andre.ecary on Thu, 9 Sep 1999 01:32:42 +0200 (CEST) |
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<nettime> Money in cyberspace |
Money in cyberspace (personal point of view) There are big problems with money on the internet. As one of many examples, consider music recording companies, who desperately try to stop an exchange of music files through the internet. Their effort is like trying to stop the wind from blowing, no matter how big, rich and powerfull they were just a short time ago. When people have a possibility to download music from the internet, and pass it to others by simply copying the files, why would they buy CDs. The use of money in association with the internet, software and even any sort of information is very closely related to protection of copying. What happened to music can (and will) happen to movies, newspapers, books and virtually everything, what can be converted into digital form. Cyberspace (internet, world of information, or call it whatever you want) is simply made up of different elements than physical world. Different natural laws rule there. Words like \'distance\' or \'place\' have completely changed it\'s meanings in cyberspace, and actually very few properties of real world can be translated into cyberspace, simply because it is not build up from a mass. Why I am saying this is, that I want to focus on copying. This proces has completely different attributes in cyberspace than in physical world. Just try to copy your TV-set and try to copy some digital books or music (those .doc, .ps or .mp3 files you have on your hard disc). Really a different thing, isn\'t it? Copying is an essential property of information. So essential that one could compare it to a simple move in physical world. Imagine that you buy a TV-set and the seller tells you \'Okey, when you once install it in your room, you can by no means move it to a different place. You know, we don\'t want you to move it, so we placed a mechanism inside, which will cause malfunction whenever you move it.\' It\'s pretty absurd, but to make a digital copy is even more simple than moving your TV-set to another room. Money works well as a medium of exchange of goods. You give two times more goods, you get two times more money. But say the same about cyberspace - you give two times more copies of your software, e-art, information for two times more money, and notice, that copying means no work or energy. There\'s something wrong with it. Using money in connection with information and the internet is a try to adapt a mechanism developed for physical world into a completely different setting. However, money are one of the corner-stones of today\'s world and almost nobody from \'civilized\' countries can imagine world without money, but in cyberspace, they somehow don\'t work well. It\'s a question whether to race for better and better copy protection methods, to try to adapt that money mechanism for all costs or to try to find something different for the cyberspace. Something completely new. comments to Andre.Ecary@pobox.sk # distributed via <nettime>: no commercial use without permission # <nettime> is a moderated mailing list for net criticism, # collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets # more info: majordomo@bbs.thing.net and "info nettime-l" in the msg body # archive: http://www.nettime.org contact: nettime@bbs.thing.net