<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?>
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<title>SideQuest</title>
<link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://www.sidequest.org/weblog/" />
<modified>2005-11-04T15:10:45Z</modified>
<tagline>Walking through life sideways</tagline>
<id>tag:www.sidequest.org,2007:/weblog/2</id>
<generator url="http://www.movabletype.org/" version="3.121">Movable Type</generator>
<copyright>Copyright (c) 2005, The DJ</copyright>
<entry>
<title>Pay to tell your story</title>
<link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://sidequest.org/weblog/archives/2005/11/pay_to_tell_you.html" />
<modified>2005-11-04T15:10:45Z</modified>
<issued>2005-11-04T14:37:40Z</issued>
<id>tag:www.sidequest.org,2005:/weblog/2.47</id>
<created>2005-11-04T14:37:40Z</created>
<summary type="text/plain">As Stallman and many others already feared, the USPTO has come up with yet a more idiotic patent. From today, it is apparently possible to patent a storyline. You say: &quot;So what?&quot;. Oh my.. you have no idea. This means...</summary>
<author>
<name>The DJ</name>
<url>http://www.sidequest.org</url>
<email>mt@sidequest.org</email>
</author>
<dc:subject>Philosophy</dc:subject>
<content type="text/html" mode="escaped" xml:lang="en" xml:base="http://www.sidequest.org/weblog/">
<![CDATA[<p>As <a href="http://technology.guardian.co.uk/online/comment/story/0,12449,1510566,00.html">Stallman</a> and many others already feared, the USPTO has come up with yet a more <a href="http://www.emediawire.com/releases/2005/11/emw303435.htm">idiotic patent</a>. From today, it is apparently possible to patent a storyline. You say: "So what?". Oh my.. you have no idea. This means that the person awarded the patent can collect licensing fees from ANYONE who writes a story, makes a movie or in any other way base a work on this storyline. This is the END of creativity of the mind people. When is America gonna stand up for their rights instead of for money and say: "Enough is enough!!!". This is totally getting out of hand.</p>

<p>Below a repost of an earlier blogentry with some links to related materials <br />
<code><br />
My friend <a href="http://nanocrew.net/blog">Jon Lech Johansen</a> pointed me at some speaches by <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cory_Doctorow">Cory Doctorow</a> and <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lawrence_Lessig">Lawrence Lessig</a>. Cory is a Science Fiction writer and EFF spokesperson and Lawrence is a Stanford Professor of Law. Both have great ideas on copyright, DRM and Freedoms. And even better examples of what often goes wrong in the current situation of regulation of these.<br />
I would consider this obligated viewing material for all European Parliament members before they take the all important EU Patent vote. It's directly related to patents in that patent law is BUILT on these copyright laws. And the current proposal (let's not even talk about the legality of how it got trough the EC :D ) protects and exploits exactly some of the defects of current copyright law.</p>

<p>And it's interesting material for anyone interested in Piracy, Copyright, DRM, Creativity and Freedom.<br />
<a href="http://www.craphound.com/msftdrm.txt">Cory's famous DRM speach at Microsoft (txt)</a><br />
<a href="http://www.nuug.no/pub/herman/efn/20050509-cory_doctorow-1.mpeg">Cory's NUUG speach (mpg)</a><br />
<a href="http://www.nuug.no/pub/herman/efn/20050509-cory_doctorow-2.mpeg">Cory's NUUG post speach discussion (mpg)</a><br />
<a href="ftp://ftp.skolelinux.no/skolelinux/press/20050520-kopinor/lessig_20050520.mpeg">Lessig's talk (takes a while before it gets really interesting, but VERY good). (mpg)</a><br />
</code></p>]]>

</content>
</entry>
<entry>
<title>What can you say, what can you do?</title>
<link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://sidequest.org/weblog/archives/2004/11/what_can_you_sa.html" />
<modified>2004-11-02T14:44:09Z</modified>
<issued>2004-11-02T14:29:35Z</issued>
<id>tag:www.sidequest.org,2004:/weblog/2.22</id>
<created>2004-11-02T14:29:35Z</created>
<summary type="text/plain">Not again. That is what I thought when I heard about the murder on Theo van Gogh. Dutch newsreport BBC newsreport CNN newsreport I won&apos;t be saying anything that hasn&apos;t been said by everyone else here. Simply because it is...</summary>
<author>
<name>The DJ</name>
<url>http://www.sidequest.org</url>
<email>mt@sidequest.org</email>
</author>
<dc:subject>Philosophy</dc:subject>
<content type="text/html" mode="escaped" xml:lang="en" xml:base="http://www.sidequest.org/weblog/">
<![CDATA[<p>Not again. That is what I thought when I heard about the murder on Theo van Gogh.<br />
<a href="http://portal.omroep.nl/?nav=runekBsHEbGcZvGabE">Dutch newsreport</a><br />
<a href="http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/click/rss/1.0/-/2/hi/europe/3974179.stm">BBC newsreport</a><br />
<a href="http://edition.cnn.com/2004/WORLD/europe/11/02/netherlands.filmmaker.reut/index.html">CNN newsreport</a></p>

