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Lawrence Lessig: The Architecture of Access to Scientific Knowledge

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    Lawrence Lessig: Thank you very much. It's extremely cool to be here.
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    It's just about as cool as when I spoke at Pixar.
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    I think of these two as being highlights of my career.
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    So, thank you very much for having me.
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    I have two small ideas I want to use as an introduction to an argument,
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    about the nature of access to scientific knowledge in the context of the internet,
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    and use that argument as a step towards a plea about what we should do.
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    So here is the first idea.
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    I want to call it the "White-effect".
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    And I name that after Justice Byron White, justice of the US Supreme Court,
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    appointed by John F. Kennedy - there he is in 1962
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    - famous before that as 'Whizzer' White on the Yale University football team.
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    When he was appointed to the Supreme Court, he was a famous liberal,
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    renowned liberal, the only appointee that John Kennedy had to the Supreme Court.
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    But 'Whizzer' White grew old, and he is probably most famous for an infamous opinion,
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    which he penned on behalf of the Supreme Court, Bowers v. Hardwick,
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    an opinion where the Supreme Court upheld the Criminalization of Sodomy laws,
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    with the passage: 'Against this background, to claim that a right to engage
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    in such conduct' - homosexual sodomy - 'is "deeply rooted in this Nation's history and tradition"
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    or "implicit in the concept of ordered liberty" is, at best, facetious.'
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    Now, this is what I want to think of as the "White Effect".
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    To be a liberal or a progressive is always relative to a moment, and that moment changes,
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    and too many are liberal or progressive no more.
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    So, that's the "White effect". Here is the second idea.
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    The Harvard Gazette is a kind of propaganda publication of Harvard University,
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    it talks about all the happy things at Harvard.
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    So here's an article that it wrote, about an extraordinary macro-economist,
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    Gita Gopinath, who has just come to Harvard, received tenure last year
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    and is one of the most influential macroeconomists in the United States right now.
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    This article talks about her work and her research, and at the very end,
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    there is this puzzling passage, where it says:
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    'Still, the shelves in her new office are nearly bare, since, said Gopinath,
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    "Everything I need is on the Internet now." '
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    Right, that's the second idea. Here is the argument.
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    So, copyright is a regulation by the State intended to change
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    a regulation by the market. It's an exclusive right, a monopoly right,
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    a property right granted by the State, which is necessary
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    to solve an inevitable market failure.
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    Now, by saying that it's necessary to solve an inevitable market failure,
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    I'm marking myself as a pro-copyright scholar,
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    in the sense that I believe copyright is necessary. Even in a digital age,
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    especially in a digital age, copyright is necessary to achieve
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    certain incentives that otherwise would be lost.
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    But in the internet age, what we've seen as a fight about copyright,
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    about the scope of copyright, waged most consistently in the context
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    of the battle over artists' rights, in particular, in the context of music,
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    where massive 'sharing' - sharing which is technically illegal - has lead to a fight
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    fought by artists and especially by artists' representatives.
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    And we from the Free Culture movement, have challenged the people
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    who have been waging that fight.
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    And they defend copyright in the context of that fight.
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    But if we get above the din of this battle, the important thing to keep in mind
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    is that both sides in this fight acknowledge that copyright is essential
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    for certain creative work,
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    and we need to respect copyright for that creative work.
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    We, from the Free Culture movement, need to respect copyright for that work.
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    We need to recognize that there is a place for a sensible copyright policy
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    to protect and encourage that work.
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    But, however - and here is the important distinction -
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    Not only artists rely upon copyright, copyright is also relied upon by publishers,
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    and publishers are a different animal.
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    We don't have to be as negative as John Milton was when he wrote publishers are
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    "Old patentees and monopolizers in the trade of books
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    - men who do no labor in an honest profession, to [them], learning is indebted."
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    We don't have to go quite that far to recognize why publishers are different,
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    that the economic problem for publishers is different
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    from the economic problems presented by creating.
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    So who is copyright for? The publishers or the artists?
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    Well, since the beginning of copyright in the Anglo-American tradition,
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    the Statute of Anne of 1710, there has been this argument about whether copyright
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    was intended for the publishers or the artists.
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    When the Statute of Anne was originally introduced, it gave a perpetual term of copyright,
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    which the publishers understood to be a protection for them.
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    It was then amended to give just a limited term for copyright.
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    Publishers were puzzled about that, because it wouldn't make sense to give a limited term
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    if it was the publisher that was to be protected.
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    In 1769, a court case in the context of Millar v. Taylor seemed to suggest that
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    despite the limitations of the Statute of Anne, copyright was for ever.
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    But in 1774, in a very famous case about this book, The Seasons, by James Thomson,
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    the House of Lords held that copyright protected by the Status of Anne was limited,
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    holding for the first time that works passed into a public domain.
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    And for the first time in English history, works including Shakespeare
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    passed into the public domain. And in this moment, we can say Free Culture was born.
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    And it also clarified that copyright was not intended for the publisher.
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    Even if it benefited the publishers, it was a creative right
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    and author's right. Even if benefitting publishers, copyright was for authors.
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    So, I remark these obvious borders about the scope of copyright,
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    because we tend to forget them. We've been fighting a battle in the context of copyright
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    where copyright is essential, and we are spending too little attention
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    about a battle in a context where copyright is not essential.
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    And I mean by that, in the context of science, in the context that Gopinath was speaking of
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    when she talked about everything being available on the internet.
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    And the consequence of failing to pay attention to this second context
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    within which this battle is being waged is that there is a trouble here
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    that too few see.
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    So let's think about this claim that everything is on the internet now.
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    What does that mean?
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    Here is a particular example to evaluate what that means.
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    Much of my work, these days, is focusing on corruption
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    in the context of this institution, Congress.
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    So let's say that we wanted to study, you wanted to study with me,
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    corruption in this context. Go to Google Scholar and enter a search for campaign finance.
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    Here are the top articles that would be listed from that search.
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    So let's say you wanted to browse through these articles
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    and get a sense of campaign finance and how it might be related to corruption in Congress.
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    So here are the top 10 articles. This first one, a very famous one
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    by my former colleague Pam Karlan and Sam Issacharof.
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    You would find, to get access to this article, you'd have to pay $29.95.
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    The second article, housed at JSTOR, you'd have to get through to get permission
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    from the Columbia Law Review - not quite clear how you would do that.
