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Intellectual Property

Snurb — Monday 10 July 2023 02:13

Confronting the Challenges of Digital Capitalism

Politics | Internet Technologies | Social Media | Intellectual Property | IAMCR 2023 |

My conferencing year continues with the IAMCR 2023 in a boiling Lyon, France – it’s hot here even by Australian standards. The conference opens with a keynote by Christian Fuchs, which I’ll try to liveblog (though frankly this proved a challenge when I last blogged one of his presentations at ECREA 2014; let’s see how we go today). More liveblogging from regular conference sessions to follow over the week, at any rate.

Christian’s focus here is on explaining the challenges of digitalisation for humanity. This requires an understanding of the relationship between communication and the underlying economic structures, and …

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Snurb — Friday 12 October 2018 05:13

Consequences of Our Lack of Understanding of the DMCA

Politics | Internet Technologies | Intellectual Property | AoIR 2018 |

The final speaker in this AoIR 2018 session is Aram Sinnreich, whose interest is in the continuing consequences of the U.S. Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA) – and in particular its anti-circumvention elements that criminalise the bypassing of copyright protection mechanisms such as encryption, even in contexts where ‘fair use’ exceptions apply.

But there are some exceptions; the U.S. Copyright Office engages in triennial rulemaking processes that grant exemptions for particular, tightly defined cases of bypassing. However, do such exemptions work? While copyright users are by now well aware of the DMCA, they are less aware of the bypassing prohibitions …

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Snurb — Thursday 6 October 2016 04:20

Towards the Platform Society

Internet Technologies | 'Big Data' | Social Media | Intellectual Property | AoIR 2016 |

After an exciting workshop day, we're now starting AoIR 2016 proper with the opening keynote by José van Dijck from the University of Amsterdam. She begins by noting the work of Tarleton Gillespie on the politics of online platforms, which has been very influential in Internet studies in recent years. Internet platforms are now intricately interwoven in a technical, commercial, and social ecosystem, with a number of leading platforms serving as the major gateways to that ecosystem.

But new platforms are constantly emerging, to systematically connect people to things, ideas, and money. These platforms penetrate all aspects of our public …

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Snurb — Tuesday 24 May 2016 01:10

Current Practices in Social Media Data Sharing between Researchers

'Big Data' | Social Media | Intellectual Property | WebSci '16 |

The next WebSci 2016 presenters are Katharina Kinder-Kurlanda and Katrin Weller, who argue that it is necessary to address the digital divides in data accessibility in social media research. They interviewed a large number of social media researchers, and what emerges from this work is that much data sharing is already taking place, but under varying circumstances.

From a methodological point of view, how can we document such sharing to ensure reproducibility? Legally, how can we make such sharing practices sustainable and non-infringing? Ethically, how can we ensure that such data sharing does no harm and lives up to the …

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Snurb — Tuesday 24 May 2016 01:09

Automated Assessment of the Validity of Content Take-Down Notices?

Streaming Media | Intellectual Property | Digital Rights Management | WebSci '16 |

The next WebSci 2016 paper session starts with a presentation by Pei Zhang, which introduces what she calls the Content-Linking-Context model, or CLC. The context for this is legislation such as the Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA) and the European e-Commerce Directive, as well as various national legislation in the EU.

The DMCA requires services providers to take down content on request expeditiously, even without verification of copyright infringement claims, and providers such as Google and Dailymotion are known to act on such requests, but there is little information about the criteria they use to vet requests. Can automated systems …

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Snurb — Monday 26 October 2015 02:19

Netflix and the Geoblocked Internet

Streaming Media | Intellectual Property | AoIR 2015 | Television |

The next speaker in this AoIR 2015 session is Nicole Hentrich, who shifts our focus to the problem of geoblocking in accessing televisual content online. Such Internet content is still controlled on a geographic basis; the Internet is thus not experienced the same by everyone, on both an individual, regional, and national basis.

Even when new services enter a local market – as Netflix did in Australia earlier this year – these issues do not go away. Netflix became officially available in Australia in March 2015, though some 200,000 subscribers had already been using it through VPNs – more than …

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Snurb — Thursday 25 October 2012 19:34

The Corporate Hijacking of Internet Blackout Protests

Politics | Internet Technologies | Intellectual Property | ECREA 2012 |

The next speaker in this ECREA 2012 session is Tessa Houghton, who begins by noting the 2009 New Zealand blackout of Websites and avatars, in protest against new copyright legislation. This is a form of spectacular viral publicity, and has been repeated in a number of national contexts over the past years – variously protesting copyright or Internet regulations. The anti-SOPA/PIPA blackout of early 2012 is another example for this.

Socially mediated antagonistic publicity is increasingly characteristic for such protests; for all the differences between the specific publics involved in the protests, it highlights contemporary configurations of power. This departs …

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Snurb — Saturday 23 October 2010 18:40

The Emergence of Copygrey Services

Streaming Media | Intellectual Property | Filesharing | AoIR 2010 |

Gothenburg.
It’s the last day of AoIR 2010, and the first session I’m attending starts with Jan Nolin, whose interest is in filesharing. He describes this as Internet-based cultural consumption (IBCC), in order to move away from terms like filesharing, peer-to-peer networks, and other more limited concepts. IBCC is a broad and inclusive term, then (though excluding user-led content creation) – it includes societal contexts, technological and economical choices, social relationships, and political and legislative contexts.

IBCC has been important in shaping the Net – it has been in a tug of war pattern between legislation and technology: increased …

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Snurb — Friday 22 October 2010 01:28

Top-Down and Bottom-Up Copyright Approaches

Intellectual Property | Creative Commons | AoIR 2010 |

Gothenburg.
The final speaker in this AoIR 2010 session is Bjarki Valtysson, whose interest is in the politics of access to exchange-oriented processes of mass self-communication – which build on a different arrangement of production, distribution, and consumption processes than we used to have. This is a clash between the politics of access (read/write) and the politics of permission (read-only culture), and there’s a question about how this plays out in digital public spheres.

This can be examined in the context of a number of projects. The Europeana content archive has been hampered by complex polemics regarding online accessibility, the …

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Snurb — Tuesday 12 October 2010 18:10

Considering Piracy as More than Just a Criminal Activity

Intellectual Property | Filesharing | ECREA 2010 |

Bremen.
It’s too early, too chilly, and too foggy for words – but regardless, the second day of the ‘Doing Global Media Studies’ pre-conference to ECREA 2010 is about to begin. The keynote speaker this morning is Tristan Mattelart, whose focus is on audiovisual piracy - and he begins by noting the substantial attention already paid to this phenomenon, though mainly as a for of 'criminal' activity. He notes that there is a difference between Internet piracy and physical piracy (the sale of counterfeit DVDs and CDs), and that there are differences in such piracy between different countries.

We already …

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