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"Wolna kultura" Lawrence'a Lessiga - pobierz.

07.05.2005
15:39
smile
[1]

bartek [ ]

"Wolna kultura" Lawrence'a Lessiga - pobierz.

"Wolna kultura - w jaki sposób wielkie media wykorzystują technologię i prawo, aby blokować kulturę i kontrolować kreatywność"

Dopiero zaczynam się wczytywać, chyba warto, szczególnie dlatego, że książka jest całkowicie darmowa.

Wersja HTML: https://www.futrega.org/wk/
Wersja PDF: https://www.futrega.org/wk/wk.pdf
Mirror PDF: https://www.wsip.com.pl/Link?refId=D78CH21P3HTV2183TLDR10WV

07.05.2005
16:00
[2]

Dagger [ Legend ]

Z tego co pamiętam książka była tłumaczona na zasadzie "wiki".
Poniżej dobry felieton Lessiga z "Wired"


Why Your Broadband Sucks
You'll be pleased to know that communism was defeated in Pennsylvania last year. Governor Ed Rendell signed into law a bill prohibiting the Reds in local government from offering free Wi-Fi throughout their municipalities. The action came after Philadelphia, where more than 50 percent of neighborhoods don't have access to broadband, embarked on a $10 million wireless Internet project. City leaders had stepped in where the free market had failed. Of course, it's a slippery slope from free Internet access to Karl Marx. So Rendell, the telecom industry's latest toady, even while exempting the City of Brotherly Love, acted to spare Pennsylvania from this grave threat to its economic freedom.

Let's hope this is just the first step. For if you look closely, you'll see the communist menace has infiltrated governments everywhere. Ever notice those free photons as you walk the city at night? Ever think about the poor streetlamp companies, run out of business because municipalities deigned to do completely what private industry would do only incompletely? Or think about the scandal of public roads: How many tollbooth workers have lost their jobs because we no longer (since about the 18th century) fund all roads through private enterprise? Municipal buses compete with private taxis. City police departments hamper the growth at Pinkerton's (now Securitas). It's a national scandal. So let the principle that guided Rendell guide governments everywhere: If private industry can provide a service, however poorly or incompletely, then ban the government from competing. What's true for Wi-Fi should be true for water.

No, I haven't lost my mind. But this sort of insanity is raging across the US today. Pushed by lobbyists, at least 14 states have passed legislation similar to Pennsylvania's. I've always wondered what almost $1 billion spent on lobbying state lawmakers gets you. Now I'm beginning to see.

The telcos' argument isn't much more subtle than that of the simpleton who began this column: Businesses shouldn't have to compete against their governments. What the market can do, the government shouldn't. Or so the fall of the Soviet Union should have taught us.

Although this principle is true enough in most cases, it is obviously not true in all. The government should certainly not do what private enterprise can do better (e.g., make computers). And the government should not prohibit private enterprise from competing against it (e.g., FedEx). But the government also should not act as the cat's paw for one of the most powerful industries in the nation by making competition against that industry illegal, whether from government or not. This is true, at least, when it is unclear just what kind of "good" such competition might produce.

Broadband is the perfect example. The private market has failed the US so far. At the beginning, we led the world in broadband deployment. But by 2004, we ranked an embarrassing 13th. There are many places, like Philadelphia, where service is lacking. And there are many places, like San Francisco, where competition is lacking. The result of the duopoly that currently defines "competition" is that prices and service suck. We're the world's leader in Internet technology - except that we're not.

The solution is not to fire private enterprise; it is instead to encourage more competition. Communities across the country are experimenting with ways to supplement private service. And these experiments are producing unexpected economic returns. Some are discovering that free wireless access increases the value of public spaces just as, well, streetlamps do. And just as streetlamps don't make other types of lighting obsolete, free wireless access in public spaces won't kill demand for access in private spaces. In economoid-speak, these public services may well provide positive externalities. Yet we will never recognize these externalities unless municipalities are free to experiment. That's why the bipartisan Silicon Valley advocacy group TechNet explicitly endorses allowing local governments to compete with broadband providers.

City and state politicians should have the backbone to stand up to self-serving lobbyists. Citizens everywhere should punish telecom toadies who don't. Backwater broadband has been our fate long enough. Let the markets, both private and public, compete to provide the service that telecom and cable has not.

07.05.2005
16:19
[3]

Mistrz Giętej Riposty [ Kozioł Antyfaszysta ]

Dlaczeg

"Pomysł Lessiga to w pewnym sensie kopernikański zwrot. Zamiast za pomocą licencji określać, jak bardzo dzieło ma być chronione, przekazuje te uprawnienia autorowi – to autor ma decydować, jak bardzo jego dzieło ma być wolne i dostępne dla innych twórców, czyli praktycznie wszystkich."

ma niby byc skuteczniejszy niz prawa autorskie w obecnej postaci? Czy nie rozni sie to tylko zamiana dookreslania tego co zabronione na to co dozwolone ? Poza tym istnieja przeciez tego typu "wolne" licencje, wiec jaki znowu zwrot kopernikanski... ?

Moze w ksiazce jest to lepiej wyjasnione nzi w tym stzreszczeniu.

07.05.2005
16:22
[4]

Dagger [ Legend ]

==>Mistrz Giętej Riposty
Ano może różni się tym że Lessig może udostępnić elektroniczną wersję swojej książki za darmo - w takiej wersji w jakiej została wydrukowana :)

Na dole link do wersji angielskiej - bezpośrednie pobieranie nie jest zbyt szybkie ale jest też torrent do ściągnięcia.

07.05.2005
16:26
[5]

Mistrz Giętej Riposty [ Kozioł Antyfaszysta ]

Dagger - a tworcy gry freeware, albo autorzy mp3 na wolnej strefie to niby nie moga ? :) Jak to ktos tam w srodku jednak napisal - wywazanie otwartch drzwi. Ale moze i warto przeczytac, bo zawsze lubilem sluchac wywodow o polskiej transfomracji okiem Amerykanina... bez ironii mowie - to ciekawa sprawa, jak oni to widzą.

07.05.2005
16:31
[6]

Dagger [ Legend ]

==>Mistrz Giętej Riposty
Książki nie czytałem - może zakupie jej drukowane wydanie - natomiast nie sądzę żę jest tam wiele o polskiej transformacji :)

19.05.2005
21:41
[7]

Dagger [ Legend ]

To znamy już cenę wydania papierowego, w księgarni jeszcze dzisiaj nie znalazłem.

01.06.2005
14:14
[8]

Przewodnik Syriusza [ Magazyn Grafik ]

Zapowiada się super, będę sobie drukowal.

01.06.2005
14:21
[9]

Dagger [ Legend ]

BTW Ktoś wie gdzie WSiP ma swoją księgarnie w Warszawie? I czy ta ksiązka została już wydana w Polsce, jest dostępna w księgarniach?

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