such public relations nightmares lie ahead. In the meantime, some lawmakers like Sen. Norm Coleman (R - Minn.) are challenging the industry's heavy-handed techniques.
[Source: Greplaw]
September 11, 2003 in Civil Liberties | Permalink | Comments (0)
Brianna Lahara won't be sharing music files anymore. Less than a day after the recording industry announced its lawsuits, the 12-year-old Manhattan schoolgirl and her mother settled their case for $2,000."I am sorry for what I have done," Brianna said in a statement released by the Recording Industry Association of America on Tuesday. "I love music and I don't want to hurt the artists I love."
[Source: Wired]
There's something wrong here.
September 11, 2003 in Civil Liberties | Permalink | Comments (0)