Tuesday, December 20, 2011

Making Internet Money


Epic Commissions     How To Make Money Online by net4tipsand


This week the Mystic Valley Regional Charter School in Malden,
Massachusetts, put a highly regarded teacher on paid leave after
the local Fox affiliate
revealed that he has appeared in several pornographic movies.
No one alleges that Kevin Hogan, a crew coach who is also head of
the school's English department, did anything illegal, and he gets
high marks as a teacher. Yet the school is investigating him,
ostensibly for giving an incomplete account of his work experience
prior to taking his current job. When it broke the story on
Tuesday, Fox 25 seemed mostly interested in titillation:



Kevin Hogan is an English teacher and crew coach at a top-rated
Massachusetts public high school, but he brings some unusual
experience to the job: until recently, he was starring in
pornographic movies....


He can also be found on the Internet and in adult entertainment
stores under his screen name: Hytch Cawke.


His movie credits include "Fetish World" and "Just Gone Gay 8,"
and FOX Undercover found his third movie, whose title is not fit to
reveal in a family news outlet, in a local adult store. It features
him answering an ad to have sex for money.


"Hi, I'm Hytch and I just answered the ad and now I'm here to
see what it’s like to be with a guy," he says to the camera.


But Hogan wasn't so talkative when FOX Undercover's camera was
on him.



To provide a fig leaf of legitimate public interest, the TV
station quoted three parents who were disturbed by the news for no
clearly articulated reason, one of whom also said: "The kids really
love him. He's been a great addition to the team." The story also
noted that Hogan had "flawless references."


In a follow-up segment the next day, Fox 25
reported that the initial piece "sparked a flood of responses,
many of them critical of the story. One tweet said 'Kevin Hogan did
not deserve that. He's a good teacher with students supporting
him.'" The headline on a
story posted this morning asks, "Are private lives of teachers
truly private?" Which seems like something Fox 25 should have asked
before ruining this guy's life.


The closest the station has come to an intelligible
justification for its exposé is this
quote from a spokesman for the state Department of Elementary
and Secondary Education, which also is investigating
Hogan: “We expect teachers to hold a very high moral standard.
They are role models for students."


So even if everyone concedes a teacher is good at teaching, he
is disqualified from the job if he behaves immorally off the clock.
Who decides what counts as immoral? Does it have to involve sex?
Promiscuity and adultery too, or just making porn? Does it matter
whether it is gay or straight porn?


Obviously, no one forced Hogan to make those movies. But should
he have taken it for granted that he was throwing away his teaching
career by doing so?


[Thanks to Andrew Friedrich for the tip.]


Funniest/Most Insightful Comments Of The Week At Techdirt

from the rocking-the-insight dept

It appears that the top two winners for most insightful this week were both on the same story... I don't recall that happening before, though it's possible that it has. That story was about ex-RIAA boss Hilary Rosen asking, in response to my post about the problems of SOPA & PIPA, "if a store doesn't sell u what u want, u are justified in stealing?" An anonymous commenter quickly pointed out the rather obvious issue here:


um. if the store doesn't sell it, that means they don't have it in stock, how would i steal it?

For what it's worth, that comment also came in third in the voting for funniest (and juuuuuust missed second).



A very close second place (I mean, really, really close) for insightful came from That Anonymous Coward, who went a little more in-depth and made some key points:

If you don't put what I want in the store, don't be pissed if I look elsewhere for it.
Don't be mad if I explore CC licensed music, or artists skipping over your archaic business model.
If you can't figure out how to release something worldwide within a week, don't cry when people forget they wanted it when you get around to releasing it in region 5 6 months later.



Your approach to dealing with infringement has been to try and get more laws and make people think it is as horrible as home invasions with people breaking in to steal your last brick of ramen. How much longer until you stop playing the helpless victim and figure out you have so many more ways to make money today than ever before. That there is a world wide market, if you'd stop trying to treat each piece of the world as unconnected from the others.



Maybe you haven't noticed, there are many artists using this internet fad to launch careers and they make more than they ever would have made under your system. How much longer before more artists decide your not needed? It might be time to innovate to keep them rather than try to legislate a perfect world where everyone pays you every 5 minutes.

