Wednesday, January 30, 2013

Paul McGuinness: Google isn't doing enough to fight piracy



Google has been making "encouraging noises" about restricting access to sites hosting pirated content, but it needs to take action, said U2's manager Paul McGuinness speaking on a panel at Midem(Marché International du Disque et de l' Edition Musicale)
McGuinness was talking about Google's promise to downgrade sites that host copyright-infringing content in its search engines. He said that he didn't want to engage in "Google-bashing" but that there was a sense of unease across Europe towards the search giant.
He then proceeded to bash Google for not applying itself properly.McGuinness admitted that Google has brought "so much to civilisation" in terms of spreading knowledge. "We all know they're ingenious, but they are making money from directing people to piracy sites." He called for Google executives to "apply themselves" to developing a system of microtransactions that could remunerate artists when someone listens to their music over the web. However, he believes that "they're not really doing what they could be doing in this space".
Michael Barnier, European Commissioner for Internal Market and Services, was keen to point out that he was firm on tackling piracy in addition to reforming copyright legislation. He called copyright an "essential driver" in the creative process, but said that if that right is not respected it is of little use. He showed particular disdain for those sites making money from advertising from hosting pirated content. "Is it acceptable to tolerate advertising revenues being gobbled up by service providers who foster the free sharing of illegal music files?" he asked.
He went on to criticise the fragmented nature of the European market, but was keen to point out that the situation had improved over the last three years. "But there are some istances of restrictions which Europeans have to suffer; the availability of music and unavailability of some websites is still uneven between member states. It's incomprehensible that Europeans are still facing obstacles on the internet that we've faced in the physical world for the last fifty years."
When the conversation moved to legal streaming services such as Spotify, McGuinness felt that the artist revenues were quite trivial even for huge stars. "You could say that these services are mainly a promotional medium," he said.
You can watch all of the Midem panels online. Or you can read Midem's liveblog of the session here.

http://www.wired.co.uk//http://www.ultraviolet-u2.com

Tuesday, January 29, 2013

David Gray, Bono’s Sunglasses and Me

In his particularly funny and entertaining way of writing, Neil Mc Cormick tells us how tiresome and difficult it is to run a charity event.

From The Telegraph:


Neil McCormick's son Finn wearing Bono's sunglasses

On Wednesday March 6, I am presenting a charity concert at the Islington Assembly Hall in London, featuring David Gray, The Magic Numbers, Gabriella Cilmi, David Ford, Bo Bruce and a few other musical friends and associates. Please buy a ticket and prevent an out-of-depth rock critic’s nervous breakdown.
I was not cut out for the life of a promoter. Indeed, I’m not sure anyone is. I was in bands for long enough in my younger years to know how fretful staging a gig can be, involving a huge advance effort in getting musicians, equipment and venue ready, with no guarantee that anyone will turn up and make it worthwhile. “Why do you think all promoters look permanently stressed?” a band manager sympathetically said to me, before adding, “You’re looking a bit peeky yourself, mate.”
I’m doing it for love. Well, specifically for my wife. She is an acupuncturist involved in a small charity, Moxafrica, who run a research project in universities in Uganda and South Africa, investigating the treatment of TB with Chinese medicine. It is not an obviously appealing cause, like food for the starving. Yet Moxafrica is having results with potentially wide ranging implications for the developing world, where drug resistant TB is epidemic (it kills someone every 20 seconds in Africa). Although the sums required to support Moxafrica seem small in the grand scheme of things (£16,000 would keep them going another year), it is a tough time for all charities right now and Moxafrica is in danger of coming to a premature end. I listened to lots of conversations about little schemes to raise small amounts as the clock kept ticking, until, almost against my own better judgment, I uttered the fateful line, “You know you could raise that in one go with a gig.”
And so I have entered into another world, of promoters, managers and agents. I have been spending time in empty venues, looking out from empty stages on to empty floors and empty seats, the most beautiful concert halls and lavishly appointed clubs all taking on a strangely bereft atmosphere without the throb of humanity that brings them to life. “An empty venue is of no use to anyone,” is an oft-repeated line, and I have been offered top night spots on attractive terms.
“The money’s on the popcorn,” is another much repeated phrase, meaning, if I could guarantee a certain number of people through the doors, the venue would make its real profit behind the bar.

