bureaud@altern.org on Wed, 9 Feb 2000 22:00:54 +0100 (CET) |
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<nettime> Leonardo Sued! |
PRESS RELEASE FEBRUARY 2000 LEONARDO French Association Founded in 1967 and On the Web Since 1994 Under Legal Attack for Using the Name " Leonardo ". Court Suit Threatens the Existence of a Non-Profit Organization Dedicated to Bringing Together Art and the New Technologies For the Past 30 Years THE FACTS On November 3, 1999 a bailiff and eight policemen carried out a search directed against the Leonardo Association, raiding a private residence. This highly unusual procedure was followed by the filing of a lawsuit against Leonardo by the Transasia Corporation and two co-complainants. Transasia has just recently registered the names Leonardo, Leonardo Finance, Leonardo Partners, Leonardo Invest and Leonardo Experts in France. It is suing Leonardo for a million dollars in damages and interest on the grounds of trademark infringement. Their basic argument is that a search engine request using the keyword "Leonardo" brings up not only the Transasia's sites but also the Web sites affiliated with the Leonardo arts organization. As part of this suit, Transasia has asked that Leonardo be forbidden to use the word "Leonardo," not only on its Web sites, but in any of its products and services, including its publications. This strikes at Leonardo's right to exist. LEONARDO: for 30 years the world's premier champion of a closer relationship between the arts and the sciences, providing information, promoting exchanges and stimulating thinking on both sides. The Leonardo Association is a French non-profit organization. Together with the International Society for the Arts, Sciences and Technology (ISAST), it works to forge an international community of artists, scientists and students. John Cage, Franck Popper, R. Buckminster Fuller have participated in Leonardo, an artistic and academic network founded in Paris during the 1960s by Frank Malina, a space science pioneer and kinetic artist. For 30 years now Leonardo has been dedicated to promoting artists who use science and the new technologies in their work. Its activity, long centered on print media, now also includes a Web site and online publishing. The broad juridical implications of the Transasia suit are of a matter of serious concern for all those involved in the Net. The Leonardo Association, conscious of what is at stake in this case, is preparing a legal defense based on three main arguments: Net Democracy: Forbidding someone to use a particular keyword means facilitating access to some sites and obstructing access to others. This is inequitable and contrary to the spirit of democracy that characterizes the Net. The principle of antecedence ("first come, first served"): Leonardo magazine has been published and circulated internationally for three decades. It has been available online as an MIT electronic publication since 1994 (mitpress.mit.edu/Leonardo). Thus suit betrays a bias in its choice of target: Search engines looking for the keyword "Leonardo" come up with many Web pages, some of them dedicated to Leonardo da Vinci and others to Leonardo DiCaprio! LEONARDO'S ACTIVITIES ______________________ © OLATS (Observatoire Leonardo des Arts et des Techno-Sciences) www.olats.org The Leonardo Observatory for the Arts, Sciences and Technology (OLATS) is a research group whose work is presented on a mainly French-language Web site. OLATS offers information, guidance and potential links between the arts and science and technology. It encourages the production of technologically-based artworks and helps bring scientists and artists together. This site is affiliated with the Leonardo Association, which for 30 years now has played a major role in providing information, promoting exchanges and stimulating thinking on both sides. > The VIRTUAL AFRICA Project Virtual Africa is a multimedia project whose mission is to build bridges between artists and intellectuals in Africa and the rest of the world. In January 2000, OLATS/Virtual Africa sponsored The River Festival, in which a group of international artists, most of them working in new media, gathered to travel down the Mouhoun River in Burkina Faso and meet with their counterparts in that country. Together they have produced artwork in the villages and hold workshops with local artists, school children and street kids. In November-December 2000 and May-June 2001, all of these artists will tour Europe. > The PIONEERS & PRECURSORS Project Technological art has a past, but does it have a memory ? Through rigorous online documentation, the PIONEERS & PATHBREAKERS Project aims to resituate the importance of artists such as Nicolas Schöffer, Nam June Paik, Rauschenberg, Stockhausen, Takis, Tinguely, whose thoughts and work were so influential for the evolution of technological art. © LEONARDO'S PUBLICATIONS Leonardo's magazines and books are produced by Leonardo/IAST in San Francisco and published by the highly-respected MIT Press in Cambridge, Massachusetts. > Leonardo's magazine: Journal of the International Society for the Arts, Sciences and Technology This English-language bimonthly magazine is the publication of reference in the domain of art and the new media. It is available in all major libraries and, since 1994, has got a web site from MIT Press (mitpress.mit.edu/e-journals/Leonardo). The journal embraces all the artistic disciplines-new media, music, performance art, conceptual art, land art, artificial intelligence, etc. By emphasizing the writings of artists themselves, it helps make sure that their voices are heard and that they are full participants in the process of developing of new technologies. > Leonardo Music Journal (LMJ) Accompanied by an audio CD, LMJ is a forum open to composers, artists, researchers, musicians, musical instrument makers and musicologists-all those whose work involves coloring outside the lines and redefining the borders between musical and artistic disciplines. Its purpose is to bring whole new perspectives into view. > The Leonardo Book Series Seven titles have been published to date: The Leonardo Almanac: International Resources in Art, Sciences and Technology The Visual Arts: Art and Mathematics Designing Information Technology in the Postmodern Age: from Method to Metaphor Immersed in Technology: Art and Virtual Environments Art and Innovation: The Xerox Parc Artist in Residence Program Technoromanticism, Digital Narrative, Holism and the Romance of the Real The Digital Dialectic: New Essays on New Media > The Leonardo Electronic Almanac (mitpress.mit.educ/LEA) This online English-language magazine available by subscription serves as a forum for all those interested in the use of the new media in contemporary art and the emerging links between art and science and technology. Artists are asked to present their work in progress and all readers are free to comment. For further information, please contact: CorporArt Communication 20, rue du Cirque, 75008 Paris Tél. 01 47 42 56 51/52/48 ; fax : 01 47 42 56 49 e-mail : beatrice@corporart.com # distributed via <nettime>: no commercial use without permission # <nettime> is a moderated mailing list for net criticism, # collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets # more info: majordomo@bbs.thing.net and "info nettime-l" in the msg body # archive: http://www.nettime.org contact: nettime@bbs.thing.net