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In Copyright's Arc, Martin Skladany rejects a one-size-fits-all
copyright regime. Within developed countries, copyright's
incentives have spawned multinational corporations that create a
plethora of slick, hyped entertainment options that encourage
Americans to overconsume, whereas in developing countries, extreme
copyright blocks the widespread distribution of entertainment,
which impedes women's equality and human rights movements.
Meanwhile, moderate copyright in middle-income countries helps
foster artistic movements that forge inclusive national identities.
Given these conditions, Skladany argues that copyright should vary
between countries, following an arc across the development
spectrum.
In Copyright's Arc, Martin Skladany rejects a one-size-fits-all
copyright regime. Within developed countries, copyright's
incentives have spawned multinational corporations that create a
plethora of slick, hyped entertainment options that encourage
Americans to overconsume, whereas in developing countries, extreme
copyright blocks the widespread distribution of entertainment,
which impedes women's equality and human rights movements.
Meanwhile, moderate copyright in middle-income countries helps
foster artistic movements that forge inclusive national identities.
Given these conditions, Skladany argues that copyright should vary
between countries, following an arc across the development
spectrum.
When the idea of copyright was enshrined in the Constitution it was
intended to induce citizens to create. Today, however, copyright
has morphed into a system that offers the bulk of its protection to
a select number of major corporate content providers (or Big
Copyright), which has turned us from a country of creators into one
of consumers who spend, on average, ten hours each day on
entertainment. In this alarming but illuminating book, Martin
Skladany examines our culture of overconsumption and shows not only
how it leads to addiction, but also how it is unraveling important
threads - of family, friendship, and community - in our society.
Big Copyright versus the People should be read by anyone interested
in understanding how Big Copyright managed to get such a lethal
grip on our culture and what can be done to loosen it.
When the idea of copyright was enshrined in the Constitution it was
intended to induce citizens to create. Today, however, copyright
has morphed into a system that offers the bulk of its protection to
a select number of major corporate content providers (or Big
Copyright), which has turned us from a country of creators into one
of consumers who spend, on average, ten hours each day on
entertainment. In this alarming but illuminating book, Martin
Skladany examines our culture of overconsumption and shows not only
how it leads to addiction, but also how it is unraveling important
threads - of family, friendship, and community - in our society.
Big Copyright versus the People should be read by anyone interested
in understanding how Big Copyright managed to get such a lethal
grip on our culture and what can be done to loosen it.
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