17%OFF
What´s Wrong with Copying?
Abraham Drassinower
€ 52.99
€ 44.17
FREE Delivery in Ireland
Description for What´s Wrong with Copying?
Hardback. Abraham Drassinower presents a new way to balance the needs of creators and users of authored works. Disentangling copyright theory from its focus on the economic value of a work as a commodity, he views a work instead as a communicative act. Infringement, according to this perspective, is an unauthorized appropriation of another's speech. Num Pages: 283 pages. BIC Classification: LAB; LNR. Category: (G) General (US: Trade). Dimension: 243 x 163 x 28. Weight in Grams: 550.
Copyright law, as conventionally understood, serves the public interest by regulating the production and dissemination of works of authorship, though it recognizes that the requirements of the public interest are in tension. Incentives for creation must be provided, but protections granted authors must not prevent the fruits of creativity and knowledge from spreading. Copyright law, therefore, should balance the needs of creators and users—or so the theory goes.
Challenging this widely accepted view, What’s Wrong with Copying? disentangles copyright theory from its focus on the economic value of an authored work as a commodity or piece of property. In ... Read more
Product Details
Format
Hardback
Publication date
2015
Publisher
Harvard University Press
Condition
New
Number of Pages
288
Place of Publication
Cambridge, Mass, United States
ISBN
9780674743977
SKU
V9780674743977
Shipping Time
Usually ships in 7 to 11 working days
Ref
99-1
About Abraham Drassinower
Abraham Drassinower is Chair in the Legal, Ethical, and Cultural Implications of Technological Innovation at the University of Toronto Faculty of Law.
Reviews for What´s Wrong with Copying?
This book is the first in two decades to take a really fresh and illuminating methodological look at an intellectual-property topic.
Wendy J. Gordon, Boston University School of Law The most original and provocative philosophical treatment of copyright law in decades, if not centuries.
Barton Beebe, New York University School of Law
Wendy J. Gordon, Boston University School of Law The most original and provocative philosophical treatment of copyright law in decades, if not centuries.
Barton Beebe, New York University School of Law