@ayende You ought to try Mercurial. in reply to ayende 2 weeks ago
04
Jun

The Church needs Creative Commons

If you’ve ever had anything to do with modern church music, chances are you’ll have come across an organisation called Christian Copyright Licensing International. Their website has the strap line “encouraging the spirit of worship” and the idea is that rather than paying royalties to individual songwriters and their agents, you just pay one licence fee and that lets you sing whatever you like as often as you like in your church for a whole year. It helps with administration and makes it easier for your church to operate in righteousness, so it saves some time and hassle, though maybe not money. It’s a vast improvement over what we had in the early 80s with songbooks like this one that had a dozen or so entries that said “This song has been omitted for copyright reasons.”

However, it only covers church services, so if you are organising evangelistic events, or conventions like Faith Camp, or making your own worship album, or streaming your meetings live over the Internet, or making a mashup for something or other, or even playing tracks from your favourite Christian albums in a coffee shop, you need to go through the rigmarole of getting whatever other additional licences you need. And of course, all this costs more in terms of both money and time, and what might otherwise only take a couple of days can end up taking several weeks or even months while you’re waiting for permission to come through — if it comes through at all.

Now compare this “Christian” approach to copyright with the concepts that developers and geeks have come up with. I am talking, of course, about open source and Creative Commons.

If you’ve never heard of Creative Commons, you may want to take a look at this video, which explains it very simply and clearly:

The idea is for copyright owners to allow greater freedom and flexibility in what is done with their own intellectual property. Take my blog for example. I could put a notice on it saying you’re not allowed to copy it without paying me a fat fee, period, but I have deliberately chosen not to do so. Instead, I’ve released it under a licence that lets you reproduce it wherever you like as long as you aren’t doing so for profit, you acknowledge me as the original author, and if you make a derivative work, you grant others the same rights. You don’t even have to ask me — though it would of course be nice to know. The Creative Commons website allows you to choose a licence tailored to your needs from several different options.

The entire concept could have been lifted straight out of the New Testament, yet Christianity has had little involvement in it. It is a practical outworking of Jesus’ words, “Freely you have received, freely give” — indeed, in recent years, Bram Cohen, who is pretty much a poster child of the whole free content movement, made “Give and ye shall receive” the slogan for Bittorrent. It is a slight rewording of Luke 6:38.

Or what about Paul’s words in 2 Corinthians 2:17? “Unlike so many, we do not peddle the word of God for profit. On the contrary, in Christ we speak before God with sincerity, like men sent from God.”

So where on earth is the Body of Christ in all of this? Why are we dragging our heels when we should be forging ahead?

Worship leaders, church musicians and Christian authors have a lot in common with software developers such as myself. We tend to be very creative individuals, and what we do is often very much a labour of love. We write songs, books, blogs or computer code even if we’re not getting paid for it, and while it is nice to earn something from it, that is only a secondary consideration.

Yet while there are some people producing resources such as books, Bible studies and worship songs who have taken the concept of Creative Commons on board, they are very much on the fringes. Most, if not all, widely used Christian resources — including most modern translations of the Bible and nearly all songs that have a circulation beyond the songwriter’s home church — are only made available under restrictive commercial licences.

Is this encouraging the spirit of worship, or the spirit of mammon?

I would love to see some notable Christian songwriters distributing their compositions under licences similar to Creative Commons. I would love to see major ministries jumping on board, open sourcing their Bible study resources, and actively encouraging others to do the same.

I simply can’t accept the excuses that “it can’t be done” or “it’s impractical” or “worship leaders have to make money somehow.” The whole open source movement blows these claims completely out of the water. Some open source software packages have taken far longer to write than all the time that Graham Kendrick, Martin Smith, Tim Hughes, Matt Redman and the entire Hillsongs crowd have spent on all their songs put together — yet they are still made available for free, despite being mature and stable enough to power business critical servers. If software developers can do it, why can’t the Church?

01
Oct

Church 2.0

Our church is organising a communication and media master class on 19-20 October with Mal Fletcher. This is highly recommended for anyone who is interested in using media in a Christian context. Mal Fletcher is one of those guys who is pretty hip with using modern technology and Web 2.0 and so on to communicate. I gather that the last time he was here, he was getting everyone excited about blogging, podcasting and the like. Unfortunately I missed that particular meeting so I don’t know exactly what he said, but the feedback sounded pretty good. His websites, nextwaveonline.com and edges.tv, have a lot of interesting and effective articles, videos and documentaries on various social issues that affect us all these days.

I often think it would be particularly good to see churches making much more effective use of blogging in particular to communicate their message. Blogging has a much more personal, authentic feel to it than traditional websites, especially if comments are enabled so that visitors can feel part of the discussion. For some reason, blogs don’t seem to have a particularly high profile on most major ministries’ websites though.

(For anyone wanting to get into blogging in a Christian context, The Blogging Church by Brian Bailey and Terry Storch is a must-read.)

