Tag Archives: The Hard Data

The Hard Data Update January 2019

Dear Readers of The Hard Data,

You have probably noticed a lack of any new print issues after our Winter 2018 edition. Yes, we have had some great web articles since then and some nice updates here and there in our various social media. But let’s face it, the most fun part of The Hard Data is our print issues.

Basically, it is my fault, so I want to -upfront- apologize for the lack of issues in 2018. My personal life impeded my focus on the operation. Though there are many contributors to THD, finding a second-in-command to replace me hadn’t happened before life-issues monopolized my time. Having said that, our last issue (but hopefully not the last) was arguably our best with the biggest distribution and impact. Now that my life is somewhat stabilizing, I vow this new year to finalize the first era of The Hard Data, and hopefully, set up its next by explaining much of what happened so far. After which interested readers may or may not find themselves inspired to get involved. If so, the original idea of The Hard Data will be fulfilled. If not, well… hey folks, it was fun while it lasted.

Immediate First Aid:

Before I tell the story, I must directly address our paying subscribers: You will be refunded your last subscription payment. Your current subscription will be cancelled. However, I hope to edit and publish one more issue of “The Hard Data Volume One” with a tentative publishing date of April 18, 2019. This will most likely be an oversized issue. It will be sent to you for free. If The Hard Data continues after this issue, your subscription will be re-instated should you desire, and the promise of a $6 or $12 yearly subscription forevermore will be a honored and explicitly non-negotiable term when and if I hand control of the magazine and The Hard Data brand over.

For those on our industry mailing list, I will send out an email detailing how much postage will be if you would like the new issue sent to you.

The last issue will be free and distributed to our usual spots in Los Angeles and elsewhere, but it will be a much lower circulation.

Ok, now that’s out of the way, here’s what happened…

How it Started.

A transformer blew up and subsequently destroyed everything I owned in 2014. New readers and hard dance fans might not know that I had a fair amount of history in the “hardcore” techno and rave scene going back to its earliest days. The physical evidence of that past was now gone in my life, and I guess psychologically I figured I was going to have to remake the history I lost. Rebooting my rave career, I looked around and noticed a lack of fanzines dedicated to the culture and remembered how important they were. I wrote for many, published one previously, and those odd mags were some of my prized possessions that got incinerated. So I thought, “Hey, I’ll start a new ‘zine.”

The Hard Data reached many of its goals: It became well known in the hard electronic/dance community, it got advertising from some of the top clients in its field, and it published some truly great articles.

But I had other ambitions for The Hard Data. I wanted it to help the hardcore/hardstyle scene in Los Angeles operate as a fully “sustainable” self-supporting economic sub-culture. The people who read it, who had businesses or such, would have ads in it. People in the scene could buy and trade and be informed about their peers. Local artists would be profiled and encouraged. Shows in LA would be promoted to a bigger and larger degree.

Please read the above paragraph again at some point, because that was the original idea. it hasn’t been fulfilled. Why? And why would that be important anyway?

The Reason it Exists

Since being involved with the rave scene since its earliest days, one thing became abundantly clear: The American mainstream music industry hates hardcore techno. The mainstream American rave industry hates hardcore techno. They hate the sound. They hate the noise. They hate the speed. They hate the attitude. They often hate the people involved.

Even though hardcore techno has shaped aspects of the commercial EDM scene we know today, no one wants to admit it. Why? Because in my opinion, it really, truly is a scene that ultimately cares about new sounds, new music, and as such, really does appeal to non-conforming people from all walks of life. The simple fact of the matter is that since day one, there has never been an ongoing, reliable social profile for hardcore techno in America other than the actual music being listened to. As such, the music truly, strangely, subconsciously delivers the goods that so many Utopian visionaries advertise but chump out on when they realize they can’t control such a situation. “They” hate it because they don’t feel they can control it.

This attitude translates to most large corporate advertisers. If you are reading this, I suspect the average marketing person feels you aren’t worth the trouble (at least in this niche). Yeah, you’ll buy the beer, the vapes, the games, the energy drink, whatever… but the very fact you will listen to the type of music covered in The Hard Data is a red-flashing warning sign you have a freaking brain that you still have some control over. It hasn’t been completely overtaken by media and peer brainwashing. You are a bad risk not worth banking on. What’s more, you’re potentially contagious. Sure, you were listening to Metallica or Ariana Grande a few years ago, and now look where you are at. You didn’t stick with the plan. What if you convince others of the same?

