Title: When Users are Authors: Authorship in the Age of Digital Media
Abstract: This Article explores what authorship and creative production means in the digital age. Notions of the author as the creator of the work provided a point of reference for recognizing ownership rights in literary and artistic works in conventional copyright jurisprudence. The role of the author, as the creator and producer of a work, has been seen as distinct and separate from that of the publisher and user. Copyright laws and customary norms protect the author’s rights in his creation to provide the incentive to create and allow him to appropriate the social value generated by his creativity as recognition of his contribution towards society. By initially protecting the rights of authors in literary and artistic works as a property right, copyright laws facilitated market transfers of private rights and directed use of these works towards the most socially beneficial uses. This Article proposes that in the digital age, when users of literary and artistic works are increasingly becoming authors themselves, the notion of authorship connects the original author with the work in a market characterized by an abundance of derivative works and remixes by providing a mark of identification. The notion of authorship in the digital age attributes individual and collaborative contributions to the pool of information back to their respective authors. This Article proposes that the networked economy may be sustained in a world where digital technologies facilitate the free flow of information if good works of authorship are rewarded by attributing the original author of the work and authentic works of authorship by responsible authors become an expected norm. Recognizing authorship and protecting ownership rights in the digital age, where open platform technologies and peer production create a plethora, rather than a paucity, of literary and artistic works, is a simple and cost-effective way for the law to address this question of sustainability by acknowledging the moral and ethical components of communal and collaborative production. This Article suggests that recognizing authorship and protecting ownership rights in literary and artistic works in the digital age promotes, rather than restrain, creative activity.
Publication Year: 2010
Publication Date: 2010-01-30
Language: en
Type: article
Access and Citation
Cited By Count: 4
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