<p>I won't be saying anything that hasn't been said by everyone else here. Simply because it is impossible. There is just nothing left to say. What has happened to this world? Why do we need to shoot people over what they say? Why do we bomb people to get what we want? Why do we attack other nations based on flimsy evidence? Why so much violence for no apparent reason other than that we do not like eachother? If Bush wins the elections today, then I will know for sure. We are entering a very dark period filled with negative approaches, fear, loathing and hatred. There is no way back. It has to come to a climax in order to reset everyone back to square 1. World War III is coming and I wish i could just move to Antarctica or Mars. I want to be gone, hide, hibernate anything to get away from this world. Just wait to let it come to it's senses again, for a time where we can all work together again and build a better and greater society with the ones that DO understand.</p>

<p>PS. This is not a suicide note, just me being very pessimistic.</p>]]>

</content>
</entry>
<entry>
<title>200 things ToDo</title>
<link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://sidequest.org/weblog/archives/2004/10/200_things_todo.html" />
<modified>2004-10-08T11:46:01Z</modified>
<issued>2004-10-08T11:30:20Z</issued>
<id>tag:www.sidequest.org,2004:/weblog/2.21</id>
<created>2004-10-08T11:30:20Z</created>
<summary type="text/plain">Now I never claimed I was really original, so before I forgot where I read this, i present this list of 200 things you can do with your life. I got it from Wh|te Russian, who seems to have copied...</summary>
<author>
<name>The DJ</name>
<url>http://www.sidequest.org</url>
<email>mt@sidequest.org</email>
</author>
<dc:subject>Philosophy</dc:subject>
<content type="text/html" mode="escaped" xml:lang="en" xml:base="http://www.sidequest.org/weblog/">
<![CDATA[<p>Now I never claimed I was really original, so before I forgot where I read this, i present this list of 200 things you can do with your life. I got it from <a href="http://www.white-russian.nl/blog/2004/09/200_things.html#more">Wh|te Russian</a>, who seems to have copied it from <a href="http://www.jayallen.org/">Jay Allen</a> who got it from someone else etc. etc. etc. </p>

<p>I've marked what I have done so far in bold. A quick look at it, and I think I need to start making a World tour.</p>]]>
<![CDATA[<p><b>01. Bought everyone in the pub a drink</b><br />
02. Swam with wild dolphins<br />
<b>03. Climbed a mountain</b><br />
04. Taken a Ferrari for a test drive<br />
05. Been inside the Great Pyramid<br />
06. Held a tarantula.<br />
07. Taken a candlelit bath with someone<br />
08. Said ‘I love you’ and meant it<br />
<b>09. Hugged a tree</b><br />
10. Done a striptease<br />
11. Bungee jumped<br />
<b>12. Visited Paris</b><br />
13. Watched a lightning storm at sea<br />
<b>14. Stayed up all night long, and watch the sun rise</b><br />
<b>15. Seen the Northern Lights</b><br />
16. Gone to a huge sports game<br />
17. Walked the stairs to the top of the Leaning Tower of Pisa<br />
<b>18. Grown and eaten your own vegetables</b><br />
19. Touched an iceberg<br />
20. Slept under the stars</p>

<p></p>

<p>21. Changed a baby's diaper<br />
22. Taken a trip in a hot air balloon<br />
<b>23. Watched a meteor shower</b><br />
24. Gotten drunk on champagne<br />
25. Given more than you can afford to charity<br />
<b>26. Looked up at the night sky through a telescope</b><br />
27. Had an uncontrollable giggling fit at the worst possible <br />
moment<br />
<b>28. Had a food fight</b><br />
29. Bet on a winning horse<br />
<b>30. Taken a sick day when you’re not ill</b><br />
31. Asked out a stranger<br />
<b>32. Had a snowball fight</b><br />
33. Photocopied your bottom on the office photocopier<br />
<b>34. Screamed as loudly as you possibly can</b><br />
<b>35. Held a lamb</b><br />
36. Enacted a favorite fantasy<br />
37. Taken a midnight skinny dip<br />
38. Taken an ice cold bath<br />
39. Had a meaningful conversation with a beggar<br />
<b>40. Seen a total eclipse</b></p>

