Posted in digital, idea, law, society,
copyright is dead, long live trackright
Copyright, as the name implies, grants content owner the right of copy.
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In the digital realm, to move a file is to copy it somewhere else and then delete the original. in our digital era every movement is a copy, and it’s insane (and anti-democratic) to expect permission for each and every movement you make.
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In other words: We can either have a totalitarian society watching our every movement, or the death of copyrights. Which one do you prefer?
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Yeah, I thought so.
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Then again, it’s unfair for others to profit from content of creators without some payment. Right now Google is redesigning its google reader with social features to compete with Twitter and Facebook.
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Or: A giant company is using content it doesn’t own to better position itself in the market. And not paying a dime for content creators. Talk about Free.
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Is that it?
the right of tracks
metadata - the information about the information - is powerful. So far, google keeps it to itself, simply because nobody asked.
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assume the peanut association commissions me to draw… well… peanuts. imagine if I can publish it on my own network systems (twitter, blog, facebook) and later give them the complete track history to determine the success of the campaign, and be paid accordingly. Now that’s a revenue model.
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too bad under existing rules, I - the content creator -have no say on my own creation tracks. heck, I’m not even allowed to see it if I don’t own the database. And oh boy, these social networks have a field day with that data.
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Can we just forget all this cry over copyright and move to a trackright system? Like, you’re free to publish my work anywhere, but you are required by law to share the tracks with me. reputation is the new currency anyways and I need all the bragging rights I can get.
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That sound reasonable.
