By krisnelson on Feb 8, 2010 in constitution / copyright / featured / intellectual property / law / theory
In reaction to claims that copyright exists to protect creators because of the effort they’ve put into their work, Techdirt points us to a Supreme Court case that clearly says otherwise. History and precedent back it up.
Posted in constitution, copyright, featured, intellectual property, law, theory | Tagged common law, constitution, copyright, history, House of Lords, John Locke, Mike Masnick, Public domain, supreme court, U.S. Supreme Court |
By krisnelson on Jan 21, 2010 in business / copyright / literary / technology
Purchasing books on the Kindle has always struck me as a bit of a Faustian bargain: once you enter the Kindle ecosystem and purchase some books, those books are forever locked to Amazon’s e-reader. Now Amazon has made it easier for small-scale publishers and authors to opt-out.
Posted in business, copyright, literary, technology | Tagged Amazon, business, copyright, DRM, economics, literary, publishing, technology |
By krisnelson on Jan 10, 2010 in education / government / open access / research
The NIH requires free, public access to research they fund. Now the Office of Science and Technology Policy is considering extending the policy to other federal agencies that fund academic research.
Posted in education, government, open access, research | Tagged business, copyright, innovation, law, library, NIH, open access, publishing, research, science |
By krisnelson on Jan 9, 2010 in business / copyright / education / history / intellectual property / law / research / technology
Dan Cohen gave an interesting talk at the American Historical Association meeting recently, where he discussed the benefits Google brings to historical research, as well as some pointed criticisms.
Posted in business, copyright, education, history, intellectual property, law, research, technology | Tagged copyright, education, Google, Google Books, Google Scholar, history, intellectual property, law, Public domain, research, technology |
By krisnelson on Jan 7, 2010 in blog / copyright / featured / law
I’ve found that pictures shared under a Creative Commons (CC) license (of all flavors) are a great resource for bloggers who want artwork to accompany their posts. I’ve also realized that not everyone, myself included, has always done an adequate job of meeting the attribution requirements of CC licenses. To help remedy this, here are my recommendations for doing this properly in a blog.
Posted in blog, copyright, featured, law | Tagged blog, copyright, Creative Commons, Flickr, law, licensing, WordPress |
By krisnelson on Jan 4, 2010 in business / intellectual property / technology
Consumer electronics manufacturers and Hollywood studios have a problem: when customers purchase a movie online, they expect to be able to watch it anywhere — but, thanks to DRM, they can’t easily do it (unless they bought a physical DVD and rip it, or otherwise remove the DRM, which is what Hollywood is desperate to prevent). The DECE wants to change that.
Posted in business, intellectual property, technology | Tagged business, copyright, DRM, intellectual property, law, technology |
By krisnelson on Nov 6, 2009 in copyright / government / intellectual property / international / law
The internet chapter of the Anti-Counterfeiting Trade Agreement, a secret copyright treaty whose text Obama’s administration refused to disclose due to “national security” concerns, has leaked. It’s bad
Posted in copyright, government, intellectual property, international, law | Tagged copyright, development, DRM, intellectual property, international, law |
By krisnelson on Oct 24, 2009 in copyright / law / recommendations
This is an excellent write-up about how fair use works, along with its complexities (and areas where it is more straightforward, generally where courts have already ruled on a very similar use previously).
Posted in copyright, law, recommendations | Tagged copyright, intellectual property, law, recommended |