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By Jonathan Eisen | June 14th 2008 03:22 AM | 4 comments | Print | E-mail | Track Comments
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About Jonathan Eisen

I am an evolutionary biologist and a Professor at the University of California, Davis.

My research focuses on the origin of novelty (how new processes and functions originate). To study


... Full Bio

Normally, everything I write about here is at least indirectly connected to science in some way. However, today I am drifting into the world of music. The New York Times had an article a few days ago about Trent Reznor (Trent Reznor’s Frustration and Fury - Take It. It’s Free). Trent, the brains behind the band Nine Inch Nails (full disclosure - I am a fan of his music), has been railing against the constraints of the music industry for year.

And now he is going even further and in essence putting his music into the public domain as much as possible (see his web site NIN.com for more detail). For example

"Mr. Reznor even posts online all the raw digital tracks from Nine Inch Nails albums for anyone to remix. “I’m done with them,” he said. “Why not?”

And he is doing this even though the $$$ for producing his music does not come from the government. He does it in part because he wants his ideas and music to spread and he wants to contribute to musical development. There are obvious parallels between what he (and others) are doing in music and those who develop Open Source software and those who release their data and publications to be as free as possible. I know I am not the first to discuss this, but just thought I would put it out there.

Comments

I am a long time fan of Mr. Reznor. I often restrain from calling anyone who doesn't save lives "geniuses", but Mr. Reznor comes very close to receiving that title from me. There doesn't seem to be an alternative motive to sharing his music an ideas. I read a direct quote from him saying so. For me all of the open source movement is history coming full circle. I'm referring to the time of traveling scholars, the days of Socrates, etc. I can't put a time frame on this thought [lack of research] but some have had the idea you needed a family to support "you" as the American student traveled across Europe [typically] soaking in moral, personal, and all kinds of education that really couldn't have a price tag attached to it. I agree with that idea. Open source knowledge and projects have open the door for so many opportunities that are fluid and growing. I truly love it and appreciate Mr. Reznor's blind leap into this new age of knowledge.

Hank's picture
Living back in Pittsburgh some years ago, a short hop from where Trent was raised, I had occasion to meet a classmate of his.

"What's up with the pigs?" I asked.

"He was like that in school too," the man said. "Believe me, it was a lot less cool then."

I bet it was!

I would have never thought, not in a million years, to ask anyone about the "pig" issue! Great question!

I agree. I think Reznor is both a genius and very bold for pusing music into more openness.

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