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    Third article, again, $29.95. The fourth article, protected by Questia,
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    we learn that you can get a 1-day free trial to all of these Oxford University Press articles,
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    you'd only have to pay when that day is over 99 dollars
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    to continue for a year.
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    Here is the 4th article again, protected by JSTOR.
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    The 5th article, it's an economics article, so the price is right on the surface:
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    10 dollars to purchase access to this article.
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    Here's the 7th article, Columbia Law Review.
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    8th article, Columbia Law Review, 9th article, protected again by JSTOR,
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    10th article, $29.95. So, how accessible is this information to the general public?
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    Well, one of these you can get access to for free, at least one time only,
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    One of them you can pay $10 for. 3 of them, $29.95, and 5 of them, terms unknown,
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    protected by JSTOR.
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    So, when Gopinath says "Everything I need is on the internet",
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    what does she mean? What she means is if - and this is a big if -
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    you're a tenured professor at an elite university or we could say a professor,
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    or a student or professor in an elite university, or maybe
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    a student or professor at a US university, if you are a member of the knowledge elite,
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    then you have effectively free access to all of this information.
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    But if you are from the rest of the world? Not so much.
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    Now, the thing to recognize is we built this world,
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    we built this architecture for access, these flows from the deployment of copyright,
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    but here, copyright to benefit publishers. Not to enable authors.
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    Not one of these authors gets money from copyright.
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    Not one of them wants the distribution of their articles limited.
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    Not one of them has a business model that turns upon restricting access to their work.
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    Not one of them should support this system.
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    As a knowledge policy for the creators of this knowledge, this is crazy.
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    And the craziness doesn't stop here.
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    So, my third child, this extraordinarily beautiful girl, Samantha Tess,
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    when she was born, the doctors were worried she had a condition
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    that would suggest jaundice. I had jaundice as a baby, so I didn't think it was serious,
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    and I was told very forcefully by her doctor, this is extroardinarily serious.
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    If this condition manifest in the dangerous condition, it would produce brain damage,
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    possibly death.
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    So, of course, we were terrified. I went home and I did what every academic did - does:
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    I pulled everything I could from the web to study about what jaundice was
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    and what the conditions were. Now, because I am a Harvard professor,
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    of course, I didn't have to pay to get access to this information, but I just kept the tally.
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    To get access to the 20 articles that I wanted access to was $435,
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    for the ordinary human, not a Harvard professor. OK.
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    So I gathered these articles and set them aside, believing this problem
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    would not manifest itself in a serious way.
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    But on her third day, she fell into a stupor, and we called the doctor,
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    and the doctor was panciked and he said we had to get to the hospital immediately.
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    So, at 3 o'clock in the morning, we trundled the baby up and raced to the hospital.
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    We were sitting in the waiting room, and I brought the articles with me,
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    because I wanted something to do, to distract me from the terror
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    that my child had this condition.
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    And I picked up the first of these articles, which is actually free,
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    published on the web for free, at the American Family Physician,
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    and I started reading about this condition.
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    And I got to this table, a table that was going to describe
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    when you should worry about whether the child would have too severe of this exposure.
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    I turned the page, and this is what I found:
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    "The rightsholder did not grant rights to reproduce this item in electronic media.
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    For the missing item, see the original print version of this publication."
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    And I had this moment of liberation from fear about my child,
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    because I turned to fear about our culture. I thought, this is outrageous!
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    The idea that we are regulating access down to the chart in an article
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    that was posted for free to help, not doctors, but parents
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    understand what this condition was.
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    We are regulating access to parts of articles.
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    Now here and throughout our architecture for access,
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    we are building an infrastructure for this regulation.
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    Think about the Google Books project, which is perfecting control down to the sentence,
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    the ability to regulate access down to the sentence.
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    By the way, I alway forget to tell this: the kid is fine, she didn't have jaundice,
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    it is a complete non issue.
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    But the point is, we are architecting access here, for what purpose?
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    To maximize revenue. And why? Revenue to the artists?
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    Revenues necessary to produce the incentive to create?
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    Is this a limitation that serves any of the real objectives of copyright?
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    The answer is no.
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    It is simply the natural result of for-profit production
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    for any good that we, quote, must have.
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    As Bergstrom and McAfee describe in a really fantastic little bit of work,
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    if you compare the cost per page of for-profit publishers
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    and the cost per page of not-for-profit publishers in these different fields of science,
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    it's a 4 and a half times factor difference cost per page.
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    That is a function of different, of these having different objectives.
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    One objective is to spread knowledge: that's the not-for-profit publishers,
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    and one objective, to maximize profit: that's the for-profit publishers.
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    Now, this architecture for access is beginning to build resistance.
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    So, think about the story of JSTOR.
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    JSTOR was launched in 1995, with an extraordinary amount of funding
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    from the Mellon Foundation. That funding produced a huge archive
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    of journal articles. So that there are now more than 1200 journals, 20 collections,
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    53 disciplines, 303'000 issues, about 38 million pages in JSTOR archive.
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    When this archive was launched, everybody thought it was brilliant.
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    Everybody thought the access here was extraordinary.
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    But today? There is increasingly criticism growing out there
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    about how JSTOR makes its information accessible.
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    We could think of it as a kind of "White effect".
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    It was liberal when it was launched, but what has it become as it has grown old?
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    So, for example, here is an article published in the
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    California Historical Society Quarterly. It's 6 pages long.
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    To get it, you have to pay $20 to JSTOR, this non-profit organization,
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    leading Carl Malamud, who of course is famous for his Public Resources site,
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    to tweet in the following way: "JSTOR is morally offensive.
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    $20 for a 6-page article, unless you happen to work at a fancy school."
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    Now, you might say, "This is a really important academic archive",
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    but the question is whether this really important academic archive
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    is going to become a kind of RIAA for the academy.
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    Begging the question that the "White effect" always begs,
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    whether we could do this better under a different set of assumptions.
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    Now, of course the Open Access movement is the movement that was launched
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    to try and do this better under different circumstances.
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    Now, it has a long history, but its real push was inspired by
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    a dramatic increase in the cost of journals.
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    So, if this is a study between 1986 and 2004 by the American Research Libraries,
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    this is the increase in inflation, this is the increase in the cost of serials,
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    it's obvious that the market power of these publishers is being exploited,
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    because the purchasers of these serials have no choice but to buy them.