<p></p>

<p><b>41. Ridden a roller coaster</b><br />
42. Hit a home run<br />
43. Fit three weeks miraculously into three days<br />
<b>44. Danced like a fool and not cared who was looking</b><br />
45. Adopted an accent for an entire day<br />
<b>46. Visited the birthplace of your ancestors</b><br />
47. Actually felt happy about your life, even for just a <br />
moment<br />
<b>48. Had two hard drives for your computer.</b><br />
49. Visited all 50 states<br />
50. Loved your job for all accounts<br />
51. Taken care of someone who was shit faced<br />
52. Had enough money to be truly satisfied (money != satisfaction)<br />
<b>53. Had amazing friends</b><br />
54. Danced with a stranger in a foreign country<br />
55. Watched wild whales<br />
56. Stolen a sign<br />
<b>57. Backpacked in Europe</b><br />
58. Taken a road-trip<br />
<b>59. Rock climbing</b><br />
60. Lied to foreign government’s official in that country to <br />
avoid notice</p>

<p><br />
<b>61. Midnight walk on the beach</b><br />
62. Sky diving<br />
63. Visited Ireland<br />
64. Been heartbroken longer then you were actually in <br />
love<br />
65. In a restaurant, sat at a stranger’s table and had a meal <br />
with them<br />
66. Visited Japan<br />
67. Benchpressed your own weight<br />
<b>68. Milked a cow</b><br />
69. Alphabetized your records<br />
<b>70. Pretended to be a superhero</b><br />
71. Sung karaoke<br />
<b>72. Lounged around in bed all day</b><br />
73. Posed nude in front of strangers<br />
<b>74. Scuba diving</b><br />
75. Got it on to “Let’s Get It On” by Marvin Gaye<br />
76. Kissed in the rain<br />
77. Played in the mud<br />
78. Played in the rain<br />
79. Gone to a drive-in theater<br />
<b>80. Done something you should regret, but don’t regret <br />
it.</b></p>

<p><br />
81. Visited the Great Wall of China<br />
82. Discovered that someone who’s not supposed to have known <br />
about your blog has discovered your blog<br />
<b>83. Dropped Windows in favor of something better</b><br />
84. Started a business<br />
85. Fallen in love and not had your heart broken<br />
<b>86. Toured ancient sites</b><br />
87. Taken a martial arts class<br />
88. Swordfought for the honor of a woman<br />
89. Played D&D for more than 6 hours straight<br />
90. Gotten married<br />
91. Been in a movie<br />
92. Crashed a party<br />
93. Loved someone you shouldn’t have<br />
94. Kissed someone so passionately it made them dizzy<br />
95. Gotten divorced<br />
96. Had sex at the office<br />
97. Gone without food for 5 days<br />
98. Made cookies from scratch<br />
99. Won first prize in a costume contest<br />
100. Ridden a gondola in Venice</p>

<p><br />
101. Gotten a tattoo<br />
102. Found that the texture of some materials can turn you <br />
on<br />
103. Rafted the Snake River<br />
104. Been on television news programs as an “expert”<br />
105. Got flowers for no reason<br />
<b>106. Masturbated in a public place</b><br />
<b>107. Got so drunk you don’t remember anything</b><br />
108. Been addicted to some form of illegal drug<br />
109. Performed on stage<br />
110. Been to Las Vegas<br />
111. Recorded music<br />
112. Eaten shark<br />
113. Had a one-night stand<br />
114. Gone to Thailand<br />
115. Seen Siouxsie live<br />
116. Bought a house<br />
117. Been in a combat zone<br />
118. Buried one/both of your parents<br />
119. Shaved or waxed your pubic hair off<br />
120. Been on a cruise ship</p>

<p><br />
121. Spoken more than one language fluently<br />
122. Gotten into a fight while attempting to defend <br />
someone<br />
<b>123. Bounced a check</b><br />
124. Performed in Rocky Horror<br />
<b>125. Read - and understood - your credit report</b><br />
126. Raised children<br />
<b>127. Recently bought and played with a favorite childhood toy</b><br />
128. Followed your favorite band/singer on tour<br />
129. Created and named your own constellation of stars<br />
<b>130. Taken an exotic bicycle tour in a foreign country</b><br />
131. Found out something significant that your ancestors did<br />
132. Called or written your Congress person<br />
133. Picked up and moved to another city to just start <br />
over<br />
134. …more than once? - More than thrice?<br />
135. Walked the Golden Gate Bridge<br />
136. Sang loudly in the car, and didn’t stop when you knew <br />
someone was looking<br />
137. Had an abortion or your female partner did<br />
138. Had plastic surgery<br />
139. Survived an accident that you shouldn’t have survived.<br />
140. Wrote articles for a large publication</p>