Monday, January 28, 2013

Bill and Bono: best friends forever



Bono with Bill and Melinda Gates

They've been dubbed the odd couple – one a publicity-shy techno geek who is the second richest man in the world; the other an ageing rock star who wants to change it. But Bono and Bill Gates's shared plan for the planet has forged such a bond between them that they're fast becoming best friends.
This week, U2's frontman welcomed the Microsoft tycoon to Dublin as part of their ongoing tour to shore up support for foreign aid, and convince European leaders that even in tough times wealthier countries have a moral obligation to provide financial help to ones that are poor.
Gates met Tánaiste and Foreign Affairs Minister Eamon Gilmore to discuss overseas aid, the EU budget and the campaign to end polio. He also met the Taoiseach and President Higgins as part of a visit to a number of European countries ahead of the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland.
Growing scepticism among recession-hit western powers and economists about whether aid actually eases poverty or too often ends up in the wrong hands, has strengthened the friendship between Gates and Bono and made them critically aware of the benefits of presenting a joint front in public.
They know the cameras can't resist the sight of them together on the international stage shaking hands with presidents and policy-makers, and that ensures their agenda makes the headlines.
But it is the depth of their relationship away from the limelight which is even more interesting. Their shared sense of impatient optimism and messianic drive to change the world has given them a common purpose, but, in the process, they have discovered other similarities in everything from religion to parenting.
When Bono is on the West Coast of America, he stays at Gates's home, a $150m lakeside mansion in Washington state, which features a swimming pool with underwater sound system, a trampoline room, and a library which holds Bill's pride and joy – the Codex Leicester, one of Leonardo da Vinci's notebooks, which he bought in 1994 for $30.8m.
Not so long ago, there were rumours that the pair were planning to buy a 65-acre island off the coast of Mayo, where they could hammer out ideas and rekindle their long-distance friendship.
But their friendship didn't start out so well.
When the singer first tried to recruit Gates to his poverty crusade more than a decade ago, the socially awkward software guru wasn't exactly pro-Bono in his response. In fact, he dismissed the idea.
Nancy Gibbs, a reporter with Time magazine, described how "the nature of Bono's fame is that just about everyone in the world wants to meet him – except for the richest man in the world, who thought it would be a waste of time".
"World health is immensely complicated," said Gates, recalling that first encounter in 2002. "It doesn't really boil down to a 'Let's be nice' analysis. So I thought a meeting wouldn't be all that valuable."
But he had a sudden change of heart when he did eventually accept the invitation.
"It took about three minutes with Bono for Gates to change his mind," Gibbs said. "Bill and his wife Melinda, another computer nerd turned poverty warrior, love facts and data with a tenderness most people reserve for their children, and Bono was hurling metrics across the table as fast as they could keep up.
"He was every bit the geek that we are," said Gates Foundation chief Patty Stonesifer, who helped broker that first summit. "He just happens to be a geek who is a fantastic musician."
Since then, their unlikely alliance has grown closer, verging on the sycophantic at times. During concerts, Bono has taken to celebrating Gates on stage, bursting into a round of 'Happy Birthday' for him on one occasion, and describing how meeting him was a 'life-changing experience' on others.
The Microsoft billionaire, who stepped down from the company four years ago to become a full-time philanthropist, is equally gushing about his pop-star pal.
"I get to hang out with a lot of very cool and inspiring people, but none more so than Bono. I first met him a decade ago, and we've worked together a lot since. But people are still curious about our connection. I guess we might seem like a strange pair. We are. Melinda and I have many friends, allies and valued partners in our philanthropic work, but few as creative, energetic and inspiring as Bono."
In 2005, the trio were pictured on the cover of Time magazine when they were voted People of the Year for their humanitarian work. Dubbed "The Good Samaritans", Bono picked up the title for "charming, bullying and morally blackmailing the leaders of the world's richest countries into forgiving $40bn in debt owed by the poorest"; Bill and Melinda Gates for "building the world's biggest charity and giving more money away faster than anyone else ever has". The latest figures show that he has so far given away $28bn via his charitable foundation.
Having Gates beside him on the global platform has given Bono gravitas at a time when he is seen by some critics as a faux expert who should keep his nose out of the world economy.
Once such detractor is William Easterly, a celebrated professor of economics at New York University, who spent most of his career at the World Bank.
He has spoken scathingly of Bono, describing him as a "ridiculous celebrity wonk" who does not challenge power but embraces it.
"He is more likely to appear in photo ops with international political leaders," he says, "or to travel through Africa with a treasury secretary than he is to call them out in a meaningful way."
Easterly's iconoclastic book The White Man's Burden argues that the $2.3 trillion of foreign aid spent by the West in the last five decades has failed to lift the poorest countries of the world out of poverty or stimulate economic growth.
Gates said he hated the book, sniping back that success can be measured in things beyond economics, such as literacy and life-saving vaccines.
Another critic of celebrity philanthropy is Zambian economist Dambisa Moyo who believes it is wrong that famous westerners have become "inadvertently or manipulatively spokespeople for the African continent".
The Harvard academic believes foreign aid has largely resulted in holding Africa back.
"You get the corruption. Historically, leaders have stolen the money without penalty, and you get the dependency, which kills entrepreneurship," she says.
Despite the critics, Bono is convinced that Gates has the power and determination to bring about real change. "Bill wants to know where every penny goes," he said.
"Not because those pennies mean so much to him, but because he's demanding efficiency.
"When an Irish rock star starts talking about it, people go, yeah, you're paid to be indulged and have these ideas. But when Bill Gates says you can fix malaria in 10 years, they know he's done a few spreadsheets."
As both men approach 60, and a dawning realisation that they are mortal, they have become more vocal about their spiritual beliefs. While fans of Bono are well used to him quoting passages from scripture and wearing his Christianity on his sleeve, Gates, who typically avoids talk of religion in public, said this week that he no longer had any need for money and that he was now doing the "work of God".
But as fathers of teenagers, they are still busily engaged in the business of parenthood. too, and share common tactics to try and shelter their children from the mindboggling wealth in their lives.
Bono's 21-year-old daughter Eve said recently that she was banned from her parent's multi-million penthouse in Manhattan when she was studying there, and had to share a small apartment with a friend instead.
Gates has vowed his three children will inherit no more than a slither of his $56bn fortune – "enough to let them do anything but not enough to let them do nothing".
His plan is to have most of it spent before he dies, an ambition his new best friend is only too happy to help him fulfil.
Originally published in 

