richard barbrook on Thu, 8 Nov 2001 02:07:01 +0100 (CET) |
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[Nettime-bold] Fwd: TidBITS#602/22-Oct-01 |
---- Begin Forwarded Text ---- >Date: Mon, 22 Oct 2001 21:00:00 -0700 >From: TidBITS Editors <editors@tidbits.com> >Subject: TidBITS#602/22-Oct-01 >To: tidbits@tidbits.com (TidBITS Distribution) >Reply-To: "TidBITS Editors" <editors@tidbits.com> > >TidBITS#602/22-Oct-01 >===================== [snip] >Steal This Essay 1: Content Is a Pure Public Good >------------------------------------------------- > by Dan Kohn > > Steal this essay, or, why these sorts of essays represent the > future of all publishing. Hint: I'm not getting paid for them. > > "Freedom of the press belongs to those who own one." > - A.J. Liebling > > If you or anyone you know has ever or will ever produce content > (writing, music, video, etc.) and hopes to get paid for it, you > should be afraid. > > To see why, start by downloading (for free, of course) one of the > numerous peer-to-peer file sharing systems such as Aimster, > LimeWire, and eDonkey2000 that have emerged hydra-like to take the > place of Napster, whose head was cut off this spring by the > Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA). You will find > that much the same selection of MP3 music that was on Napster is > still available for free, as well as being accompanied by more and > more movies ("ripped" directly from DVDs), and nearly all other > forms of content, from Shakespeare's works to hard core adult > materials. > ><http://www.aimster.com/> ><http://www.limewire.com/> ><http://www.edonkey2000.com/> ><http://www.napster.com/> ><http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tbser=1206> > > What you will not find - even if you are the RIAA - is anyone to > sue. Because unlike Napster, there are no companies underlying the > software infrastructure, no servers to confiscate, no officers on > whom to serve papers. The next generation of peer-to-peer clients > relies on no central infrastructure whatsoever, and is being > developed by a loose knit group of developers spread around the > world, all donating their significant efforts without any real > hope of getting paid for their work. All of the developers are men > - or teenage boys - and though not following the typical societal > track toward prestige, they are just as competitive as any rival > athletes or entrepreneurs. Many are distributing their software as > open source, so anyone else can fix bugs and make improvements. > What this means is not just that the RIAA is applying makeup to > the corpse of the music industry as we've known it. In fact, it > heralds an even larger change about how all content is created and > distributed, and raises serious questions as to whether content > creators (such as the author of this essay) will ever be > compensated for our work. > > Read a few dozen articles by top technology analysts, and it is > often difficult to find one that doesn't breathlessly declare how > this or that new technology represents a sea change, an inflection > point, or the end of history. In fact, while the Internet's growth > rates have been quite high, other technologies such as radio and > gas cooking have actually been adopted faster. It may be, though, > that all of the hype surrounding the digital duplication and > peer-to-peer distribution of content actually underestimates the > impact on the authors and publishers of music, movies, and written > works. > > Put simply, in a world where there are essentially no costs to > replicate content and it is effectively impossible to stop anyone > from doing so at will, the current economic model underpinning > content creation will be dead. Despite the protestations of > lawyers, (certain) rock bands, and legislatures (all on the same > losing side, oddly enough), we are entering that brave new world. > > If, as this hard technology determinist viewpoint suggests, > content is destined to be free - i.e., the content creators and > publishers will not be directly compensated the way they are today > when you make a purchase from your local CD store - then the real > question is what system could replace the content compensation > system that has worked quite well for the last 300 years. However, > implementing revenue models for infinitely redistributable goods > is not an entirely novel question, and there are several economic > models that can support the creation of content. What there may > not be is _enough_ revenue to support the publishers of that > content in addition to the authors, which helps explain why the > RIAA is so eager to thwart digital distribution. When an ecosystem > undergoes severe environmental changes, certain organisms that > were previously essential - like the cyanobacteria that originally > converted carbon dioxide to oxygen, or the record companies' > A&R men - may recede to minor ecological niches. > > Economists have a term for