
The intention of the authors is to show that, despite 300 years of history, "the term copyright itself, used freely in debates surrounding contemporary topics such as iTunes, DVD piracy, and file-sharing, is not only semantically anachronistic but is an anachronistic problem." This has to do, according to Phillips and Watts, with the fact that, today, intellectual property rights became commercially hijacked by the culture or creative industries which seem to be the main profiteers of what is, in the eyes of lawmakers, still considered to be a body of legislation in favour of artists and authors.
http://journal.media-culture.org.au/0506/06-phillipswatts.php
Keywords
Locations:
Beyond Europe ,All Europe (48 countries) Thematic scope:
Artistic Practice ,Cultural & Media Legislation ,Cultural Theory & Research Languages:
English Arts & Cultural categories:
Architecture & Design ,Audiovisual & Media ,Community Arts ,Cultural Heritage ,Literature & Publishing ,Multidisciplinary Arts ,Performing Arts ,Visual & Plastic Arts Type of publication:
Article
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