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Free Articulator has its ISSN

May 6, 2008

It’s been a long time coming, but the Free Articulator has finally achieved a new level of professional status and obtained its ISSN. You can see our new ISSN in the Header near the Comments and RSS subscription button in the top right of the homepage.

A small, apparently insignificant, number that is loaded with a great deal more meaning and usefulness than one may at first realize.

So what’s an ISSN?

Wikipedia has an excellent article on this which you can read here. It’s essentially an 8-digit number that provides a unique identifier. It also means that a publication is archived.

What use is it?

Well, the fact that it is archived puts a publication into an historical context meaning that every article published is archived in the national library of the country in which the publication is registered. Articles published are placed into a searchable database. Nice way to backup the hard work that goes into a publication and preserve it for posterity.

These databases are used by universities, institutions, media and scholars for education and research of various types.

Why have one?

A publication with an ISSN achieves another level of professionalism, responsibility, credibility and reputation. More importantly, for Allforart and the Free Articulator, this means we are now helping establish Featured Artists, Movers & Shakers, New Product Releases, and artworks as part of the historical record in national, and potentially international, archives.

In the electronic age this means that what is published in the Free Articulator, having been archived by a national library is now available through research libraries that are interconnected around the world. This increases the potential for legitimate exposure.

What about copyright?

Authors who may be concerned about their intellectual property being archived by a national library should not be concerned. Organizations that utilize such resources are bound by intellectual property laws, conventions and treaties in their use of such materials and this does not affect any author’s copyright in material ways. ISSN registration and publication filing are bound by these laws and treaties too.

Archiving means that publication in the Free Articulator now has the potential to reach a much larger audience. This includes crossing the digital divide for those who use library and other public computers to access the internet.

For more information about ISSN do read the manual provided by the international organization based in France.

There are more actions Allforart and the Free Articulator will be taking in the near (and not-so-near) future to expand our reach and support of the remarkable talents of creative individuals and industry events that have come to our attention around the world. We’ll let you know as they occur.

Apologies for Duplicate Postings

May 4, 2008

Since upgrading to the new version of WordPress late last month, we have been experiencing some technical glitches resulting in the re-publication of previously published articles. This is most annoying when you’re learning a new interface. Apparently there is “something screwy in the date-a-base.”

Our apologies for any inconvenience, we are looking into why this is occurring, while we’re in the middle of a reorganization, and hope to have it resolved in the next week or two. In the meantime, we trust you’ll continue to enjoy a fresh new series of articles from Branwen, Doc Don Sturgiss, Marie, NDK and other contributors and editors.

Of course if you’re not at all inconvenienced and love reading our posts over again then don’t forget that you don’t have to wait until “we republish” you can access the archives (see the side bar), or use the search function (top of the page) to find something you’d like to read again.

Create Peace, End War, Fix Planet - March 20

March 20, 2008

Peace March 20 HeaderOn 20 March 2008 it is the 5th anniversary of the American invasion of Iraq. The Free Articulator is marking this day by hosting the Peace March 20 initiative, focusing on artists as social activists during this time of conflict. We’d like to invite all visual artists, writers, and song writers to sign up, participate, and contribute their voice and links.

Read more

Match it for Pratchett - Support an Artist and Alzheimers Research

March 16, 2008

As you may have read recently, Terry Pratchett, who is best known for his comedic Discworld saga, has an unusual case of early-onset Alzheimer’s. Pratchett recently used the fruits of his good fortune in life to donate $1,000,000 American dollars to Alzheimer’s research, a serious and widespread condition with a severe shortage of funding to find a cure:

“I am, along with many others, scrabbling to stay ahead long enough to be there when the Cure comes along. Say it will be soon – there’s nearly as many of us as there are cancer sufferers, and it looks as if the number of people with dementia will double within a generation. In most cases, alongside the sufferer you will find a spouse suffering as much. It is a shock to find out that funding for Alzheimer’s research is just 3% of that to find cancer cures.”  - Terry Pratchett

While the number of people with Alzheimer’s compared to the number of people with cancer is comparable, almost 200x as much is spent on cancer research.

Pat Cadigan has started a campaign to match Pratchett’s donation dollar for dollar or pound for pound, depending on which side of the pond you live—the goal is for 500,000 Pratchett fans to donate either a pound or two dollars.

If you enjoyed Pratchett’s books, why not ditch the can of Coke today and make a donation in the hopes for getting a few more out of him? Head to the Alzheimer’s Research Trust to help match it for Pratchett.

Photo by Myrmi, reproduced under Creative Commons License.

30 Years vs. 30 Days: A Battle Lessig Had to Turn Down to Win His War

March 7, 2008

Larry Lessig

When Larry Lessig, Stanford University law professor and copyright activist, announced he would not in fact run for a seat in the US Congress last week, he disappointed thousands of supporters of his cause: to change congress.

In a five-minute video posted on his blog (www.lessig.org/blog/), Lessig reasons that his competition, longtime Democratic Party member Jackie Speiers, was an opponent too difficult to defeat. What’s more, the polls showed he would not lose the election (which was only 30 days away) just by a nose or two, but that he would “lose in a big way.”

Jackie Speiers has a 30 year-long history with the Democratic Party, and has also been campaigning for a seat in the US Congress for over a year. Thirty days, Lessig rationalized, was simply not enough time to sway the minds of voters and win against such a popular and well-known candidate. Nor would it be enough time gain support for his latest initiative, which he simply calls Change Congress.

