this video is based off the following excerpts from Chapter 5 in Free Culture (pages 62-66)
We were born, in this sense, a pirate nation.
Piracy comes in many forms.The most significant is commercial piracy, the unauthorized taking of other peoples content within a commercial context.Despite many justifications that are offered in its defense, this taking is wrong.No one should condone it, and the law should stop it.
But as well as copy-shop piracy, there is another kind of taking that is more directly related to the Internet.Before we paint this taking “piracy,” however, we should understand its nature a bit more.For the harm of this taking is significantly more ambiguous than outright copying, and the law should account for that ambiguity, as it has done so often in the past.
All across the world, but especially in Asia and Eastern Europe, there are businesses that do nothing but take others copyrighted content, copy it, and sell it—all without the permission of a copyright owner.This piracy is wrong.
Many kinds of piracy are useful and productive, to produce either new content or new ways of doing business.For (1) like the original Hollywood, p2p sharing escapes an overly controlling industry; and (2) like the original recording industry, it simply exploits a new way to distribute content; but (3) unlike cable TV, no one is selling the content that is shared on p2p services.
It might therefore seem hypocritical for us to insist so strongly that other developing nations treat as wrong what we, for the first hundred years of our existence treated as right.
"First, about copyright. In the last three hundred years, we have come to apply the concept of 'copyright' ever more broadly. But in 1710, it wasn't so much a concept as it was a very particular right. The copyright was born as a very specific set of restrictions: It forbade others from reprinting a book. In 1710, the 'copy-right' was a right to use a particular machine to replicate a particular work. It did not go beyond that very narrow right. It did not control any more generally how a work could be used. Today the right includes a large collection of restrictions on the freedom of others: It grants the author the exclusive right to copy, the exclusive right to distribute, the exclusive right to perform, and so on.
So, for example, even if the copyright to Shakespeare's works were perpetual, all that would have meant under the original meaning of the term was that no one could reprint Shakespeare's work without the permission of the Shakespeare estate. It would not have controlled anything, for example, about how the work could be performed, whether the work could be translated, or whether Kenneth Branagh would be allowed to make his films. The 'copy-right' was only an exclusive right to print - no less, of course, but also no more.
Even that limited right was viewed with skepticism by the British. They had had a long and ugly experience with 'exclusive rights', especially 'exclusive rights' granted by the Crown. The English had fought a civil war in part about the Crown's practice of handing out monopolies - especially monopolies for works that already existed. King Henry VIII granted a patent to print the Bible and a monopoly to Darcy to print playing cards. The English Parliament began to fight back against this power of the Crown. In 1656, it passed to the Statute of Monopolies, limiting monopolies to patents for new inventions. And by 1710, Parliament was eager to deal with the growing monopoly in publishing.
Thus the 'copy-right', when viewed as a monopoly right, was naturally viewed as a right that should be limited. (However convincing the claim that 'it's my property, and I should have it forever,' try sounding convincing when uttering, 'It's my monopoly, and I should have it forever.') The state would protect the exclusive right, but only so long as it benefited society. The British saw the harms from special-interest favors; they passed a law to stop them."
from pages 87-88 in Free Culture by Lawrence Lessig
Have you ever been really bored and just wanted to look at random, yet interesting websites? Fortunately, there is a social media site for that called StumbleUpon. According to Wikipedia, StumbleUpon is “a discovery engine that finds the best of the web, recommended to each unique user.” This site allows you to start at one webpage and “stumble” to another. For instance, if you first go to StumbleUpon, the page might be awesome photography of African animals. When you hit the “stumble” button on the top left corner of the page, it will immediately direct you to another page. The next page might be a recipe for low calorie brownies. You can keep stumbling through pages and pages and find things like funny videos, comic strips, photography, articles, clothing deals, and much more. The best part about StumbleUpon is that you can make your own username and save the pages you like. When you stumble through pages, there is another button next to the “stumble” button that says “I like this” By clicking this button, you save that webpage to your favorites. When first making your account, you can select from categories you are interested in to direct StumbleUpon to pages within those categories. When you like a webpage, StumbleUpon also takes into account the pages you like to keep directing you toward similar pages. I believe this is considered a social media site because you can find your friends on StumbleUpon using your Facebook account or your e-mail. When you find a friend, you can see their favorite pages. Because of how it functions, StumbleUpon is an example of participatory culture, community and convergence.