There were just too many other insightful comments for me to pick just two for editor's choice, so you've got some bonus comments.



First up an anonymous musician responding to some questionable analysis by Digital Music News, totally misreading Tunecore data to suggest that it's difficult to make a living using Tunecore, because lots of musicians just make a little bit of money. This musician explained the key point: under Tunecore, lots of musicians make some money. Under the old system most musicians lose money:

What DMN's critique neatly ignores are all the artists that LOSE money as a result of trying things the "traditional" way.



I spent four and a half years in a pretty good band, with a substantial regional following. We practiced, we wrote, we played out, we recorded, we did all the things one might expect musicians to do. And we made money...for other people. In the end, we figured out that (collectively) we were about $22,000 in the red -- while those we were working for were about $47,000 in the black.



We would have been happy to make minimum wage -- on a per-hour basis, given the thousands of hours we put into our craft, we would have at least had something to show for all our effort. But that's not how it went down.



And we we're not alone.



Everyone in the business knows this. Everyone learns, sometimes rather quickly, that musicians are the last to get paid. This is the "business model" that's been in place for decades, and it's been immensely profitable for everyone BUT musicians (with rare exceptions). The question thus becomes: why doesn't DMN know this? Why doesn't DMN recognize that when any musician is making any money at all, that's probably a huge win over the status quo?



Oh -- we would have done it for minimum wage. We loved what we were doing. That's why we put thousands and thousands of hours into it. That's why we held down second jobs to fund it. That's why we sacrificed, why we slept in a van, why we played lousy gigs in lousy joints, why we fought through all the setbacks, why we gave up time with girlfriends (and sometimes gave up girlfriends). So if we could have actually afforded to keep doing it, if we hadn't been forced out by financial reality, we would have kept right on.

Then we've got the folks from MAFIAAFire, responding to someone claiming that their new system to route around DNS and IP blocks would be illegal. They pointed out why that didn't matter:

Illegal in the US.



A lot of what we do is illegal in China (like watching porn) and we give a crap about breaking Chinese laws as much as we give a crap about breaking US laws.



We are Swedish citizens, we are not breaking Swedish law.



US lawmakers can go suck an egg for all we care.



If it becomes illegal and Mozilla asks us to move, we'll host this on our own _Swedish_ website (in English of course).

For the last two, we've got two good explanations of what's really the reasoning behind SOPA/PIPA. First, we've got Marcel de Jong noting that it's about control:

It's not about piracy, that's just a talking point, just a narrative. (the sugar to make the medicine go down Congress' throat)



The real issue is about control.


The middlemen of the RIAA- and MPAA-backed labels and studios can't control what gets released to the market anymore, because of the internet.



Indie artists suddenly have about as much opportunities for profiling their works to the public as artists who have signed up with the large corporations.



And these corporations are running scared. They are so fixed on keeping their old cushy jobs, that they don't dare to change their business models to suit the new reality more, because that would mean more work for them and possibly less profit. So intent they are on keeping that control, that they are willing to destroy the internet and criminalize the fanbase of their artists.

And then we have Eric Goldman explaining that it's about rent seeking:

Mike, SOPA/PIPA was never designed to provoke intelligent conversation about solutions to legitimate concerns. It was a pure rent-seeking rights grab, and the only open Q is if the proponents have enough muscle to push it through without actually addressing its "details." I wouldn't rule out the proponents' ability to do so.

Moving to the funny... we've got a winner from Gwiz, responding to the question of "what do you consider to be casual infringement?"

It's when you download a movie in sweat pants and a T-shirt, instead of your buccaneer hat, puffy shirt, and eye patch.

Coming in second is Hephaestus, with his simplified message to the legacy entertainment industry explaining what's happening online these days:

Dear RIAA and MPAA



I am sorry you are drowning, please accept this anvil as a gift.



Signed the Internet.

For editor's choice, we've got Michael Barclay pointing out the relative penalties of certain crimes:

SOPA makes it a felony to upload a video of someone singing a copyrighted song with up to 5 years in prison. Dr. Conrad Murray was convicted of manslaughter for killing Michael Jackson and only got a 4 year maximum sentence.



So it's a bigger crime to sing one of Michael Jackson's songs than it is to kill him.

