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How to Fix Copyright (Hardcover)
Loot Price: R539
Discovery Miles 5 390
You Save: R98
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How to Fix Copyright (Hardcover)
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List price R637
Loot Price R539
Discovery Miles 5 390
You Save R98 (15%)
Expected to ship within 10 - 15 working days
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Do copyright laws directly cause people to create works they
otherwise wouldn't create? Do those laws directly put substantial
amounts of money into authors' pockets? Does culture depend on
copyright? Are copyright laws a key driver of competitiveness and
of the knowledge economy?
These are the key questions William Patry addresses in How to Fix
Copyright. We all share the goals of increasing creative works,
ensuring authors can make a decent living, furthering culture and
competitiveness and ensuring that knowledge is widely shared, but
what role does copyright law actually play in making these things
come true in the real world? Simply believing in lofty goals isn't
enough. If we want our goals to come true, we must go beyond
believing in them; we must ensure they come true, through empirical
testing and adjustment.
Patry argues that laws must be consistent with prevailing markets
and technologies because technologies play a large (although not
exclusive) role in creating consumer demand; markets then satisfy
that demand. Patry discusses how copyright laws arose out of
eighteenth-century markets and technology, the most important
characteristic of which was artificial scarcity. Artificial
scarcity was created by the existence of a small number
gatekeepers, by relatively high barriers to entry, and by analog
limitations on copying.
Markets and technologies change, in a symbiotic way, Patry asserts.
New technologies create new demand, requiring new business models.
The new markets created by the Internet and digital tools are the
greatest ever: Barriers to entry are low, costs of production and
distribution are low, the reach is global, and large sums of money
can be made off of a multitude of small transactions. Along with
these new technologies and markets comes the democratization of
creation; digital abundance is replacing analog artificial
scarcity.
The task of policymakers is to remake our copyright laws to fit our
times: our copyright laws, based on the eighteenth century concept
of physical copies, gatekeepers, and artificial scarcity, must be
replaced with laws based on access not ownership of physical goods,
creation by the masses and not by the few, and global rather than
regional markets. Patry's view is that of a traditionalist who
believes in the goals of copyright but insists that laws must match
the times rather than fight against the present and the future.
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