|
|
Showing 1 - 8 of
8 matches in All Departments
Information and the marketplace are uneasy bedfellows. The
dissemination of information via media can have many different and
overlapping purposes, including entertainment, art, ideology, and
research. It is particularly among groups that need to share
information - the academic and scientific communities, for example
- that viewing it as something that can be bought and sold is
intrusive and even damaging. There are many other reasons why the
commodification of information, which continues to move from
strength to strength with the expansion of international free
trade, must be carefully scrutinized. To this end, a conference of
specialists with expertise encompassing the area of law and
practice where intellectual property, communications, privacy, free
speech, collaborative research, and international trade all
intersect met under the auspices of the University of Haifa Faculty
of Law in May 1999. This book presents the analyses and
recommendations that emerged from that conference. As one might
expect, a broad spectrum of views is expressed, from commercialism
as the liberator of free speech to commodification as de facto
censorship.
The United States Supreme Court famously labeled copyright "the
engine of free expression" because it provides a vital economic
incentive for much of the literature, commentary, music, art, and
film that makes up our public discourse. Yet today's copyright law
also does the opposite--it is often used to quash news reporting,
political commentary, church dissent, historical scholarship,
cultural critique, and artistic expression.
In Copyright's Paradox, Neil Weinstock Netanel explores the
tensions between copyright law and free speech, revealing how
copyright can impose unacceptable burdens on expression. Netanel
provides concrete illustrations of how copyright often prevents
speakers from effectively conveying their message, tracing this
conflict across both traditional and digital media and considering
current controversies such as the remix and copying culture rampant
on YouTube and MySpace, hip-hop music and digital sampling, and the
Google Book Search litigation. The author juxtaposes the dramatic
expansion of copyright holders' proprietary control against the
individual's newly found ability to digitally cut, paste, edit,
remix, and distribute sound recordings, movies, TV programs,
graphics, and texts the world over. He tests whether, in light of
these developments and others, copyright still serves as a vital
engine of free expression and he assesses how copyright does--and
does not--burden speech. Taking First Amendment values as his
lodestar, Netanel argues that copyright should be limited to how it
can best promote robust debate and expressive diversity, and he
presents a blueprint for how that can be accomplished.
Copyright and free speech will always stand in sometension. But
there are ways in which copyright can continue to serve as an
engine of free expression while leaving ample room for speakers to
build on copyrighted works to convey their message, express their
personal commitments, and create new art. This book shows us how.
The Development Agenda is the result of the recent campaign to
ensure that the intellectual property treaty regime permits -- and,
indeed, empowers -- developing countries to tailor their
intellectual property laws as they deem necessary to promote
development and serve the welfare of their citizens. The Agenda's
adoption by the World Intellectual Property Organization (WIPO) in
September 2007 was an historic watershed for that UN agency, which
has long viewed its mandate as the unabashed promotion of greater
intellectual property rights throughout the world.
Written by some of the world's leading IP scholars, Neil W.
Netanel has edited this compilation of articles in order to examine
the Development Agenda and the broader issues it touches upon.
Contributors include leading scholars from various disciplines,
including economics, political science, and law, and from countries
at various stages of development, including China, India, Brazil,
Argentina, Chile, Nigeria, Egypt, and Israel, in addition to the
US, Canada, and EU. They also include experts from NGO-think tanks,
UNCTAD, and the two Brazilian diplomats who were the leading
advocates of the Development Agenda's adoption.
Jewish copyright law is a rich body of copyright doctrine and
jurisprudence that developed in parallel with Anglo-American and
Continental European copyright laws and the printers' privileges
that preceded them. Jewish copyright law traces its origins to a
dispute adjudicated in 1550, over 150 years before modern copyright
law is typically said to have emerged with the Statute of Anne of
1709. It continues to be applied today, notably in a rabbinic
ruling outlawing pirated software, issued at Microsoft's request.
In From Maimonides to Microsoft, Professors Netanel and Nimmer
trace the development of Jewish copyright law by relaying the
stories of five dramatic disputes, running from the sixteenth
century to the present. They describe each dispute in its
historical context and examine the rabbinic rulings that sought to
resolve it. Remarkably, these disputes address some of the same
issues that animate copyright jurisprudence today: Is copyright a
property right or a limited regulatory prerogative? What is
copyright's rationale? What is its scope? How can copyright be
enforced against an infringer who is beyond the applicable legal
authority's reach? This book introduces copyright scholars,
students, and practitioners to an entirely new narrative and body
of copyright jurisprudence. Presenting new material regarding the
operation of the Jewish book trade and some of the leading disputes
affecting it, Professors Netanel and Nimmer examine how copyright
disputes arose from their respective historical contexts and, in
turn, reverberated through Jewish life. From Maimonides to
Microsoft examines how one area of Jewish law has developed in
historical context and how Jewish copyright law compares with its
Anglo-American and Continental European counterparts.