Time and again I had beaten my head against this brick wall I describe above, vainly hoping that some needed commercial cash would grease the wheels of my and others endeavors in the scene. But it always turned out the same way. Sometimes the answer was immediate, sometimes we got teased for a while before the invariable let-down.

So this is why The Hard Data as a communication instrument between like-minded individuals is so needed. Listening to the type of music we do is part of a bigger overall picture of leading a good life where creativity, honesty and individual freedom is honored and supported. Even though we moan about our peers in this scene, worldwide, I have yet to meet anyone in it that comes close to the psycho and sociopaths I’ve met in other corners of the post-rave world. No self-respecting sociopath would go near a scene whose numbers can’t be quantified like ours.

Hindsight 2017?

Looking back, I wish I would have made a better effort to insert smaller, lower costing ads in the magazine garnered from small businesses. Instead, I took the bigger ad money from the event companies. Don’t get me wrong, I, and The Hard Data are eternally grateful to Insomniac/Basscon and Trauma, but more effort should have been spent patiently explaining to the readers the importance of advertising their own scene and their own initiatives. Fast forward to today and I might have had a second-in-command to take over more readily, and more advertisers with my back.

But, for convenience, mostly because I was doing so many jobs on the magazine myself, once I got the money from the big ads I relaxed and concentrated on the coming issue’s content. I could only spread myself so thin and it was a choice of making the new issue or interfacing with people trying to coordinate their voice and payments.

If I could do it again, I would basically start out giving free ads to everyone in the scene that wanted one until they got their business feet firmly grounded and could comfortably pay for their ads.

Also, I believe that if we had a full-time ad salesman, even those big corporations I complain about would have thrown money our way as well. But, I never found anyone that wanted to risk doing that full time. Which is a shame, because I never had a very hard time selling ads when I put my mind to it. Unfortunately, a lot of sales-type people want to sell the tried and true and not take a chance on something new. The magazine needs a “true-believer” salesman besides me.

I’m Not Really a Businessman

Another problem is that when it gets right down to it, I’m not really a businessman. Sometimes I can give the appearance of one… but I’m really an artist that occasionally sees a need and rushes to fill it, mostly from some creative urgency. Many of you only know me from The Hard Data, but honestly, I’ve had a habit over my life of instigating and catalyzing various underground movements. Rave promoter, producer, DJ, record label, graffiti artist, publisher, just to name a few. Yep. I’ve done a lot of this stuff in the early days of many a scene. But it’s only a side-product of a creative life. After getting my hands dirty building the foundation, another type of personality really is needed to take over.

In fact, traditionally I step off just as the money comes in. So, maybe for everyone’s sake that pattern will continue here. Looking back, my only constant is pursuing my artwork however it manifests, such as with graffiti art or music production, and when I go too long ignoring that I get frustrated and frankly ignore the reasons why anyone ever paid attention to what I had to say in the first place. So, The Hard Data is made because it was needed, now it needs new hands to continue.

What the heck happened with Musicoin?

Some of you will understand this next part… If you read my desires for the magazine above, the attraction to a music-based cryptocurrency might seem pretty obvious. Basically, by tapping into a new economic stream of activity, The Hard Data and its contributors and readers could fashion their own economy. Anyone who was involved in that time will remember The Hard Data’s Musicoin initiative was firing on all cylinders.

Unfortunately, I had a major falling out with the main developer of Musicoin. Why? I don’t 100% know. I can only speculate. Despite what may be said from that individual, most people involved know that The Hard Data and myself promoted the project vigorously with much belief, effort and positive effect. And, I truly think that may be why we were shown the door.

What I didn’t know at the time was how easy it is for large investors to sway the price of smaller cryptocurrencies, and for some, that fact is very important. The Hard Data and I were becoming influential enough that casual investors started to pay attention to us. The fact that we had a positive effect on the project’s utility might ultimately have been what let to our ouster!

To explain a little better: A small cryptocurrency can be manipulated by an investor or investors initiating fake buys and sells. With automatic trading, this process becomes somewhat predictable. By attracting the hopeful investor and then selling off at a time the initial investors only know, fortunes can be made. So, when an actual real-world use case influences the price, it takes some of their control away. Like I said though, this is only my speculation on what happened.

