[wordup] Copyright: Your number's up ...
Adam Shand
adam at personaltelco.net
Thu Oct 4 12:02:44 EDT 2001
i *love* this stuff. this is as cool as when offspring printed napster
t-shirts and started selling them on their web site.
Via: Simon Horsburgh <simon.horsburgh at stonebow.otago.ac.nz>
Via: http://slashdot.org/articles/01/10/04/0142222.shtml )
From: http://www.theage.com.au/entertainment/2001/10/04/FFX0PGT0CSC.html
Copyright: your number's up
By FERGUS SHIEL
Thursday 4 October 2001
Listen up, they've got your number. Australian composers Nigel Helyer, aka
Dr Sonique, and Jon Drummond have copyrighted 100,000,000,000 telephone
tone sequences.
You might not know it but every time you dial a number, you play a short
melody.
With the aid of a computer, Helyer and Drummond have notated the tones of
every imaginable phone number combination and, in turn, claimed the
melodies as their own. Next time you make a phone call, therefore, chances
are you'll be in breach of international copyright law.
If business can claim ownership over the elemental building blocks of
human life, the composers say it's only fitting that artists lay claim to
the "DNA" of business and are paid for it.
"We're saying to (big business), 'Okay guys, the boot is on the other
foot. If you really believe in copyright, you've got to pay'," Helyer
says.
"I think Mr Howard will be high on the list. Universities. Lots of
corporations. We'll go for it."
The composers say their Magnus-Opus is a playful way of lampooning
copyright laws that protect big business rather than artists.
You can check your home, work, mobile, fax or modem number against their
compositional database by logging on to www.magnus-opus.com.
If your number is matched, the melody will be played, the notes scored and
a direction given to complete the licence agreement supplied online as
soon as possible.
Helyer and Drummond, who've only just launched the website, say they've
had one offer of payment already. "An American guy tired of direct sales
people calling him has told us he'd like to purchase the copyright for his
number so that he can stop them," Helyer says.
The website explains in greater detail how the composers went about their
creation by throwing 16 tone pairs into an algorithmic generation to
produce countless melodies.
"The whole telecommunications system is entirely musicalised," Helyer
says.
Magnus-Opuswill be installed at the Adelaide Festival of the Arts next
year.
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