Francis Hwang on Fri, 12 Jul 2002 02:53:01 +0200 (CEST) |
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[Nettime-bold] Re: <nettime> "China:Imitation Nation"-Salon |
Just because copyright is becoming an anachronism doesn't mean people should starve to be artists. It just means that the payment mechanisms we have aren't going to work. We'll need alternatives. One alternative is called the Street Performer Protocol, and you can read a technical paper by security guru Bruce Schneier and John Kelsey here: http://www.counterpane.com/street_performer.pdf In a nutshell, artists post applications which describe a work and how much money they need to be paid to do such a thing and release it into the general public. People log into a system, decide whether or not to donate some money. Eventually the amount is met and the work is released to the general public, or the amount is not met and the donaters get their money back. Think of it as a distributed-grant process. Part of the problem has been because solutions like this route around the language of commercial transactions and start to sound a lot like communal action. Our political imaginations are so atrophied that we can't imagine the possibility of anything other than the familiar atomized consumer-to-corporation interaction. "You mean I would join with others to help fund something that eventually would be released to everybody, including people who never paid anything? I don't know, sounds sort of socialist to me ... " But we'll need to start thinking this way, soon. With increasing computing power and bandwidth (I'm not pitching a Gilder-esque telecosm scenario, just observing that lots of people have enough bandwidth to file-share MP3s today), we can no longer treat data as if its distribution can be controlled. If you put an artistic expression in a digital reproducible form, it becomes less like a physical object and more like a natural resource. Think of oxygen. No society would ever want its citizens to be forced to buy oxygen out of individually wrapped containers. Yet oxygen, like all resources, has a limit, and it's a society's responsibility to make sure there's enough oxygen around. You can't let people chop down all the trees, and you can't let industries build too many power plants. Francis _______________________________________________ Nettime-bold mailing list Nettime-bold@nettime.org http://amsterdam.nettime.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/nettime-bold