A social network is a network of meanings
A story is at root an authority, a transfer of identity, which explains its close correspondence to network tie.
—Harrison White, Identity and Control (1992), observing that social network ties emerge from stories, “stories describe ties in social networks,” and “stories are essential vehicles for elaborating networks so as to become the base for further formations.”
Society is not merely an aggregate of individuals; it is the sum of the relations in which these individuals stand to one another.
—Marx (1857)
Property is an intellectual production. The game requires coolness, right reasoning, promptness, and patience in the players.
The farmer’s dollar is heavy, and the clerk’s is light and nimble; leaps out of his pocket; jumps on to cards and faro-tables: but still more curious is its susceptibility to metaphysical changes. It is the finest barometer of social storms, and announces revolutions.
The national economy is showing some initial signs of stability, confidence is improved, the financial system is starting to heal, credit is starting to ease a bit. It’s just the beginning, however. We have a lot more work to do to lay the foundation for a sustainable recovery with the gains broadly shared among all Americans.
—Tim Geithner
We reject: kings, presidents, and voting. We believe in: rough consensus and running code.
—Dave Clark on the IETF
The web has not seen this level of transformation, this level of acceleration, in the past ten years.
—Vic Gundotra, VP of Engineering, Google
I am 100 percent sure that the U.S. will go into hyperinflation. The problem with government debt growing so much is that when the time will come and the Fed should increase interest rates, they will be very reluctant to do so and so inflation will start to accelerate….Of all the regions in the world, Asia is still the most attractive by far.
—Marc Faber
There are some concerns of a risk from inflation from all the liquidity injected into the banking system but it’s not an immediate threat right now given all the excess capacity in the U.S. economy. I have a little more confidence that the Fed has an exit strategy for draining all the liquidity at the appropriate time.
—David Cohen, head of Asian economic forecasting at Action Economics in Singapore
The US didn’t pass international copyright protection until 1891. Until then, anything that sold elsewhere could be sold in the US without restriction. If it was a bestseller in Britain, we brought it over. The presses were smoking and ready to go.
1790 – The US passes its first national copyright law. It provides fourteen year coverage for authors who were citizens or residents of the US.
1831 – The US extends copyright to 28 years but refuses to make international considerations
1842 – Dickens toured the US pleading for copyright protection
1843 – A Christmas Carol was selling for six cents in the US and $2.50 in England
1850 – Among Russia and the Ottoman Empire, the US still refused to recognize international copyright, contrary those acts already instituted by Denmark, Prussia, England, France, and Belgium.
1891 – Congress passed an international copyright act and gained reciprocal rights from the British. The typesetters had made a fortune harvesting the productive capacity of British authors, and the act would no doubt affect their copyright arbitrage model. Congress made sure to support them through the transition. The Copyright Act of 1891 protected only those foreign works that were typeset in the US.
An increase in affordability has seemingly enticed potential homebuyers. We believe home sales have stabilized.
—Michelle Meyer, an economist at Barlays Capital
April NAR Data
—Purchases increased 2.9%, annual rate of 4.68mm, from 4.55mm in March, but they were 3.5% below the 4.85mm level in April 2008
—Existing-home sales in the Northeast grew 11.6% to an annual pace of 770,000 in April, which is 10.5% below April 2008. The median price was $237,400, 9.6% lower than a year ago.
—Total housing inventory rose 8.8% to 3.97 million existing homes available for sale, a 10.2.-month supply, compared with a 9.6-month supply in March.
Most of the sales are taking place in lower price ranges and activity is beginning to pick up in the midprice ranges, but high-end home sales remain sluggish. The Federal Reserve needs to help restore liquidity for the jumbo mortgage market by buying these loans under the TALF program.
Fortunately, home buyers are being attracted to deeply discounted prices and are bidding up many foreclosed listings, particularly in California, Nevada, and Florida – this will set the stage for healthy market conditions going forward.
The gain in inventory is largely seasonal from sellers entering the spring market. Even with the rise, inventory over the past few months has remained consistently lower in comparison with a year earlier
—Lawrence Yun, Chief Economist, NAR
There have been some encouraging signs in recent weeks that suggest perhaps the worst is behind us. Consumer confidence has ticked up. Housing turnover, especially in certain markets, is showing signs of a bottom.
—Robert Niblock, Lowe’s Chief Executive Officer, conference call May 18.
Kids don’t want quality time. They want quantity time — big, stinking, lazy, nonproductive quantity time
Al Franken