It should be pointed out: After Musicoin severed its relationship with The Hard Data it has taken a precipitous none-dive in value. Mainly this was because of Bitcoin’s price plunge, but its worth considering that The Hard Data continuing to stress and demonstrate the project’s utility might have lessened or even reversed its precipitous recent decline.

Despite the Musicoin experience, I would still like to see The Hard Data involved with a robust cryptocurrency project. There are truly good merits to blockchain technology that can make life better for those involved. If I find another good project, I’ll let you know.

Why Print?

In this age of social media and declining print ad budgets, many ask, “Why Print?”. The easy answer: It’s cooler. No one cares about your Facebook post a week later. People save their magazines their whole life sometimes. Ultimately, the printed word carries more weight to its readers and is more trusted. It’s as simple as that. Yeah, you can’t quantify it easily with Google Analytics, but maybe relying on data driven statistics just leads to crappy imitative products. Have you ever thought that if you like something, someone else will? All the data in the world can’t really replace something made from the heart. That sounds corny I know, but ten years from now maybe check out what old issues of The Hard Data are selling for on eBay. The web is great for ephemeral data. The printed page is great for long term memory.

Social Media Meltdowns

Looking back, I wish I had spent less time on Facebook.

The hardcore/hardstyle scene in America revolves quite a bit around Facebook and Instagram and ultimately, I think both are dead ends. Yes, the eyeballs seem to be there. But through the last couple years I noticed how Facebook would throttle posts, overcharge for ads, not allow sharing, banning people for things they say, and generally becoming a dead end of energy. Most alarming to me is that many of my friends and peers in the scene started to buy the corporate line and promote that there is a such thing as “hate” speech.

The promotion and acceptance of the “hate speech” concept is one of the possibly biggest obstacles to our scene, and perhaps our overall society’s unity. I know people mean well when they think they are defending some maligned person or group, calling for what-for-all-intents-and-purposes amounts to censorship. But the number one thing that made our society more accepting, more tolerant, more open… was letting people say whatever they wanted no matter how horrible it sounded! That’s why we have many of the liberties today: because unpopular ideas, opinions and facts were given voice and consideration. Now, sadly, those that claimed they were abused, maligned, and bullied, after finally being accepted… want to viciously shut down the avenues that led to their acceptance. Friends, this will only end in heartbreak. The weapon you think you are wielding in defense, you are actually only helping to  construct, and there is a high probability it will be turned on you once it is complete.

This concept of “hate” speech (almost always spelled in all caps by its adherents for some reason) would practically ban over half the catalog of hardcore techno available since the early nineties, made by every freaking screwball and weirdo the globe had to offer! Have we not been accused of being “offensive” in some way all along? I’m exaggerating for comedic effect, but the general idea I’m sure many of you would know to be valid!

People! Please, please, please, the real fight is against the international corporations that wish to subdivide and control us. They are the ones who gain by us bickering over mere words that they tell us are bad one day, fine the next, and bad then again. When we follow the agenda they set for us, through all their fake alternative media, we become easier to identify, influence and control. If you break down the monied influences on the various media outlets many think are “diverse”, you will find many of them are all funded from the same basic sources. People think they are reading opposing voices. Most of the time, they aren’t.

Please, let people vent their crazy, angry junk and get it out of their system, bottling it up just makes it worse. You can argue with them, you can ignore them, you can debate them, but don’t try to censor them. Everyone has a perspective and a reason for their beliefs. We all grow in capacity when we better understand and debate unpopular opinions, and it is the synthesis of perspectives wherein we better understand the truth. Is that not why you are here in the first place? The mainstream’s push to make everyone think in pre-packaged boxes and compartmentalized social groups at odds with one another sucks energy from our scene, our music, and our relationships with one another. Don’t fall for it!

Should the next version of The Hard Data manifest, there will be at least two paths it will be faced with that are inexorably tied to the mainstream corporate pressures mentioned above and the fake alternative worlds of the social media giants:

  1. Despite its “wild” nature, just like Rock and Roll and Rap… Hardcore/Hardstyle, etc. can be commodified by outside sources and further reduced to a recognizable marketable genre of pre-packaged adolescent rebellion. In this scenario, it interfaces as expected with the corporate world.
  2. It follows its own path and eschews the data-driven world of statistics. It comes from the publishers’ guts and builds its own self-reliant system.

