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"Copyright Germany History."
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Authors and apparatus : a media history of copyright
\"Copyright is under attack. This book charts the development of this conflict in the U.S., Germany, France, and Great Britain and uses the examples of photocopy and sound recording to outline the complex rights and interests of all relevant parties from 1850 to the present day\"-- Provided by publisher.
Expanding Intellectual Property
2017
The book deals with the expansion and institutionalization of intellectual property norms in the twentieth century, with a European focus. Its thirteen chapters revolve around the transfer, adaptation and the ambivalence of legal transplants in the interface between national and international projects, trends and contexts. After discussing the institutionalization of copyright and patent law in the framework of the bigger political and economic projects of the twentieth century in the first part, the second and third parts of the collection review relevant processes in the communist regimes and the post-communist societies respectively. The essays point at processes of enculturation, trans-nationalization and universalization of norms, as well as practices of incorporation and resistance. The contributors lay a particular emphasis on the role and activity of social actors in the establishment and validation of intellectual property norms and regimes, from the function of experts and creation of expert cultures to the compelling power of popular street protests.
Pop Songs for the Tape Recorder, LPs for the Record Player? The Market Launch of Tape Recorders in West Germany and the Copyright Debate on Young Consumers' Practice of Tape-recording in the 1950s and 1960s
2008
Since the late 1950s, tape recorders were increasingly to be found in West German households. This device for the first time gave the consumers the opportunity to record music from records or from the radio. This triggered off discussions between the record industry and the GEMA (Society for musical performing and mechanical reproduction rights) on the one hand and tape recorder producers and users on the other hand. Whereas the former complained about falling record sales and called for the introduction of copyright fees, the latter argued that the tape recorder offered a large range of applications and that therefore a collective charging of producers and/ or users would not be justified. Against the background of the changing legal situation, the article retraces the copyright debate and evaluates the opponents' arguments. In spite of the manifold functions of the tape recorder, young consumers predominantly employed it to record their favourite light music. But these appropriation practices did not cause an overall decline in record sales but rather a change in music consumption patterns. While the possibility of recording single hits did in fact lead to falling sales figures of 45rpm-discs, sales of long-playing-records rose considerably.
Journal Article
Two bits : the cultural significance of free software
by
Dumit, Joseph
,
Kelty, Christopher M
,
Fischer, Michael M. J
in
Access to information
,
Anthropology
,
COMPUTERS
2008
In Two Bits, Christopher M. Kelty investigates the history and cultural significance of Free Software, revealing the people and practices that have transformed not only software but also music, film, science, and education. Free Software is a set of practices devoted to the collaborative creation of software source code that is made openly and freely available through an unconventional use of copyright law. Kelty explains how these specific practices have reoriented the relations of power around the creation, dissemination, and authorization of all kinds of knowledge. He also makes an important contribution to discussions of public spheres and social imaginaries by demonstrating how Free Software is a \"recursive public\"—a public organized around the ability to build, modify, and maintain the very infrastructure that gives it life in the first place.
Drawing on ethnographic research that took him from an Internet healthcare start-up company in Boston to media labs in Berlin to young entrepreneurs in Bangalore, Kelty describes the technologies and the moral vision that bind together hackers, geeks, lawyers, and other Free Software advocates. In each case, he shows how their practices and way of life include not only the sharing of software source code but also ways of conceptualizing openness, writing copyright licenses, coordinating collaboration, and proselytizing. By exploring in detail how these practices came together as the Free Software movement from the 1970s to the 1990s, Kelty also considers how it is possible to understand the new movements emerging from Free Software: projects such as Creative Commons, a nonprofit organization that creates copyright licenses, and Connexions, a project to create an online scholarly textbook commons.
Berne Convention Implementation Act of 1987. Congressional Hearing, June 17, July 23, Sept. 16, 30, 1987, Feb. 9, 10, 1988, 1987-06-17, 1987-07-23, 1987-07-23, 1987-09-16, 1987-09-16, 1987-09-30, 1987-09-30, 1988-02-09, 1988-02-09, 1988-02-10, 1988-02-10
in
Ad Hoc Working Group on U.S. Adherence to the Berne Convention
,
American Institute of Architects
,
American Library Association
1987
Government Document
The Making of a Music Multinational: PolyGram's International Businesses, 1945–1998
2006
In half a century PolyGram expanded from two small Dutch and German companies to become the world's largest music multinational. It did so in the midst of a fast-changing business environment, in which relatively homogenous products and tastes gave way to differentiated outputs for segmented markets. Making use of strengths inherited from its owners Philips and Siemens, PolyGram integrated a continuous series of foreign acquisitions into one international organization while maintaining the creative identities and independence of the firms it acquired. To control and manage the resulting idiosyncratic configuration, it developed the federated form, a decentralized organizational structure that fit the shifting environment. PolyGram became what can be defined as a rightsbased multinational, and its structure showed similarities to multinationals in other rights-based industries.
Journal Article