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    It's in part motivated by this cost concern, it's also motivated by a sense of unfairness.
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    We do all the work, they get all the money, here.
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    So the response to these two kinds of concerns has been two:
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    #1 an open access self-archiving movement, where the push has been
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    "Let's get as many things out there archived on the Web as we can,
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    pre-prints and whatever we can get up, and make sure
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    the Web can make them accessible" - and an Open Access publishing movement.
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    Now, what's the difference between these two movements?
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    The difference is licensing. Some "open" is "free", in the sense that Richard Stallman
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    made famous by his quote: "Free software is a matter of liberty, not price.
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    To understand the concept, you should think of free as in free speech,
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    not as in free beer."
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    So, some aspect of the Open Access publishing is free as in free speech,
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    some "open" is not. Some is just free as in: "You can download it freely,
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    but the rights that you get from the download are just as broad
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    as narrowly granted by some implicit copyright rule.
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    Now, "free", as in licensed freely, has been the objective that the Science Commons project,
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    which is a project that Creative Commons has been pushing,
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    and pushing as part of a broader strategy for producing
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    the information architecture that science needs, as they announce
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    in their "Principles for open science". There are four principles here.
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    The first is, there should be open access to literature, by which Science Commons says:
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    you should be on the internet, literature "should be on the internet
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    in digital form, with permission granted in advance
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    to users to read, download, copy, distribute, print, search or link
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    to the full texts of articles, crawl them indexing, pass them as data to software,
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    or use them for any other lawful purpose,
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    without financial, legal or technical barriers other than those inseparable
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    from gaining access to the internet itself."
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    That's what "free", here, means.
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    Second, access to research tools: there should be "materials necessary
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    to replicate funded research - cell lines, model animals, DNA tools,
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    reagents, and more - should be described in digital formats,
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    made available under standard terms of use or contracts,
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    with infrastructure or resources to fulfill requests to qualified scientists,
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    and with full credit provided to the scientist who created the tools."
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    #3 Data should be in the public domain. "Research data, data sets, databases,
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    and protocols should be in the public domain."
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    meaning no copyright restrictions at all.
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    And 4, Open cyber-infrastructure:
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    "Data without structure and annotation is an opportunity lost.
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    Research data should flow in an open, public and extensible infrastructure
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    that supports its recombination and reconfiguration into computer models,
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    its searchability by search engines,
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    and its use by both scientists and the taxpaying public.
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    This infrastructure is an essential public good."
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    Now, my view is, this the right way - you might think this is the left way -
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    but it's the correct way to instantiate this Open Access movement.
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    The values and the efficiency and the justice in this architecture
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    are the right values, efficiency and justice for an Open Access movement.
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    So let's call it, following Stallman, the Free Access Movement.
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    And the critical question of the Free Access movement
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    is the license that governs access to the information being provided.
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    Does the license grant freedoms?
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    And that, of course, was the motivation between the Public Library of Science -
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    every one of their articles is published under a Creative Commons
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    Attribution license, the freest license we have.
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    And that is increasingly the practice, surprisingly, of the largest publishers,
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    as described by this wonderful project housed here at CERN,
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    which is studying Open Access publishing.
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    This is the first of three stages to this project. When studying the large publishers,
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    this study concludes that "Half of the large publishers use some version
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    of a Creative Commons license. These seven publish 72% of the titles
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    and 71% of the articles investigated.
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    And of these, 82% use the freest license, cc-by, and 18% use cc-by-nc", non commercial.
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    And that of course is an excellent report on the progress of this free access movement
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    in the context of the largest publishers.
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    But what's not excellent in this story is the other publishers here.
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    For these other publishers, only 73% you can determine copyright status
  • 21:52 - 21:58
    69% transfer the copyright to the publisher. Only 21 % of the articles
  • 21:58 - 22:01
    have any Creative Commons license attached at all.
  • 22:02 - 22:08
    Now, this is because these other publishers are using copyright as a means,
  • 22:09 - 22:15
    a means to a non-knowledge ends, to a non-copyright ends.
  • 22:15 - 22:18
    So, for example, they are using it to support the societies
  • 22:18 - 22:21
    that might happen to be associated with publishing
  • 22:21 - 22:24
    that particular journal, that society that might study
  • 22:24 - 22:25
    one particular of science.
  • 22:25 - 22:28
    That society, of course, is valuable, but what they are doing
  • 22:28 - 22:31
    is using copyright to support that society.
  • 22:31 - 22:37
    And the consequence of that strategy is to block access to all but the few.
  • 22:37 - 22:40
    We don't achieve the objectives of the Enlightenment,
  • 22:40 - 22:44
    we achieve the reality of an elite-nment, the elite-nment
  • 22:44 - 22:48
    which describes the way in which we spread knowledge
  • 22:48 - 22:51
    despite the ideals of the Enlightenment.
  • 22:51 - 22:56
    And the point I'm emphasizing here is that it's for no good copyright reason.
  • 22:57 - 23:02
    Now, the slowness inside of science to embrace this more broadly,
  • 23:02 - 23:05
    especially among the smaller publishers, may surprise some,
  • 23:05 - 23:09
    or maybe it doesn't surprise. The whole design of science
  • 23:09 - 23:13
    is to be a fad-resistor, the idea is to have an infrastructure
  • 23:14 - 23:17
    that avoids fads, and tradition then becomes the metric of what's right
  • 23:18 - 23:19
    or of what's good in science.
  • 23:19 - 23:25
    But I think it's time to recognize that Free Access, as in free, as in speech access
  • 23:25 - 23:27
    is no fad.
  • 23:27 - 23:33
    And it's time to push this non fad more broadly in the context of science.
  • 23:34 - 23:39
    Now, just because I'm talking about how bad some area of science is,
  • 23:39 - 23:43
    I don't mean to suggest that the arts is good, right?
  • 23:43 - 23:46
    We have practices in the context of the arts that are just as bad, here.
  • 23:46 - 23:51
    For example, think about a recent episode around YouTube.
  • 23:52 - 23:55
    You know, we should not minimize the significance of YouTube
  • 23:55 - 23:57
    in the infrastructure of culture right now.
  • 23:57 - 24:00
    YouTube now has 43 different languages.
  • 24:00 - 24:03
    There is more uploaded in one month on Youtube
  • 24:04 - 24:08
    than was broadcast by the major networks in the United States
  • 24:08 - 24:11
    over the last 60 years.
