The first thing anyone will notice coming to Korea is that it is a land marked by extremes. Extreme beauty and extreme dedication. Extreme competition and extreme image.
Where to begin in describing this to someone who has never been here is difficult, but maybe I can start by giving some examples.
In Korea, the first extreme is the number of people densely packed into this small pennisula, less than a third of the size of California. California has some 30 million people–so does Korea. By the sheer number of people always shoulder to shouler, elbow to elbow walking down the streets, it’s hard not to be come more aware of the differences between life in California.. or rather, Los Angeles and Seoul. They are smack in front of your face. About as densely pack as the people are the stores. There are 3 types of shops in Seoul. KTF — the Verizon of Korea; the Hofs — the life of every college town; the Coffee shops — always busy — all 6 floors of them. Now, I’d like to say that there are tons of restaurants.. and there are. But their numbers are really dwarfed by the top three.
So.. KTF is the largest mobile phone company here in Korea. In a busy city like Sinchon, you will find 1 store within eye site of another store — either just a few doors down or across the street.
The Hoffs are stacked back to back, all on top of eachother. Their signs are obnoxious and usually blare beeps and bleeps techno music, or one of TWO groups: Cool or G.O.D. The outside of almost every place is quite trashy, but once you enter you will very often find an interior decor that would be found only in the most trendy of Hollywood or Sunset night clubs. They are very big on taking English words as names, and it’s not uncommon to find a place called the “Roxy” or a mispelled “House of Blue”. There’s this once place I went to called “Oh’charlies..” Sounded like a nice Irsih pub or something. But once you enter, you find something of a more Eastern European decor. It gave me quite the laugh.
The coffee shops are as slick as the bars, often with wonderfully comfortable sofas and modern-classical furnature. The exceptions are the very boring American coffee chain stores like Coffee Bean, Seatle’s Best Coffee, and Starbucks. They are very boring inside and usually offer nice hard wooden chairs to sit on, not much to compare against the personal lounge chair all the other places offer. Starbucks can sometimes have some big locations in the states, but nothing in comparison to what you will find here. Imagine the largest Starbucks you have ever been to. Now, multiply that by 5 floors and you have one Starbucks. Coffee Bean has the same arrangement, along with many other local coffee shop chains or novelties.
Posted by e at 2002-09-23 05:38:00
let the battle begin
CNN: Record labels seek OK for P2P sabotage
Sunday September 29, 2002 at 10:08 PM
(Original link expired:
http://www.cnn.com/2002/TECH/internet/09/27/media.piracy.reut/index.html)
Here’s another copy http://vancouver.indymedia.org/news/2002/09/17874.php
Original article is at http://vancouver.indymedia.org/news/2002/09/17874.php
cnn: Record labels seek OK for P2P sabotage
by linkkkbot Sunday September 29, 2002 at 10:08 PM
linkbotproject@hushmail.com
WASHINGTON (Reuters) — Frustrated by the continuing presence of free music on the Internet, the recording industry asked for Congress’ blessing on Thursday to gum up the online networks they blame for slowing their sales.
Congress is considering expanded legal protection for record labels who resort to sabotage in their ongoing battle with “peer to peer” networks that allow users to freely trade music, movies and other copyrighted material.
The recording industry offered a glimpse into its tactics, which include blocking transfers and flooding the network with dummy songs, and promised a House of Representatives subcommittee that they would not disrupt the Internet or reach into individuals’ computers.
“I can’t foresee any scenario where it would be in our interest to go into anybody’s computer and delete a file,” said Hilary Rosen, chairman of the Recording Industry Association of America.
But some lawmakers worried that overzealous copyright enforcement measures could end up targeting innocent computer users, and said they did not want to encourage a high-tech game of cat and mouse that could easily get out of hand.
“What are the implications for the Internet’s functionality when the inevitable arms race develops?” asked Virginia Democratic Rep. Rick Boucher.
Boucher noted that overzealous copyright enforcers have already mistaken a photo entitled “Portrait of mrs harrison williams 1943″ for a song by former Beatle George Harrison, and demanded that Internet provider UUNet terminate the account of a customer who posted a book report on Harry Potter.
Changing tactics
The recording industry has aggressively fought peer-to-peer services since Napster gained widespread popularity more than two years ago.
While the recording industry was able to persuade a California court to shut Napster down, it has so far been less successful against next-generation services that are based overseas or operate in a decentralized manner.
The industry has tried different tactics recently, targeting individual users with automated tracking software and launching an advertising campaign to discourage illegal downloads.
Record labels have also turned to Los Angeles technology firm MediaDefender Inc., which floods peer-to-peer services with decoy songs in an attempt to crowd out copyrighted material.
MediaDefender president Randy Saaf said the company can also block downloads through a technique called “interdiction,” which closes off a user’s hard drive to others on the network.
The industry has used the decoy service heavily, to the point where nine out of ten versions on a peer-to-peer network may be empty shells, he said. Interdiction has been less popular, he said, as it may run afoul of anti-hacking laws.
KaZaA and Morpheus said after the hearing that they have seen few effects from record-company sabotage, even as KaZaA released a new version that allows users to screen out unreliable files.
“We haven’t had a plethora of complaints about dummy files … It would be misguided to imagine that’s the only reason” for the upgrade, said KaZaA spokeswoman Kelly Larabee.
Steve Griffin, who watched from the audience as lawmakers and witnesses castigated his Morpheus peer-to-peer service, said Congress would do better to establish a per-song royalty rate to compensate copyright holders, rather than endorsing high-tech warfare between record labels and peer-to-peer networks.
“It’s impractical and unfeasible to simply wipe out all the hard drives of America,” Griffin said.
edition.cnn.com/2002/TECH/internet/09/27/media.piracy.reut/index.html