June 16, 2024, 06:59:15 AM

Author Topic: Stevie Wonder to UN: Ease copyrights for the blind  (Read 699 times)

0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.

Offline zuluwarrior

  • Hero Warrior
  • *****
  • Posts: 3048
  • use your tongue to count your teeth
    • View Profile
    • http://pointalive.com
Stevie Wonder to UN: Ease copyrights for the blind
« on: September 20, 2010, 11:46:32 AM »
Stevie Wonder to UN: Ease copyrights for the blind
GENEVA, Mon Sep 20, 10:37 AM
 
 
Stevie Wonder pressed global copyright overseers on Monday to help blind and visually impaired people access millions of science, history and other audiobooks, which they cannot read in electronic form.

The blind singer told the U.N.'s 184-nation World Intellectual Property Organization that more than 300 million people who "live in the dark" want to "read their way into light," and the current copyright system denies them an equal opportunity.

The current legal framework means that institutes for the blind in different countries may be required to make multiple audiobook versions of the same work, said Richard Owens, WIPO's director of copyright and electronic commerce.

Owens said this leads to higher costs that are passed on to the listeners. It also limits access to blind and partially blind people in poor countries, which cannot afford to make their own versions of everything from science textbooks to best-sellers, he said.

The U.N. agency has been trying for six years to revamp its global copyright framework so that it better accounts for new media, such as audiobooks. For the blind and visually impaired, the goal is to create a clearinghouse so that published material can be traded around the world and translated into new, readable formats.

But the problem of access for such copyrighted material goes to the heart of a growing crisis in the world of copyright protection, as the Internet increasingly muddies laws that were created for traditional media. Whereas wide exceptions exist for books in Braille, WIPO officials say there is confusion over how these benefits can be translated into the digital age.


 
Proponents of a new agreement say the same benefits that digital books provide most consumers - lower costs and better storage and accessibility - should be extended to those with disabilities. The United States and European nations that export large amounts of published material are somewhat hesitant because of concerns over an erosion of intellectual property rights, and want to avoid a binding treaty.

Wonder called for a compromise and teased the diplomats.

"Please work it out. Or I'll have to write a song about what you didn't do," said the 60-year-old singer known for such hits as "Superstition" and "I Just Called to Say I Love You."

Complicating the talks are the demands of African countries, which are seeking even larger copyright loopholes. They want their libraries and academic institutions to be able to skip licensing agreements so that they can provide audiobook access for larger communities.

Wonder, who has sold tens of million of albums, said any agreement should respect the authors "who labor to create the great works that enlighten and nourish our minds, hearts and souls." He insisted on a practical solution so that blind and visually impaired people get "the tools to think their way out of poverty."



.
good things happening to good people: a good thing
good things happening to bad people: a bad thing
bad things happening to good people: a bad thing
bad things happening to bad people: a good thing

Offline palos

  • Hero Warrior
  • *****
  • Posts: 11529
  • Test
    • View Profile
Re: Stevie Wonder to UN: Ease copyrights for the blind
« Reply #1 on: September 20, 2010, 01:10:44 PM »
Interesting timing by Stevie given this story:


Reading 'Playboy' To The Blind




By day, Suzi Hanks is a DJ at a classic radio station in Houston, Texas. It's what she does after work that makes people's ears blush.

Hanks volunteers with Taping for the Blind, an organization that makes audio recordings of popular books and magazines. When she started the gig three years ago, they put her to work reading pet publications.

"Dog Fancy, Cat Fancy and Bird Talk," she says.  "It was wonderful, but a little boring, to be honest."

Then one day, Hanks got a more interesting reading opportunity.  They asked her to read Playboy, too.

"The guy who did Playboy got married, and his wife told him he couldn't do it anymore," Hanks explains.  "So they came and asked me."

As a woman on a classic rock radio station with a predominantly male audience and fan following, the organization "thought it might be fun."

Hanks, of course, reads the articles in Playboy, but yes, a large part of her job is indeed describing the pictures. She does this without a script, speaking extemporaneously about what she's seeing.

"Basically I'm their eyes. All I'm doing is providing accessibility to what's there on the page," she says.  "I don't have to try to be sexy when I'm describing the pictures.  I'm just a woman reading it, and it comes out sexy whether I want it to or not."

It's more than just body parts, she says.  "That would get boring.  You're painting a picture.  She's conveying something through her eyes, through her facial expressions."

Hanks will look for details in the photos like nautical sheets on the bed, or make observations like, "interestingly enough, in the centerfold,  it looks as if the tattoos have been airbrushed out. The tattoos are gone."

