Archive: germany

German academics want Hitler’s book reprinted

meinkampf30042008 German academics want Hitlers book reprinted

There’s an interesting debate going on here in Germany at the moment about Adolf Hitler’s book, “Mein Kampf“. German academics want the book re-printed before the copyright expires in 2015.

Normally the copyright expires 70 years after the author’s death, which is of course 2015 in this case. After that, the book falls into the public domain whereupon people can print their own copies for free, distribute them for free and so on. We might even see copies springing up on Project Gutenberg.

The whole issue is contentious of course because of the author and the subject of the book. Hitler wrote Mein Kampf (German for “My Struggle”) in 1923 while in Landsberg prison, serving a sentence for treason. I read the book while at school - it is an awful book, full of anti-semitic hatred and vitriol. Hitler hates everyone, blames everyone and advocates killing everyone. Plus Hitler is no writer. He dictated his ranting and raving to his private secretary, Rudolf Hess, who wrote down every word, verbatim.

After the war, publication of the book was banned in Germany (for obvious reasons), the copyright was passed to the Bavarian finance ministry and existing copies of the book were very strictly controlled as to second-hand re-sale and private viewing. If you try to sell a used copy on eBay Germany for example, it is stopped. If a student wants to see a copy for study purposes, they need a letter of introduction from a teacher / professor explaining exactly why they need it and what course of study they are in which requires the book. They just can’t walk in and take the book off the shelf. This has led to copies being highly sought after by book collectors and I touched on this in an article some years back.

But now with the copyright deadline fast approaching, academics fear that right-wing extremists will use the public domain to circumvent the German laws and bring out their own versions of Mein Kampf with their own interpretations, their own introductions, their own glossaries, their own illustrations….

Far better, academics argue, that the German government takes a pro-active approach and brings out an officially sanctioned annotated version put properly into context. True, this won’t stop the right-wingers bringing out their copies in 2015 but at least by then, the official version will be out and this will give teachers and parents a chance to show curious schoolchildren the proper version. With anti-semitism on the rise in Germany, we need to show children SOMETHING.

But the government is not willing so far to budge. I really don’t understand their reluctance. You only have to go to Google and put in “Mein Kampf” to get this. It isn’t THAT hard to find it. Isn’t it better to work with the German Jewish community and put this vile book into its proper context? The Jewish community is all in favour and is ready to help and the Bavarian governor is apparently being approached. But they need to hurry because a project like this takes years to be done and the clock is ticking.

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Yes hallo, I would like a pair of MP3 lederhosens please!

ipodlederhosen Yes hallo, I would like a pair of MP3 lederhosens please!Now we’re talking!

While you’re dancing around the Bavarian mountains getting all Sound Of Music-y and with the sound of volksmusik humming in your ears, what you need to complete the ensemble is a pair of MP3 lederhosen pants!

So with your blonde Frau on one arm and with your beer in the other hand, you can wander the German countryside with your music MP3 controls in your pants!

The wonders of German technology.

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German restaurant replaces waiters with serving tracks

nurembergrestaurantcomputer German restaurant replaces waiters with serving tracks

A restaurant in Nuremberg, Germany has replaced waiters with hi-tech tracks that whiz food down to the customers, and you order your food by computer. While you’re waiting for your food, you can browse the net or send a SMS.

The part I particularly like though is the fact you don’t have to leave a tip!

read more | digg story

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German Google still having hiccups

2314856398_dff5334c64_m German Google still having hiccups
Creative Commons License photo credit: Artletic

It seems that a few days after the German Google went down for a period of 90 minutes, the site is still experiencing the lingering after-effects.

Gmail is one casualty. For the past couple of days, the site has generally been sluggish and I have also been unable to change photos or details in my contact book :

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Google crashes for 90 minutes in Germany

2314245192_8ed591a0a0_m Google crashes for 90 minutes in Germany
Creative Commons License photo credit: chenta

This afternoon, just as my working day was finally starting to kick in (I’m a late starter), Google crashed. Thinking it might be a browser issue (I had installed a Google-related Firefox extension last night), I checked on Opera and Safari. Nothing. Zilch. Google was toast.

This had happened briefly once before, a couple of weeks back. Access to all Google domains from German locations was down but I didn’t wait long to see what was going to happen (I generally don’t have the patience). I just hit the reset switch on the router and the dynamic IP address changed and we were back into Google again instantly. So today we tried the same tack but Google was still down for close to a hour and a half. That meant no Gmail, no GTalk, no Google Reader and of course no search. I was forced to sink really low and use Yahoo. I thought I had died and gone to hell.

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