  • 24:11 - 24:16
    Every single day, 6 new years of video gets uploaded to YouTube.
  • 24:16 - 24:19
    There are 2 billion views of YouTube every single year.
  • 24:19 - 24:24
    every single day, sorry. That's 40% increase over just the last year.
  • 24:24 - 24:28
    And I've been famously a fan of this extraordinary site
  • 24:28 - 24:32
    because I celebrate the kind of read-write creativity
  • 24:32 - 24:34
    that I think YouTube has encouraged.
  • 24:34 - 24:39
    And I got this sense of what we should think of as read-write creativity
  • 24:39 - 24:41
    when I was reading testimony at this place
  • 24:41 - 24:44
    by this man, John Philip Souza, in 1906.
  • 24:44 - 24:49
    when he was - I didn't read it in 1906 but the testimony was given in 1906 -
  • 24:49 - 24:52
    when Souza was testifying about this technology,
  • 24:52 - 24:56
    what he called "talking machines".
  • 24:57 - 25:00
    Now, Souza was not a fan of the talking machines.
  • 25:01 - 25:02
    This is what he had to say about them:
  • 25:03 - 25:06
    "These talking machines are going to ruin the artistic development
  • 25:07 - 25:08
    of music in this country.
  • 25:08 - 25:11
    When I was a boy, in front of every house in the summer evenings
  • 25:11 - 25:14
    you would find young people together singing the songs
  • 25:14 - 25:16
    of the day or the old songs.
  • 25:16 - 25:21
    Today you hear these infernal machines going night and day.
  • 25:22 - 25:25
    We will not have a vocal chord left," Souza said,
  • 25:25 - 25:28
    "The vocal chords will be eliminated by a process of evolution,
  • 25:28 - 25:32
    as was the tail of man when he came from the ape."
  • 25:35 - 25:36
    Now this is the picture I want you to focus on.
  • 25:37 - 25:40
    This picture of "young people together, singing the songs of the day
  • 25:40 - 25:41
    or the old songs".
  • 25:41 - 25:47
    This is a picture of culture. We could call it, using modern computer terminology,
  • 25:47 - 25:49
    a kind of read-write culture.
  • 25:49 - 25:53
    It's a culture where people participate in the creation and the re-creation
  • 25:53 - 25:55
    of their culture: in that sense, it's read-write.
  • 25:56 - 25:59
    And the opposite of read-write creativity, then, we should call
  • 25:59 - 26:04
    "read-only" culture. A culture where creativity is consumed
  • 26:04 - 26:10
    but the consumer is not a creator. A culture, in this sense, that's top-down,
  • 26:10 - 26:13
    where the vocal cords of the millions of ordinary potential creators
  • 26:13 - 26:17
    has been lost, and lost, because, as Souza said,
  • 26:17 - 26:23
    because of these infernal machines: technology, technology like this,
  • 26:23 - 26:26
    or technology like this, to produce a culture like this,
  • 26:27 - 26:31
    a culture which enabled efficient consumption, what we call "reading",
  • 26:32 - 26:37
    but inefficient amateur production, what we should call "writing".
  • 26:37 - 26:41
    A culture good for listening, but not a culture good for speaking,
  • 26:41 - 26:45
    a culture good for watching, a culture not good for creating.
  • 26:46 - 26:49
    Now, the first popular instantiation of the internet,
  • 26:49 - 26:51
    long after you guys gave us the World Wide Web,
  • 26:51 - 26:54
    but the first one people really paid attention to,
  • 26:55 - 27:00
    around 1997 and 1998, was a read-only internet.
  • 27:00 - 27:05
    So, Napster, which of course, built the largest music archive,
  • 27:05 - 27:09
    is still a music archive of music created by others
  • 27:09 - 27:13
    and the legal version, the iTunes Music Store, was an archive of the music
  • 27:13 - 27:17
    created by others, that you could buy for 99 cents.
  • 27:17 - 27:19
    These were technologies to enable access,
  • 27:19 - 27:21
    but access to culture created elsewhere.
  • 27:22 - 27:26
    But then, shortly in - after the turn of the century, I think,
  • 27:26 - 27:28
    the internet became fundamentally read-write.
  • 27:29 - 27:32
    People began taking, and remixing, and sharing
  • 27:32 - 27:36
    their creativity on the internet, and YouTube was the platform for that.
  • 27:36 - 27:41
    So, my favorite example, which I first saw on YouTube, is this:
  • 27:41 - 27:46
    [Read my lips by: Atmo - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rhlHUTBgAMw]
  • 27:51 - 27:59
    "Bush: My love, there's only you in my life,
  • 28:00 - 28:04
    the only thing that's right.
  • 28:07 - 28:15
    Blair: My first love: you're every breath that I take,
  • 28:15 - 28:20
    you're every step I make.
  • 28:21 - 28:29
    Bush: And I, I want to share
  • 28:29 - 28:35
    Bush and Blair: all my love with you
  • 28:35 - 28:39
    Bush: No one else will do.
  • 28:42 - 28:44
    Blair: And your eyes
  • 28:44 - 28:46
    Bush: Your eyes, your eyes
  • 28:46 - 28:53
    Bush and Blair: they tell me how much you care for...
  • 28:53 - 28:56
    announcer: remember to(?) take dictation"
  • 28:56 - 29:00
    Lessig: OK. And then.more recently, I don't know if (?) many of you
  • 29:00 - 29:02
    have seen this extraordinary site ThruYou.
  • 29:02 - 29:05
    This is a site that takes content only from YouTube
  • 29:05 - 29:10
    and remixes it to produce albums and videos. And this is his latest, you know.
  • 29:10 - 29:12
    Voice: This is my mother:
  • 29:12 - 29:16
    Mother: Howdy, howdy. OK.
  • 29:16 - 29:20
    [plays a continuo on keyboard]
  • 29:20 - 29:22
    Tenesan1 [see http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-J8sSXO9VWk ]
  • 29:22 - 29:25
    Tenesan1: The song I'm going to sing, I wrote, is called "Green"
  • 29:25 - 29:29
    because ... (?)
