Posts tagged Death of Newspapers

TED – Clay Shirky on how Twitter can make history

Clay Shirky on these newfangled interwebs and how they are changing the world.

 

The growth and resilience of the “read-write” web culture

Lawrence Lessig never ceases to amaze me. After discovering and reading Lessig’s Free Culture in my final year of year of university, (2004, for anyone wondering) I knew his relevance would extend long into the future. The topics he tackled in Free Culture were visionary and foretold the necessity of redefining copyright law, lest all children be made into “criminals.”

Five years later, Dr. Lessig’s in-depth examination of intellectual property seems even more relevant as the  forces of technological change continue their rapid transformation of our culture via the new mediums through which it is created and defined. And we’ve reached several breaking points. The extension of our centuries-old, “read-only,” top-down broadcasting, advertising supported media is now completely at odds with the growth of the Internet, the “read-write” culture and the democratization of the process of content creation. The legal and political battles being waged between the content industries and the public are really only a symptom of the real disease: the death of information scarcity. It would improper to raise the specter of “information scarcity” without pointing to Clay Shirky hammering on the plight of the “traditional” media: “For any business where scarcity of information was the principle selling point, that business is in trouble.“ 

But legal considerations aide, a recent Lessig talk I listened to pointed to an amazing example of how empowered the general public is to participate in the “read-write” web culture. Kutiman is a band that makes music without playing any instruments. They crowdsource their music by remixing performances that individuals have uploaded to YouTube – many that are very talented singers and musicians – to create something new, and dare I say, better. Tapping into the global talent pool, they created a series of masterpieces.  Here are two of my favorites: 

Kutiman – I’m New 

Kutiman – Babylon Band

While I’ve made reference to Eclectic Method in previous posts I thought their new “Tarantino Mixtape” is a great example of why copyrighted content should not be exempted or excluded from this new “read-write” ecology in the web’s remix culture. As an aside, I cannot foresee Quentin’s feathers getting too ruffled about this mashup … movie studio & music industry lawyers on the other hand… 

Eclectic Method – The Tarantino Mixtape

When any teenager with a $1000 computer can appropriate any video they like and mash it up with any other video and of piece of music they want without regard for copyright, licensing fees or royalties, the sheer volume of content produced will continue to overwhelm the guardians of the “read-only” content industry and ensure the growth and resilience of the “read-write” culture.

The best articles I read last week

The Huffington Post’s Paul Dailing casts a hilarious critical gaze on the “Death of Newspapers” meme that pervades twitter and the “blogosphere” in How to Become a “Death of Newspapers” Blogger

The Toronto Star surveys the lay of the land in Canadian broadcasting after huge cuts to the CBC this week and the potential of more cuts at the private broadcasters in TV tumult on the Canadian dial

NPR and WNYC’s “On the Media” looks at the JP Neufeld, a Concordia University student in Montreal who stopped a an act of school violence before it happened, 3000 miles away in the UK: The Long Arm of the Law

The Atlantic’s The Quiet Coup is a devastating examination of the role and influence of the finance and banking sectors over the entire American political process. 

Ian Brodie, Harper’s former chief of staff , asserts that evidence doesn’t matter when making public policy via Macleans.ca

The Totalitarian Temptation and all that is an examination of the tendency towards totalitarian belief systems on both the left and right. I loved it, but I care about this sort of stuff. Link to  http://crookedtimber.org/ via @MikeSoron