I was thinking of broadening that a bit to all fiction-related IP, now  
and in the future.
I'm working on finding a copyright specialist willing to stand up in  
front of this group and tell us how copyright ain't gonna be what it  
used to be.

Speaking of R-SPEC meetings, I'd like to remind everyone to come and  
discuss what you think should be on R-SPEC's Official Recommended  
Reading List at our meeting this Tuesday, March 3, at 7pm at the  
Pittsford Barnes and Noble. Should we have categories? Dare we try to  
delineate genres? Which of the Old Masters have stood the test of  
time? Who's hot now? Which stories lit up your brain and stayed with  
you for years? Which works inspired you to write?




On Mar 1, 2009, at 4:45 PM, delancey wrote:

>
> PS:  hey, Alicia, it might be fun to have an RSpec on this topic in
> the future.  Digital rights and science fiction.  The Only Fiction
> People Care Enough About to Steal.  Something like that.
>
> On Mar 1, 4:31 pm, delancey <[email protected]> wrote:
>> Thereby creating a technical standard which will be forced onto other
>> software.  Soon content controllers will claim that all speech-to- 
>> text
>> software must have DRM controls of a similar kind.
>>
>> cd
> >


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