Honestly, I tried to blend both these approaches, but based on my experiences the last couple years I have come to champion option 2. However, we never know what will happen with our creations once we let them loose, so…

The Future Unknown

So The Hard Data exists, people like it, but I have to move on. Trust me, more and more capable hands are needed now. So, over the next few months, I will be doing my best to tie up loose ends and package the existing brand and assets of The Hard Data so that others may take it further. It needs full time sales people, web developers, print editors as well as the continuing stable of contributors. It needs a person in charge of distribution, as well as many other jobs many of you have gone to college or trade school for. So, if you are interested in becoming involved or investing in the brand, contact me as I am trying to coordinate the end of this era and beginning of the next.

I want to thank all of you for reading and contributing to version one of The Hard Data. And just remember,

The rhythm is life and death!

DJ Deadly Buda

The Hard Data: What’s Next?

Gabberfest Conference 1

After 3 years The Hard Data has established itself as a media outlet for hard electronic music, but numerous challenges have accompanied its growth. Specifically, the demands of the readers have outgrown the staff, and the current and future needs and manifestations of the hard electronic scene need to be identified and addressed.

Joel Bevacqua, aka DJ Deadly Buda, the magazine’s present editor and founder, will host a round-table conversation with the goal of addressing and solving the challenges facing the hard electronic scene and The Hard Data. By soliciting input, perspectives and action from Gabberfest attendees, this round-table will play a major (perhaps the major) role in shaping The Hard Data’s subject matter, editorial, media staff, distribution and financial structure for the years going forward.

The conference meets at 2:30-3:30pm (and perhaps longer if necessary) at Gabberfest’s indoor meeting area. Attendees will be participating in Gabberfest’s first conference panel.  

The Hard Data: What's Next? Gabberfest Conference 1 will address current issues in the hard electronic scene and how The Hard Data can address them.
The Hard Data: What’s Next? Gabberfest Conference 1 will address current issues in the hard electronic scene and how The Hard Data can address them.

Kryptic Corner 003: Braincrushers & E-RAYzor Interview

Article and interview by Howard “How Hard’ Grene

In July 2017, Hard Kryptic Records released the Worldwide Movement: Remix Project which featured both top name and underground artists remixing one of the most recognized tracks in Hard Kryptic: “Worldwide Movement”. Remixers like Masters of Hardcore‘s Re-Style, Swiss legends Dark Headz, Sweden’s top name Mark Frostbite aka Trinitite, Spain’s rising star SOTUI, Japan’s untouchable Kortarow, Argentina’s noisemaker Round Wave Crusher, and Dutch and American duo Hard Versions took the already crushing track and re-visioned it as their own.

The original release came out in July 2014 and was created to show how hardcore music is bigger than borders. German producers Braincrushers and E-RAYzor joined forces with US producer How Hard. An accompanying music video further showed the unified hardcore vibe with clips of hardcore events in Germany, Ukraine, Netherlands, United States, UK, and more!

I virtually sat with duo Braincrushers, which consists of brothers Oliver and David, and Ralf aka E-RAYzor after the dust settled on this explosive release to learn about them, their thoughts, on the project, and more!

Worldwide Movement: Remix Project (HKD078)

When did each of you start to create/produce music? Was hardcore the genre you start with?

BC: We started in 1995 with an old mixer and two turntable with no pitch. The mixer was Oliver’s birthday present, our dad came up with it. He played music as a young man and made his money with it. I think he wanted us to do something and tried to give an initial start. It worked just fine. The electronic music wave just came up here, it was new, cool, but not for everybody. We went crazy on hardcore music from the first second! In 1996, we played our first DJ set on a hardcore party. In the early 2000s we started to make our own music on Fruity Loops, and then Reason. Our first release came out ´07 “Little Asses” on G-Net Records.

E: I started producing hardcore with some friends using Fast Tracker in the middle of the nineties. We first only made fun tracks for ourselves, but one time we invited DJ friend of mine, and we made our first serious track. He pressed that one as a test pressing and played it in Bochum Germany at a big hardcore party. The reaction was positive, and that kept me going!

Were there any early influences on your music in the beginning? What about today?

BC: We always liked Main & Industrial. Artists from Traxtorm, Neophyte Records, Megarave, Industrial Strength, and Enzyme all influenced our music. In the very beginning, there was also Rob Gee (my ringtone is still “Ecstasy, You Got What I Need”), Lenny Dee with Microtronic, Dreamer, and Noize Suppressor.

E: My first CD was The Prodigy’s Experience, and the second was Thunderdome II, so you can say I am hardcore since the beginning! I also listened to all the 90s dancefloor stuff, hip hop like 2 Live Crew and DMX. Also, some rock and metal stuff like Linkin Park. All in all, I have a really wide taste of music. I don`t think in genres. There is good music everywhere, it just needs a drive for me, something special, recognizable.

Braincrushers

How would you each describe your styles of hardcore?

BC: We like hardcore music that goes with the times. The better the hardware and software gets, the better the tunes. We listen to and love the old classics, but when we play parties and work on our music, we want to go with times in our own way.

E: As a DJ, my style in hardcore is very diverse. I play everything from the early rave to happy hardcore, early mainstyle from the 2000s, and all the to the new stuff. Depending on the party, I can play everything from slow to fast, from old to new. As long it gets me and in a good mood I like it. I play a lot of tracks with nice melodies, but also “in ya face” tracks. For me, the mixture makes the party.

E-RAYzor

What are you using in the studio these days? Any stand-out piece of gear or instrument?

BC: Nothing special. A keyboard, Cubase, KRK Rockets and a lot of enthusiasm.

E:  I don’t have my own studio today. I prefer more visiting my friends’ studios instead, like the Braincrushers’. We can have fun together, and I’m way more creative there versus working alone.

Worldwide Movement: Remix Project is out now. What can you say about this project, and what makes it so special?

BC:  Special to us is the long history of this project. The first release came out in 2014. We started working on this track months before with Ray when he visited us. We couldn’t find suitable vocals, so we asked Howard if he could record something for us. Bit by bit, session after session, element after element, countless nights with less sleep, hurting necks, and a lot of fun, we finally completed the track. Then came the video that Howard did with all the screaming people with different origins and now, all the remixes from artists around the world. “Worldwide” is not just a cool word for the title, the release was actually made worldwide!

E: In the beginning it was just a fun idea, but then we received Trinitite’s first remix from Sweden and said, “Hey, that is just too good to be not released, so what can we do?” As the title of the EP was Worldwide Movement, we thought about who we can also ask for a remix. The Darkheadz from Switzerland are good friends of mine for over 15 years. They were totally into the project, and sent their remix very quickly. Re-Style I knew from many bookings and parties where we met and I love his style since his first record so it was no question to ask him, too. In the end, I think we really have many different remixes with different styles but all of them have to touch and vibe of the original. For me it is always hard to decide which one I play the next!

Worldwide Movement (HKD060)

The original Worldwide Movement track was a collaboration between artists. Any other artists you would like to work with in the studio?

BC: Actually, every talented artist with the same enthusiasm is welcome! Main thing is to have fun and at the end of the day: good music!

Who else would you love to see remix one of your tracks?

E: For me one of the best remixers is The Viper, so that would be cool!

BC: Noize Suppressor! He is one of greatest interpreters of hardcore. He is a real artist.

Oliver/Braincrushers

From your work on Hard Kryptic, what would each be your stand out track or release?

BC: “Worldwide Movement”, “STOMP!” and “Crush on You“. Honestly, we can’t make a decision!

E: That`s easy! The original “Worldwide Movement” is the best track I ever made! It still gives me goosebumps every time I listen to it, and even play it at all parties!

Any stand out tracks from HKR besides your own tracks?

BC: The “Return of the Pit” remix by Ophidian.

E: I love all the Braincrushers releases and the Triax vinyl release, but the most outstanding track for me is the Amnesys Remix of DJ Delirium’s “Blazin’ Out Your Speaker”. This one is an absolute masterpiece in my opinion! It also was the first Hard Kryptic release I heard, so it got me into contact with the label. I pushed my favorite record store in that time to order that record because I heard it and totally fell in love.

Triax – Stronger Than Ever (HKR004)

Besides being producers, you’re also established DJs who have played in many festivals and in different countries, including the United States. What different do you see between playing in the U.S. versus in Europe?

E: I first came to New York in 2010 for Speakerfreakz. I thought I stepped out of a time machine! So many different people with wild costumes, much dedication to the music. I felt like back in the nineties in Europe when the whole rave scene began, and everything seemed to be possible. At all the parties I played in the U.S., there where all different styles of electronic music: house, drum n’ bass, hardstyle, hardcore, and even dubstep. The people were so open-minded to everything I played. I started my set with hardstyle and slowly took them to hardcore, and they loved it! It was unbelievable! I will never forget when I ended my set with the Pussyvibes mash-up of the Braincrushers at over 200 BPM, and the DJ after me started a house set at 130 BPM. In Europe that would be impossible!