  • 29:30 - 29:36
    I'm seing beauty created on the land
  • 29:38 - 29:45
    On Earth the third day, producing all the plants
  • 29:45 - 29:53
    Mother Nature created by the most high God
  • 29:53 - 29:58
    I'm seeing beauty and it's green to me
  • 29:58 - 30:04
    [other instruments enter]
  • 30:04 - 30:09
    Spotting tranquillity, peace and restoration
  • 30:11 - 30:19
    Check all the water travelling from roots
  • 30:19 - 30:26
    Then you will see roots digging deep, building a strong foundation
  • 30:26 - 30:33
    Then finally a stem shoots through
  • 30:33 - 30:38
    I'm seeing beauty, it's green..
  • 30:38 - 30:42
    Lessig: So this is then what I think of as a platform for read-write creativity.
  • 30:42 - 30:45
    But then the second stage of this, I think is ultimately
  • 30:45 - 30:47
    much more interesting. It's the way that this platform
  • 30:47 - 30:49
    has become a platform for read-write communities,
  • 30:49 - 30:54
    which means creativity, which then gets remixed by others
  • 30:54 - 30:57
    in response to the initial read-write creativity.
  • 30:57 - 30:58
    So here is an example. This video:
  • 30:58 - 31:03
    [ "Crank That" by Soulja Boy - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sLGLum5SyKQ + Superman:] You Soulja Boy..
  • 31:03 - 31:07
    I got a new dance fo you all called the soulja boy
  • 31:07 - 31:10
    You gotta punch then crank back three times from left to right
  • 31:10 - 31:16
    Aaah!
  • 31:16 - 31:18
    Lessig: so that video inspired this video:
  • 31:18 - 31:33
    [video 2] You Soulja Boy ...
  • 31:33 - 31:36
    Lessig: which then inspired this video
  • 31:36 - 31:52
    [Video 3] Soulja Boy ...
  • 31:52 - 31:55
    Lessig: Well here is another example. I'm sure many of you remember
  • 31:55 - 31:56
    these extraordinary movies by John Hughes,
  • 31:56 - 31:59
    what we used to think of as the Brat Pack, until we knew
  • 31:59 - 32:01
    that there was a Brat Pack before these guys.
  • 32:01 - 32:04
    So this is the first bit of cultural,
  • 32:04 - 32:06
    and I think here is the second.
  • 32:06 - 32:10
    This is a music video by the band Phoenix, with their song Lisztomania:
  • 32:11 - 32:17
    [Lisztomania: Phoenix' clip]
  • 32:17 - 32:19
    Lessig (over clip): So classic music video style
  • 32:19 - 32:23
    [clip continues]
  • 32:23 - 32:25
    So sentimental
  • 32:25 - 32:29
    Lessig: Somebody got the idea that they would take John Hughes' content
  • 32:29 - 32:33
    and remix it with the music by Phoenix. They produced this:
  • 32:34 - 32:51
    [remix]
  • 32:51 - 32:52
    So sentimental
  • 32:53 - 32:55
    not sentimental, no
  • 32:55 - 32:57
    romantic not disgusting yet
  • 32:57 - 33:02
    Darling, I'm down and lonely when with the fortunate is only
  • 33:04 - 33:05
    I've been looking for something else
  • 33:05 - 33:09
    Do let, do let, do let, jugulate, do let, do let, do
  • 33:09 - 33:12
    Let's go slowly discouraged
  • 33:12 - 33:19
    Distant from other interests on your favorite weekend ending...
  • 33:19 - 33:23
    Lessig: Then somebody had the idea that they would make a local version
  • 33:23 - 33:26
    of this remix video. So this is the Brooklyn version:
  • 33:26 - 33:58
    [Brooklyn remix:]
  • 33:58 - 34:01
    Lessig: And then San Francisco decided they'd like to copy:
  • 34:01 - 34:29
    [San Francisco remix:]
  • 34:29 - 34:32
    Lessig: And then Boston University decided they would copy:
  • 34:32 - 34:59
    [Boston U remix:]
  • 34:59 - 35:01
    Lessig: There are others, literally scores of these on the internet,
  • 35:01 - 35:03
    from every place around the world.
  • 35:03 - 35:05
    (1 sentence ????)
  • 35:05 - 35:10
    every other place... these people doing the same kind of remix.
  • 35:10 - 35:15
    The point to recognize is that this is then what Souza was romanticizing
  • 35:15 - 35:19
    when Souza was talking about the young people getting together
  • 35:19 - 35:20
    and singing the songs of the day or the old songs.
  • 35:21 - 35:23
    But they are not singing the songs or the old songs
  • 35:23 - 35:27
    in their backyard or on the corner, they are now singing them
  • 35:27 - 35:30
    on this free digital platform that allows people to sing and respond,
  • 35:30 - 35:33
    and respond again all across the world,
  • 35:33 - 35:37
    in my view, important and valuable, in understanding
  • 35:37 - 35:40
    how this kind of culture develops and spreads.
  • 35:40 - 35:41
    Now, is it legal?
  • 35:43 - 35:47
    Well, YouTube has just stepped into this battle, of whether it's legal.
  • 35:47 - 35:50
    They've launched this Copyright School
  • 35:50 - 35:52
    So I will give you a little bit of their copyright school.
  • 35:52 - 36:11
    [video from http://www.youtube.com/copyright_school - original subtitled in ca 40 languages]
  • 36:11 - 36:14
    "Everybody has really been looking forward to the new video
  • 36:14 - 36:15
    "from Lumpy and the Lumpettes.
  • 36:16 - 36:18
    "Even Lumpy.
  • 36:23 - 36:28
    "Russell's a huge fan. He can't wait to tell all his friends about it.
  • 36:29 - 36:33
    "'Hey, Russell, you didn't create that video!
  • 36:33 - 36:36
    "'You just copied someone else's content.'"
  • 36:36 - 36:39
    Lessig: OK, this first part is pretty standard,
  • 36:39 - 36:41
    talking about copying people's content, uploading it,
  • 36:41 - 36:43
    and even copying a live performance and uploading it.
  • 36:43 - 36:46
    And that's fair, that's true, that's accurate in its statement
  • 36:46 - 36:50
    of what copyright law is, and what I think copyright law should be.
  • 36:50 - 36:52
    But I want to focus on their talk about remix,
  • 36:52 - 36:55
    which might be confusing to you, and if you do, you should buy
  • 36:55 - 36:57
    multiple copies of my book, "Remix" to understand what it's about.
  • 36:57 - 37:00
    But here's YouTube's version of the story of remix
  • 37:00 - 37:05
    [YouTube video cont.]