http://www.independent.ie

Bono Promised Help to Mali’s Festival au Désert

Bono and Ali at the Festival du Art in Timbuktu, Mali, 2012

Last year Bono and Ali attended the Festival du Art in Timbuktu, Mali. This year with the  French military intervention in Mali , the organisers of the landmark music festival, Festival au Désert, were still adamant they would go ahead with this year’s edition ’in-exile’, having being forced out from their stricken native land.
Founded in 2001 by a collective of North Malian Touareg musicians, the festival’s thirteenth edition this year was to seek refuge in the community’s nomadic roots as its home, in the south Saharan city of Timbuktu, has come under the control of various coalitions of Jihadists and armed rebel militias since early last year (2012).
Planning to travel thousands of Kilometres, Festival au Désert looked to tour in February/March 2013 across Mauritania, Burkina Faso, Niger and Algeria in two separate caravans of artists, activists and fans, whose routes would eventually cross in Southern Mali.
Instead, the 2013 Rendez-Vous in exile will take the festival’s banner of non-violence and cultural struggle elsewhere around the rest of the globe, but most unlikely not around the Sahel. Over the next twelve months, a network of international supporters in partnership with the original production team will be running “in exile” events and caravans across the Middle East, Asia, Europe and the US.
In the light of current events and in an increasingly volatile region, this year’s edition is very unlikely to cruise around the Sahel as initially conceived, but cultural activists and festival organisers behind Festival au Désert will undoubtedly rise in defiance once again. It is a story of peaceful resistance whose message isn’t about Touaregs, ‘blue people’, nomads and myths of geographically-remote places echoed by colonial narratives and wreathed in orientalist whims. As Manny Ansar, founder and director of Festival au Désert, told Ceasefire in the course of this interview, “Festival au Désert is unwaveringly standing in solidarity with Timbuktu and vowing to extend Northern Mali’s tradition of tolerance to world populations in similar distress”.
Ceasefire has posted a long interview to Manny Ansar, founder and director of Festival au Désert. He mentions Bono`s help in the course of the dialogue:

CF: Historically, Festival au Désert has attracted many worldwide music icons such as Robert Plant of the Led Zeppelin. Is the festival still receiving support from international artists in the west?
MA: As for financing, this year there has been very little. Nothing confirmed so far. The Irish star Bono has promised to help after his surprise visit and stage appearance in last year’s edition. He often sends sympathetic messages of moral support. Bono is more involved and committed to the global caravan. He is in charge of this initiative, along with big names in the American cinema and media. At this stage, they are studying the feasibility of the project in different countries across North America, Europe, Middle East, Asia and elsewhere in Africa. The first event in this world tour is expected in April. It is aimed at raising awareness of the conflict and helping to alleviate the suffering of refugees.

