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Some restrictions and limitations apply The Department Of Romance Languages Presents .sacte and Repres 005747 Painting Hatred and Ceremonies of Possession in Protestant Anti-Spanish Pamphleteering a lecture by Jose Rabasa Friday, February 26, 3:00 pm, 338 Gilbert Professor Rabasa's talk will focus on narratives and artistic representations as modes of colonizing territories, on how the beautiful constitutes a specific modality of claiming possession and sovereignty. He will Reflect on the connection between the ideological struggles that surrounded the wars of religion in France and the Low Countries, and Theodore de bry's illustrations to the translation of Las Casas's "Brevissima relacion de la destruction de tndias (1958) Rabasa will show how this translation as well as the watercolors lead the reader to identify the atrocities committed against Amerindians with those perpetrated against Protestants. Jose Rabasa (University of California, Berkeley is a specialist in Latin American Colonial literature. His publications include: Inventing America: Spanish Historiography and the Formation of Eurocentrism (University of Oklahoma Press, 1993), and Writing Violence on the Northern Frontier (Forthcoming in Duke University Press). Cosponsored by the Latin American Studies Committee Oregon Daily Emerald Wednesday, February 24,1999 Confessions of a CD ‘burner’ A person who copies music CDs claims store prices are inflated By David Ryan Oregon Daily Emerald The Emerald interviewed a stu dent who claims to copy CD al bums, using a store-bought CD burner to do the copying. While copying CD albums is not software piracy, it is copyright infringe ment and it does require the use of a computer to arrange music tracks on a blank CD. The person agreed to be interviewed on con dition that the Emerald would not identify the person. What do you do? “I don’t pirate software. You can make [software programs) into CDs, but it requires a lot of work. In the end it’s not worth it. I wouldn’t even do it for myself. “If someone has a CD, or their roommate wants to copy it, then I’ll [copy] it for them. I don’t go on the Internet and get albums which are available. That’s too much work for me. The price I want to charge in terms of the work required to get it, I’ll say ‘just go buy the CD. ’” You don’t make a profit from it? “Um, no, I’m charging more than it costs for me to buy the blank CDs, but that’s only until I cover the $400 cost to buy the CD burner. So it’s not really ever go ing to be a profitable operation. ” When you first bought the CD burner, did you find you had a lot of people who wanted you to copy CDs? “When I first got the burner, I was swamped with people who wanted copies of things, but now I think a lot of people kind of got the CDs they wanted. Now, every cou ple weeks there will be a new CD that comes out that everybody wants. I’ll bum that. (Demand for copies of CDs] comes in spurts.” How many people wanted you to copy CDs in the last month? “Maybe 20,25.” Do you know it's copyright infringe ment? “Technically, yes, but the other thing is that CDs are way over priced. It’s kind of a personal bat tle against the CD companies. ” Are you afraid of getting caught? “Not really. A lot of people are concerned about it, but I don’t see the difference between [burning CDs] and putting a blank tape in your recorder up to an album and recording it. And everybody does that and that doesn’t seem to be anything people are talking about. I think that if I got into software pirating I’d be afraid there, be cause then you’re really doing something. Also, I’m not actively trying to get clients.” The person went on to say there was a new product in stores made by a stereo manufacturer that will copy music CDs. The person said he didn’t find anything wrong with what he was doing when there was a commercial advertis ing that kind of product. Some of these answers have been edited for length and clarity. Piracy Continued from Page 1 Because it can be easy, students might not know they are pirating software. Copying a friend’s computer game might be OK, according to the alliance, but only if it’s some thing called “shareware” or "free ware,” in which the maker of the program gives permission for the program to be copied without the maker’s approval. “I don’t think it’s so much a technical issue as it is an educa tional issue,” said Joe St Sauver from the University Computing Center. “I think awareness [of soft ware copyright laws] is a big part of it. It’s like copying books: it’s probably something [students] are not supposed to do, but they don’t know about the copyright laws.” St Sauver said pirated software can bring viruses onto a student’s hard drive. One program type, called a “Trojan horse” causes the computer to appear to be doing one thing while actually doing an other, such as a screen saver that deletes programs off a hard drive. Pirated programs also offer no technical support service. Not to mention how pirating software might grab the attention of federal agents. A University of Oregon student caught the FBI’s attention. Federal agents served a search warrant on Feb. 3 to a residence within the University-owned Agate Apart ments and confiscated computing equipment. Assistant U.S. Attor ney Sean Hoar, who is handling the case along with the FBI, said the student at the address was sus pected of pirating software. Acting on information that pi rating had occurred at the Com puting Center, federal agents also investigated a computer port there. The port showed signs of be ing used for software piracy, Hoar said. “Obviously it’s electronic and dif ferent than a normal computer [rou tinely used by a specific person], but we know who was using it at a cer tain time,” Hoar said. “There’s no question about” who was using the port to pirate software. Barret and Hoar would not com ment further on the incident be cause the case is still under inves tigation. The FBI is not the only one after software pirates, and students are not the only ones at the University who have found themselves in trouble with agencies fighting soft ware piracy. The Software Publishing Asso ciation, a private organization that searches for software pirates, files lawsuits against violators in addi tion to holding educational lec tures across the country. The University of Oregon is no stranger to the SPA, according to a Feb. 7,1993, article in the webzine “The Computer Underground Di gest.” In settling the first software pira SOUTH PARK AT ) DOC’S m TONIGHT! PRIZES INCLUDE* - NORRISETTE TICKETS! DANCINO AT WH DN O C s :ocktall Research cy lawsuit brought against a pub lic university, the University paid $130,000 to the SPA in 1991. The University admitted no wrongdo ing. After die lawsuit, the University has required its employees to sign a legal agreement not to steal or use unauthorized software. Since then, no software piracy lawsuits have been filed against the University. Individual schools at the Uni versity also use other measures to prevent piracy. “Primarily we use lab monitors and active discouragement,” said Rick Gross, the school of journal ism’s instructional technology co ordinator. “We try to make sure stu dents know what piracy means." If caught, student pirates can be convicted of violation of the stu dent conduct code. “You’re basically risking your college career,” Gross said. Christopher Wolf, an intellectual property attorney with the Wash ington, D.C., law firm Proskauer Rose, said the nature of software piracy is quickly changing. “I think it’s going to be easier to copy, and I think it will be easier to identify who’s copying,” he said. “There will be identifying infor mation written onto the software so copies on [Web sites where soft ware can be downloaded] can be identified.” Emerald online editor Jake Ortman contributed to this article. RENTALS! Downhill(newshapedskis) S Ilk & Cross Country. Ilf Snowboards & Bools. *25 Back Country & Telemark Pkgs.. 15 Snow Shoes.. BW/ /ki /hoc Mon-Thurs 10-7 • Fri-Sat 10-9 • Sun 12-5 13th & Lawrence • 683-1300 Hot off the press and into your hands Oregon Daily Emerald Circulating 10,000 papers daily