[JoPP-Public] Issue #6 Disruption and the Law

Mathieu ONeil mathieu.oneil at anu.edu.au
Fri Jan 23 14:44:42 CET 2015


Hi all


Congrats to Steve and Angela!


I posted the release announcement to:


Fibreculture

ACS
ICT&Society

CITASA (though I think they unsubbed me so not sure if will work)

?If anyone wants to spread the word please do and let us know on this list to avoid multiple posts


cheers,


Mathieu



________________________________
From: jopp-public-bounces at lists.ourproject.org <jopp-public-bounces at lists.ourproject.org> on behalf of Steve Collins <stephen.collins at mq.edu.au>
Sent: Wednesday, January 21, 2015 11:55
To: jopp-public at lists.ourproject.org
Subject: [JoPP-Public] Issue #6 Disruption and the Law

Hi Everyone

I'd like to announce the release of issue #6 of the Journal of Peer Production.

Disruption and the Law was edited by Angela Daly (Swinburne University of Technology and European University Institute) and myself (Macquarie University). Please distribute across your networks.

http://peerproduction.net/issues/issue-6-disruption-and-the-law/

The disruption caused by new technologies and non-conventional methods of organisation - from a Western perspective at least - have posed challenges for the law, confronting regulators with the need to balance justice and an appreciation of new realities with powerful interests and existing paradigms. Experience from the "disruptions" of the late twentieth century has shown that the response from incumbent industries can lead to a period of intense litigation and lobbying for laws that will maintain the status quo. For example, following its "Napster moment", the music industry fought to maintain its grip on distribution channels through increased copyright enforcement and the longer copyright terms it managed to extract from the legislative process. The newspaper industry has similarly seen its historical revenue stream of classified ads disrupted by more efficient online listings, and responded to its own failure to capitalise on online advertising by launching legal campaigns against Google News in various European countries.

Though the law as it stands may not be well-equipped to deal with disruptive episodes, the technological innovations of the last twenty years have created an environment that generates disruption. The Internet, the Web and networked personal computers have converged into the ubiquitous post-PC media device, leaving twentieth century paradigms of production, consumption and distribution, particularly in the Western world, under considerable threat. The latest technology to be added to this group of disruptive innovations may be 3D printing, which in recent times has become increasingly available and accessible to users in developed economies, whilst the manufacturing capacity of 3D printers has dramatically grown. Although current offerings on the market are far from a Star Trek-like "replicator", the spectre of disruption has once again arrived with the prospect of 3D printed guns inspiring a moral panic and raising questions of gun control, regulation, jurisdiction and effective control. In addition, 3D printing raises a number of issues regarding intellectual property, going far beyond the copyright problems that file-sharing brought about due to its production of physical objects.

It is against this backdrop that we present this special issue of the Journal of Peer Production, comprising six peer-reviewed papers and one discussion paper covering an array of diverse issues implicated by the emergence of new production and distribution technologies, associated peer practices and tensions with legal and de facto regulatory frameworks.

best
steve

--
Dr Steve Collins
Senior Lecturer in Multimedia
Program Director / BA-Media / Bachelor Marketing and Media
Department of Media, Music, Communication & Cultural Studies
Macquarie University

P: (02) 9850 2165
W: http://bit.ly/122QivW
L: Y3A 191D
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