    "'Oh, Russell! Your reuse of the Lumpy's content is clever,
  • 37:05 - 37:07
    "'but did you get permission for it?
  • 37:07 - 37:10
    "'Mashups or remixes of content may also require permission
  • 37:10 - 37:12
    "'from the original copyright owner, depending on whether or not
  • 37:12 - 37:14
    "'the use is a fair use.
  • 37:14 - 37:34
    "'In the United States [text shown onscreen is read very fast] ...
  • 37:35 - 37:36
    "'...you should consult a qualified copyright attorney.'"
  • 37:38 - 37:41
    Lessig: OK. "Consult a qualified copyright attorney"?
  • 37:41 - 37:46
    These are 15-year olds. You're trying to teach 15-year olds
  • 37:46 - 37:48
    how to obey the law, and what you do is you give them
  • 37:48 - 37:50
    this thing called fair use, and you read it so fast
  • 37:50 - 37:52
    nobody can understand it.
  • 37:52 - 37:54
    You believe you've actually explained something sensible?
  • 37:54 - 37:55
    This is crazy talk.
  • 37:55 - 37:59
    Of course we train lawyers to understand it, and not think it's crazy talk,
  • 37:59 - 38:02
    but non lawyers should recognize it's crazy talk.
  • 38:02 - 38:04
    It's an absurd system here.
  • 38:04 - 38:07
    And of course, a sensible system would say:
  • 38:07 - 38:12
    "Then it should be plainly legal for Russell to make a remix,
  • 38:12 - 38:15
    "a non commercial consumer making a remix of content
  • 38:15 - 38:19
    "that he sees out there, even if it's not legal for YouTube
  • 38:19 - 38:23
    "to distribute it without paying some sort of royalty
  • 38:23 - 38:26
    "to copyright owners whose work has been remixed."
  • 38:26 - 38:30
    Now the point is, the significance of this kind of culture,
  • 38:30 - 38:32
    this kind of remix culture, and the opportunity
  • 38:32 - 38:35
    for this remix culture to flourish is recognized by people on the left,
  • 38:35 - 38:39
    and the right. Here is my favorite little bit.
  • 38:39 - 38:42
    It's a little bit bad video, but it's by one of my favorite
  • 38:42 - 38:45
    libertarians from Cato Institute, which is one of the
  • 38:45 - 38:47
    most important libertarian think-tanks in the United States,
  • 38:47 - 38:49
    talking about this:
  • 38:49 - 38:52
    Libertarian man: Copyright policy isn't just about how to incentivize
  • 38:52 - 38:54
    the production of a certain kind of artistic commodity.
  • 38:54 - 38:57
    It's about what level of control we're going to permit to be
  • 38:57 - 39:02
    exercised over our social realities, social realities that are now
  • 39:02 - 39:05
    inevitably permeated by pop culture.
  • 39:05 - 39:08
    I think it's important that we keep these two different kinds
  • 39:08 - 39:12
    of public uses in mind. If we only focus on how to
  • 39:12 - 39:15
    maximize the supply of one,
  • 39:15 - 39:19
    I think we risk suppressing this different and richer
  • 39:19 - 39:22
    and, in some ways, maybe even more important one.
  • 39:22 - 39:25
    Lessig: Bingo. That's the point.
  • 39:25 - 39:28
    There are two kinds of cultures here, two kinds of culture:
  • 39:28 - 39:31
    the commercial culture and the amateur culture.
  • 39:31 - 39:35
    And we have to have a system that tries to recognize and encourage both.
  • 39:35 - 39:39
    And even YouTube, now, the company most responsible
  • 39:39 - 39:42
    for this revival of this remix culture,
  • 39:42 - 39:46
    even YouTube, now, is criminalizing the remixer.
  • 39:46 - 39:47
    OK, now that's the argument.
  • 39:47 - 39:48
    Here is what I think we need to do here.
  • 39:48 - 39:52
    In both these contexts, both science and culture,
  • 39:52 - 39:53
    we need reform.
  • 39:53 - 39:56
    That's not to say we need the abolition of copyright.
  • 39:56 - 39:59
    There are copyright abolitionists out there, and I'm not one them.
  • 39:59 - 40:03
    What we need is reform, both of the law and of us.
  • 40:03 - 40:08
    So, of the law: I, last year, had the opportunity -
  • 40:08 - 40:11
    surprising, from the perspective of 10 years ago -
  • 40:11 - 40:14
    but I was invited by WIPO to talk to WIPO,
  • 40:14 - 40:17
    and both my presentation and the current Director General
  • 40:17 - 40:20
    has a conception of what WIPO should do here
  • 40:20 - 40:23
    and it's very similar. They should launch what we could think of
  • 40:23 - 40:26
    as a Blue Skies Commission, a commission to think about
  • 40:26 - 40:29
    what architecture for copyright makes sense in the digital age.
  • 40:29 - 40:32
    The presumption is, copyright is necessary,
  • 40:32 - 40:35
    but the presumption is also that the architecture from the 20th century
  • 40:35 - 40:38
    doesn't make sense in a digital context.
  • 40:38 - 40:41
    And the elements of, in my view, of this architecture
  • 40:41 - 40:43
    that would make sense, are 5.
  • 40:43 - 40:47
    #1 Copyright has got to be simple. If it purports to regulate
  • 40:47 - 40:50
    15 year olds, 15 year olds must be able to understand it.
  • 40:50 - 40:52
    They don't understand it now.
  • 40:52 - 40:54
    No one understands it now.
  • 40:54 - 40:56
    And we need to remake it, to make it simple,
  • 40:56 - 41:00
    if it tends to regulate as broadly as it regulates.
  • 41:00 - 41:02
    #2 It needs to be efficient.
  • 41:02 - 41:05
    Copyright is a property system. It also happens to be
  • 41:05 - 41:08
    the most inefficient property system known to man.
  • 41:09 - 41:13
    We can't know who owns what under this system,
  • 41:13 - 41:16
    because we have no system for recording ownership
  • 41:16 - 41:18
    and allowing us to allocate ownership as we want.
  • 41:18 - 41:23
    And the only remedy to that is to restore a kind of formality,
  • 41:23 - 41:26
    at least a formality required to maintain a copyright.
  • 41:26 - 41:30
    And this is a position that's even supported by the RIAA
  • 41:30 - 41:32
    as one of the essential reforms to copyright.
