Cormac
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cormacf.bsky.social
Cormac
@cormacf.bsky.social
he/his. Views my own.
I believe it's just an excluded no-mans land of worry-free listening.

Unless of course you GDPR your entire data set and up they pop again
December 5, 2024 at 2:24 PM
It's winning games like this that are the most important ones!
November 24, 2024 at 5:46 PM
This is the first year where I genuinely don't even know who my top artist is going to be. I couldn't even give you a predicted top three.

I am genuinely worried about what will come out 😂
November 20, 2024 at 9:10 PM
Especially in times of crisis, or fast flowing news, are people necessarily going to stop and check whether they're retweeting @ news[.]nytimes[.]com and @ news[.]newyorktimes[.]site? ($2 to set up today)
November 19, 2024 at 7:04 PM
If I bought billgates[.]foundation (~$5 currently), set it to redirect to the real address, and set up a bluesky purporting to be the official account...

Of course anyone with a little bit of technical knowledge could easily debunk. But how would average Joe who just comes across my post?
November 19, 2024 at 7:03 PM
I love how you know what our ribbons get used for.

Ailbhe thanks you for your service 🐱🫡
November 17, 2024 at 1:02 PM
Yep, £1.12 total over the last three years!

Accounts for Bert points and that I pay for all my Bert's books with national book tokens.

Doesn't account for the ~0.2% higher credit card rewards I'd get from Jeff. Who can be arsed with that.
November 17, 2024 at 12:32 PM
If anyone wants the numbers, I've just gone through all my Bert orders since July 2021 and checked them against historical Jeff prices.

My net Bert Book's premium was a grand total of...

£1.12

Less than half the price of one Jeff's books giftwrap.
November 17, 2024 at 12:19 PM
Quite genuinely though, if any single person has been the most instrumental in pushing me to actually break the habit, it's been you. So thanks for that.
November 17, 2024 at 9:51 AM
I'm basically coming off now, but for me there's a fourth factor: nostalgia and sheer head-in-sand stubbornness.

I've been on twitter since early 2009. I've been opening that app and seeing some of those people for half my life. It feels so odd to just... Walk away.
November 17, 2024 at 9:51 AM
Ikr. If they write something at 20, and live to 95 they might just nudge in a century. I'd love to know what magic dust they're inhaling to "easily exceed" 😂
September 11, 2023 at 5:42 PM
Absolutely right.

If I open a FF with "Harry looked out the window of the hogwarts express", 9 words tell you he's is a wizard, going to school, famous, etc. You probs have a pre-existing opinion of him.

Why? Not through anything I did. JKR et al did all that work for me. Writing FF is different.
September 1, 2023 at 7:14 PM
The characters are very often practically synonymous with the work. (And can be damaged by misuse of the IP).

What's Harry Potter without Harry? What's Hound of the Baskervilles without Sherlock? Of *course* the characters count. Similarly with Hogwarts. Or Rivendel. Or Narnia. They're iconic.
September 1, 2023 at 5:11 PM
it's not about the process of creating. It's about protecting the authors right to their work. That's why it's usually life of author +Xyrs.

Sure it doesn't magically change between X and X-1, but that's laws for you. The principle stands: protect the author's work for *a time* - then make public.
September 1, 2023 at 5:06 PM
You make it, you own it. Real simple. People can *choose* to work for free, but they don't *have* to.

If you're forced to create with no way to own your creations, in the end everyone works for free.

I'd rather people had the choice to work for free than were always forced to.
September 1, 2023 at 4:15 PM
If you create original work you should have sole right to [decide who] profit[s] from it until the expiration of your copyright. That's the single rationale. It's really that simple.

If you want to write for profit, write original, non-derivative ideas. Otherwise, feel free to write for fun.
September 1, 2023 at 4:11 PM
That's deriving public domain work; work that is old enough that the copyright has expired.

Which, as I've previously said more than once, is a good thing that should also be protected. This *is* an area where Disney et. al have skewed the system.

Copyright is good. So is copyright expiration.
September 1, 2023 at 4:03 PM
The law needs to distinguish because otherwise no one gets compensated for anything. Disney, Netflix, et al could simply appropriate any content they like and profit off it with no compensation to the author. We've been through this. I'm increasingly convinced this misunderstanding is willful.
September 1, 2023 at 4:00 PM
Straw man, but still easy:

Writing derivatives of copyrighted work should be a hobby.

You can turn it into a job by either a) obtaining the permission of, and compensating, the original author b) writing your own original work.

It's really not that hard.
September 1, 2023 at 3:58 PM
I think they might be a troll.

They if they can't/won't understand that the law can't differentiate between me selling a smutty fanfic online for $2 and Netflix finding said fanfic and making it into a $200m movie without my consent (and therefore bans both) then I'm not sure it's worth engaging.
September 1, 2023 at 3:53 PM
Yes, fanfic should be a hobby. You can turn it into a job by obtaining the permission of and compensating the original author.
September 1, 2023 at 3:47 PM
He really doesn't seem to understand that his quest to monetise his own fanfiction will result in the wholesale destruction of value in *all* copyrighted works.

He gains cents. Destroys dollars for everyone else.

If he wanted to monetise as a job, he could always write his own original work.
September 1, 2023 at 3:41 PM
Gotcha - fair enough. Standing still is absolutely better than going backwards.
September 1, 2023 at 2:46 PM