Occlith
Well-Known Member
Free Culture by Lawrence Lessig
Lessig believes creative works build on the past and that in order for us to keep creating, the public needs easy access to past ideas. Lessig gives examples of early technology in the USA and how legal decisions of ownership and licensing have affected culture. He then shows how the fear of technology by corporations and big interests has shrunk the pool of media available as public domain.
The writing style is informal, using layman's terms and stories to familiarize readers with copyright and the law. He covers many subjects such as: English book publishers; derivative works; the RIAA vs. p2p file sharers; the pharmaceutical industry; doujinshi manga; and his own experience of arguing before the Supreme Court.
The author offers some possible solutions to the problems presented in his book.
Free Culture is available in print and as a free download from:
http://free-culture.cc/freecontent/
Lessig believes creative works build on the past and that in order for us to keep creating, the public needs easy access to past ideas. Lessig gives examples of early technology in the USA and how legal decisions of ownership and licensing have affected culture. He then shows how the fear of technology by corporations and big interests has shrunk the pool of media available as public domain.
The writing style is informal, using layman's terms and stories to familiarize readers with copyright and the law. He covers many subjects such as: English book publishers; derivative works; the RIAA vs. p2p file sharers; the pharmaceutical industry; doujinshi manga; and his own experience of arguing before the Supreme Court.
The author offers some possible solutions to the problems presented in his book.
Free Culture is available in print and as a free download from:
http://free-culture.cc/freecontent/