Jewish copyright law is a rich body of jurisprudence that developed
in parallel with modern copyright laws and the book privileges that
preceded them. Jewish copyright law owes its origins to a
reprinting ban that the Rome rabbinic court issued for three books
of Hebrew grammar in 1518. It continues to be applied today,
notably in a rabbinic ruling outlawing pirated software, issued at
Microsoft's request. In From Maimonides to Microsoft, Professor
Netanel traces the historical development of Jewish copyright law
by comparing rabbinic reprinting bans with secular and papal book
privileges and by relaying the stories of dramatic disputes among
publishers of books of Jewish learning and liturgy. He describes
each dispute in its historical context and examines the rabbinic
rulings that sought to resolve it. Remarkably, the rabbinic
reprinting bans and copyright rulings address some of the same
issues that animate copyright jurisprudence today: Is copyright a
property right or just a right to receive fair compensation? How
long should copyrights last? What purposes does copyright serve?
While Jewish copyright law has borrowed from its secular law
counterpart at key junctures, it fashions strikingly different
answers to those key questions. The story of Jewish copyright law
also intertwines with the history of the Jewish book trade and with
steadfast efforts of rabbinic leaders to maintain their authority
to regulate that trade in the face of the dramatic erosion of
Jewish communal autonomy in the eighteenth and nineteenth
centuries. This book will thus be of considerable interest to
students of Jewish law and history, as well as copyright scholars
and practitioners.
Providing a vital economic incentive for much of society's music,
art, and literature, copyright is widely considered "the engine of
free expression"--but it is also used to stifle news reporting,
political commentary, historical scholarship, and even artistic
expression. In Copyright'sParadox, Neil Weinstock Netanel explores
the tensions between copyright law and free speech, revealing the
unacceptable burdens on expression that copyright can impose.
Tracing the conflict across both traditional and digital media,
Netanel examines the remix and copying culture at the heart of
current controversies related to the Google Book Search litigation,
YouTube and MySpace, hip-hop music, and digital sampling. The
author juxtaposes the dramatic expansion of copyright holders'
proprietary control against the individual's newly found ability to
digitally cut, paste, edit, remix, and distribute sound recordings,
movies, TV programs, graphics, and texts the world over. He tests
whether, in light of these and other developments, copyright still
serves as a vital engine of free expression and assesses how
copyright does--and does not--burden free speech. Taking First
Amendment values as his lodestar, Netanel offers a crucial, timely
call to redefine the limits of copyright so it can most effectively
promote robust debate and expressive diversity--and he presents a
definitive blueprint for how this can be accomplished.
Copyright law was once an esoteric backwater, the special province
of professional authors, publishers, and entertainment companies,
but it now impacts everyone who uses the Internet or consumes
cultural expression on a computer, mobile phone, or personal
tablet. Copyright has come to be immensely controversial as well.
For instance, the proposed Stop Online Piracy Act (SOPA),
copyright-industry backed legislation met its defeat at the hands
of a popular outcry spearheaded by Google, Wikipedia, and other
online aggregators of content and information. SOPA and other such
initiatives would target the massive online piracy that threatens
the economic viability of newspapers, movie studios, record labels,
and book publishers. But the copyright industries' arguably
heavy-handed response threatens to chill the free-wheeling
wellspring of online creativity, expression, and ready access to
information upon which we have all come to rely. To navigate the
shoals of these opposing, equally dim prospects is a complex
undertaking. No less daunting, even for the educated layperson, is
to understand the legal framework, policy arguments, industry
economics, legislative proposals, and judicial decisions that fuel
the copyright debate. In Copyright: What Everyone Needs to Know
(R), law professor Neil Netanel guides readers through the murky
dynamics of modern copyright law, answering questions about topics
such as the new challenges posed by the digital environment,
copyright and piracy in the global marketplace, and proposals for
future reform. From the basis and purpose of copyright law to a
glimpse at what the law could - or should - become in the digital
age, Netanel offers the necessary tools for following the debates
that have raged everywhere from internet forums to the halls of
Congress.
Copyright law was once an esoteric backwater, the special province
of professional authors, publishers, and media companies. This is
no longer the case. In the age of social media and cloud storage,
we have become a copying and sharing culture. Much of our everyday
communication, work, and entertainment now directly involves
copyright law. Copyright law and policy are ferociously contested.
Record labels, movie studios, book publishers, newspapers, and many
authors rage that those who share music, video, text, and images
over the Internet are astealinga their property. By contrast,
copyright industry critics celebrate digital technologyas potential
to make the universe of movies, music, books, and art accessible
anytime and anywhere a and to empower individuals the world over to
express themselves by sharing and remixing those works. These
critics argue that excessive copyright enforcement threatens that
promise and stifles creativity. In Copyright: What Everyone Needs
to Know (R), Neil Weinstock Netanel explains the concepts needed to
understand the heated debates about copyright law and policy. He
identifies the combatants, unpacks their arguments, and illuminates
what is at stake in the debates over copyrightas present and
future.
|
|