IMO, no matter what the RIAA thinks. This is part one of a series of
essays, lifted once-again from the Hettinga-lists. I'll send part two
tomorrow. Please feel free to disagree or suggest alternatives if you
can think of any that haven't been tried. Thanks.
JMR

++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

Subject: Steal This Essay 1: Content Is a Pure Public Good
Date: Tue, 30 Oct 2001 06:37:44 -0500


Originally published in TidBITS#602/22-Oct-01; see
<http://www.tidbits.com/> for more information.

Steal This Essay 1: Content Is a Pure Public Good

by Dan Kohn

Steal this essay, or, why these sorts of essays represent the future of all
publishing. Hint: I'm not getting paid for them.

"Freedom of the press belongs to those who own one." - A.J. Liebling

If you or anyone you know has ever or will ever produce content (writing,
music, video, etc.) and hopes to get paid for it, you should be afraid.

To see why, start by downloading (for free, of course) one of the numerous
peer-to-peer file sharing systems such as Aimster, LimeWire, and
eDonkey2000 that have emerged hydra-like to take the place of Napster,
whose head was cut off this spring by the Recording Industry Association of
America (RIAA). You will find that much the same selection of MP3 music
that was on Napster is still available for free, as well as being
accompanied by more and more movies ("ripped" directly from DVDs), and
nearly all other forms of content, from Shakespeare's works to hard core
adult materials.

<http://www.aimster.com/>
<http://www.limewire.com/>
<http://www.edonkey2000.com/>
<http://www.napster.com/>
<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tbser=1206>

What you will not find - even if you are the RIAA - is anyone to sue.
Because unlike Napster, there are no companies underlying the software
infrastructure, no servers to confiscate, no officers on whom to serve
papers. The next generation of peer-to-peer clients relies on no central
infrastructure whatsoever, and is being developed by a loose knit group of
developers spread around the world, all donating their significant efforts
without any real hope of getting paid for their work. All of the developers
are men - or teenage boys - and though not following the typical societal
track toward prestige, they are just as competitive as any rival athletes
or entrepreneurs. Many are distributing their software as open source, so
anyone else can fix bugs and make improvements. What this means is not just
that the RIAA is applying makeup to the corpse of the music industry as
we've known it. In fact, it heralds an even larger change about how all
content is created and distributed, and raises serious questions as to
whether content creators (such as the author of this essay) will ever be
compensated for our work.

Read a few dozen articles by top technology analysts, and it is often
difficult to find one that doesn't breathlessly declare how this or that
new technology represents a sea change, an inflection point, or the end of
history. In fact, while the Internet's growth rates have been quite high,
other technologies such as radio and gas cooking have actually been adopted
faster. It may be, though, that all of the hype surrounding the digital
duplication and peer-to-peer distribution of content actually
underestimates the impact on the authors and publishers of music, movies,
and written works.

Put simply, in a world where there are essentially no costs to replicate
content and it is effectively impossible to stop anyone from doing so at
will, the current economic model underpinning content creation will be
dead. Despite the protestations of lawyers, (certain) rock bands, and
legislatures (all on the same losing side, oddly enough), we are entering
that brave new world.

If, as this hard technology determinist viewpoint suggests, content is
destined to be free - i.e., the content creators and publishers will not be
directly compensated the way they are today when you make a purchase from
your local CD store - then the real question is what system could replace
the content compensation system that has worked quite well for the last 300
years. However, implementing revenue models for infinitely redistributable
goods is not an entirely novel question, and there are several economic
models that can support the creation of content. What there may not be is
enough revenue to support the publishers of that content in addition to the
authors, which helps explain why the RIAA is so eager to thwart digital
distribution. When an ecosystem undergoes severe environmental changes,
certain organisms that were previously essential - like the cyanobacteria
that originally converted carbon dioxide to oxygen, or the record
companies' A&R men - may recede to minor ecological niches.

Economists have a term for what digital goods have become. Items are
"nonrival" when we can all make use of them without anyone having to give
them up. If I copy your CD, you're none the worse for it (nonrival), but if
I steal your car, you will probably be upset (rival). Goods are
"nonexcludable" when it becomes impractical to stop everyone from making
use of the item, once one person can. It is infeasible, for instance, to
stop additional viewers of broadcast television (nonexcludable), while it
is very feasible to stop additional moviegoers from entering a theater
(excludable). Economists call nonrival, nonexcludable items "pure public
goods," although the name does not imply that public goods can be provided
only by the government.

Lighthouses are a classic pure public good. They are nonrival because each
additional ship does not reduce the light available to the others. They are
nonexcludable because any ship sailing by can see them. There are cases in
New England two centuries ago of shipping guilds building privately managed
lighthouses, even though the services couldn't be withheld from
non-members. Most medical research and nearly all basic scientific research
today is a pure public good, although for exactly this reason it is often
financed (at least indirectly) by the government. Other textbook public
goods are national defense, mosquito control, and public radio. In each
case, the cost of providing the item to one consumer is the same as
providing it to any number of consumers (nonrival), and it is impractical
to stop anyone from making use of the good (nonexcludable). The table below
provides some examples.


            |  EXCLUDABLE        |  NONEXCLUDABLE
 -----------+--------------------+--------------------------------
 RIVAL      |  car, Walkman      |  unmanaged fishing rights
 -----------+--------------------+--------------------------------
 NONRIVAL   |  movie in a movie  |  lighthouses, national defense,
            |  theater, concert  |  mosquito control
            |  in a large hall   |


If content is becoming a pure public good, it will necessitate a radical
rethinking of the recording industry's claim that copying content is
stealing. We as a society react very differently toward the unpaid use of
rival versus nonrival goods. Think of the punishment inflicted, for
example, on those who steal cars versus those who listen to public radio
without contributing to the fund drives. Of course, whether a good is rival
or not is beside the point if you can successfully exclude people who don't
pay. (Ask Microsoft, whose cost for selling one copy of Office is
approximately the same as selling 100 million copies (nonrival), but which
has used informant tactics and large legal penalties to make their software
very excludable, at least for businesses.)

The lawyers representing the recording and movie industry are well aware of
the threat to their business models of digital content, and they believe
they have already developed the answer: encryption. Encryption represents
the music industry's last, best hope of maintaining their product as
excludable. Why they are wrong, and content protection is doomed to
failure, will have to wait for the next essay.

[Dan Kohn is a General Partner with Skymoon Ventures. His writings are
announced through <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> and can be discussed
through <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>.]

<http://www.dankohn.com/>
<http://www.skymoonventures.com/>
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Unless otherwise noted, this article is copyright 2001 Dan Kohn, published
in TidBITS 602, copyright 2001 TidBITS Electronic Publishing, all rights
reserved.


-- 
-----------------
R. A. Hettinga <mailto: [EMAIL PROTECTED]>
The Internet Bearer Underwriting Corporation <http://www.ibuc.com/>
44 Farquhar Street, Boston, MA 02131 USA
"... however it may deserve respect for its usefulness and antiquity,
[predicting the end of the world] has not been found agreeable to
experience." -- Edward Gibbon, 'Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire'

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