Posts Tagged ‘music’

Ideas and control … how are they linked?

I was listening to something on the radio and it got me thinking. A century ago, people started being recognised as people. It took a while and we haven’t completed that task, but with the beginnings of the shift of enfranchisement to include others besides powerful men, we started down a track which has led to here. Where is here? Well, here is where we have people with (almost) equal rights. I say (almost) because there are still portions of various societies that still view members of that society as lesser members. Not as good as the powerful members. People having fewer rights, fewer options, fewer possibilities to grow.

Concurrently, we had this burgeoning of ideas. The last century has seen a flurry of intellectual growth, ideation, information. Are these two linked? I’m not enough of a historian to determine that. But, and this is my point, with the increase of both ‘rights’ and ‘ideas’ and a decrease in ‘control’ of people, there seems to have been a shift to the control of ideas.

How has this happened? How is it that the powerful people of a century ago have shifted their control of ‘others’ to the control of ‘ideas’? We no longer condone the ‘ownership of people’ but we now have this notion of ‘ownership of ideas’ and frankly, if I try to own an idea, the only way I can control it is by not sharing. If I share an idea, it’s not just mine, it’s ours. I think this means I believe that ‘intellectual property’ is a crock!

And that I gladly share with you.

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Rants

I just had a long rant on my old blog (the Griffith ‘official’ one). I’m not sure why, but that interface really irks me. I seem to continually get annoyed every time I sit down to write something there.

It got me thinking though about the whole web2.0 thing. Web2.0 is supposed to be about use-generated content, about community and involvement, and yet, there seems to be a need for control as well as other issues that are really starting to surface. I noted this morning (via my sister) that the whole web2.0 sharing thing is problematic. It seems (according to the New York Times) that web2.0 site Bebo.com has been sold for a whopping $850 million. That strikes me (and Billy too) as being quite amazing particularly as the whole of the site is based around user-generated content. Apparently, the owner of Bebo wanted to make sure that it was good for artists to put their music on the site, that there wasn’t an implied licence to use stuff perpetually (which a lot of licences state), but how then does he justify making so much of the back of these artists? How does he get to sell something for so much that has little value without the user-generated content? When will we see a licence that states that if (when?) the site is sold for a whopping amount some of that will be returned to some of the artists who busted their guts to get stuff out and some recognition? Why isn’t some of that being returned to the creative people?

It seems to me that we’re setting up a similar system to the old ‘labels’, where they make the money and the artist just gets recognition. Recognition won’t pay the bills, sadly.

There seems to be two kinds of social network system being set up. There is the open resources variety (kind of like Wikipedia and WikiEducator) where the objective is to get more content out there for the benefit of millions, and the other sort, which is supposedly open, but which results in someone making millions while the bunnies trying to make it work in some way to make a living make nothing except an increased reputation. I can easily participate in the former (I do have a job that keeps me going, although for how long given my latest rant), and I have very little to offer in the the latter (yes, I can sing, but it’s just not very pleasurable for anyone else). So how do we get these two different models doing what they do best? Getting things to people who want or need them?

At one level, I suppose that’s one of the differences. People need educational resources, but we want music, we want the cultural value of those other resources, we want to belong even just through the knowing of something that speaks to us. Many of us are willing to pay for that, provided we don’t feel ripped off (think of the time wasted watching all those ‘piracy is bad’ messages at the beginning of movies – we just paid for the frelling thing, but if we rip it, if we break some laws in some places we don’t have to put up with being accused of that which we just did in order to avoid being called pirates).

I just mispelt accused as acussed. I think there was a message in that.

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Sometimes when I’m alone …

I google myself. That sounds kind of bizarre, but in setting up the new site and blog, I’m interested in where I appear out there. Part of the reason for this blog is to increase my web presence, so it would be appropriate to google myself. Vanity has its uses.

But one of the problems of having two given names (only two given names) is that I seem to be lost in amongst all the other Alison Ruth [LastName]‘s out there. Admittedly, I’m first, or at least my official university profile is, followed closely by my uni blog (the (B)Lotus one, which I really dislike, but that’s fodder for another post). In amongst the pages and pages of hits for “alison ruth” are my publications, but they don’t appear together and there is no definitive list of them (until now).

But nonetheless, it’s interesting to see how often I do turn up, given that the combination ‘alison ruth’ is such a popular set of names. There are two alison ruth‘s on livejournal (neither of which are me). Mostly you can find the things that are public by searching for ‘alison ruth’ or ‘alisonruth’. I tend to sign up to sites that I’m comfortable people knowing about as the latter. Sometimes, googling myself helps me remember what I have signed up for.

The process does make it very obvious how much information is out there about you (very much a vicarious conversation with yourself), but it also puts my mind at ease, as with all the stuff I have put out there, most of what comes up with my name is the kind of stuff that’s okay. Everything else is hidden behind a pseudonym. (And no, I’m not telling, it’s private.)

Privacy is a conversation between an individual and the social process with which they engage. Like most conversations, part of it can be taken out of context by others who have access to the information. I know there are lots of things out there about me, but generally, I’m okay with the things that are viewable. It brings up interesting issues about ownership and control of information. In some ways, I know that once something is out there, I no longer have control over it, yet do I still own it in the traditional sense. I think I have a sense of discomfort with the notion of intellectual property, about who owns what.

Take the music industry, sorry, the recording industry. There’s all sorts of mis-takes on what music is to people. For a song to be popular, the people who hear it, there must be some sense of ownership of the song for them to care about it, yet the recording industry maintains that we can never own it. There is a huge breakdown in the conversation between music listeners and music recorders. Who really owns the music?

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