  • 41:32 - 41:37
    #3 Copyright has got to be better targeted. It's got to regulate selectively.
  • 41:37 - 41:40
    So if you think about the distinction between copies and remix,
  • 41:40 - 41:43
    and the distinction between the professional and the amateur,
  • 41:43 - 41:46
    of course, we get this matrix - lawyers deal in two dimensions,
  • 41:46 - 41:49
    you guys in hundred dimensions but here is my two dimensions -
  • 41:49 - 41:52
    What we have in the current regime of copyright
  • 41:52 - 41:55
    is presumption of copyright regulates the same
  • 41:55 - 41:57
    across these four possibilities.
  • 41:57 - 42:00
    But that's a mistake. Obviously copyright needs to regulate
  • 42:00 - 42:04
    efficiently here, copies of professional works,
  • 42:04 - 42:08
    so 10'000 copies of Madonna's latest CD is a problem
  • 42:08 - 42:10
    that copyright law needs to worry about,
  • 42:10 - 42:14
    But this area, amateurs remixing culture needs to be free
  • 42:14 - 42:17
    of the regulation of copyright. Not fair use, but free use.
  • 42:17 - 42:20
    Not even triggering copyright's concern.
  • 42:20 - 42:22
    And then these two middle cases are harder.
  • 42:22 - 42:25
    They need a little more freedom, but they need to assure
  • 42:25 - 42:28
    some kind of control. So if you share Madonna's latest CD
  • 42:28 - 42:31
    with your 10'000 best friends, that's a problem.
  • 42:31 - 42:33
    There needs to be some response to that problem.
  • 42:33 - 42:37
    And if you take a book and turn it into a movie,
  • 42:37 - 42:39
    I think it's still appropriate that you get permission for that,
  • 42:39 - 42:41
    though of course, you need to be able to remix
  • 42:41 - 42:44
    in the way that we saw Soderberg remixed that video
  • 42:44 - 42:47
    of Bush and Endless Love.
  • 42:47 - 42:49
    The point here is that if you think about this, I'm talking about
  • 42:49 - 42:52
    deregulating a significant space of culture,
  • 42:52 - 42:55
    and focusing the regulation of copyright work and do some good.
  • 42:55 - 42:58
    #4 It needs to be effective. And effective means
  • 42:58 - 43:01
    it must actually work in getting artists paid.
  • 43:01 - 43:05
    The current system does not work in getting artists paid.
  • 43:05 - 43:07
    And #5 It needs to be realistic.
  • 43:07 - 43:12
    Think about the problem of peer-to-peer, quote, "piracy" internationally,
  • 43:13 - 43:16
    We've, for the last decade, been waging what is referred to
  • 43:16 - 43:20
    as a war. My friend, the late Jack Valenti, former head of the
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    Motion Picture Association of America used to refer to it as
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    his own, quote, "terrorist war", where apparently the terrorists in this war
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    are our children.
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    Now this war has been a total failure.
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    It has not achieved its objective of reducing copyrights sharing
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    or illegal peer-to-peer file sharing.
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    And I know the response of some to totally failed wars
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    is to continue to wage that war forever, and ever more viciously,
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    but I suggest we adopt the opposite response here.
  • 43:51 - 43:55
    We sue for peace. We sue for peace in this war,
  • 43:55 - 43:57
    and consider proposals that would give us the opportunity
  • 43:57 - 44:00
    to achieve the objectives of copyright,
  • 44:00 - 44:01
    without waging this war.
  • 44:01 - 44:05
    So, compulsory licenses, voluntary collective licenses
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    or the German Greens' suggestion of a cultural flat rate
  • 44:08 - 44:10
    which would be collected and allocated to artists
  • 44:10 - 44:14
    on the basis of the harm suffered because of P2P file-sharing,
  • 44:14 - 44:16
    all of these are alternatives to waging a war
  • 44:16 - 44:20
    to stop sharing, when sharing is of course at the core
  • 44:20 - 44:21
    of the architecture of the Net,
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    and all of them recognize that if we achieve
  • 44:25 - 44:30
    that alternative, we don't need to block this system of sharing.
  • 44:30 - 44:34
    Now, the thing to think about is, if we had had one of these alternatives
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    10 years ago, what would the world look like today,
  • 44:38 - 44:39
    how would it be different?
  • 44:39 - 44:41
    Now one difference is, artists would get more money,
  • 44:41 - 44:43
    they would have gotten more money, because
  • 44:43 - 44:45
    while we have been waging war against artists [sic: "children", "pirates"?]
  • 44:45 - 44:48
    artists haven't got anything, only lawyers have.
  • 44:48 - 44:49
    Businesses would have had more competition,
  • 44:49 - 44:52
    the rules would have been clear, we would have more companies
  • 44:52 - 44:54
    than just Apple and Microsoft thinking out
  • 44:54 - 44:57
    how they could exploit this new digital technologies.
  • 44:57 - 44:59
    But most important to me, is, we wouldn't have a generation
  • 44:59 - 45:02
    of criminals who have grown up being called criminals
  • 45:02 - 45:04
    because they are technically pirates, according to
  • 45:04 - 45:06
    this outdated copyright law.
  • 45:07 - 45:09
    So these 5 objectives would go into the conception of what
  • 45:09 - 45:11
    this Blue Skies commission should think about
  • 45:11 - 45:14
    and I think it should think of this in a 5 year process
  • 45:14 - 45:17
    talking about something not to into effect for 10 years.
  • 45:17 - 45:22
    Think of it as a kind of Map for Berne II, but Bern II being
  • 45:22 - 45:25
    a system that could work to achieve the objectives of copyright
  • 45:25 - 45:28
    in a digital age. That's what the law should do.
  • 45:28 - 45:30
    But most important right now is what we need to do.
  • 45:30 - 45:35
    We, both in the context of business - so in the context of business,
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    we need to think about how to better enable legal reuse
  • 45:38 - 45:39
    of copyrighted material.
  • 45:39 - 45:43
    And companies like Google and Microsoft's Bing
  • 45:43 - 45:44
    need to do more here.
  • 45:44 - 45:47
    We're in the age of remix, where writing is remix,
  • 45:47 - 45:50
    where teachers tell students to go out to the web
  • 45:50 - 45:52
    and gather as much content as you can in order to
  • 45:52 - 45:55
    write a report about whatever it is they are assigning them
  • 45:55 - 45:56
    to write reports about.
