Pit Schultz on 17 Apr 2001 15:31:09 -0000 |
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[Nettime-bold] James Boyle: A Politics of Intellectual Property: Environmentalism For the Net? [2/3] |
IV A Brief Case-Study: Copyright on The Net If the information society has an iconic form (one could hardly say an embodiment) it is the Internet. The Net is the anarchic, decentralised network of computers that provides the main locus of digital interchange. While Vice-President Gore, the Commerce Department and the National Telecommunications and Information Administration were planning the "information superhighway" the Net was becoming it. Accordingly, if the government produced a proposal that laid down the ground rules for the information economy, that profoundly altered the distribution of property rights over this extremely important resource and that threatened to "lock in" the power of current market leaders, one would expect a great deal of attention to be paid by lawyers, scholars and the media. Nothing could be further from the truth. The appearance of the Clinton Administration "White Paper"(27) on intellectual property on the National Information Infrastructure produced almost no press reaction. The same was true of the introduction and eventual stalling of the White Paper's legislative proposals in both the House and the Senate.(28) Given the potential ramifications of the legislation, this alone, it seems to me, would be strong evidence for the proposition that greater scrutiny of our intellectual policy making is needed. But the problem lies deeper. Elsewhere I, and many others, have written about the problems with the White Paper's account of current law, its distressing tendency to misstate, minimise or simply ignore contrary cases, policy and legislative history, its habit of presenting as settled, that which is in fact a matter of profound dispute.(29) There have also been thoughtful analyses some of the potential negative effects of the White Paper and its implementing legislation, particularly focusing on the consequences for libraries, for software innovation and for privacy.(30) Defenders of the White Paper have argued that its proposals are necessary to protect content on, and encourage fuller use and faster growth of, the Net.(31)