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#121 |
Wizard
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#122 |
Wizard
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#123 |
Wizard
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#124 |
Wizard
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#125 |
Wizard
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#126 | |
Wizard
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I would not say no to a magic-wand originating sanity-infusion into national and international legal systems though. - Ahi |
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#127 |
Wizard
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Reducing the influence of corporate lobbyists and getting rid of bribery (... sorry, "campaign contributions") would help. But that's a whole different can of worms, certainly beyond the scope of copyright reform.
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#128 | |
Wizard
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#129 |
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#130 |
Enthusiast
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#131 | |||||||
Banned
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The fact that we're largely talking about DEAD people penetrate your sweet, sweet, crunchy, independent, cocoa coating yet? Or that once the rights leave the artists, any sense of inherent, moral entitlement vanishes? Quote:
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Of course, that isn't happening. All the trampling is happening, here in the real world, from the people in a position to trample. There is nothing absurd in what I have stated. There is absurdity in equating strongly argued opinions with trampling. There is absurdity in accepting the squishy middle of what are clear moral and ethical choices as some sort of independent, free-thinking, mavericky ideal. There is absurdity in implying superiority of insight while not recognizing that the under-informed, placid middle is a tool used by those with power to shield their excesses. You're "spouting off" a bit yourself, you know -- how is it that you can comment, but I cannot? (I know the answer and so do you.) Quote:
You conflate piracy with arguments against copyright extension, DRM with copyright and artist's rights with the interests of business. Apropos my earlier argument, you are a tool, and very, very useful. m a r |
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#132 | |||
Professional Contrarian
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Copyright has nothing to do with "control" of culture for anything other than commercial reasons. If you want to witness real cultural control for political reasons, keep your eye on places where it's actually happening -- e.g. China, Russia, Myanmar/Burma, Cuba, Iran etc Not to mention that it is much easier now to openly and freely distribute digital information than it ever was to distribute analog information. 20 years ago, a self-published author would be lucky to have access to any sort of distributor, let alone be able to afford the costs involved for a small print run; now, anyone with $15 and a domain name can distribute their cultural content to an international audience. And I am not aware of any sort of "DRM Forces" that are trying to make everyone use DRM whether they like it or not. EMusic, Amazon, iTunes, and numerous public domain ebook distributors are DRM-free or moving in that direction. So where's the "control" that you fear so virulently? DRM is not a political conspiracy to lock down content. It's an imposition and an annoyance, but that's really about it. Quote:
![]() B&N is under no obligation to educate people about public domain. Quote:
Some artists do exert a fair amount of control over their works; i.e. only one movie company has the rights to make "Harry Potter" movies. But that's due to copyright laws, and has nothing to do with DRM. |
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#133 | ||||||||||||
Banned
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Simplistic, and of course, not what I am talking about. Copyright is exactly what it says, a right to make copies, granted so that creators can profit from their creations. I have no objection to it, and in fact think it was, and is, a brilliant solution to a difficult problem. But the limited monopoly of prior times is being transformed into a permanent monopoly, and specifically because of the fear of the internet and copying technologies, and the spread of knowledge. Licensing and control of distribution of content is what is being pursued (among many, many other things) by the business elites in the US, at least. I live in Thailand. I know that there are worse places, with more overt oppression than most of the US. It is irrelevant that there is something worse, somewhere else. DRM, copyright extension, invasive control of digital systems; these are of a pattern with all the other abuses of power and money in the States. We discuss eBooks here, and DRM and copyright. Not insurgency, military repression and international relations. Quote:
I mean, try to mount a play that uses music from the 1950s without begging a corporation for permission. Maybe rewrite the dialogue to a showing of the Maltese Falcon. Or use the script from it as a source for a serious rewrite. Do anything at all with Zorro! Use commercials from the early twentieth century as material in your documentary -- try it! You can't. The twentieth century is locked up, and so will be the twenty-first. The things that matter, that people want to talk about and use are imprisoned by the companies that "own" them. If you try to create a new work from something sorta old, but not really old (and therefore of less relevance), you will be found. You will be punished. The current relative ease of distribution is being overtaken by the ease of suppression. Now maybe it'll always stay ahead -- but not if folks keep thinking it's all gonna be just fine, keep trusting the guys in suits. Quote:
