Patents & Copyrights in the information age- Documentry +Interesting+

Collapse
X
 
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts
  • MovieMaster
    Confirmed User
    • Apr 2003
    • 897

    #1

    Patents & Copyrights in the information age- Documentry +Interesting+

    This isn't a short video 1:30hrs long but if your bored or can play in a second screen while working its worth a watch.

    http://www.hulu.com/watch/88782/rip-a-remix-manifesto

    Filmmaker Brett Gaylor explores issues of copyright in the information age, mashing up the media landscape of the 20th century and shattering the wall between users and producers.

    Not sure how I feel about this, I feel like I am for this but at the same time under the name of Public domain rights and etc is the idea of flat out stealing ones works in whole or large enough parts that its utterly wrong.

    Later in the documentry seems to lead you down the road in which the world will become a collective pool everyone will be able to get for free since its all public domain. So what happens to all those jobs, economies, and etc? Whether its music, medicine, investment, building machines and etc if you can't monetize and protect your works ?

    Definitely a very interesting debate... But seems that people want to lump some topics that are close but no where near the same into the same topic. Sampling vs flat out stealing.

    Another shocking documentry is "The Future Of Food" unreal!

    http://www.hulu.com/watch/67878/the-future-of-food
    100% Exclusive Program Babe-Bucks.com = HotModelClub.com | NextDoor-Models.com
    Payments by: CCBILL
    ICQ Three 02 Five 638 Five 6

    ReliableServers.com - NEED BANDWIDTH?
  • MovieMaster
    Confirmed User
    • Apr 2003
    • 897

    #2
    Anyone else seen these docs?
    100% Exclusive Program Babe-Bucks.com = HotModelClub.com | NextDoor-Models.com
    Payments by: CCBILL
    ICQ Three 02 Five 638 Five 6

    ReliableServers.com - NEED BANDWIDTH?

    Comment

    • L-Pink
      working on my tan
      • Mar 2005
      • 39151

      #3
      Who is going to produce a quality movie, novel, etc if it's not for profit? If costs aren't covered? Free is good but who wants free "shit" ?

      Comment

      • sysk
        Confirmed User
        • Aug 2007
        • 1005

        #4
        Most economists agree that patents are bad for innovation
        icq: 612510168 / email: [email protected] / php ninja 4 hire

        Comment

        • Dirty Dane
          Sick Fuck
          • Feb 2004
          • 9491

          #5
          People who endorse free share of everything also endorse the communistic idea of economy. In the end, you will have to force people to work, if there are no individual gains from individual work. It's that simple.
          Some countries are talking about "piracy tax", but it is NOT going to work. As Churchill said; you can't tax yourself to welfare

          Comment

          • MovieMaster
            Confirmed User
            • Apr 2003
            • 897

            #6
            Originally posted by L-Pink
            Who is going to produce a quality movie, novel, etc if it's not for profit? If costs aren't covered? Free is good but who wants free "shit" ?
            I agree take the reward out the equation and innovation is stifled. Greed can be good in some ways!
            100% Exclusive Program Babe-Bucks.com = HotModelClub.com | NextDoor-Models.com
            Payments by: CCBILL
            ICQ Three 02 Five 638 Five 6

            ReliableServers.com - NEED BANDWIDTH?

            Comment

            • gideongallery
              Confirmed User
              • Aug 2003
              • 7082

              #7
              Originally posted by MovieMaster
              This isn't a short video 1:30hrs long but if your bored or can play in a second screen while working its worth a watch.

              http://www.hulu.com/watch/88782/rip-a-remix-manifesto

              Filmmaker Brett Gaylor explores issues of copyright in the information age, mashing up the media landscape of the 20th century and shattering the wall between users and producers.

              Not sure how I feel about this, I feel like I am for this but at the same time under the name of Public domain rights and etc is the idea of flat out stealing ones works in whole or large enough parts that its utterly wrong.

              Later in the documentry seems to lead you down the road in which the world will become a collective pool everyone will be able to get for free since its all public domain. So what happens to all those jobs, economies, and etc? Whether its music, medicine, investment, building machines and etc if you can't monetize and protect your works ?

              Definitely a very interesting debate... But seems that people want to lump some topics that are close but no where near the same into the same topic. Sampling vs flat out stealing.

              Another shocking documentry is "The Future Of Food" unreal!

              http://www.hulu.com/watch/67878/the-future-of-food
              a documentary advocating public domain restricted by country

              “When crimes occur through the mail, you don’t shut the post office down,” Steve Wozniak

              Comment

              Working...