When stumbling, I have never run across the same page more than once. According to my StumbleUpon profile, I have stumbled through 706 webpages, so it is pretty amazing that I see new things every single time I stumble. I believe this is a result of our culture. Our culture is used to an ever-changing and fast-paced environment. We are constantly connected to technology and feeding information into our already-packed brains. Currently I am writing this paper in a word processor while on the internet with five different tabs open on one window. I am also watching my boyfriend play Halo on his Xbox 360 while texting on my cell phone. Our daily environment is full of multi-tasking, especially with advanced technology. Participatory culture is one where people are participating in and contributing to the culture, most often in the form of media. With social media surrounding our daily lives, we are living in the midst of participatory culture. Henry Jenkins says “this circulation of media content – across different media systems, competing media economies, and national borders – depends heavily on consumers’ active participation.” StumbleUpon is no exception to this. I have noticed that many webpages are putting a StumbleUpon button on their page so that people can click it and that webpage will then appear on StumbleUpon. StumbleUpon exists because people link webpages to it that interest them and they want to share with others. The site could not exist without our constant participation with it. To better suit our interests, we need to use the website as much as possible. The more we stumble, the better the site gets to know us. It can then provide us with sites that we will almost always like because it caters to our interests. Our participation with StumbleUpon benefits both us and the website.
Social media and community are words that are often used together, and StumbleUpon definitely exemplifies a community. According to Burgess and Green on the subject of YouTube, “videos … give material form and visibility to the identities of fans as members of a community of fellow enthusiasts. Uploading this material serves as a way for the group to talk among themselves, and to the broader community, using the same media texts that bring them together.” StumbleUpon, like YouTube, has many aspects of a community. You can find your friends on StumbleUpon and see all of their favorite webpages. You can also follow certain stumblers, just like on Twitter. You can join groups based on categories as well as look at recent and top stumblers. Many pages on StumbleUpon also have a place to comment. Because of this, many discussions (and arguments) break out on the site. Whether it’s a good or bad comment, people are interacting with one another through StumbleUpon. Burgess and Green go on to say, “YouTube is a potential site of cosmopolitan cultural citizenship – a space in which individuals can represent their identities and perspectives, engage with the self-representations of others, and encounter cultural difference.” I would say that StumbleUpon is also classified as a space where others can represent themselves. Your specific profile on StumbleUpon shows what you like and what kind of categories most interest you. You can tell a lot about a person by looking at their interests. When people have the same interests, it becomes part of a community.
StumbleUpon is also an example of convergence. Jenkins says “convergence alters the relationship between existing technologies, industries, markets, genres, and audiences.” StumbleUpon is not using the most advanced technology, but it is making great use of an already existing technology, the internet. The site is essentially just linking to other webpages and putting the StumbleUpon search bar on top of each page. However, it is extremely effective and it appeals to a large audience. Just about anyone can use and be entertained by StumbleUpon. There are many different categories to search through and it is fun to be surprised by what you will stumble upon next on the web. Jenkins continues with “convergence involves both a change in the way media is produced and a change in the way media is consumed.” Whoever started StumbleUpon is a genius. They used the internet, which so many people have and rely on, and made it easy for us to entertain ourselves in a simple way. It reminds me of when search engines first started. Someone put Google together to be able to find webpages related to any search. StumbleUpon is similar in the way that there are millions of webpages connected to it. This is a completely new way that we can “consume” the internet for our own entertainment value.