To read the complete interview, click here. 
http://ceasefiremagazine.co.uk

Saturday, January 26, 2013

Bono: Micro Bill is my biggest idol

Jennifer O`Brien with Bono



ROCK God Bono reckons Bill Gates has changed the entire world TWICE.

He showed tycoon pal Bill around Dublin this week — and was full of praise for the billionaire’s giving nature.
Bono said: “Bill didn’t just change the world once with Microsoft. He’s changed it twice, because what they are doing with vaccinations is a giant thing if you live in certain parts of the world — saving countless lives.”
Bono and Bill enjoyed a few late night tipples at the plush Westbury hotel, with the U2 frontman revealing: “He’s a good friend and it was terrific to have him here in Ireland.”
The rock star appeared alongside Bill and his wife Melinda on the cover of Time when the trio were named the magazine’s People of the Year in 2005.
Bono added: “There’s now 160 people working in two charity organisations I am involved with — Red and One — and that’s because of Bill and Melinda.”
Bono and his wife Ali, accompanied by The Edge and his wife Morleigh, supported pal Guggi at the launch of his latest exhibition in Dublin on Thursday.
The Edge revealed U2’s new album is well on its way. He said: “We’re looking at having it out around the end of the summer.”

http://www.thesun.ie

Friday, January 25, 2013

Bono and Edge at Guggi's New Exhibition



Bono and his wife Ali Hewson with artist and long-time friend Guggi and his wife Sibylle
Bono and his wife Ali Hewson with artist and long-time friend Guggi and his wife Sibylle

A HOST of famous friends have gathered together to celebrate internationally acclaimed artist Guggi's first exhibition in Ireland in four years – and leading the way was best friend Bono.

There was a glowing turnout as Guggi unveiled his latest collection at the Kerlin Gallery in Dublin last night.

Showing his continued support for the creative visionary, the U2 frontman, who arrived with wife Ali Hewson, told the Irish Independent of his delight to see his close friend's work come to fruition.

"Normally I get to enjoy a preview of the pieces beforehand in the studio, but things have been so busy this time I didn't get a chance. He's just getting better and better every time, we're all so proud of him. He's extraordinary."

The superstar said he'll definitely consider adding to his growing collection by purchasing a painting.

Bono and Hewson were accompanied by The Edge and his wife, Morleigh Steinberg.

Edge and wife Morleigh

Adam Clayton 

While he has shown in the UK, US and Argentina in recent months, guest of honour Guggi told the Irish Independent that it was particularly special to see his 21 pieces hang on the walls in Dublin again.

"This is my home town, I come from here and it's always particularly special when an exhibition is here.

"I'm surprised and flattered by the turnout, it's fantastic. It means everything to have my friends and family here."

It was also a family occasion for Guggi, who arrived with his wife, Sibylle, and their four boys, Noah, Eliah, Caleb and Gideon.

- Laura Butler



http://www.independent.ie/

Thursday, January 24, 2013

Bono kept me up a little late, says Bill Gates



MICROSOFT founder Bill Gates held separate meetings with the Taoiseach and the Tanaiste today – but he also found time to catch up with old friends.
Mr Gates, who topped Forbes magazine’s rich list last year with an estimated fortune of €50 billion, flew into Dublin last night – but still found time to catch up with some friends.
“Bono kept me up a little late last night,” he told the Taoiseach as he arrived in Government Buildings.
The billionaire and the U2 singer have been friends for almost a decade – Bono appeared alongside Bill Gates and his wife Melinda on the cover of Time when the trio were named the magazine’s People of the Year in 2005 for their charity work.
After an hour-long breakfast meeting on overseas development aid in the Department of Foreign Affairs, Eamon Gilmore described the billionaire philanthropist as “very much a friend of Ireland”.
The Tánaiste said they had also discussed Ireland’s economy.
“I took the opportunity of briefing him on what we have been doing to stabilise the public finances, to attract inward investment," he said.
"He had encouraging things to say to me about Ireland’s recovery and he expressed very strong hope that Ireland would recover and expressed a confidence in that."
Mr Gates also had a meeting with the Taoiseach in Government Buildings, before travelling to the Aras to call on President Higgins.
Ireland is one of several countries being visited by Mr Gates who is en route to the World Economic Forum in Davos.
According to the Tánaiste, the discussion also centred on the negotiations over the European Union budget which are continuing under the Irish presidency of the EU. He said that “there is concern which Bill Gates shares” over the EU budget in terms of development aid.
“I briefed him on where the discussions are at the moment. I told him the objective at this stage is to try and agree a budget in early February”.
- Lise Hand


http://www.independent.ie