Hard-Drive Samizdat
Via Adam at Mutualist Journal Club. According to Calendarlive, DVDs are the new soapbox. Radical filmmakers can bypass the Hollywood distribution system by going straight to DVD.
It strikes me that discs may also be the new samizdat. It's quite likely that the transmission of information on the web will be increasingly monitored and restricted by Homeland Security--or whatever combination of jackbooted alphabet soup agencies in the sub-basements of Ft. Meade, and "private" Pinkertonian mercenaries, become our home-grown Gestapo. And as John Zube of the Libertarian Microfiche Project has pointed out, a single CD-Rom with 650MB capacity can hold thousands of books in text-only files. So the duplication of CD-Roms by hard drive and distribution by hand (or by snail mail, assuming "smart stamps" and other forms of enclosure of the postal commons don't render it off-limits to subversives) may be the best way of circulating libertarian literature under a police state.
Launching this week, on the left side of the aisle: Ironweed, a San Francisco-based DVD-of-the-month club (www.ironweedfilms.com) that will disseminate "progressive" documentaries and feature films and also serve as a networking tool. As part of a grass-roots marketing campaign, groups such as MoveOn.org, the Progressive Majority, Working Assets and the Nation magazine have alerted their subscribers.
On the right: Eagle Publishing, a leading conservative publisher based in Washington, D.C., was selling so many DVDs through its book club that it recently set up its own DVD website (www.conservativedvds.com).
It strikes me that discs may also be the new samizdat. It's quite likely that the transmission of information on the web will be increasingly monitored and restricted by Homeland Security--or whatever combination of jackbooted alphabet soup agencies in the sub-basements of Ft. Meade, and "private" Pinkertonian mercenaries, become our home-grown Gestapo. And as John Zube of the Libertarian Microfiche Project has pointed out, a single CD-Rom with 650MB capacity can hold thousands of books in text-only files. So the duplication of CD-Roms by hard drive and distribution by hand (or by snail mail, assuming "smart stamps" and other forms of enclosure of the postal commons don't render it off-limits to subversives) may be the best way of circulating libertarian literature under a police state.
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