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November 23, 2010

Transitioning from Industrial Production to Social Production of Content: The Failure of Traditional Premises of Copyright Law to Accommodate the Social Web

From the abstract of Niva Elkin-Koren's (University of Haifa Faculty of Law) Tailoring Copyright to Social Production [SSRN]:

The prevalence of social production and the increase in User Generated Content (UGC) destabilize some of the fundamental premises of our current copyright law. Copyright law is primarily designed to regulate the relationships of a single owner with other non-owners and is focused on the sovereignty of the author/owner. Social production, by contrast, requires us to articulate a matrix of relationships between the individual, the facilitating platform and the communities and crowds involved in social production. The transition from industrial production to social production transforms the social relations associated with the production of content and therefore requires adjustment of the institutions that design such relations.

This Article closely examines the social dimension of content production and analyzes the consequences for the governance of content in the social web. The Article proceeds as follows: Part I describes social production and analyzes the implications for the stakeholders involved. I focus on three key features of social production which affect why we create, how we create, and what assets are generated by these social processes involving creation. Part II explains why social production might be incompatible with the current copyright regime. In particular, I argue that copyright law mainly defines rights against strangers and fails to provide a framework for managing the rights and interests within a gigantic group of collaborators.

Hat tip to Media Law Prof Blog. [JH]

November 23, 2010 in Professional Readings, Scholarship | Permalink

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