scholarly journals Re-Imagining Digital Copyright Through the Power of Imitation: Lessons from Confucius and Plato

2018 ◽  
Author(s):  
Giancarlo Frosio

For millennia, Western and Eastern culture shared a common creative paradigm. From Confucian China, across the Hindu Kush with the Indian Mahābhārata, the Bible, the Koran and the Homeric epics, to Platonic mimēsis and Shakespeare’s “borrowed feathers,” our culture was created under a fully open regime of access to pre-existing expressions and re-use. Creativity used to be propelled by the power of imitation. However, modern policies have largely forgotten the cumulative and collaborative nature of creativity. Actually, the last three decades have witnessed an unprecedented expansion of intellectual property rights in sharp contrast with the open and participatory social norms governing creativity in the networked environment. Against this background, this paper discusses the reaction to traditional copyright policy and the emergence of a social movement re-imagining copyright according to a common tradition focusing on re-use, collaboration, access and cumulative creativity. This reaction builds upon copyright’s growing irrelevance in the public mind, especially among younger generations in the digital environment, because of the emergence of new economics of digital content distribution in the Internet. Along the way, the rise of the users, and the demise of traditional gatekeepers, forced a process of reconsideration of copyright’s rationale and welfare incentives. Scholarly and market alternatives to traditional copyright have been plenty, attempting to reconcile pre-modern, modern and post-modern creative paradigms. Building upon this body of research, proposals and practice, this Article will finally try to chart a roadmap for reform that reconnects Eastern and Western creative experience in light of a common past, looking for a shared future.

2019 ◽  
pp. 274-304
Author(s):  
Andrew Murray

This chapter examines copyright issues from copying and distributing information from the internet. It considers the discussion focuses on how the internet has challenged the application and development of copyright law, considering web-copyright concerns such as linking, caching, and aggregating, citing Google Inc. v Copiepresse SCRL. It spends considerable time discussing the operation of the temporary eproduction right though key cases Infopaq International, and Public Relations Consultants Association v Newspaper Licensing Agency. The analysis then moves on to examine the communication to the public right created by the Copyright and Related Rights in the Information Society Directive, examining the application of the right through key cases such as Nils Svensson v Retriever Sverige, GS Media v Sanoma Media, and Stichting Brein v Ziggo BV.


2021 ◽  
Vol 29 (1) ◽  
pp. 99-121
Author(s):  
Natasha Kravchuk

Abstract Legal regulations codifying the privacy rights of children in digital contexts, both at national and international levels, are fragmentary. Existing norms primarily address issues related to child safety as well as data processing, but not the protection of his/her dignity and reputation. At the same time, the Internet Communications and Technology-related (ict) activities of parents, who are traditionally considered to be the primary defenders of their children’s rights but presently are the main contributors to the public image of their child, may endanger child privacy. To address the threat that “sharenting” creates, the privacy of the child should be considered not only as a right, but also in “the best interests of the child”. This conceptualisation of rights as argued, would allow for a greater degree of privacy protection as it requires authorities to take it into consideration, ‘in all actions concerning children’, and will guarantee that they allocate to it the proper weight, while balancing it with the rights of others.


2017 ◽  
Author(s):  
Giancarlo Frosio

This article discusses the resistance to the Digital Revolution and the emergence of a social movement “resisting the resistance.” Mass empowerment has political implications that may provoke reactionary counteractions. Ultimately—as I have discussed elsewhere—resistance to the Digital Revolution can be seen as a response to Baudrillard’s call to a return to prodigality beyond the structural scarcity of the capitalistic market economy. In Baudrillard’s terms, by increasingly commodifying knowledge and expanding copyright protection, we are taming limitless power with artificial scarcity to keep in place a dialectic of penury and unlimited need. In this paper, I will focus on certain global movements that do resist copyright expansion, such as creative commons, the open access movement, the Pirate Party, the A2K movement and cultural environmentalism. A nuanced discussion of these campaigns must account for the irrelevance of copyright in the public mind, the emergence of new economics of digital content distribution in the Internet, the idea of the death of copyright, and the demise of traditional gatekeepers. Scholarly and market alternatives to traditional copyright merit consideration here, as well. I will conclude my review of this movement “resisting the resistance” to the Digital Revolution by sketching out a roadmap for copyright reform that builds upon its vision.


Google Rules ◽  
2020 ◽  
pp. 151-164
Author(s):  
Joanne Elizabeth Gray

When private companies negotiate and enforce copyright rules that determine the scope and application of copyright across large portions of the digital environment, do they have a responsibility to act in the public interest? In this chapter, it is argued that they do bear a responsibility to act in the public interest, and strategies aimed at ensuring copyright regimes operate in the interest of a broad range of stakeholders are enumerated. There are multiple courses of action available. Monopoly power can be addressed directly, by breaking up companies or by breaking down barriers to entry in digital markets. Or public interest responsibilities can be imposed upon the intermediaries that dominate the digital environment. Both pathways are viable options for lawmakers and activists seeking to curtail Google’s power and to secure public interest outcomes in digital copyright governance.