  • 45:56 - 46:00
    That means Google and Bing need to help our kids
  • 46:00 - 46:03
    do it legally, which they don't, right now.
  • 46:03 - 46:05
    So for example, this extraordinary service, which Google
  • 46:05 - 46:07
    gives you when you want to do an image search:
  • 46:07 - 46:10
    let's say you search for an image, you do an image search on flowers,
  • 46:10 - 46:14
    This, over here - I don't know if you play with this -
  • 46:14 - 46:16
    is really extraordinary: you can then narrow the search
  • 46:16 - 46:18
    on the basis of many of these categories,
  • 46:18 - 46:20
    including like the color of the photographs.
  • 46:20 - 46:23
    So you want pink flowers, there you can see all the pink flowers,
  • 46:23 - 46:24
    just by clicking on the link.
  • 46:24 - 46:28
    But why, in this extraction, don't we also have an option
  • 46:28 - 46:31
    for something like this: show reusable?
  • 46:31 - 46:35
    Show the content that is explicitly licensed to be reusable,
  • 46:35 - 46:37
    because Google indexes Creative Commons licenses
  • 46:37 - 46:39
    associated with these images.
  • 46:39 - 46:43
    Why not make it on the surface easy to begin to filter out
  • 46:43 - 46:45
    those that you can use with the permission of the author
  • 46:45 - 46:47
    from those that presumptively require a lawyer?
  • 46:47 - 46:50
    Same thing in the context of a site like YouTube.
  • 46:50 - 46:53
    Why don't we enable more easily the signaling by the creator
  • 46:53 - 46:56
    that others should be able to download and reuse content,
  • 46:56 - 47:00
    not so much to redefine what Fair Use is -
  • 47:00 - 47:02
    I still think there is a fair use claim even if there isn't
  • 47:02 - 47:06
    permission given to re-use - but at least to encourage people
  • 47:06 - 47:08
    to begin to signal that their freedom to share
  • 47:08 - 47:10
    has been authorized by the author.
  • 47:10 - 47:15
    And then in the academy, which I think we are speaking
  • 47:15 - 47:17
    about here right now.
  • 47:17 - 47:19
    We need to recognize in the academy, I think,
  • 47:19 - 47:24
    an ethical obligation, much stronger than the ones Stallman spoke of
  • 47:24 - 47:27
    in the context of software. An ethical obligation
  • 47:27 - 47:29
    which is at the core of our mission.
  • 47:29 - 47:31
    Our mission is universal access to knowledge.
  • 47:31 - 47:34
    Universal access to knowledge:
  • 47:34 - 47:36
    not American University access to knowledge,
  • 47:36 - 47:40
    but universal access to knowledge in every part of the globe.
  • 47:40 - 47:43
    And that obligation has certain entailments.
  • 47:43 - 47:49
    Entailment #1 is that we need to keep this work free,
  • 47:49 - 47:51
    where free means licensed freely.
  • 47:51 - 47:55
    Now this needs to be part of an ethical point about what we do.
  • 47:55 - 47:59
    It is resisted by people who say that archiving is enough.
  • 47:59 - 48:02
    But that is wrong, I think.
  • 48:02 - 48:06
    Archiving is not enough, because what it does is
  • 48:06 - 48:10
    leave these rights out-there. And by leaving these rights our-there
  • 48:10 - 48:12
    it encourages this architecture of closed access.
  • 48:12 - 48:16
    It encourages models of access that block access
  • 48:16 - 48:18
    to the non-elite around the world.
  • 48:18 - 48:24
    And it discourages unplanned, unanticipated and "uncool" innovation.
  • 48:24 - 48:26
    That's the thing that publishers would have said
  • 48:26 - 48:28
    of Google Books, when Google Books had the idea
  • 48:28 - 48:31
    to take all books published and put them on the Web.
  • 48:31 - 48:33
    Right, publishers thought that was very uncool,
  • 48:33 - 48:35
    but that's exactly the kind of innovation we need to encourage,
  • 48:36 - 48:38
    and we know it won't be the publishers
  • 48:38 - 48:39
    that do that kind of innovation.
  • 48:39 - 48:44
    We don't need for our work, exclusivity.
  • 48:44 - 48:47
    And we shouldn't practice, with our work, exclusivity.
  • 48:47 - 48:51
    And we should name those who do, wrong.
  • 48:51 - 48:57
    Those who do are inconsistent with the ethic of our work.
  • 48:57 - 49:00
    Now how do we do that? I think we do that by exercising leadership,
  • 49:00 - 49:05
    leadership by those who can afford to take the lead,
  • 49:05 - 49:09
    the senior academics, those with tenure, those who can say,
  • 49:09 - 49:12
    on committees granting tenure, that it doesn't matter
  • 49:12 - 49:14
    that you didn't publish in the most prestigious journal
  • 49:14 - 49:18
    if that journal is not Open Access.
  • 49:18 - 49:22
    People who can begin to help redefine what access to knowledge is,
  • 49:22 - 49:25
    by supporting Open Access and respecting Open Access
  • 49:25 - 49:28
    and encouraging Open Access.
  • 49:28 - 49:30
    Now, I'm really honored and happy to be able to talk about this
  • 49:30 - 49:34
    here, where you of course gave us the Web,
  • 49:34 - 49:39
    and CERN has taken the lead in supporting Open Access
  • 49:39 - 49:42
    in a crucial space of physics.
  • 49:42 - 49:46
    And the work that you are doing right now will have a dramatic effect
  • 49:46 - 49:50
    on changing the debate on science across the globe.
  • 49:50 - 49:52
    But what we need to do is to think about
  • 49:52 - 49:56
    how to leverage this leadership into leadership for the globe,
  • 49:56 - 50:02
    to benefit this area of the globe as much as this area of the globe.
  • 50:02 - 50:04
    Thank you very much.
  • 50:04 - 50:07
    (applause)
  • 50:07 - 50:08
    [credits for Flickr photos]
  • 50:08 - 50:15
    [This work licensed: CC-BY]
  • 50:15 - 50:19
    Subtitles: universalsubtitles.org/videos/jD5TB2eebD5d/
Title:
Lawrence Lessig: The Architecture of Access to Scientific Knowledge
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Video Language:
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Duration:
50:19

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