Posts Tagged ‘pirate’s dilemma’
It was a sad day when the Pirate Bay guys – Frederik Neij, Gottfrid Svartholm Warg, Carl Lundstrom and Peter Sunde – were been banged up and ordered to pay $4.5m damages.
“There has been a perception that piracy is OK and that the music industry should just have to accept it. This verdict will change that,” said International Federation of the Phonographic Industry (IFPI) chairman John Kennedy. Unbelievable. And it gets worse: “The trial of the operators of The Pirate Bay was about defending the rights of creators, confirming the illegality of the service and creating a fair environment for legal music services that respect the rights of the creative community. Today’s verdict is the right outcome on all three counts.”
What a load of crap.
Up speaks Ludvig Werner, Chairman of IFPI Sweden: “The court has delivered a simple and clear judgement, which is that people and businesses engaged in creative activities have the fundamental right to be rewarded for their work and to be protected from massive copyright violators like Pirate Bay. The criminal conviction of the Pirate Bay operators will not only hearten the music and film community – it is also a huge shot in the arm for legitimate producers and entrepreneurs, who are trying to create a thriving legitimate online business based on proper respect of copyright.”
I’m in the music and film community. I’m a legitimate producer and entrepreneur. I’m trying to create a thriving legitimate online business. But I’m certainly not trying to do is ‘based on proper respect of copyright’. That would just be plain dumb.
Yet more nonsense, this time Helen Smith, Executive Chair of IMPALA: “This is music to the ears of the thousands of small independents and artists who produce the majority of new releases today. It demonstrates a real understanding of the dilemma that if no one pays for music today who will make the exciting new music of tomorrow?”
The unimaginative granny-suing sticking plasters and folksy claims on behalf of us little producer/creative types will only stretch so far. Reminds me of a mobile operator head putting his hand up at a recent conference and asking what they were supposed to do if mobile ads switched from opt-out to opt-in… aw… shame! No, it’s not business as usual, but while ‘industry’ scratches its had and jails creative developers, those who’ve bothered to think of a better way are taking over. Industry has had it too easy for too long. The result? Imbalance and hampered innovation. Not for long.
A more rational comment from Rickard Falkvinge, leader of The Pirate Party… “This wasn’t a criminal trial, it was a political trial. It is just gross beyond description that you can jail four people for providing infrastructure.”
Micah White, a Contributing Editor at Adbuster, claims in this recent blog posting ‘The only way forward, toward the original dream of censorship-free communication, is to build mainstream support for online piracy based on the argument that piracy is a litmus test for authentic culture.’
Someone asked me yesterday what exactly Punk Capitalism means…
Punk was all about a DIY revolution, rejecting authority and hierarchy, working for yourself without taking cues from the mass market, setting up businesses that aren’t fussed about competing and place purpose over profit, advocating that we should produce as much as we consume. Nowadays we’re all working more independently and struggle with crappy managers / bosses, we want richer experiences and creativity is our most valuable currency. We’re coming to the end of the Industrial Revolution cycle… the final nails are going in the coffin for mass production (and in turn mass marketing) – starting with the internet making it free to transmit stuff digitally ourselves. Now punks in lab coats are working on things like 3D printers, already in use by Adidas, BMW, Sony etc for making prototypes. Once these are available in our homes there will be no boundaries left between producer and consumer – just creativity. It’s not far off Star Trek replicators! Then nobody has to be bribed to do shit jobs. Phew! What we deem piracy is the best form of distribution in a Punk Capitalist world.
My previous post mentions this here; and refers to this book as the ultimate Punk Capitalism and piracy resource.
Listen to these distinguishing features / central axioms of Capitalism:
Each person owns his or her own labor and therefore is allowed to sell the use of it to employers [Take this a bit further forward along the curve and companies don't tend to have employees, just pools of talented people who do stuff]
The best allocation of resources is achieved through consumers having free choice, and producers responding accordingly to meet collective consumer demand [Yes, we like free choice... so much so that we're kissing goodbye to the mass and saying hello to the long tail. Again, pools of talented producers / citizens of the world meet collective demands of the people]
And…
Globalisation in its literal sense is the process of transformation of local or regional phenomena into global ones. It can be described as a process by which the people of the world are unified into a single society and function together. [Now that's not so bad, is it?]
Looks like we need to redefine a few things. We humans are frighteningly susceptible to the power of suggestion. As Malcolm Gladwell illustrated in Blink, if you ask a bunch of people to walk down a corridor, sit a test and walk back up the corridor – the fact the test contained hidden references to old age will make them walk back much more slowly. Imagine what we’ve anchored to words like ‘Globalisation’ and ‘Capitalism’, evidenced by those irritating grown-ups who rant like freshers, contradictions galore, without actually doing anything.
Matt Mason talks about Punk Capitalism in his book The Pirate’s Dilemma. He says, ‘Punk’s independent spirits spurred a DIY revolution, encouraging us to reject authority and hierarchy, advocating that we can and should produce as much as we consume. Since punk, this idea has been quietly changing the very fabric of our economic system, replacing outdated ideas with 21st century upgrades of Punk Capitalism… There is a misconception that all changes we are experiencing as a society are the result of new technologies… the changes are profoundly cultural.’
So there we go. Punk Capitalism is the new way.
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