Free Culture

Author:

Lawrence Lessig

Available at:

(book’s web site available at http://www.free-culture.cc/)

Description:

(from book’s web site, available at http://www.free-culture.cc/about/): Lawrence Lessig’s focus is the social dimension of creativity: how creative work builds on the past and how society encourages or inhibits that building with laws and technologies. In Free Culture he widens his focus to consider the diminishment of the larger public domain of ideas. In this powerful wake-up call he shows how shortsighted interests blind to the long-term damage they’re inflicting are poisoning the ecosystem that fosters innovation. All creative works—books, movies, records, software, and so on—are a compromise between what can be imagined and what is possible—technologically and legally. For more than two hundred years, laws in America have sought a balance between rewarding creativity and allowing the borrowing from which new creativity springs. The original term of copyright set by the Constitution in 1787 was seventeen years. Now it is closer to two hundred. Thomas Jefferson considered protecting the public against overly long monopolies on creative works an essential government role. Lawrence Lessig shows us that while new technologies always lead to new laws, never before have the big cultural monopolists used the fear created by new technologies, specifically the Internet, to shrink the public domain of ideas, even as the same corporations use the same technologies to control more and more what we can and can’t do with culture. As more and more culture becomes digitized, more and more becomes controllable, even as laws are being toughened at the behest of the big media groups. What’s at stake is our freedom—freedom to create, freedom to build, and ultimately, freedom to imagine.

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