Copyright or the *Right to Eat*
April 20, 2008
This morning, I read an interesting piece written by Steven Poole, and just had to comment on it. In it, he discusses his book, which he released for free (and DRM-free) around the net, and which has received ca. 30,000 downloads so far. But he also discusses the idea of artists, or creators in general, making money, and how that + giving away stuff for free, doesn’t compute.
He also refers to what he calls the “Slashdot argument,” one, I should add, I’ve used myself several times, that (music-)artists should keep giving away their creations for free, because it’s possible, and instead collect revenues from live-performances. As a counter-argument, he uses the programming-profession:
Oh Mr Freetard, you work as a programmer, do you? How interesting. So do you perform all your corporate programming duties for free, and earn your keep by selling personally branded mousemats on the side?
It is actually interesting, because the live-analogy actually applies to programming also; where is software slowly but surely moving too? Towards hybrids, like Software-as-a-Service, Software+Service, and other incarnations, as well as a 100%-on-the-internet model. A hybrid model is, incidentally, also the way gaming-companies like Shanda combat the problem of piracy in China.
But a large part of what he’s saying, I do agree with. Releasing your stuff online, for free or a freemium, is most suitable to artists whose concerts are sure to be sold out: NiN and Radiohead. Plenty of artists, like my mother who paints, just want to create art and sell it; not release it for free and do crazy live stunts to earn a living (even though that’s what’s entrepreneurship is all about).
I guess, when he calls for a renaming of copyright to Right-to-Eat, that perhaps he has a point. There are plenty of people out there, who don’t get copyright, don’t care about it, or justify it through a self-serving argument.
I don’t particularly think that prosecution works that well here—crime is global, while crime-prevention is local—but perhaps we need more education; perhaps we need the equivalent of pictures of blackened lungs on cigarette-packs to be extended to media? The only problem with that are videos like this (couldn’t find the original, so enjoy the parody), which, ironically, mainly target those people who paid for a DVD, while pirates smartly removed that “feature” long before releasing the DVD into the wild. Or perhaps we do need DRM, like the kind that Steven Poole refers too, tying you to your Kindle or iPod?
It’s definitely a tricky situation, and I’m not sure there is an easy answer that works for everyone. I’ve heard of people pasting a big copyright-sign across their pictures; of authors, who read chapters or the whole book for free through a weekly podcast, while selling the book on the side for the impatient. And of course, of Radiohead and NiN, both of whom are huge artists, but who didn’t exactly employ an all-your-eggs-in-one-basket formula either.
But what about my namesake, Vincent van Gogh, an incredibly talented, yet socially awkward individual? If we expected people like him to “perform live” to earn money, perhaps we would have never seen his art today.
This piece is written by Vincent van Wylick, co-author on Tech IT Easy. The picture is courtesy of csauce.wordpress.com.










April 21, 2008 at 10:22
[...] video, user-generated content, web2.0 — Fidji SIMO @ 10:22 am I was just commenting on Vince’s last article Copyright or the Right-to-Eat and realized that my comment was getting so long that I should better write an article on the [...]
April 26, 2008 at 06:35
Hi Fidji, Vincent!
top subject, I don’t know where to leave my comment because it’s transversal trough your articles.
I am so glad you arrived at the basic idea that an artist is someone who lives things differently, thus s/he cannot conform with business rules.
But you also present artists competing over art-consumers revenues, which is bad news. Good news is that business people may start closing deals that are just beautiful and exalting for their soul. Cool, I’ll stick around to see it!!!
Vincent I agree that artists feel ackward with (hate) business. That’s why they hire agents to do the nasty job. Or they get married, like Rembrandt, putting love in the middle so that greed stays masked.
To monetize, you can count only on agent-driven art. Art that is artist-driven is highly impredictable and has some very unstable dynamics.
Quality is definitely easier to monetize and license than the representations that have no inbuilt pricing criteria. I don’t know how much I would like to pay for a 5minute song with a piano, a bass, a flute, no idea how much a tree or Dori sitting in the middle of an exhibition costs.
If I had money, I would buy a strong marketing, probably a dead artist (whose marketing is passed on to pros) or an agent-driven one.
If I had time I would buy something I like, and If I were also mature enough (as an audience) I would have had the opportunity to support a seed.
So education, Vincent, is effectively a good solution for the sustainability (trendy word, haha) of art.
Fidji, coming from a country where orthodox priests are public servants, I am very positive of the idea or replacing some of them with artists (who will address the spiritualism of people who don’t express themselves through religion). This would democratize the luxury of art, improve social welfare, and help stressed artists concentrate in their art rather than in business.