Author(s):  
Alison Harcourt ◽  
George Christou ◽  
Seamus Simpson

This introductory chapter charts the debate on and importance of global standard-setting for the Internet and for Internet governance more broadly. Despite being highly contested, the importance of standards-developing organizations (SDOs) for ensuring and maintaining the openness, interconnectivity, and security of the Internet are critical. Their utility is outlined before setting out the central guiding questions, and aims and objectives of the book, theoretically and empirically. The added value of the approach taken in relation to SDO decision-making is explicated. The chapter then details developments within SDOs to address the public interest. It concludes with the structure, argument, and logic of the remaining chapters, with explanation of the choice of case studies, namely privacy/security, mobile communications standards, Intellectual Property Rights (IPR), and copyright. Each chapter in the book assesses the public interest in SDO decision-making and the mechanisms that have affected the direction of standards’ development.


2013 ◽  
Vol 9 (2) ◽  
Author(s):  
José Carlos Sales dos Santos

Resumo Com o potencial de interatividade e compartilhamento de conteúdos em rede, os governos viabilizam condições diversas de acesso a informações governamentais, prerrogativa essencial para a consolidação da transparência política no processo democrático. Neste contexto, e compreendida como órgão governamental produtor de informações públicas, a Assembleia Legislativa da Bahia – ALBA também procura disponibilizar conteúdos digitais orientados à sociedade. O artigo do presente artigo é analisar o modus operandi dos dispositivos comunicacionais utilizados para a disseminação e consecução de conteúdos informacionais públicos através do website da ALBA, engendrada nas estruturas de prestação de serviços propostas pelo Governo Eletrônico. Discutem-se os aspectos conceituais do governo eletrônico, as perspectivas e propostas focalizadas no marco legal brasileiro, para apresentar as possíveis aproximações da Assembleia com as categorias previstas no governo eletrônico. O roteiro de entrevista orientado aos responsáveis administrativos do website da ALBA, e a observação sistematizada do sítio, constituíram os principais instrumentos de coleta de dados. A conclusão evidencia que o site analisado respondeu satisfatoriamente à disponibilidade de informações relacionadas aos parlamentares, mas, no plano ‘interatividade’, a pesquisa apresentou uma relativa ineficácia administrativa para responder às demandas dos cidadãos.Palavras-chave Assembleia Legislativa da Bahia – ALBA, Governo Eletrônico, Conteúdos Informacionais Digitais, Informação Pública.Abstract As a governmental producer of public information, the Assembleia Legislativa da Bahia – ALBA offers political oriented digital content to citizens, as a prerogative to transparency of government activities. These informational digital content require consistent with the interest of the public and the audience to meet the essential conditions for the exercise of democracy. The internet booking capabilities for the production, dissemination and preservation of information produced in the public sector. From these considerations, the goal of this article is to analyze the modus operandi of the devices used for dissemination and achievement of public informational content via the website of ALBA, based on the structures to provide services proposed by Gov. Discuss conceptual aspects of e-Government, the perspectives and proposals focused on the Brazilian legal framework, to present the possible approximations of the Assembly with the categories provided for in e-Government. This article part of successful results in dissertation research developed by the author at the Programa de Pós-Graduação em Ciência da Informação at the Universidade Federal da Bahia – PPGCIUFBA.Keywords Assembleia Legislativa da Bahia – ALBA, Electronic Government, Digital Content Information, Public Information   


Google Rules ◽  
2020 ◽  
pp. 135-150
Author(s):  
Joanne Elizabeth Gray

This chapter provides an evaluation of Google’s influence on copyright law and identifies the implications for the public interest. Google’s influence raises critical questions regarding monopoly power, accountability, transparency, and bias in digital copyright governance. From Google Books, to the issues over Google News in Europe, to private copyright rule-making and algorithmic enforcement, we have moved beyond narrow debates about access versus remuneration, even beyond Google’s “innovate first, permission later” heuristic. Today, the digital copyright debate is entangled with issues of accountability, transparency, due process, and concentrated private power in a rapidly evolving digital environment. Grappling with copyright under the influence of Google requires responding to issues that are complex, unstable, and inconsistent.


2014 ◽  
Vol 7 (2) ◽  
pp. 197-211
Author(s):  
James Crossley

Using the 400th anniversary of the King James Bible as a test case, this article illustrates some of the important ways in which the Bible is understood and consumed and how it has continued to survive in an age of neoliberalism and postmodernity. It is clear that instant recognition of the Bible-as-artefact, multiple repackaging and pithy biblical phrases, combined with a popular nationalism, provide distinctive strands of this understanding and survival. It is also clear that the KJV is seen as a key part of a proud English cultural heritage and tied in with traditions of democracy and tolerance, despite having next to nothing to do with either. Anything potentially problematic for Western liberal discourse (e.g. calling outsiders “dogs,” smashing babies heads against rocks, Hades-fire for the rich, killing heretics, using the Bible to convert and colonize, etc.) is effectively removed, or even encouraged to be removed, from such discussions of the KJV and the Bible in the public arena. In other words, this is a decaffeinated Bible that has been colonized by, and has adapted to, Western liberal capitalism.


2020 ◽  
Vol 2020 (4) ◽  
pp. 116-1-116-7
Author(s):  
Raphael Antonius Frick ◽  
Sascha Zmudzinski ◽  
Martin Steinebach

In recent years, the number of forged videos circulating on the Internet has immensely increased. Software and services to create such forgeries have become more and more accessible to the public. In this regard, the risk of malicious use of forged videos has risen. This work proposes an approach based on the Ghost effect knwon from image forensics for detecting forgeries in videos that can replace faces in video sequences or change the mimic of a face. The experimental results show that the proposed approach is able to identify forgery in high-quality encoded video content.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document