She's never been asked to tone down or censor her descriptions of the photos.  "It's just honest and very straightforward," she says.  "That's what I like about it."

But does her husband like it?

"He never really listened to it before, but the other day I brought one home and I read it to him," Hanks says.

"I was fully clothed when I read that to him, by the way," she adds.


SOURCE
Carlos "The Rolls Royce" Edwards

Offline weary1969

  • Hero Warrior
  • *****
  • Posts: 27225
    • View Profile
Re: Stevie Wonder to UN: Ease copyrights for the blind
« Reply #2 on: September 20, 2010, 01:42:39 PM »
Interesting timing by Stevie given this story:


Reading 'Playboy' To The Blind




By day, Suzi Hanks is a DJ at a classic radio station in Houston, Texas. It's what she does after work that makes people's ears blush.

Hanks volunteers with Taping for the Blind, an organization that makes audio recordings of popular books and magazines. When she started the gig three years ago, they put her to work reading pet publications.

"Dog Fancy, Cat Fancy and Bird Talk," she says.  "It was wonderful, but a little boring, to be honest."

Then one day, Hanks got a more interesting reading opportunity.  They asked her to read Playboy, too.

"The guy who did Playboy got married, and his wife told him he couldn't do it anymore," Hanks explains.  "So they came and asked me."

As a woman on a classic rock radio station with a predominantly male audience and fan following, the organization "thought it might be fun."

Hanks, of course, reads the articles in Playboy, but yes, a large part of her job is indeed describing the pictures. She does this without a script, speaking extemporaneously about what she's seeing.

"Basically I'm their eyes. All I'm doing is providing accessibility to what's there on the page," she says.  "I don't have to try to be sexy when I'm describing the pictures.  I'm just a woman reading it, and it comes out sexy whether I want it to or not."

It's more than just body parts, she says.  "That would get boring.  You're painting a picture.  She's conveying something through her eyes, through her facial expressions."

Hanks will look for details in the photos like nautical sheets on the bed, or make observations like, "interestingly enough, in the centerfold,  it looks as if the tattoos have been airbrushed out. The tattoos are gone."

She's never been asked to tone down or censor her descriptions of the photos.  "It's just honest and very straightforward," she says.  "That's what I like about it."

But does her husband like it?

"He never really listened to it before, but the other day I brought one home and I read it to him," Hanks says.

"I was fully clothed when I read that to him, by the way," she adds.


SOURCE

Yes palos d timing intresting
Today you're the dog, tomorrow you're the hydrant - so be good to others - it comes back!"

Offline Tongue

  • Hero Warrior
  • *****
  • Posts: 1892
  • Blue is the Colour.....Chelsea Chelsea Chelsea
    • View Profile
Re: Stevie Wonder to UN: Ease copyrights for the blind
« Reply #3 on: September 20, 2010, 02:46:31 PM »
Interesting timing by Stevie given this story:


Reading 'Playboy' To The Blind




By day, Suzi Hanks is a DJ at a classic radio station in Houston, Texas. It's what she does after work that makes people's ears blush.

Hanks volunteers with Taping for the Blind, an organization that makes audio recordings of popular books and magazines. When she started the gig three years ago, they put her to work reading pet publications.

"Dog Fancy, Cat Fancy and Bird Talk," she says.  "It was wonderful, but a little boring, to be honest."

Then one day, Hanks got a more interesting reading opportunity.  They asked her to read Playboy, too.

"The guy who did Playboy got married, and his wife told him he couldn't do it anymore," Hanks explains.  "So they came and asked me."

As a woman on a classic rock radio station with a predominantly male audience and fan following, the organization "thought it might be fun."

Hanks, of course, reads the articles in Playboy, but yes, a large part of her job is indeed describing the pictures. She does this without a script, speaking extemporaneously about what she's seeing.

"Basically I'm their eyes. All I'm doing is providing accessibility to what's there on the page," she says.  "I don't have to try to be sexy when I'm describing the pictures.  I'm just a woman reading it, and it comes out sexy whether I want it to or not."

It's more than just body parts, she says.  "That would get boring.  You're painting a picture.  She's conveying something through her eyes, through her facial expressions."

Hanks will look for details in the photos like nautical sheets on the bed, or make observations like, "interestingly enough, in the centerfold,  it looks as if the tattoos have been airbrushed out. The tattoos are gone."

She's never been asked to tone down or censor her descriptions of the photos.  "It's just honest and very straightforward," she says.  "That's what I like about it."

But does her husband like it?

"He never really listened to it before, but the other day I brought one home and I read it to him," Hanks says.

"I was fully clothed when I read that to him, by the way," she adds.


SOURCE

Long friggin steuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuupes.

 

1]; } ?>