The Copyright Thing
I'm once again re-reading Cory Doctorow on internet copyright, file sharing, and all the other things that he has such controversial stuff to say about. Mostly because I'm gearing up to bring him to Ottawa schools with his book Little Brother, which (at the risk of gushing) is possibly the best YA book I've read in years. Because it's fun, because - to paraphrase Neil Gaiman - it makes me wish I was a teenager so I could read it and then go save the world, and because it's really important to remember that the technology we live with comes with a responsibility to understand it so that it can't be used against us.
And I checked out the multitude of available formats to download the book in, and found myself rereading Cory's statement about copyright and why he makes all his books available free under a Creative Commons license.
To snag one quote at random from this thought-provoking and oddly exciting foreword/manifesto: "If you're not making art with the intention of having it copied, you're not really making art for the twenty-first century. There's something charming about making work you don't want to be copied, in the same way that it's nice to go to a Pioneer Village and see the olde-timey blacksmith shoeing a horse at his traditional forge. But it's hardly, you know, contemporary. I'm a science fiction writer. It's my job to write about the future (on a good day) or at least the present. Art that's not supposed to be copied is from the past."
Yeah, some things are going to have to change in the face of 21st century technology - and that's not a bad thing. It just means business models have to be reworked . . . which probably hurts the people living off the business models as they are, but as Darwin said, "It is not the strongest of the species that survives, nor the most intelligent, but the most adaptive to change."
Posted by Kathryn Hunt
at 3:37 PM EDT