• DocumentCode
    2407643
  • Title

    Dematerialised data and human desire: the Internet and copy culture

  • Author

    Allen, Matthew

  • Author_Institution
    Internet Studies, Curtin Univ. of Technol., Australia
  • fYear
    2003
  • fDate
    3-5 Dec. 2003
  • Firstpage
    26
  • Lastpage
    33
  • Abstract
    Since Licklider in the 1960s influential proponents of networked computing have envisioned electronic information in terms of a relatively small (even singular) number of \´sources\´, distributed through technologies such as the Internet. Most recently, Levy writes, in Becoming Virtual, that "in cyberspace, since any point is directly accessible from any other point, there is an increasing tendency to replace copies of documents with hypertext links. Ultimately, there will only need to be a single physical exemplar of the text". Hypertext implies, in theory, the end of \´the copy\´, and the multiplication of access points to the original. But, in practice, the Internet abounds with copying, both large and small scale, both as conscious human practice, and also as autonomous computer function. Effective and cheap data storage that encourages computer users to keep anything of use they have downloaded, lest the links they have found, \´break\´; while browsers don\´t \´browse\´ the Internet - they download copies of everything to client machines. Not surprisingly, there is significant regulation against \´copying\´ regulation that constrains our understanding of \´copying\´ to maintain a legal fiction of the \´original\´ for the purposes of intellectual property protection. In this paper, I will firstly demonstrate, by a series of examples, how \´copying\´ is more than just copyright infringement of music and software, but is a defining, multi-faceted feature of Internet behaviour. I will then argue that the Internet produces an interaction between dematerialised, digital data and human subjectivity and desire that fundamentally challenges notions of originality and copy. Walter Benjamin noted about photography: "one can make any number of prints [from a negative]; to ask for the \´authentic\´ print makes no sense". In cyberspace, it makes no sense to ask which one is the copy.
  • Keywords
    Internet; copy protection; copyright; Internet; access point; autonomous computer function; browser; copy culture; data storage; dematerialised data; digital data; distributed source; download; electronic information; human desire; link; networked computing; virtual cyberspace; Computer networks; Distributed computing; Humans; IP networks; Intellectual property; Internet; Law; Legal factors; Memory; Protection;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • Conference_Titel
    Cyberworlds, 2003. Proceedings. 2003 International Conference on
  • Print_ISBN
    0-7695-1922-9
  • Type

    conf

  • DOI
    10.1109/CYBER.2003.1253431
  • Filename
    1253431