With so many social media websites at our fingertips nowadays, it seems impossible that we should ever be bored. However, with our generation becoming more involved with the internet, we constantly need new things to capture our interests. StumbleUpon is a website I turn to when I need some entertainment. I can stumble for hours, and share what I find with my friends and family. StumbleUpon relies on a participatory culture to survive and it is definitely not lacking in contribution. It also provides a community for people. Not only can we find interesting things on StumbleUpon, but we can learn more about our friends by looking at what webpages interest them. The site also creates a community for the users to feel like they are a part of something. You can see when someone has shared interests with you and even make a new friend from it. StumbleUpon is also an example of convergence in that it is constantly linking to other webpages. Many webpages now want to be linked to StumbleUpon because of all the users on it. Not only does StumbleUpon literally converge websites, but it is a convergence of old and new media. It uses the internet to provide entertainment for us. I can stumble and find a webpage that recommends books for me to read, based on my favorite books. I can find a site with cute photos of tired animals. I can find videos on YouTube that are slowly becoming viral videos. I can even find a website that helps me make something to satisfy my craving for Thai food. With social media sites such as StumbleUpon, we have so many options for things to do in our free time.
Have you ever been really bored and just wanted to look at random, yet interesting websites? Fortunately, there is a social media site for that called StumbleUpon. According to Wikipedia, StumbleUpon is “a discovery engine that finds the best of the web, recommended to each unique user.” This site allows you to start at one webpage and “stumble” to another. For instance, if you first go to StumbleUpon, the page might be awesome photography of African animals. When you hit the “stumble” button on the top left corner of the page, it will immediately direct you to another page. The next page might be a recipe for low calorie brownies. You can keep stumbling through pages and pages and find things like funny videos, comic strips, photography, articles, clothing deals, and much more. The best part about StumbleUpon is that you can make your own username and save the pages you like. When you stumble through pages, there is another button next to the “stumble” button that says “I like this”
By clicking this button, you save that webpage to your favorites. When first making your account, you can select from categories you are interested in to direct StumbleUpon to pages within those categories. When you like a webpage, StumbleUpon also takes into account the pages you like to keep directing you toward similar pages. I believe this is considered a social media site because you can find your friends on StumbleUpon using your Facebook account or your e-mail. When you find a friend, you can see their favorite pages. StumbleUpon is an example of participatory culture, community and convergence.
When stumbling, I have never run across the same page more than once. According to my StumbleUpon profile, I have stumbled through 705 webpages, so it is pretty amazing that I see new things every single time I stumble. I believe this is a result of our culture. Our culture is used to an ever-changing and fast-paced environment. We are constantly connected to technology and feeding information into our already-packed brains. Currently I am writing this paper in a word processor while on the internet with five different tabs open on one window. I am also watching my boyfriend play Halo on his Xbox 360 while texting on my cell phone. Today’s culture is one that is full of multi-tasking, especially with advanced technology.
Participatory culture is one where people are participating in and contributing to the culture, most often in the form of media. With social media surrounding our daily lives, we are living in the midst of participatory culture. Henry Jenkins says “this circulation of media content – across different media systems, competing media economies, and national borders – depends heavily on consumers’ active participation.” StumbleUpon is no exception to this. I have noticed that many webpages are putting a StumbleUpon button on their page so that people can click it and that webpage will then appear on StumbleUpon. StumbleUpon exists because people link webpages to it that interest them and they want to share with others. (Here's how to link a page to StumbleUpon)
Social media and community are words that are often used together, and StumbleUpon definitely exemplifies a community. According to Burgess and Green on the subject of YouTube, “videos … give material form and visibility to the identities of fans as members of a community of fellow enthusiasts. Uploading this material serves as a way for the group to talk among themselves, and to the broader community, using the same media texts that bring them together.” StumbleUpon, like YouTube, has many aspects of a community. Like stated earlier, you can find your friends on StumbleUpon and see all of their favorite webpages. You can also follower certain stumblers, just like on Twitter. You can join groups based on categories as well as look at recent and top stumblers. Many pages on StumbleUpon also have a place to comment. Because of this, many discussions (and arguments) break out on the site. Whether it’s a good or rude comment, people are interacting with one another through StumbleUpon. Burgess and Green go on to say, “YouTube is a potential site of cosmopolitan cultural citizenship – a space in which individuals can represent their identities and perspectives, engage with the self-representations of others, and encounter cultural difference.” I would say that StumbleUpon is also classified as a space where others can represent themselves. Your specific profile on StumbleUpon shows what you like and what kind of categories most interest you. You can tell a lot about a person by looking at their interests. When people have the same interests, it becomes part of a community.