what digital goods have become. Items > are "nonrival" when we can all make use of them without anyone > having to give them up. If I copy your CD, you're none the worse > for it (nonrival), but if I steal your car, you will probably be > upset (rival). Goods are "nonexcludable" when it becomes > impractical to stop everyone from making use of the item, once one > person can. It is infeasible, for instance, to stop additional > viewers of broadcast television (nonexcludable), while it is very > feasible to stop additional moviegoers from entering a theater > (excludable). Economists call nonrival, nonexcludable items "pure > public goods," although the name does not imply that public goods > can be provided only by the government. > > Lighthouses are a classic pure public good. They are nonrival > because each additional ship does not reduce the light available > to the others. They are nonexcludable because any ship sailing by > can see them. There are cases in New England two centuries ago of > shipping guilds building privately managed lighthouses, even > though the services couldn't be withheld from non-members. Most > medical research and nearly all basic scientific research today is > a pure public good, although for exactly this reason it is often > financed (at least indirectly) by the government. Other textbook > public goods are national defense, mosquito control, and public > radio. In each case, the cost of providing the item to one > consumer is the same as providing it to any number of consumers > (nonrival), and it is impractical to stop anyone from making use > of the good (nonexcludable). The table below provides some > examples. > > | EXCLUDABLE | NONEXCLUDABLE > -----------+--------------------+-------------------------------- > RIVAL | car, Walkman | unmanaged fishing rights > -----------+--------------------+-------------------------------- > NONRIVAL | movie in a movie | lighthouses, national defense, > | theater, concert | mosquito control > | in a large hall | > > If content is becoming a pure public good, it will necessitate a > radical rethinking of the recording industry's claim that copying > content is stealing. We as a society react very differently toward > the unpaid use of rival versus nonrival goods. Think of the > punishment inflicted, for example, on those who steal cars versus > those who listen to public radio without contributing to the fund > drives. Of course, whether a good is rival or not is beside the > point if you can successfully exclude people who don't pay. (Ask > Microsoft, whose cost for selling one copy of Office is > approximately the same as selling 100 million copies (nonrival), > but which has used informant tactics and large legal penalties to > make their software very excludable, at least for businesses.) > > The lawyers representing the recording and movie industry are well > aware of the threat to their business models of digital content, > and they believe they have already developed the answer: > encryption. Encryption represents the music industry's last, best > hope of maintaining their product as excludable. Why they are > wrong, and content protection is doomed to failure, will have to > wait for the next essay. > > [Dan Kohn is a General Partner with Skymoon Ventures. His writings > are announced through <dankohn-subscribe@yahoogroups.com> and can > be discussed through <dankohn-discuss-subscribe@yahoogroups.com>.] > ><http://www.dankohn.com/> ><http://www.skymoonventures.com/> > > > >$$ > > Non-profit, non-commercial publications may reprint articles if > full credit is given. Others please contact us. We don't guarantee > accuracy of articles. Caveat lector. Publication, product, and > company names may be registered trademarks of their companies. > > This file is formatted as setext. For more information send email > to <setext@tidbits.com>. A file will be returned shortly. > > For information: how to subscribe, where to find back issues, > and more, email <info@tidbits.com>. TidBITS ISSN 1090-7017. > Send comments and editorial submissions to: <editors@tidbits.com> > Back issues available at: <http://www.tidbits.com/tb-issues/> > And: <ftp://ftp.tidbits.com/issues/> > Full text searching available at: <http://www.tidbits.com/search/> > ------------------------------------------------------------------- > ---- End Forwarded Text ---- -- ___________________________________________________________________ Jeremy Quinn Karma Divers webSpace Design HyperMedia Research Centre <mailto:sharkbait@mac.com> <http://www.media.demon.co.uk> <phone:+44.[0].20.7737.6831> <pager:jermq@vizzavi.net> ------------------------ Yahoo! Groups Sponsor ---------------------~--> Get your FREE credit report with a FREE CreditCheck Monitoring Service trial http://us.click.yahoo.com/Gi0tnD/bQ8CAA/ySSFAA/GFYolB/TM ---------------------------------------------------------------------~-> Your use of Yahoo! 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