Do you have any advice would you give a new DJ or producer?

E: Do it for the love of the music, not because you think it`s cool.

BC: Stick to it, don’t give up. Make it with passion.

What is upcoming for you? Any new releases or remixes in the works?

BC: We always are working on something. Stay anxious! Tracks are in the works. Hopefully another banging release on HKR!

E: Not yet, but hopefully I will find the time to get back in the studio soon to make some serious noise!

Find more information at:

Hard Kryptic Records/Hard X Music Official Website

Hard Kryptic Records/Hard X Music Facebook

Hard Kryptic Records/Hard X Music Twitter

Hard Kryptic Records/Hard X Music YouTube

Hard Kryptic Records/Hard X Music Soundcloud

My EDC Orlando Experience

My first rave was when I was 16 years old, when my brother put on the show at a local fire hall. Both my parents and grandparents attended. My parents showed up probably because they had to…you know, legal reasons and all, and my grandparents and I to show our support.

The music was great, with DJ Deadly Buda headlining. As an invincible teen, I wanted to jump in the mosh pit, flail around running into everyone, and let out some of that pent-up teen aggression. As luck would have it, though, I made it around the pit once and then fell, only to look up from the ground, and see a nice, scruffy pair of combat boots heading my way. The next thing I knew, a multitude of arms were there helping me up and saving me from being crushed by those boots. That ended my mosh pit days, but what remained was the knowledge of that feeling of caring from those faceless helpers.

Enter 2017, where I was given the opportunity to attend Electric Daisy Carnival in Orlando, as a VIP. It’s been 28 years since that first rave, and my how things have changed…or have they? EDM has become so popular that whole football fields are necessary to accommodate all the partygoers. Tinker Field was a huge venue with multiple stages (back in 1989, there’d only been one). There were chill out zones, amusement park rides, and vendors of all kinds. Inflatable furniture anyone? How about some organic jewelry? What amazed me was how the good folks at Insomniac had all these stages outside near each other, each with a DJ playing their own music, yet the sound from one never interfered with the other. You heard each clearly without distortion or distraction from the other, yet there were no walls or buffers of any kind. Amazing acoustic planning!

Ferris Wheel at EDC Orlando 2017

The layout and flow of traffic was also planned out well. For the amount of people at the show, one never felt overcrowded, and liquid refreshment and chill areas were always right there, much different from, say, and other famous Kingdom here in Orlando.

I truly enjoyed all the colorful lights everywhere. The Kinetic stage was my favorite, with its fireworks, water fountains, light show, dancers and video screen imagery, which was planned to the music with the goddess’s heart beating and close-ups of the djs. Kudos to the creative team! Partygoers were also creative in their dress, from furries to kandi kids, butt-cheek models to neon-clad gentlemen, marching bands, stilt walkers, and oversized fish. Those last three might have been Insomniac’s doing, but oh what fun and good vibes they made for. Some of my favorites were the lite-up butterfly wing cape, the lite-up faux fur coat and the lite-up tutu. Notice a trend here? What I didn’t notice were any combat boots or mosh pits. Nor did I miss them, to be honest. What I loved seeing was that EDM has become so popular, that people danced peacefully next to each other all over the field and most of all that raves are still multi-generational.

While waiting for a friend to buy refreshments, I started talking to a young girl with glitter and rhinestones on her face and her blonde hair in braided pigtails. She was 26 and a graduate of Flagler College. She and her Dad had come all the way from Jacksonville for the show. Her mom liked more classically played music and had opted to stay home. However, as the marching band passed by, she exclaimed to her dad how “Mom really would have liked that.”

I bet there was more her mom could have appreciated: the goddess-designed stage, the creative outfits, the more chill VIP area, and most of all, the family bonding. Back at my first rave, my grandparents found the music sounded “quite funny”, but they still polka-danced to it anyway. I’d like to believe that had my grandparents been alive and with me at EDC that they’d have been there in the VIP area drinking, eating, and polka dancing into the night. That’s what’s so great about EDM shows, there is something for everyone to enjoy and a feeling of acceptance for whoever you are.