In essence, the “30 years versus 30 days” loss would discredit Lessig’s new pet project considerably. Losing the election in the Bay Area (California) by a landslide would signal to the rest of the country “that a Change Congress message has no salience or support. That would, in my view, harm the movement more than it would help.”

So exactly what is Change Congress? True to what its name suggests, the movement was created by Lessig as a means to weaken what he sees as the stream of corruption running through the US Congress, and his chosen weapon in this war is — to no one’s surprise — the Internet. The advocate of a “read/write culture” and founder of Creative Commons is now building a website to tackle the problems he perceives as damaging the integrity of the US Congress.

According to Lessig, the initiative is based on three main changes he would like to see in the US Congress today: 1) the end of Congressmen accepting money from lobbyists and political action committees, 2) a ban on earmarks, and 3) public financing for Congressional campaigns.

On this new website, Congressional candidates will be able to indicate their level of support to Change Congress and its proposed reforms, and people can make donations to those who back the movement. In addition, a page will be set up that encourages running against candidates who do not support Change Congress’s reforms.

Although Lessig says he does not see himself entering public service any time soon, he still questions his decision to not run for Congress this time around, despite certain defeat: “It’s impossible to make a decision like that without fearing that you made a fundamental mistake. Succeeding could have been amazing. It’s not a decision I will ever feel 100 percent comfortable with.”

But will this new undertaking detract Lessig’s attention away from his passion for liberalizing copyright laws and lobbying for reforms on intellectual property? Probably not. But perhaps while this cyberlaw warrior is busy trying to revolutionize what have become traditional political campaign measures, we’ll see a cease-fire on the “permission culture” versus “remix culture” front.

As the man said, “I never expected that this would happen quickly. I think it is going to take many years and many cycles. It’s going to take many more people becoming involved.”

Good-bye Angel Eyes: Jeff Healy — an Inspiration to Artists Everywhere

March 4, 2008

Jeff Healy

March 2nd, 2008 was a sad day for music lovers of all genres. Jeff Healy, one of Canada’s most gifted, most versatile, and most loved musicians, lost his lifelong battle with cancer Sunday evening in a Toronto hospital. He was 41 years young.

Healy suffered from retinoblastoma, a rare form of cancer that claimed his eyesight at the age of one. Still, undaunted by the ravages of the disease, he pursued his passion for music, and rose to become an accomplished, internationally renowned singer and songwriter, sharing his enormous talent as a classic rock, blues, and later on, jazz guitarist.

Healy’s publicist, Richard Flohil, in a statement to a CTV newscaster, said, “Visually, Jeff was an intriguing player to watch, because he played guitar — by any conventional standard — all wrong, with it flat across his lap. But he was a remarkable, a virtuoso player.”

No doubt Jeff Healy will be remembered for his diverse musical talent and for his awesome guitar playing, but I say Jeff Healy should also be remembered as inspiration to us all. Despite his crippling and often painful disease, this artist allowed his passion for music to rule his world.

Although blind, Healy began teaching himself to play guitar when he was just three years old. He was performing on stage by the age of six, and a few short years later, was considered a teenage prodigy, having put together his first band, Blue Direction.

As a rocker, The Jeff Healy Band produced such popular hits as the romantic “Angel Eyes,” the soulful “How Long Can a Man Be Strong,” and a stirring cover of the Beatles’ “While My Guitar Gently Weeps.” He recorded and played side by side with the likes of George Harrison, Mark Knopfler, and Stevie Ray Vaughn. As a blues guitarist, Healy paired up with such musical geniuses as B.B. King and Jimmy Rogers.

Not feeling limited by his success as a rock star, Healy explored the musical realm of jazz, his true love, and released several CDs later in his career, earning him acclaim as an accomplished classic American jazz guitarist.

In his close circle, Healy was described as having a wicked sense of humor, as never feeling sorry for himself because of his illness, and as a generous, down-to-earth, warm-hearted soul.

Now that’s a true artist, through and through.

Healy’s first rock-blues CD in eight years, Mess of Blues, is to be released in the next few weeks in Europe, and later in April in Canada and the US. Can’t wait to hear it, although it will be a bittersweet experience, knowing that these are the last notes that will ever be played by one of the musical greats of our time.

Sincerest and heartfelt condolences go out to Jeff Healy’s family and friends. We’ll miss him too — his music, his courage, and his angel eyes.

Violators of Copyright Law — Oh (No) Canada! Not You Too!

February 29, 2008

Imagine that. Placid, peaceful Canada, deemed year after year as one of the best countries in the world to live, has been accused along with 10 other countries of being a major violator of U.S. copyright law by the International Intellectual Property Alliance (IIPA). Read more

Say It Again, Slim Shady

February 26, 2008

Eminem is about to share the intimate details of his chaotic life with us—yet again.

According to London-based Orion Publishing Group, the hip hop megastar plans to write an autobiography, aimed for release this Fall in the UK. And the book already has a title: Eminem: The Way I Am. Read more

Say Hello to Creativity, Culture & News

February 26, 2008

In the last few months the Free Articulator has grown beyond our expectations. We launched Free Articulator 2.0 on the 1st of January and soon after, introduced our first Feature that explored the mind and work of talented digital artist and model Lena Semenkova. We’re also hard at work on a slew of things you’ll find out about soon. Read more

Freely Articulated Web: Links for the 15th of February

February 15, 2008

Here’s the Free Articulator team’s latest favorite links from across the web. Check them out:

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