Architrave CDSM Headless Relatives Release Show and Armbruster no fun super dark show
Architrave CDSM Headless Relatives Release Show and Armbruster no fun super dark show
Oct 10
seen from Macao SAR China

seen from Germany
seen from Netherlands
seen from Canada
seen from Ireland
seen from Russia

seen from United States

seen from India
seen from Germany

seen from Kazakhstan
seen from South Korea

seen from Malaysia

seen from Malaysia
seen from Australia
seen from Japan

seen from New Zealand

seen from Mexico

seen from Japan
seen from Bangladesh
seen from United States
Architrave CDSM Headless Relatives Release Show and Armbruster no fun super dark show
Architrave CDSM Headless Relatives Release Show and Armbruster no fun super dark show
Oct 10
CDSM - Convertible Hearse
Convertible Hearse, the debut full-length by Atlanta’s CDSM (Celebrity Death Slot Machine) is one of those albums that enters your consciousness, slams the doors shut, and drives you through a warped city of neon, noise, and nervous laughter. It’s a dizzying, surreal, and irresistible ride into the post-punk night you surely do not want to miss out. This record is a moving vehicle and it hums,…
CDSM at a No Fun Friday May 2022
first and 10 edition
CDSM at at Rare Form Brewing Nov 2021 presented by Super Dark first and 10 edition
Celebrity Death Slot Machine
In an action for annulment in relation to Article 17 of the Directive on copyright and related rights in the Digital Single Market (Directive (EU) 790/2019, CDSM Directive), currently pending befor…
The CDSM Directive was highly contested and passed the vote in the Council in May 2019 with support from Germany, France (see here) and the UK (which has since then withdrawn from the EU) but with strong opposition from Sweden and Finland, two of the BeNeLux countries (with Belgium abstaining), Italy and Poland. It is the latter that has challenged one of the most contested (and lobbied) provisions of the Directive (for an overview of the substantive provisions of the Directive see here and here). Article 17 (formerly Article 13 in the draft proposal) has been opposed by academics and public interest groups, and has mobilized millions of European citizens to take the streets under the slogan #SaveYourInternet. Leading NGOs led the protests, amongst them European Digital Rights, the Electronic Frontier Foundation, Communia and Creative Commons.
Article 17 aims to address what the content industry has called the ‘value gap’ on the internet, which means that uploads of copyright protected works to online platforms by their users compete with commercial offers (such as Spotify and Netflix) and reduce the revenues of artists and producers (see for an early critique here). In practice, according to rightholders, a ‘value gap’ exits if a protected work (for example a music video or a photograph) is uploaded by a user of an online service without authorization from the owner of the copyright. Benefitting from unauthorized uploads, but in general uploads of any kind, are users, whose experience using an online platform such as Facebook, YouTube and Instagram improves, and the platforms themselves whose business model is based on an ever-increasing amount of shared content, which generates interaction, data and, as a result, advertisement revenue.
Que risa esto #cdsm . #Repost @paracocineros • • • • • • Tagea a tus colegas en los comentarios. . . #cocinero #cocinamolecular #cocinadeautor##cocina tradicional #perú #instafood #instagood #instafoodperu #lima #chorrillano #bloggerstyle #foodlove #foodphotography #tradicional #better #gastronomusica #venezuela🇻🇪 #venezuelalibre #vivavenezuela #carabobo #valencia (en Chorillos, Lima, Peru) https://www.instagram.com/p/CAvFV-qHeZx/?igshid=196qzw3mhlo5o
😂😂😂😂😂 . No tiene desperdicio, escúchenlo!!! . Reposted from @esen_serio #CDSM🥵 . Repost by @ejup2009 - #regrann (en Malasaña) https://www.instagram.com/p/B-F7PZhqDwe/?igshid=99f3jdd19qyb