My niece is only 8 years old at the moment, but I hope one day to take her to a rave as well and continue on the tradition.

Российская платформа IPChain начнёт сотрудничество с Musicoin?

Прошедший недавно в Санкт-Петербурге VI Международный Культурный Форум может удивить объединением национального рынка и блокчейн-платформы Musicoin в сфере интеллектуальной собственности. Такая возможность была объявлена в ходе панельной дискуссии «Создание в России мировой практики применения блокчейн-технологий для управления правами интеллектуальной собственности: от патентов и изобретений до книг, картин, фотографий, музыки и фильмов».

После часового обсуждения соглашение было объявлено платформой IPChain («Национальный координационный центр обработки транзакций с правами и объектами интеллектуальной собственности»), чьи амбициозные цели заключаются в формировании основанной на блокчейн-технологии национальной сети Российских объектов интеллектуальной собственности, их прав, записи сделок с ними и облегчении проведения подобных сделок.

“Создание децентрализованной сети IPChain является необходимым и обязательным этапом разработок в сфере интеллектуальной собственности,” – сказал президент IPChain Андрей Кричевский (здесь и далее цитата не точная, прим. пер.). “Тем не менее, говоря о конкретных этапах важно помнить, что, несмотря на плодотворные шаги предпринимаемые сегодня, мы не должны останавливаться. В конце концов, сегодняшний тренд на блокчейн вероятно рано или поздно будет заменяться всё новыми и новыми технологиями и решениями. Наша задача в том, чтобы следить за направлением глобальных разработок и предвидеть будущие технологические перемены.”

 

Посол Musicoin Джоэль Беваква выступает на Международном Культурном Форуме в Санкт-Перербурге.

Cвои решения и точки зрения предложили следующие участники: Единая Государственная система учета научных исследований, разработок и технологических работ гражданского назначения (эта служба уже является ключевым компонентом инфраструктуры IPChain), Национальный координационный центр обработки транзакций с правами и объектами интеллектуальной собственности, участвующий в проекте Министерства образования и науки Российской Федерации по созданию системы хранения и сопоставления трёхмерных моделей, и FormMax, бизнес-решение по доставке фоновой музыки.

В число участников также вошли несколько сервисов, которые потенциально могут использовать инфраструктуру IPChain, такие, как IP EXCHANGE (IPEX), онлайн платформа регулирующая функционирование рынка объектов интеллектуальной собственности и объединяющая мировые сообщества художников, и первый в мире основанный на блокчейн-технологии стриминговый музыкальный сервис Musicoin.

 

Выступающие слева-направо: Эрик Батист (SOCAN), Андрей Кричевский (IPChain), Сергей Матвеев (Директор Департамента науки и технологий, Министерство образования и науки Российской Федерации)

И хотя форумы об интеллектуальной собственности обычно проходят спокойно, этот был похож на пороховую бочку. Иван Засурский, Заведующий кафедрой новых медиа и теории коммуникации МГУ, назвал адвокатов в этой области паразитами, юрист Павел Катков был сильно заинтересован блокчейн смарт-контрактами, которые могут оставить адвокатов на вторых ролях в деле управления правами на объекты интеллектуальной собственности, а Джоэль Беваква, посол Musicoin, отметил для всей аудитории то, что этот форум, свидетелями которого они стали, однажды может оказаться переломным моментом в их жизни.

Российская платформа IPChain завершила обсуждение ещё одним знаковым моментом того, что Российская Федерация намерена стать лидером в области технологии блокчейн – подписанием стратегических соглашений о сотрудничестве. IPChain заключила договор о сотрудничестве и взаимодействии с крупнейшим на рынке издательством электронных книг – «ЛитРес», а следом – договор с сервисом BankPrav.ru компании «АйПиБи» о партнёрстве и долгосрочной совместной разработке в сфере регистрации и монетизации интеллектуальной собственности и увеличении прозрачности сделок для всех участников рынка.

 

Джоэль Беваква, посол Musicoin (и главный редактор The Hard Data), на деловой площаадке “IP и Блокчейн” VI Международного Культурного Форума

В завершении, глава IPChain, Андрей Кричевский, преподнёс сюрприз, озвучив возможность сотрудничества платформы IPChain с SOCAN и Musicoin. Чем это обернётся, мы ещё увидим, но такое заявление может означать для музыкантов и их фанатов ещё один важный шаг вперёд, не только в России, но и во всём мире.