Archive for the ‘drm’ Category
Wednesday, December 10th, 2008 by Patrick Ross
How many times have we seen this before? A federal policymaker speaks on copyright and makes several cogent and reasonable remarks about the cost of piracy and steps by the private sector to reduce that threat and provide more legal alternatives to consumers. An online critic of copyright generates hits by providing his like-minded readers [...]
Posted in capitol hill, copyright law, copyright opponents, counterfeit, creators, drm, education, FCC, internet, network neutrality, p2p, piracy
Tuesday, December 2nd, 2008 by Patrick Ross
With this post I continue my five-part series on ten myths surrounding copyright. I have tilted at these canards for years, and now I’m trying to compile those critiques into one series. In the first post I addressed the false notion of copyright suppressing artists and the false claims of rights by some creative works [...]
Posted in blogging, copyright law, copyright opponents, creators, drm, fair use, licensing, market forces, piracy, property rights
Monday, November 17th, 2008 by Patrick Ross
It’s always nice to write about good news in this space; ito occurs with far too little regularity. Today’s good news is about a deal involving a voluntary agreement on photo licensing. As announced by the PLUS (Picture Licensing Universal System) coalition in a recent press release: Three major publishers have called for the adoption [...]
Posted in drm, licensing, market forces
Thursday, October 16th, 2008 by Patrick Ross
How do you stop a viral spread of false information, for example the myth that Senator Barack Obama is a Muslim or that a tooth left in Coca-Cola will dissolve overnight? Well, the fact is, you don’t. That’s the problem with these myths, they’re like Jason from “Halloween” – they won’t die. That brings me [...]
Posted in blogging, copyright opponents, creators, drm, fair use, internet, piracy
Wednesday, October 8th, 2008 by Patrick Ross
BERLIN, GERMANY: It doesn’t seem to matter if I’m in Las Vegas (CES), Los Angeles (Digital Hollywood), Cannes (Midem) or Berlin — the big mystery before both creative industries and technologists is how on Earth to make money in the digital space. That was a recurring theme at the sessions I attended at the Popkomm [...]
Posted in copyright opponents, drm, events, internet, licensing, market forces, piracy, property rights
Friday, October 3rd, 2008 by Patrick Ross
After speaking on a panel earlier today at a conference here at Ball State University (apparently their football team is 5-0, or so everyone told me), a student asked me why he couldn’t legally make copies of his DVDs. I don’t know if the question was prompted by news of the RealDVD service by RealPlayer [...]
Posted in copyright law, drm, internet, market forces, piracy, property rights
Tuesday, September 30th, 2008 by Patrick Ross
About two years ago I was on a panel where a speaker said he had just come back from Silicon Valley, and every investor he met said they wanted to get in with any start-up that had a way to get creative works to people more easily, the law be dammed. Asked why they weren’t [...]
Posted in copyright law, drm, fair use, licensing, piracy
Tuesday, September 2nd, 2008 by Patrick Ross
It never ceases to amaze me how there could be objections to the efforts of Congress to encourage colleges and universities to enforce the law on their campuses while educating — yes, educating at educational institutions — their students on the law, and hopefully what is right and what is wrong. We all know many [...]
Posted in capitol hill, copyright opponents, drm, education, p2p
Wednesday, May 7th, 2008 by Patrick Ross
HOLLYWOOD, CA: I've been speaking for several years now on the fact
that the creative industries continue to show more flexibility in terms of
licensing their works to platforms and distributors. What's nice is, every time
I speak at a conference like Digital
Hollywood, there is still more evidence to support that, and more panelists
and attendees who not only agree with it but are living it.
Posted in drm, market forces, network neutrality
Thursday, April 17th, 2008 by Patrick Ross
For some time now the Associated Press — a fantastic news service that, despite its excellence, once distributed my reporting — has been using a service by Silicon Valley-based Attributor to track the distribution of their articles online. Attributor isn't an access-blocking technology. Instead, it lets AP know very quickly how their output is being used, be it on a licensed newspaper or TV site, a blog, or an unlicensed aggregator. The technology itself is neutral; the AP — whose newspaper owners are represented by Copyright Alliance member the Newspaper Association of America — can choose how to respond to the information the technology provides it.
Posted in drm, licensing, market forces
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