Piracy

The Intellectual Property Wars from Gutenberg to Gates

Paperback, 634 pages

Published April 30, 2011 by University of Chicago Press.

ISBN:
978-0-226-40119-5
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Since the rise of Napster and other file sharing services in its wake, most of us have assumed that intellectual piracy is a product of the digital age and that it threatens creative expression as never before. The Motion Picture Association of America, for instance, claimed that in 2005 the film industry lost $2.3 billion in revenue to piracy online. But here Adrian Johns shows that piracy has a much longer and more vital history than we have realized—one that has been largely forgotten and is little understood.Piracy explores the intellectual property wars from the advent of print culture in the fifteenth century to the reign of the Internet in the twenty-first. Written with a historian's flair for narrative and sparkling detail, the book swarms throughout with characters of genius, principle, cunning, and outright criminal intent: in the wars over piracy, it is the victims—from Charles Dickens to Bob Dylan—who …

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An Inverted History of Intellectual Property

This book provides an incredible, inverted history of intellectual property by focusing on the "pirate" side of the equation starting with the emergence of the printing press and continuing to the modern day. Johns paints a complex picture of how the notion of piracy emerged, and how it is inextricably linked to political and technological development. The pushback of industry (rather than artists and inventors themselves) throughout history is instructive, and the era of sheet music piracy and the legal debates and industry efforts to tamp down on these "pirate kings" was fascinating. The attempts in the UK to deter private radio operators and listeners was also incredible, down to the Orwellian detection vans that roamed the streets to locate "pirates" (probably ineffectively). This book is an essential companion to intellectual property volumes and is even more relevant as generative AI systems pose challenges to the system once again. Highly …

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