matthewmcvickar + copyright   16

Andy Baio: Criminal Creativity: Untangling Cover Song Licensing on YouTube (Waxy.org)
There are millions of cover songs on YouTube, with around 12,000 new covers uploaded in the last 24 hours. Until recently, all but a sliver were illegal, considered infringement under current copyright law. Nearly all were non-commercial, created out of love by fans of the source material, with no negative impact on the market value of the original. This is creativity criminalized, quite possibly the most popular creative act that's against the law.
music  copyright  creativity 
10 days ago by matthewmcvickar
Waxy.org: No Copyright Intended
‘No amount of lawsuits or legal threats will change the fact that this behavior is considered normal — I'd wager the vast majority of people under 25 see nothing wrong with non-commercial sharing and remixing, or think it's legal already.’
copyright  future  law  youtube  video 
december 2011 by matthewmcvickar
Honolulu Weekly: Sample This
David Goldberg reviews ‘Creative License: The Law and Culture of Digital Sampling’ by Kembrew McLeod and Peter DiCola for the Honolulu Weekly, using pieces of interviews with local musicians — noise artist and netlabel head Dominic Amorin (Uvovu), hip-hop producer TKO, and myself (as Lapwing) — as a lens into the book.
friends  self  sampling  music  copyright 
september 2011 by matthewmcvickar
The Awl: Was Aaron Swartz Stealing?
A great rundown of the charges leveled against Swartz, what they mean, and a thorough examination of the assumptions and preconceptions surrounding this story.
copyright  academia  information 
august 2011 by matthewmcvickar
Marco.org: What I expect
In spite of the potential for people being ignorant or abusive with what he writes, Marco writes because ”I’m freely expressing my ideas in public, which helps me clarify my thoughts, enhance and alter my views, and improve my writing over time. I think I’m getting the better end of the deal.”
writing  blogging  wwic  copyright  culture  selfimprovement 
january 2011 by matthewmcvickar
BusinessWeek: Forever 21's Fast (and Loose) Fashion Empire
Is Forever 21’s Chang family capitalist geniuses or just exploitative and plagiaristic?
consumerism  capitalism  labor  america  forever21  shopping  plagiarism  copyright 
january 2011 by matthewmcvickar
Marc Weidenbaum — Despite the Downturn: An Answer Album
I may never get around to listening to this, but the idea is fantastic.

"An article in the May 2010 issue of the magazine The Atlantic critiqued the current generation of young music fans for rampant copyright violation. In a small irony, the illustration used to decorate the article interpolated a detail of a preexisting work that appears to not yet be in the public domain. This notice isn’t intended as a criticism of the illustrator — quite the contrary; the illustration is excellent — but instead of the theoretical foundation of the article, which suggests a clear line between right and wrong where there is, in fact, significant ambiguity. I forwarded Traum’s image, and article it accompanied, to various musicians and asked them if they would record a piece of music that took Traum’s picture literally: use it as a score.”
music  copyright  fairuse  america  ip  musicbusiness  free 
december 2010 by matthewmcvickar
paidContent: Why The Music Industry Isn’t Suing Mashup Star ‘Girl Talk’
"So why hasn’t Gillis been hauled in front of a judge by the music industry? Probably because he’s the most unappealing defendant imaginable. Gillis would be a ready-made hero for copyright reformers; if he were sued, he’d have some of the best copyright lawyers in the country knocking on his door asking to take his case for free."
music  mashup  copyright  girltalk  law  sampling 
november 2010 by matthewmcvickar
Balkinization: Copyright: The Elephant in the Middle of Glee
"The fictional high school chorus at the center of Fox’s Glee has a huge problem — nearly a million dollars in potential legal liability. For a show that regularly tackles thorny issues like teen pregnancy and alcohol abuse, it’s surprising that a million dollars worth of lawbreaking would go unmentioned." This is a very interesting look at the frequency with which this show (that I have never seen) addresses copyright issues without actually addressing copyright issues. And it's dead-on about the potential for a television show or other media of this popularity to effect social change in the realm of copyright perception.
copyright  television  culture  america 
june 2010 by matthewmcvickar
tecosystems: Why I Am Against Software Patents
Plain and simple: software patents don't work because there's too much software and not enough people who know about it.
copyright  economics  ip  patents  software  technology 
march 2010 by matthewmcvickar
Times Labs Blog: Do music artists fare better in a world with illegal file-sharing?
"The most immediate revelation, of course, is that at some point next year revenues from gigs payable to artists will for the first time overtake revenues accrued by labels from sales of recorded music."
music  business  internet  money  copyright  filesharing  piracy  economics  riaa  graph  chart 
november 2009 by matthewmcvickar
Tiny Mix Tapes: Joe Biden's Problem with Music
Obama's always been silent about copyright and bootlegging, but Biden's been, apparently, quite the industry advocate and technology ignoramus.
politics  government  obama  copyright  riaa  ip  biden 
april 2009 by matthewmcvickar
Ars Technica: 750,000 lost jobs? The dodgy digits behind the war on piracy
How the two astronomical numbers most often thrown out by the intellectual property lobby are utterly bogus. Interesting: "When someone torrents a $12 album that they would have otherwise purchased, the record industry loses $12, to be sure. But that doesn't mean that $12 has magically vanished from the economy. On the contrary: someone has gotten the value of the album and still has $12 to spend somewhere else."
copyright  ip  music  riaa  government  america 
october 2008 by matthewmcvickar
Chronicle.com: How It Does It: The RIAA Explains How It Catches Alleged Music Pirates
They use scripts and human verification to check the legality of Limewire transfers originating from college campuses.
copyright  filesharing  legal  music  piracy 
may 2008 by matthewmcvickar
New York Magazine: Trent Reznor and Saul Williams Discuss Their New Collaboration, Mourn OiNK
Trent was an Oink user and regrets its disappearance. The Reznor-Williams collaboration, The Inevitable Rise and Liberation of Niggy Tardust!, a mind-boggling fusion of genres," will be released for free on the internet. "Ghetto gothic?"
music  media  oink  piracy  filesharing  business  copyright  nin  saulwilliams 
november 2007 by matthewmcvickar
Good Copy Bad Copy
"A documentary about the current state of copyright and culture." It's free, of course.
movie  documentary  culture  media  copyright  video  free  law 
june 2007 by matthewmcvickar

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