<p>141. Lost over 100 pounds<br />
142. Held someone while they were having a flashback<br />
143. Piloted an airplane<br />
144. Petted a stingray<br />
145. Broken someone’s heart<br />
146. Helped an animal give birth<br />
147. Been fired or laid off from a job<br />
148. Won money on a T.V. game show<br />
<b>149. Broken a bone</b><br />
150. Killed a human being<br />
151. Gone on an African photo safari<br />
152. Ridden a motorcycle<br />
<b>153. Driven any land vehicle at a speed of greater than 100 <br />
mph</b><br />
154. Had a body part of yours below the neck pierced<br />
<b>155. Fired a rifle, shotgun, or pistol</b><br />
156. Eaten mushrooms that were gathered in the wild<br />
<b>157. Ridden a horse</b><br />
158. Had major surgery<br />
159. Had sex on a moving train<br />
160. Had a snake as a pet</p>

<p>161. Hiked to the bottom of the Grand Canyon<br />
162. Slept through an entire flight: takeoff, flight, and <br />
landing<br />
<b>163. Slept for more than 30 hours over the course of 48 <br />
hours</b><br />
<b>164. Visited more foreign countries than U.S. states</b><br />
165. Visited all 7 continents<br />
166. Taken a canoe trip that lasted more than 2 days<br />
167. Eaten kangaroo meat<br />
168. Fallen in love at an ancient Mayan burial ground<br />
169. Been a sperm or egg donor<br />
170. Eaten sushi<br />
<b>171. Had your picture in the newspaper</b><br />
172. Had 2 (or more) healthy romantic relationships for over a <br />
year in your lifetime<br />
173. Changed someone’s mind about something you care deeply <br />
about<br />
174. Gotten someone fired for their actions<br />
175. Gone back to school<br />
176. Parasailed<br />
177. Changed your name<br />
178. Petted a cockroach<br />
179. Eaten fried green tomatoes<br />
<b>180. Read The Iliad</b></p>

<p><b>181. Selected one “important” author who you missed in <br />
school, and read</b><br />
<b>182. Dined in a restaurant and stolen silverware, plates, cups <br />
because your apartment needed them.</b><br />
183. …and gotten 86′ed from the restaurant because you did it so many <br />
times, they figured out it was you<br />
184. Taught yourself an art from scratch<br />
185. Killed and prepared an animal for eating<br />
186. Apologized to someone years after inflicting the <br />
hurt<br />
187. Skipped all your school reunions.<br />
188. Communicated with someone without sharing a common spoken <br />
language<br />
189. Been elected to public office<br />
190. Written your own computer language<br />
191. Thought to yourself that you’re living your <br />
dream<br />
192. Had to put someone you love into hospice care<br />
<b>193. Built your own PC from parts</b><br />
194. Sold your own artwork to someone who didn’t know <br />
you<br />
<b>195. Had a booth at a street fair</b><br />
196: Dyed your hair<br />
<b>197: Been a DJ</b><br />
198: Found out someone was going to dump you via LiveJournal<br />
199: Written your own role playing game<br />
200: Been arrested</p>]]>
</content>
</entry>
<entry>
<title>Alienation</title>
<link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://sidequest.org/weblog/archives/2004/08/alienation.html" />
<modified>2004-08-22T00:13:17Z</modified>
<issued>2004-08-21T21:53:01Z</issued>
<id>tag:www.sidequest.org,2004:/weblog/2.13</id>
<created>2004-08-21T21:53:01Z</created>
<summary type="text/plain">Lance Armstrong, a month ago, said something that the French (or was it European?) supporters would rather cheer for the number 2 and boo at the number 1. I think this is not entirely true. I think that Europeans overall...</summary>
<author>
<name>The DJ</name>
<url>http://www.sidequest.org</url>
<email>mt@sidequest.org</email>
</author>
<dc:subject>Philosophy</dc:subject>
<content type="text/html" mode="escaped" xml:lang="en" xml:base="http://www.sidequest.org/weblog/">
<![CDATA[<p>Lance Armstrong, a month ago, said something that the French (or was it European?) supporters would rather cheer for the number 2 and boo at the number 1. I think this is not entirely true. I think that Europeans overall care more about the battle than the victory. It's the struggle that makes the fight of a sportsevent interesting and not the records. Because it is the struggle that shows how difficult it is to achieve success. This is exactly why Armstrong was so popular just a few years back. It was because of his struggle with cancer and how he became victorious. So they definetly like to cheer the number 2.</p>