StumbleUpon is also an example of convergence. Jenkins says “convergence alters the relationship between existing technologies, industries, markets, genres, and audiences.” StumbleUpon is not using the most advanced technology, but it is making great use of an already existing technology, the internet. The site is essentially just linking to other webpages and putting the StumbleUpon search bar on top of each page. However, it is extremely effective and it appeals to a large audience. Just about anyone can use and be entertained by StumbleUpon. There are many different categories to search through and it is fun to be surprised by what you will stumble upon next on the web. Jenkins continues with “convergence involves both a change in the way media is produced and a change in the way media is consumed.” Whoever started StumbleUpon is a genius. They used the internet, which so many people have and rely on, and made it easy for us to entertain ourselves in a simple way. It reminds me of when search engines first started. Someone put Google together to be able to find webpages related to any search. StumbleUpon is similar in the way that there are millions of webpages connected to it. This is a completely new way that we can “consume” the internet for our own entertainment value.
With so many social media websites at our fingertips nowadays, it seems impossible that we should ever be bored. However, with our generation becoming more involved with the internet, we constantly need new things to capture our interests. StumbleUpon is a website I turn to when I need some entertainment. I can stumble for hours, and share what I find with my friends and family. StumbleUpon relies on a participatory culture to survive and it is definitely not lacking in contribution. It also provides a community for people. Not only can we find interesting things on StumbleUpon, but we can learn more about our friends by looking at what webpages interest them. StumbleUpon is also an example of convergence in that it is constantly linking to other webpages. Many webpages now want to be linked to StumbleUpon because of all the users on it. Not only does StumbleUpon literally converge websites, but it is a convergence of old and new media. It uses the internet to provide entertainment for us. I can stumble and find a webpage that recommends books for me to read, based on my favorite books. I can find a site with cute photos of tired animals. I can find videos on YouTube that are slowly becoming viral videos. I can even find a website that helps me make something to satisfy my craving for Thai food. With social media sites such as StumbleUpon, we have so many options for things to do in our free time.
So my blog obviously isn't very interesting, especially since I write about stuff like my first internet experience in essay form. However, that didn't stop me from getting pageviews from Russia. Actually I had 66 pageviews from the United States, 22 from Russia, and 3 from Canada. My ugly webpage got the most pageviews at 20. I also found it interesting that 36% of my visitors use Firefox, 30% use Google Chrome, and 26% use Internet Explorer. This makes me really happy because I really dislike Internet Explorer for multiple reasons. It's good to know that the people who visit my blog have enough sense to use a more reliable web browser. :-P
Here's a link to my website with my revised writing assignment on it. I know there's a random letter P in the corner of the second page and I cannot for the life of me get it to go away. Oops!
Way back in 5th grade, about 10 years ago, I was astonished by the power of the internet. My mom had gone through the trouble of setting up AOL’s Instant Messenger, or A.I.M. on our desktop sporting Windows ’95. I had no idea what this meant, but it was then that I became an internet fanatic.
