Archive for the 'copyright' Category

Why The Copyright Industry Isn’t a Legitimate Stakeholder in Copyright

Saturday, April 30th, 2011

When the copyright monopoly and its future development is discussed, parties called “stakeholders” are frequently invited to discuss its wording and principles. Yet, current lawmakers have forgotten the reason the monopoly exists in the first place.

Source: Why The Copyright Industry Isn’t a Legitimate Stakeholder in Copyright

How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Copy

Tuesday, April 26th, 2011

After years of reading intellectual property law blogs from some of the greatest legal minds, I’m finally ready to admit that I was wrong. The fight against illegal copying is one that cannot be won. I can no longer deny the simple truth that it is ultimately futile to try to create artificial scarcities in what would otherwise be non-scarce goods.

Source: How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Copy

Copyright Is Like QWERTY: Locked-In and Retrospective

Sunday, April 24th, 2011

The term ‘path dependence’ is generally used to describe the development of technological standards and how they ‘lock in’ a given technical solution. The QWERTY keyboard is often given as an example of path dependence – the fact that the costs of changing the keyboard to a better, more efficient solution, hinders change. The same can be said about much of the copyright legislation today, but then at the expense of privacy and other rights.

Source: Copyright Is Like QWERTY: Locked-In and Retrospective

Monopoly Lawyers Shouldn’t Write Monopoly Laws

Sunday, April 17th, 2011

A problem with monopoly laws, such as the copyright monopoly and patent monopoly, is that their text is usually written by the lawyers that maintain them. This creates a vicious circle with circular proof that the laws work as intended.

Source: Monopoly Lawyers Shouldn’t Write Monopoly Laws

Monopoly Lawyers Shouldn’t Write Monopoly Laws

Sunday, April 17th, 2011

A problem with monopoly laws, such as the copyright monopoly and patent monopoly, is that their text is usually written by the lawyers that maintain them. This creates a vicious circle with circular proof that the laws work as intended.

Source: Monopoly Lawyers Shouldn’t Write Monopoly Laws

Kiwi MP Called Out As Pirate After Passing Anti-Piracy Law

Friday, April 15th, 2011

In a beautiful twist of irony, New Zealand parliament member Melissa Lee has been caught in a copyright quagmire. It turns out that just hours before she spoke out in support of the controversial new copyright law being rushed through parliament, she tweeted how pleased she was with a compilation of K-Pop songs a friend copied for her.

Source: Kiwi MP Called Out As Pirate After Passing Anti-Piracy Law