<p>Americans are very different in this. They want to quantify every result, they care about being in the recordbooks instead of being victorious. Not that Europeans cannot appreciate or be amazed at what Armstrong does. I mean look at Schumacher in Formula 1 racing. He is a lot like Armstrong in his sport. And he is quite popular. We are not boo'ing at the number 1. What Armstrong has felt is the increased impopularity of America, we were boo'ing at an american. I understand that this might be difficult to see this through the eyes of an American. In recent years though America has made some (mostly) political decisions that have alienated them from a large part of the world including Europe.</p>

<p>The following things need to be considered in this.<br />
1: America is the strongest, most powerful (military and economical) country in the world and basically superior to all. The rest of the world is in essence at their mercy. Do not forget this, it is very important. The rest of the world needs to have a lot of trust in this country. That it will do the right thing and protect the world (not only its partners).<br />
2: America likes to show of. In commerce, in products, in sports and in war. It's a chauvinistic thing that any other country in the world would probably do. However this emphasizes the above mentioned superiority. People like to defy superiority because everyone wants to be superior.<br />
3: That America is refusing to sign something like the Kyoto protocol has had a big impact on what people think about the intentions of America. This protocol wasn't about nature. It was more about the world joining in their fight to save nature. In forgoing this protocol and instead choosing for their own (already strong compared to most) economy has made some people doubt how much America is about protecting the world and the american/human ideals and if it's not more concerned about protecting it's own interests.<br />
4: This was only strengthened by what many perceive as the big deceit that was the war on Irak. Noone doubted that Hussein was a cruel dictator and posssibly had Weapons of Mass Destruction. However, there was no Al Qaida in Irak, America should have never used that as an excuse. And America SHOULD have known that there were no WMD in Irak. And in fact large factions of them did. It was this small group around President Bush that kinda pushed this issue by using misinformation (even of ministers of state and senate members). The worry that was among the world before has now turned into distrust because of this whole situation.</p>

<p>Now all of this seperatly might not seem such a big deal. But together they have had a huge impact on the image of America. Up untill about 1998 America was just fine. The Kuwait invasion (1st gulfwar), the Baltic wars, the peace attempts in Israel/Palestinia, everything they did from the late 80s up untill that point in the late 90s was good for their general image and made the people trust the USA.<br />
After that things went down hill. I won't say it was all Bush his fault (even Mircrosoft is an example of what hurt America's image), but he was the katalyser that made things worse.</p>

<p>The big thing was of course the 9-11 attacks. A terrible and horrific event. America was hurt, physically and in their pride. The people demanded a response and were right to do so. However the people don't directly govern a country and with a reason, it is because they are not good at.<br />
The president and other governers are the ones that we trust to make the right decissions for us. Bush's media and carreer consultants told him to strike back hard. Up untill here everything was still good. But then the implementation of this came and things went wrong.</p>

<p>The USA was provoked and didn't turn the other cheek as Jezus had preached. It declared war on Terrorism (and though unspoken also on Muslimism). They took on the role of 'protectors' of the world and went on a crusade. The way they did this was stupid. They could have combatted terrorism effeciently and with a lot less rethorical wording then they did. In this they themselves created or should I say physically shaped, the enemy, made it HAVING to work together to survive. It has made the enemy more visible, but also more vivid and more 'connected' than ever before and giving them more advertisement then they could have ever created themselves. They didn't realize it at the time but the USA's actions made them the bully of the class and not the teacher, the avenger and not the superhero with a secret identity. They forgot that it is not what you do, but how you do it that shapes your image.</p>

<p>So what next... there are only two possible outcomes.<br />
1: The issue bleeds to death and in time everyone forgets and starts to trust eachother again.<br />
2: A cataclismic and definitive war with one of two outcomes. A total collapse of the great USA (probably economicallt as a sideeffect of this war) or the utter destruction of terrorism. The latter is almost impossible because terrorism is everywhere.</p>

<p>Let's hope the first is the path that we (as a planet) will end up upon. It will take a lot of expertise and vision to achieve that. However trust is required for this and unfortunatly the world is largely gouverned by fear (look only at what Michael Moore showed in the last part of Bowling for Columbine). Slowly more and more people start to see this, let's hope we will be wise in our choices in the future.</p>

<p><br />
P.S. By writing this I'll be picked out by Echelon or something the likes and probably end up on some sort of list. Let's hope I'll still be able to enter the USA :)</p>]]>

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</entry>

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