Heiko Recktenwald on Sat, 6 Jun 2009 23:40:17 +0200 (CEST) |
[Date Prev] [Date Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Date Index] [Thread Index]
Re: <nettime> What has copyright to do with democracy? |
Good question, I asked the same, when I read some remarks claiming a connection. IMHO is is plain nonsense! Your argument that copyright is a monopoly is weak. You could say the same about property. Property as a monopoly against thieves. Both are absolute rights against everybody In contrast to contracts that give rights against certain people only. And that printers had such a monopoly is weak as well. Printers did what they wanted. As a matter of fact. Like thieves and users of P2P networks worldwide do what they want. But rights may be weak as well in certain situations. When you dont secure your bicycle in certain parts of some towns thieves may come and steal it. People may not care about your copyright as well. Copyright is usefull in the internet too, see Google v. the publishers, but the enforcement is rather difficult. It is fun to have a library of mp3s. And unlike bicicles that are still expensiv mp3s cost nothing to produce as far as copying is concerned. Nobody believes the arguments of the music industry when it comes to mp3s from the 70s, oldies. The catalogue of the internet is much bigger than the catalogue. In the case of google books as well. Copyright is more or less just disapearing in certain cases in the times of the internet by what people actually do. But this is anarchy, not democracy. The natural status according to Hobbes. I would not even call it a revolution. A revolution is some new law, here we have nothing. The most interesting part in that game play the mp3-search-engines and organisers of catalogues like Piratebay. Search engines may sell their result and Piratebay is an open invitation to detectives to find out what certain people that really exist have on their harddrive. Search engines and Piratebay etc are hard organisations in a soft game. I would boycott boths, well, P2P does not work without, but I boycott P2P as well. Servers like, you know the names, are hard organisations as well, but they dont serve such a clear purpose and this is their strenght. All you need is google and your brain. H. Karl-Erik Tallmo schrieb: > In view of recent debates, not the least those in Sweden, I wrote > this article about the democratic aspects of copyright legislation. > Many people today claim that copyright and democracy are incompatible > concepts, that copyright infringes the privacy of readers and other > cultural consumers etc. I believe it is not that simplistic: <...> # 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: http://mail.kein.org/mailman/listinfo/nettime-l # archive: http://www.nettime.org contact: nettime@kein.org