It was definitely a process of setting up A.I.M. First of all, we had to download the program on our dial-up computer. Not only did this take what felt like 82 hours, it took us even longer to figure out what to do once A.I.M. was installed. I called my best friend Shannon (the only person I knew with A.I.M.) and asked her what to do. I created my screen name, or S.N., which was EklundSoccer. My S.N. was my mom’s idea because she thought everyone in the family would be using the same one. Our last name is Eklund and we all played soccer, so why not? Then the fun began. I signed on and Shannon was online waiting for me with her S.N. SEC961989. Her S.N. was also very generic, as it was her initials and her birthday. All of a sudden, a new window popped up at the same time that the famous A.I.M. “new message” sound played. SEC961989 said “hi”. I typed “hi” back and was instantly entertained. This was far better than that fax I had sent my friend last week. I could send messages to a person and they could instantly receive them and respond back immediately! Soon I had more friends on my buddy list, including Shannon’s parents, Shannon’s sister, and my babysitter. I spent lots of time inside on A.I.M. instead of outside playing like I used to. I learned the A.I.M. lingo such as “lol”, “ttyl”, “lylas”, and the popular “brb”. I started to wonder why we did not have something this amazing before.
Eventually my buddy list changed to include every person I had ever encountered, and I chatted with people I would usually not talk to in person. I edited my profile to look “cool” with quotes I found on the internet as well as shout outs to all my “BFFAE’s”, also known as best friend forever and ever. I frequently got yelled at for being online when my parents were trying to use the phone, and for not spending more time outside. Of course, once my parents caught on to the internet craze they bought another phone line for internet use. I started getting involved with my Yahoo! e-mail account and expage.com. My Yahoo! e-mail address was ur1curlyfry@yahoo.com, which makes no sense whatsoever. However, I thought it was cool and original so I kept it. I sent pictures to my friends over e-mail as well as funny forwarded messages. My e-mail account was linked to my expage so I could see when my friends commented on my page. Expage.com was a place where you could build your own website. You could design the background, the fonts, etc. People could read all about you and then comment on your page. I made probably around 342 expages just because it was fun. Kidding aside, it was similar to how Facebook is now. Everyone I knew had an expage and you got on yours every day to check out your new comments and to see if anyone had changed their expage around.
It is hard to imagine how much the internet has changed since dial-up and expages, but I am sure glad it has. If I have a question about anything, I can “Google” it and get an answer. Although the reliability of my answer being correct is iffy, I can still get an answer. Now almost every one of my classes has assignments online, and the main form of communication between teachers and students outside of class is e-mail. If I wanted to get in touch with an old friend, I would probably use Facebook to do so. I am constantly online, not only because I need to for class updates and job-related updates, but because it can entertain me. I can watch T.V. shows or movies online, I can read books online, and I can play games online. What more do I need?
While I was first on A.I.M., I was surprised at how advanced the technology was. But as I became more involved with the internet and uncovered more of its treasures, I began to think that the internet could have endless possibilities. I believe the internet is something like Vannevar Bush dreamed about when he was thinking of his memex device. He says, “A memex is a device in which an individual stores all his books, records, and communications, and which is mechanized so that it may be consulted with exceeding speed and flexibility.” With the internet we can do all this, at an extremely fast rate. In fact, when I Googled the word “memex”, the search engine found 851,000 results in 0.3 seconds. Bush had some big dreams when he was thinking about his memex, but we have more than accomplished his dreams. We have digital cameras that record in High Definition video that we can immediately share on the internet. This is just one example of how advanced our technology has become. I have no expectations for the internet now that I know its capabilities and I bet Bush had no expectations of the limits of his memex either.
This is a humorous video about all the things we use on the internet. It's a party when Google's parents leave town and all the other things on the internet such as Wikipedia, YouTube, Snopes, Facebook, etc. are guests at the party. Each person has the personality of the program on the internet they are imitating.
Since we talked about lolcats in class, I thought some of you might like this video. My best friend it to me this morning. (Okay, we're those people that spend way too much time looking at cute kitten photos/videos online...)