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[personal profile] unjapanologist
Here's a short interview with Kal Raustiala, co-author of a very interesting new book called 'The Knockoff Economy: How Imitation Sparks Innovation'. Raustiala discusses how copyright is unnecessary in various creative industries. For instance, an absence of copyright protection encourages innovation in fashion, football, and cuisine. He also touches upon the (lack of) innovation in the music industry and the (lack of) use for patents in certain industries (paraphrased: "It's not reasonable for Apple to patent the rectangle").

The Knockoff Economy: How Copying Benefits Everyone (9min)




I'm reading the book and liking it very much so far. Here's a short review.

Via Boing Boing
 

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Date: 2012-10-30 05:26 am (UTC)
stealthily: kim pine from scott pilgrim in a yellow bikini, her arms folded and side-eyeing someone (Default)
From: [personal profile] stealthily
liked the video, but your link to the review doesn't work

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unjapanologist

Welcome!

This is the research journal of Nele Noppe. Besides the occasional squee about A:tLA, I mostly talk about the cultural economy of fanwork, comparative research on Japanese dojinshi and English-language fanwork, and legal, economic and cultural policy issues related to dojinshi and to fanwork in general. Anything too short or incoherent to post here goes into Twitter or the notes and quotes book.


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