[photo by Éole]
[Part 2. See: Part 1]
What I would not like to see emerge from the BNN imbroglio is a movement supporting the addition of even more restrictions to an overly-confining copyright system that is already heavily slanted towards one class/kind of creator and their sometime corporate backers/users. Copyright law has already gutted what should have been the richest information commons we have ever seen by imposing restrictions that are ridiculously extreme in both form and length. Adding objections to systems which provide added value by making use of (the already too limiting) Fair Use provisions to the vast repertoire mass media interest use to enrich themselves at the expense of the entire creative culture seems precisely the wrong way to go.
It’s perfectly OK with me that Fair Use provisions allow people to make a profit by building on the work of others. Without such a system we would have to do without many useful publications and artifacts: from scholarly criticism and review that must cite from sources to be useful, to indexes and concordances which owe their existence solely to the original work(s), to news and content summary and analysis services and publications used by a variety of people and businesses.
Further, figuring out ways to quantify and share the value of attention and respect paid to words and work by readers is a fundamental need that comes as part of the explosion of the new social, participatory web. Sites which provide added value to and through existing works based on reputation, attention, suggestion, and various social acts of consumption and sharing are a key to the humanized network we are all living in.
That profit on these activities can be accrued by people I don’t like and/or in service of philosophies I don’t subscribe to– or even used in a profit-free way by and for the same– is immaterial in the same way that the content, philosophy and speaker is immaterial to their right to be protected by the tenets of free speech. Which means there are limits, but they aren’t based on profitability or philosophical disagreement. Despite feeling this way rationally, I’ve had my own “AHA!” moments of frustration and resentment when my own words have been re-used in ways that were personally vexing.
To my shame I have also, in a moment of extreme frustration, used the protections of Fair Use as a cudgel to attack someone I felt was being unfair to me, threatening to continue using fair excerpts of their words and posts despite their expressed desire that I stop doing so. Taking advantage of Fair Use provisions to hurt or annoy someone (which is different from doing so in service of another end that might also have the same effect) is a passive-aggressive act of the highest order, like prominently linking to someone who has repeatedly asked that you not do so. Legal? Yes. Ethical? No. Unprofitable? Almost completely.
Instead of trying to find ways to add more warp to an already twisted body of legislation, people who are perturbed with the way a site like BNN is operation should be doing just what they are doing now: target people who run ethically questionable if probably legal sites using the same system of social information sharing and reputation that make such an operation potentially profitable in the first place. Rally the site-owners to protest and ask for removal, have all of them note their grievance(s) clearly on their pages so people following from the aggregating site are apprised, foment the discussion in the blogosphere, and counter with– and promote– more ethical reputation sites.
As a general rule and for reasons both sociological and economic, we have more power as individuals to bring about change in this area through our social action than we do through legal action. And if we find that we don’t have the support from the others we feel have been wronged then our first action should probably be to look at ourselves and our cause to figure out why.