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Go to cartISBN: 9788130903972
Bind: Hardbound
Year: 2006
Pages: 342
Size: 153 x 229 mm
Publisher: MIT Press
Published in India by: Viva Books
Exclusive Distributors: Viva Books
Sales Territory: India, Nepal, Pakistan, Bangladesh, Sri Lanka, Bhutan, Myanmar
Description:
Open source software is considered by many to be a novelty and the open source movement a revolution. Yet the collaborative creation of knowledge has gone on for as long as humans have been able to communicate. CODE looks at the collaborative model of creativity —with examples ranging from collective ownership in indigenous societies to free software, academic science, and the human genome project —and finds it an alternative to proprietary frameworks for creativity based on strong intellectual property rights.
Intellectual property rights, argues Rishab Ghosh in his introduction, were ostensibly developed to increase creativity; but today, policy decisions that treat knowledge and art as if they were physical forms of property actually threaten to decrease creativity, limit public access to creativity, and discourage collaborative creativity. "Newton should have had to pay a license fee before being allowed even to see how tall the “shoulders of giants” were, let alone to stand upon them," he writes.
The contributors to CODE, from such diverse fields as economics, anthropology, law, and software development, examine collaborative creativity from a variety of perspectives, looking at new and old forms of creative collaboration and the mechanisms emerging to study them. Discussing the philosophically resonant issues of ownership, property, and the commons, they ask if the increasing application of the language of property rights to knowledge and creativity constitutes a second enclosure movement —or if the worldwide acclaim for free software signifies a renaissance of the commons. Two concluding chapters offer concrete possibilities for both alternatives, with one proposing the establishment of "positive intellectual rights" to information and another issuing a warning against the threats to networked knowledge posed by globalization.
Contents:
Why Collaboration is important (again) • Creativity and domains of collaboration? Imagined collectivities and multiple authorship • Modes of creativity and the register of ownership • Some properties of culture and persons • Square pegs in round holes? Cultural production, intellectual property frameworks, and discourses of power • Who got left out of the property grab again: Oral traditions, indigenous rights, and valuable old knowledge • From keeping " Nature's Secrets" to the Institutionalization of "Open Science" • Mechanisms for Collaboration • Benefit-sharing: Experiments in governance • Trust among the algorithms: Ownership, identity and the collaborative stewardship of information • Cooking-pot markets and balanced value flows • Coase's Penguin,Or, Linux and the nature of the firm • Paying for public goods • Ownership, property and the commons • Fencing off ideas: Enclosure and the disappearance of the public domain • A renaissance of the commons: How the new sciences and internet are framing a new global identity and order • Positive intellectual rights and information exchanges • Copyright and globalization in the age of computer networks
About the Author:
Rishab Aiyer Ghosh is Program Leader at the International Institute of Infonomics at Maastricht University. He was one of the founders and is the current managing editor of First Monday, the peer-reviewed Internet journal.
Target Audience: Students and academicians of anthropology, economics, law, software development, intellectual property rights etc.