Wednesday, April 28, 2010

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Sunday, February 15, 2009

The Old Iron Bridge






Jett West and Tony G of IGP
are gearing up for working on the next film after The Devil Lives in Hot Springs, and asked me to look through the script to see if I was interested in helping out. Absolutely.

First thing was the need of an old, impassable bridge in the middle of no-where. The old Iron Bridge near where I grew up came to mind, so we went out on a Saturday morning to Plainview Arkansas, to check out this Old Iron Bridge.

The Bridge spans the Petit Jean River, and really, I'm not sure if it even has a proper name. Any of us local kids instantly know what you're talking about if said "meet at the Old Iron Bridge." It was great to get out there in those woods and backroads- see in a rural community like that, the kids didn't go to clubs or wotnot, they went to backroads and bonfires. Good times, and a lot of memories.

I was glad to get some nice photos of the bridge, if nothing else but posterity.

Special effects wise- the script calls for the bridge selected to be impassable and more run down. I'm happy to say that the real bridge is in excellent shape, however it will take some 3D and matte painting to make the bridge suitable for the location. Something I'd love to challenge myself with if this is the location they pick.

All in all, a fun day.

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Thursday, November 13, 2008

Stadium

Another return to Semi-realism. Supposed to be a bit cartoon-ey, especially given that I'm animating about 30k shuffling people... Happy with the result so far. I've automated the random shuffling of the crowd, and have rendered out a HDR pano from the boxing ring, so that I can easily animate/render/post any characters in the ring without re-rendering the entire scene.

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Wednesday, November 12, 2008

Daily work

So, I haven't blown the dust off this blog-thingy for too long. I am still working, and still cranking out the spots.

So, to actually use this thing, I'll start posting up projects I find at least partially interesting. Starting with today's:




Doing an animation where the camera swings from outside to inside and some red arrows bounce around demoing heat retention/reflection.

First time I've done realistic renders in a long time, so I'm having fun sharpening up that skill set. Plus, it's really fun to see my work in HD on the big 52in HD plasma monitor!

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Friday, June 13, 2008

2008 48 Hour film project

So, another year, another 48 hour film competition. Once again, working with the best crew I can imagine was a blast, and we have a fun film to boot.



I used 3ds Max, and AE for the effects shots.

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Friday, May 16, 2008

More Orphan Works

http://capwiz.com/illustratorspartnership/home/

My understanding of the bill:

Current copyright law provides that the creator of the work enjoys 100% protection the moment the work is created. If an infringer uses the work without permission, the copyright owner can sue for cease and desist, damages, compensation and court cost. If the copyright holders work is infringed, the infringer is responsible to prove that they used the work with permission. A formal copyright registration can be made for $45 at the copyright office at any time, however, no such formality is required*, but expedites court cases. If a copyright is infringed, the copyright owner has a retroactive 90 day period to register the work with the copyright office.

The Orphan works bill would change the consequences of copyright infringement, not copyright itself. Any work that after "a reasonable search" the copyright holder cannot be found, the work is considered an Orphan. Any Orphan work can be used in any way the infringer wants, and should the owner of the copyright discover the infringement, their only recourse is to sue for "cost of fair use". not damages, not even court cost. "fair use" is essentially what the infringer thinks they should pay, and may not even be enough for the copyright holder to pay for the litigation to get their "fair use" fee. Additionally, the responsibility of proof now shifts from the infringer to the copyright holder.

So this is the problem. It is TOO easy to Orphan a work*, and the copyright holder has little legal recourse to resolve the infringement.

If this were physical property law, rather than intellectual property law, this would be struck down in an instant- this is the equivalent of "borrowing" your neighbors car because you knocked on the door and they weren't home. and when you got caught driving to Mexico, all you had to do was pay for gas. There is no recourse for damages- what if your work was used for a cause that you found morally or ethically offensive? you could not sue for cease and desist or damages, just "fair use".

In Senator Pryor's letter back, he mentioned this law was to balance rights of copyright holders with the needs of users. To go back the car analogy, this is the same as saying balancing the rights of the car owner with my desire to drive it to Mexico. This is unacceptable. This is the Information Age- we have recognized that Information, i.e. intellectual property (IP) is more valuable in many cases than physical property. However, this Bill makes it easier for infringers to steal IP, as well as being plain insulting to those who create IP, by saying that what you produce is not as important as what a physical product is. This, in my opinion, is a huge step backward from the so-called "Information age".

*Berne Convention and current Copyright law states that copyright owners enjoy protection without a formal registry. Under the Orphan Works Act, copyright holders would be required to register their work into some sort of registry (the bill suggest commercial registries!) in order to be "searchable". at this time, the technology does not exist to search images except by tags, text labels, and watermarks- all are easily removed. Being required to register your work with one or more commercial registries will drive the cost of doing business up, as well as being a direct violation of the Berne Convention and other International copyright laws.

Sorry for the long email, but I feel strongly that this Bill is Dangerous to anyone who creates IP for a living, and plain insulting to anyone who believes that IP has any real value.

-Cliff

Thursday, May 8, 2008

Oppose the Orphan Works Act of 2008


Take Action: Don't Let Congress Orphan Your Work


This site makes it easy for you to communicate with your members of Congress. Please feel free to use the templates below and when you fill out your address, your members of Congress will be automatically identified. Non U.S. artists please go here for a sample letter and the U.S. agencies to contact.

IF YOU WANT TO OPPOSE ORPHAN WORKS, CLICK HERE:
>>>http://capwiz.com/illustratorspartnership/home/<<<


Links:
The Orphan Works Act of 2008
CGTalk Thread

Edit: some additional Links to track the legislation, courtesy Chris Storey:

www.govtrack.us/congress/bill.xpd?bill=h110-5889
www.govtrack.us/congress/bill.xpd?bill=s110-2913

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