Freshly Printed - allow 10 days lead
Digital Rights Management
The Problem of Expanding Ownership Rights
Christopher May (Author)
9781843341246, Elsevier Science
Paperback / softback, published 31 January 2007
180 pages
23.4 x 15.6 x 1.3 cm, 0.32 kg
Digital Rights Management examines the social context of new digital rights management (DRM) technologies in a lively and accessible style. It sets out the scope of DRMs in non-technical terms and then explores the shifts that DRM has produced within the regime of protection of intellectual property rights (IPRs). Focusing on the social norms around the protection of IPRs, it examines the music industry and software development sector to ask whether the protections established by DRM are legitimate and socially beneficial. Using these key examples to establish a more general argument, the books central conclusion is that rather than merely re-establishing threatened rights, the development of DRM has extended the rights of intellectual property owners, and that such an extension violates previous carefully balanced political compromises as regards the maintenance of the public domain.
Introduction: Setting the scene
Intellectual property and social norms
Digital rights management: Two trajectories
Digital rights management: Two cases for consideration
Digital rights management, the (over)protection of rights and the expansion of open alternatives.
Subject Areas: IT, Internet & electronic resources in libraries [GLF], Library & information sciences [GL]