30
Jul

Blogging from the sheep shed — or maybe not

Since I am at our annual Faith Camp this week and spending copious amounts of time in a sheep shed with only a slow Internet connection over my mobile phone, I am spending very little time online this week. Hey, what do you expect? This isn’t RailsConf — there isn’t a MacBook or an Ubuntu T-shirt in sight…

I have found in recent months that spam comments are sneaking past my arsenal of defences at a rate of about three or four a week, so I have set my blog to moderate comments until I get back. So if you leave a comment and it does not appear immediately, please bear with me. Anything legitimate should be dealt with by the start of next week.

25
Dec

Happy Christmelicious everybody!

Just a short note to wish all the readers of my blog and any passers-by a very merry Christmas and a happy New Year. Sit back and enjoy the YouTube hit of the moment “Christmelicious”:

26
Nov

Pastors: get blogging!

Kingdom Faith has a new website design, and the long awaited RSS feeds on the video blogs have finally arrived. There’s some great teaching, and you can have Google Reader or Internet Explorer 7 automatically alert you whenever there’s more for you to watch, listen to or read, without having to go back to the site every so often to check. Nice one.

Even better, I am told the video blogs will have a comment system in the near future.

That’ll be pretty exciting if they do it right. Comments are a crucial element of blogging: your readers can post their own feedback which will then appear below your article. In this way you can interact with them — they can ask you questions or initiate a discussion, and if you do it right, it gives them a feeling that they are actually interacting with real human beings rather than someone who is standing six feet above contradiction. It gives pastors a great way of interacting with, and even maybe widening, their audience beyond the four walls of the church.

There’s a new book coming out in the New Year called The Blogging Church, which looks like it could be a pretty good read. It is written by Brian Bailey, the technology director at Fellowship Church in Dallas, Texas, the fifth largest church in the USA. Bailey is also a friend of blogging guru and former Microsoftie Robert Scoble. Scoble’s book, Naked Conversations, is itself a must-read for anyone who is serious about blogging. It doesn’t blind you with science or technobabble, but focuses much more on the social and business aspects of blogging.

So pastors everywhere — you know what to do: get blogging. If you don’t know how to get started, the WordPress hosted service is as good as any.

13
Sep

An extended, enforced media fast

We had a media fast in church last week. No TV, no radio, no Internet, no editing Wikipedia, no blogging. For me, it was enforced by a faulty laptop.

Yesterday, the fast being over, I decided to get down to the business of getting it repaired. I took out a three year warranty when I bought the thing, and I decided that since I’d paid for it, I might as well make use of it. So, with only a fortnight to go before said warranty runs out, I decided to get on the blower to Dell.

Despite the initial assurances from the Dalek on the other end that I would have to wait half an hour before speaking to a real human being, I was on the phone to the usual moonlighting undergraduate in Bangalore within ten minutes, whose job, it seemed, was to try and convince me that it was a software problem.

Now I know for certain that this was a hardware problem. The machine was locking up when I booted into Windows. It was locking up when I booted into Windows safe mode. It was locking up when I booted into SuSE Linux. It was locking up when I booted into Ubuntu. It was locking up when I booted into an Ubuntu live CD.

He got me to spend half an hour running the diagnostics on the machine, taking it to pieces and putting it back together again before saying, “It’s obviously a software problem. I’ll have to transfer you to the software support department, and you will be charged for this.”

Fine. So that’s the name of the game. Refuse to believe that it’s a hardware problem. Transfer me to the software support department. What will they do? No doubt they’d ask me a string of questions, tell me that they can’t help me because I’m running an unsupported operating system but it’s obviously a hardware problem anyway, transfer me back to the hardware department, raise my blood pressure to dangerous levels and charge me a hundred quid for the pleasure.

No thanks.

I’m sure that your average punter would fall for something like this, and no doubt the undergraduate in Bangalore, having dealt with twenty average punters in the course of the evening, thought I was another average punter.

The only thing is, I’m not an average punter. I’m a geek, who knows that software problems simply do not manifest them on three different operating systems on two separate hard disks and a live CD. Yet it still took me the best part of an hour to convince the guy of this fact and persuade him to send out someone to take the thing in for servicing.

And 0870 phone numbers are expensive. Gah.

So the thing’s being picked up tomorrow sometime and taken away for repair. My media fast is being extended for however many more working days Dell see fit to take to fix the thing.

Oh well, I think this will do me a bit of good. I normally spend far too much time at the computer anyway (something Mum is always complaining about) and it’s given me an opportunity to get on with some packing. We’re moving house in only two weeks and there is still a stack of things to do.

So, if you are wondering about the dearth of blog entries and Wikipedia edits on my part, that’s why.

05
Jun

Video blogs at Kingdom Faith

It’s great that our church makes good use of all the technological resources at its disposal to spread the Gospel. We couldn’t make it to the service yesterday morning, so we got the live stream over the Internet. It’s wonderful that modern technology makes it possible for you to get church to come to you when you can’t get to church.

The new video blogs look set to be quite promising if they do it right. It’s just a bit of a shame that there are no RSS feeds — I’d love to plug them into my news reader. C’mon guys, once Windows Vista hits the shelves in a few months, RSS is gonna go mainstream big time.