The control I fear is that there are such things as EMusic, Amazon and iTunes. Too damn big, with too much power to shape choices. It will settle into a small group of corporations (pick an industry, any industry, it always does) that will protect each other from progress and outside insurgency using wealth and the concomitant political influence. But really, beyond that, none of what you're discussing has anything to do with artists, or cultural appropriation -- the main thrust of my arguments so far. Quote:
It is a symptom of a dangerous mindset, that leads to such things as creating devices that are not under the control of their tacit "owners." Devices that can report, that can be reprogrammed, that can be edited without your knowledge or permission. It leads to the creation of laws to extend copyright to ludicrous lengths, that creates laws that make sacrosanct encryption schemes of corporations, but require citizens to relinquish theirs at the border. Quote:
Or maybe: Corporate Apologist Quote:
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Moby Dick was written in 1851, before the Civil War. So, while the themes of the piece are being mined, I'm not so sure that the specifics of the piece have great relevance to people who didn't live through that century. And of course: Quote:
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And hip-hop -- the whole hip-hop sampling thing is something you should read up on. Do you know how much they pay for as little as 5 seconds of another song? You're flashing back over 20 years here, to a time when it was in ascent. Read about after the lawyers got them. How what and how they sampled evolved, or disappeared. Do one of your famous Google searches on "sampling lawsuit". It's not like these guys are free to do what they like. Like, say, Beethoven. Quote:
I'm talking about the use of DRM and the draconian laws that support it as they're being used by large corporations to carve up the cultural assets of our society between them, locking them away from the generation of creators and artists that would, in prior generations, feel no restriction about using them. Or suppressing innovation (re: printer cartridges, for instance.) I'm talking about the extension of copyright, again by large corporations via political means, and the use of it as a bludgeon to extract control and wealth by rent-seeking. And I'm talking about the lack of accountability of those corporations, the people who staff them and the mindset and ethics of both the companies and their people as they influence culture and law. And as a sideline, I'm commenting on how folks who don't pay much attention to what is going on, who take the mushy, middle path enable it all. m a r |
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#134 |
Enthusiast
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I am not really sure what you are trying to accomplish with your "milk crate" preaching, mixed with underhanded personal attacks on people who are trying to have a civilized conversation about an issue that involves us all. But usually when I see people preaching, I just ignore them, because that, my misguided friend, is MY right.
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#135 | |||||||
Professional Contrarian
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Sony is not trying to make us supporters of a new Japanese Co-Prosperity Sphere, and Apple is not trying to turn everyone into hippies. So, "commercial reasons" are not particularly political -- unless you adhere to the point of view that your choice of soap is also a "political act." It's technically accurate but rarely a useful position. And it's bupkis compared to overt totalitarian control of information.
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I.e. I don't see much of an indication, let alone definitive proof, that the whole world will be run by Buy n' Large by 2030. Quote:
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2) Didn't you laud the value of copyright a few paragraphs ago? Either you like it or you don't, which is it? 3) The situations you cited have nothing to do with monopolistic practices. Even a small company can hold and enforce the rights to a well-known artwork. Quote:
As much as people squeal about DRM and limited formats, almost every portable device I've seen allows at least one open format (if not several). Rights holders may be focusing on halting the illegal distribution of their content, but don't care much (if at all) about those who choose to release it for free. Quote:
![]() Emusic and Amazon's music downloads have always been MP3's, i.e. no DRM. Apple is making a push to selling music without DRM. The companies you're terrified of are doing exactly what you want, namely ditching DRM, and you're still afraid? I mean, really. What are you looking for, a world where no one charges for digital content? The abandonment of all copyright? Or perhaps there a magic number of retailers that would satisfy you? 10? 15? 30? 100? If the market doesn't support the number of retailers you like, who has to pay to support their existence? Or, what's your alternative to the capitalist approach -- government distribution of content, perhaps? Or perhaps governments should subsidize any and every retailer and distributor of digital content? And will eliminating DRM even make much of a dent in the formation of a monopoly? Apple's music sales are now increasingly eschewing DRM, yet the iTunes store, iPod and iPhone are still the big dogs.... Your ideas seem rather hysterical and poorly thought out. Have fun winning people over to your position. :P Quote:
Most of the examples I cited indicate that copyright does not seem to have done much to hinder the production of cultural products, and it certainly hasn't stopped artists from being influenced by their contemporaries. Read an interview with any artist in the last 20 years, and they will list their recent influences ad nauseum. Quote:
You're welcome to believe that the sky is falling, but I see no evidence for it. |
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