That one actually got more insightful votes than funny votes, but we were already full of insightful comments... and it got plenty of funny votes too. And our final editor's choice also got a ton of both insightful and funny votes. It's ScytheNoire, responding to Senator Joe Lieberman demanding that Google add a "report a terrorist" button to Blogger. Scythe had a different suggestion:

I want a 'Report Senator As Idiot' button.

Don't we all?



48 Comments | Leave a Comment..



http://cssa.mit.edu/forum/index.php?showuser=45958
http://www.ncv.unsw.edu.au/index.php/member/18835/
http://www.knopm.uw.edu.pl/forum/index.php?action=profile;u=37409
http://www.u.arizona.edu/~phlee/xenonapp/forums5/xenon/profile.php?action=get&id=7208
http://music.unt.edu/pianoresearch/discussion/profile.php?action=get&id=16272
http://sweb.uky.edu/StudentOrgs/Badminton/bbs/profile.php?action=get&id=8681
http://avidbbs.cuc.edu.cn/profile.php?id=1721
http://www.uta.edu/studentorgs/cgsa/forum/profile.php?id=33272
http://ftp.itcs.tsinghua.edu.cn/papakons/teaching/advalgorithmsS11/forum/member.php?action=profile&uid=68662
http://getreal.ous.edu/forum/member.php?action=profile&uid=36957
http://forum.loni.ucla.edu/member.php?u=10198
http://forum.portal.edu.ro/index.php?showuser=386978
http://www.jiexiu.gov.cn/user/profile/20442.page
http://forums.saa.edu/profile.php?id=263561
http://yakko.cs.wmich.edu/~digiband/index.php?section=showuser&subsection=lancemara
http://www.sas.edu.pk/vb/member.php?u=32029
http://www.sti.edu.vn/members/lancemara.html
http://forum.thcsnguyenbinhkhiem.edu.vn/member.php?u=5454
http://rkjsw.sh.gov.cn/user/profile/87172.page
http://portal.aerocivil.gov.co/foro/user/profile/25230.page
http://www.fjit.gov.cn/bbs/user/profile/173385.page
http://school41.edu.ru/smf/index.php?action=profile;u=9962
http://www.scribd.com/doc/75882708/Appliance-Repair-Services
http://www.docstoc.com/docs/108712775/Appliance_Repair_Services
http://www.slideshare.net/henryjohn34/appliance-repair-services
http://member.thinkfree.com/myoffice/show.se?f=d90342b9c507ddcc38f0d41fde4ffb82
http://www.divshare.com/download/16396780-375
http://www.4shared.com/document/0X9KkdQJ/Appliance_Repair_Services.html
https://share.zoho.com/preview/writer/685465000000083014/appliance_repair_services
http://www.box.com/s/e5ms3a5duhvte9n4zqig
http://issuu.com/henryjohn34/docs/appliance_repair_services
http://www.calameo.com/books/0004699018b34a74b13b0
http://www.keepandshare.com/doc/3361132/appliance-repair-services-doc-december-16-2011-10-50-pm-54k
http://www.wepapers.com/Papers/170344/Appliance_Repair_Services
http://www.gigasize.com/get/s485m5vogkd
http://www.doxtop.com/browse/96533712/appliance-repair-services.aspx
http://www.mediafire.com/?ciyw4482dy3atym
http://www.ziddu.com/download/17839907/Appliance_Repair_Services.doc.html
http://dl.dropbox.com/u/36250372/Appliance_Repair_Services.doc
http://speedy.sh/ChBFG/Appliance-Repair-Services.doc
http://mesendfiles.info/files/gnNd1324054830.html
http://www.largedocument.com/4/5d2c0f69/Appliance_Repair_Services.doc
http://uploadingit.com/file/ylcrcv2z7ucstwx7/Appliance_Repair_Services.doc
https://docs.google.com/document/d/1Kb1Go8YnHCzaOfSEaWqAeMYnX8h96pKUORofpujcsvQ/edit
http://www.myplick.com/view/6jNtKqnkbS8/Appliance-Repair-Services
http://www.viewdocsonline.com/document/sgzpdj
http://www.crocko.com/6B8A3E8E69FE448B90DB88104BD7FF9F/Appliance_Repair_Services.doc

No comments:

Post a Comment