Cultural Production In The Digital Age: Barriers and Incentives To Sharing COM302/CHID370 12 November 2008 Kathy E. Gill.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
In your own words, please answer: 1. What is a copyright? 2. What does a copyright protect?
Advertisements

Pirates of the Internet and how not to be one!. Prepared by: Linda Sears, Library Media Specialist Oak Mountain Intermediate School February, 2005.
Todays Objective You are going to consider ethical questions about real- life decisions young creators make in exercising their creative rights and responsibilities,
COPYRIGHT AND COPYWRONG Respect Copyright, Celebrate Creativity.
COPYRIGHT BASICS Linda Sharp Marsha Stevenson
Intellectual Property Image: William J. Wynn.
Copyright Law & Your Websites Computer Science 201 November 21, 2005 Sarah Garner, J.D., M.L.I.S. Law Library Director,
Copyright in Scholarship Gail Digital Research & Scholarship.
Legal Issues Podcasting In Biz Kathy Gill 6 May 2008.
Protects works of “intellectual property” -- creative expressions of ideas in fixed symbolic form.
Intellectual Property
HSC: All My Own Work Copyright.
CPSC156: The Internet Co-Evolution of Technology and Society Lecture 7: February 6, 2007 More about browsers (ack.: L. Cranor); Introduction to Digital.
Game March 22, 2005Ashley Irvin/ Copyright Copyright and Plagiarism for Students Exploring the world of copyright and plagiarism.
1 Intellectual Property Includes the results of intellectual activities in the arts, sciences, and industry Includes the results of intellectual activities.
Chapter 14 Legal Aspects of Sport Marketing
Copyright Laws What you should know! Presented By: Ms. Diana Arcaute 4 th Grade Teacher Las Yescas Elementary Los Fresnos CISD.
What is copyright? the exclusive legal right, given to an originator or an assignee to print, publish, perform, film, or record literary, artistic, or.
~ Copyright ~ Steering through uncharted waters; otherwise known as going with the flow… April 20, 2010 Sharon C. Bender.
COPYRIGHT & THE WEB LIS Information Technologies – Dr. Gilok Choi Pratt Institute, School of Information & Library Science Spring, 2009 By Diane.
Information Ethics Objective: Students will understand how to use information ethically.
Copyright in the Digital Age October 14, 2004 FEDLINK Membership Meeting Carrie Russell, Copyright Specialist ALA Office for Information Technology Policy.
7/3/08 Created by Mae Thomas Property Rights There can be consequences if you violate others' intellectual property rights. (That is, if you copy something.
CS110: Computers and the Internet Intellectual Property.
COPYRIGHT AND FAIR USE POLICIES By Amanda Newell.
COPYRIGHT: A Pirate’s Paradise? Prepared form Com 435 by Donna L. Ferullo, J.D. Director University Copyright Office Donna L. Ferullo.
Future Ready Schools Copyright or Wrong? John Brim Instructional Technology Division North Carolina Department of Public Instruction.
Oluwakemi Chima. The Congress shall have Power…To promote the progress of Science and useful Arts, by securing for limited Times to Authors and Inventors.
Future Ready Schools BMA-IBT DEMONSTRATE ETHICAL AND LEGAL ACTIONS WITH REGARDS TO PLAGIARISM, FAIR USE, AND COPYRIGHT LAWS.
Intellectual property rights & Internet A research about the effect of Internet on Intellectual property rights & tort in China Qiong Tang Course: Internet.
Intellectual Property, Copyright, and Fair Use What are they and why do we care???
COPYRIGHT IS A FORM OF PROTECTION GROUNDED IN THE U.S. CONSTITUTION AND GRANTED BY LAW FOR ORIGINAL WORKS OF AUTHORSHIP FIXED IN A TANGIBLE MEDIUM OF EXPRESSION.
CPSC156a: The Internet Co-Evolution of Technology and Society Lecture 11: October 16, 2003 Introduction to Digital Copyright and Online Content Distribution.
Copyright and the Classroom by Kelly Edwards. Goals/Objectives By the end of this unit, you will: Know the history of copyright in the US Know the role.
Plagiarism - You can do Something About it... Copyright ©2000 Rochester Institute of Technology, Wallace.
Intellectual Property
Fundamentals of Business Law Summarized Cases, 8 th Ed., and Excerpted Cases, 2 nd Ed. ROGER LeROY MILLER Institute for University Studies Arlington, Texas.
Copyright and Fair Use for Educators.. What is Intellectual Property?  It is property that comes from an idea that is expressed in a tangible form. 
Web 2.0: Making the Web Work for You, Illustrated Unit B: Finding Media for Projects.
Principles of Arts, Audio/Video Production Copyright Law ©
Copyright Laws Copyright Protection and Fair Use.
Intellectual Property What’s legal?. Discuss Terms  intellectual property, plagiarism, copyright-patent-trademark, public domain, fair use  piracy,
Intellectual Property: Introduction to Copyright Peter B. Hirtle Intellectual Property Officer Cornell University Library
COPYRIGHT ISSUES IN EDUCATION Presentation by Ben Hilt.
Los Angeles Times v. Free Republic Katy Clevenger Fall 2011 Introduction to Library and Information Science.
Objective: Students will be able to: identify the legal and ethical considerations involved in using the creative work of others and understand an individual’s.
HSC: All My Own Work What is copyright and what does it protect? How does it relate to me?
Copyright and Intellectual Property Right 1. 2 Use and Protection of Intellectual Property in Online Business Intellectual property (general term) includes:
Intellectual Property And Fair Use
Your Copyright Crash Course! April Tafolla Adame Elementary September 2011.
Slides prepared by Cyndi Chie and Sarah Frye1 A Gift of Fire Third edition Sara Baase Chapter 4: Intellectual Property.
Building on Other’s Creative Expression By: Alicia Trevino.
Copyright & Fair Use in the Digital Age MSDE Webinar – January 14, 2015 Instructional Technology and School Library Media Program, Division of Curriculum,
Search Engine Thumbnail Image Reproduction Are Fair Use Cyberlaw By: Megan Penecale and Lindsey Hill.
By: Georgina Salas EDTC What is Copyright?? The exclusive legal right, given to an originator or an assignee to print, publish, perform, film,
Stephen W. Watts Northcentral University. Audio Version of this Presentation To access an audio version of this presentation, please click on this link.this.
Are You a Pirate?. A pirate…. “one who infringes another’s copyright or business rights or who broadcasts without authorization”
Copyright and Ethics In The Digital Age COM495 9 November 2010 Joseph J. Probst.
Intellectual property (IP) refers to creations of the mind: inventions, literary and artistic works, music, movies, symbols, names, images, and designs.
Copyright Uppsala 12/ Katarzyna Płaneta-Björnskär Department of Informatics and Media.
6/18/2016 COPYRIGHT AND Fair Use Guidelines “Respect Copyright, Celebrate Creativity”
DIGITAL FOOTPRINTS 11 TIPS FOR MONITORING YOUR DIGITAL FOOTPRINT AND 5 TIPS TO MAKE IT POSITIVE.
Copyright and Fair use guidelines FAIR USE GUIDELINES FOR EDUCATIONAL MULTIMEDIA: WHAT TEACHERS AND STUDENTS NEED TO KNOW.
Copyright material does not permit reproducing the material, publicly displaying or performing it, or engaging in any of the acts reserved for the copyright.
Copyright and Student Media
Ethical issues in relation to Copyright
CS 115: COMPUTING FOR The Socio-Techno Web
Lesson 2- Ethical Use of Digital Resources
Copyright Crash Course
Computer ethics in computer science curriculum
Presentation transcript:

Cultural Production In The Digital Age: Barriers and Incentives To Sharing COM302/CHID November 2008 Kathy E. Gill

Framing Web 2.0 Technologies

These technologies change how we interact with cultural objects. Fundamental Premise: We are no longer merely a consumer ; we can also be a producer.

This is a major shift from the late 20th century model:

In Todays Digital World, It Is Easier to Borrow, Copy, Manipulate

This means it is technically easier to express ourselves in new, creative ways.

Traditional Model Mediated Communication was a one-way Mass Communication Model

New Model Mediated communication is transitioning to a circular (Osgood & Schramm) interpersonal model

What are the cultural industries? News media Advertising industry Television & movies Music Fashion What else?

Quotable [N]on-commercial cultural production and unconstrained expression within the Internet undermines capitalisms production of meaning. p135 - from Michael Strangelove, The Empire of Mind (University of Toronto Press, 2005)

The Clash Culture as a freely flowing current of ideas and practices runs head first into culture as intellectual property

Ask permission each time Ask permission each use

The Barrier Copyright originated in a time when the view of authors was romantic: "originality was elevated to being located in and belonging to the self of the author"... words created by these authors were considered "original" and thus distinguishable from mass-produced commodities. (Lessig, presentation, Copyright, Cultural Production and Open Content Licensing)

The Enforcer Digital Rights Management Act tend to think of this with movies and songs, but also can be pay-to-view sections of any website like the WSJ RIAA cease and desist letters Losing on two levels

Why P2P Got A Bad Name Hint: It wasnt because of production

What Is P2P? The sharing of computer resources and services by direct exchange between two systems Examples: Home, Skype, ICQ, and, of course, Napster A peer gives some resources and also receives some

Watch EFF Slide Show

Law Suits Backfiring [With Capitol v Thomas] looking to head to a mistrial, making the $222,000 judgment null and void, the two largest decisions in the RIAAs war on downloading have been against them. In both cases the RIAA admitted it was wrong and [was] ordered to pay the fees. Source

Controversy Copyright purpose is to promote the progress of science and the useful arts … and the duration for exclusivity is to be limited … - US Constitution

Infringement "Copyright infringement" means exercising one of the copyright holder's exclusive rights without permission. Should a copyright holder sue on grounds of infringement, the defendent may argue that the use was "fair use" The fair use doctrine allows copyrighted works to be used in some circumstances, such as commentary, criticism, news reporting or educational use.

Is This Infringement?

What About The Content YOU Produce?

Digital technologies enable a "Tinkering culture" -- a "read write rip burn culture"

Sources Copyright, Fair Use & The Evolution of Creative Commons: commonshttp:/ commonshttp:/ Copyright and Options for Creative Practitioners: for-creative-practitioners for-creative-practitioners Image: Consume. Be silent. Die. (unknown) Web 2.0 Image (1): Web 2.0 Image (2): firms.html firms.html Fine Print :

Kathy E. Gill Some Rights Reserved: