So all of these things let me-- I wrote about all of these things in a paper called Full Week Faith, and it's available online free to download. You can read more information about it. And there's also a study guide that goes along with it as well. I wrote it in a way that religious professionals could take this document and share it with laypeople, because we all know these common issues.
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There's the Full Week Faith page. It's on a Weebly website, which is a free website building tool. So the entire document is there. You can download it or you can read it online. You can read it by chapters or share chapters with your RE committee. There's also a discussion guide that my colleagues, Pat Infante and Mark Bernstein created to engage your lay leadership around, and the activity cards are there as well.
And if the answer is "no, we value our freedom more then our ability to watch new movies and sitcoms" then I'm pretty sure Hollywood will accept this answer and will happily continue to ignore "these crazy Linux people".
No, thankfully nobody is proposing that!> You already can't scrape, syndicate, etc. this content (modulo DRM-breaking).Yes, you're correct. But the point I was getting at is that it's good to have the HTML standard only codify things that give you this kind of technical freedom, and mark anything else as a crappy nonstandard abberation, rather than something that has essentially been given approval by the W3C. I think RMS is right here, they have serious clout and respect, this is an issue they should use that on. RMS is right. Again. Posted May 7, 2013 0:03 UTC (Tue) by coriordan (guest, #7544) [Link]
When I travel in contintental Europe, many of my BBC podcasts fail to download, and instead I get a recorded message telling me that its not available outside the UK (many do still work - particularly those that don't use content not owned by the BBC (i.e. not music programming) - and much pure-BBC output is provided free to the rest of the word). Who has a right to free BBC? Posted May 9, 2013 10:29 UTC (Thu) by madhatter (subscriber, #4665) [Link]
Note that consoles are a bit different than media. Blocking piracy on a console does *not* require protecting the content -- it just requires controlling the platform enough that you can't easily turn around and play that content on another PS3. With music and movies, it only needs one point of attack to get the content before everyone can freely share and use it. With consoles, every single console needs to be attacked individually in order to play. People were dumping and sharing images of PS3 games for years before anybody could actually use them on another system. RMS is right. Again. Posted May 9, 2013 20:02 UTC (Thu) by khim (subscriber, #9252) [Link] 2ff7e9595c
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