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Subject: Democracy of Sound- Music Piracy and the Remaking of American Copyright in the Twentieth Century 20 files - "Democracy of Sound- Music Piracy and the Remaking of American Copyright in the Twentieth Century.nfo" yEnc (1/1)
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Democracy of Sound- Music Piracy and the Remaking of American Copyright in the Twentieth Century.nfo
General
Complete name : 01 - Introduction.mp3
Format : MPEG Audio
File size : 12.5 MiB
Duration : 27mn 3s
Overall bit rate mode : Variable
Overall bit rate : 64.2 Kbps
Album : Democracy of Sound: Music Piracy and the Remaking of American Copyright in the Twentieth Century
Album/Performer : Alex Cummings
Track name : Introduction
Track name/Position : 01
Performer : Alex Sayf Cummings
Genre : Audiobook
Recorded date : 2013
Writing library : LAME3.98r
Cover : Yes
Cover type : Cover (front)
Cover MIME : image/jpg
Comment : Read by Aaron Abano; Audible Studios, 2014
Audio
Format : MPEG Audio
Format version : Version 1
Format profile : Layer 3
Duration : 27mn 3s
Bit rate mode : Variable
Bit rate : 64.2 Kbps
Minimum bit rate : 32.0 Kbps
Channel(s) : 1 channel
Sampling rate : 44.1 KHz
Compression mode : Lossy
Stream size : 12.4 MiB (99%)
Writing library : LAME3.98r
Encoding settings : -m m -V 5 -q 0 -lowpass 16.5 --vbr-new -b 32
Written by Alex Sayf Cummings
Read by Aaron Abano
Format: MP3
Music Piracy and the Remaking of American Copyright in the Twentieth Century
Democracy of Sound is the first book to examine music piracy in the United States from the dawn of sound recording to the rise of Napster and online file-sharing. It asks why Americans stopped thinking of copyright as a monopoly-a kind of necessary evil-and came to see intellectual property as sacrosanct and necessary for the prosperity of an information economy. Recordings only became eligible for federal copyright in 1972, following years of struggle between pirates, musicians, songwriters, broadcasters, and record companies over the right to own sound. Beginning in the 1890s, the book follows the competing visions of Americans who proposed ways to keep obscure and noncommercial music in circulation, preserve out-of-print recordings from extinction, or simply make records more freely and cheaply available. Genteel jazz collectors swapped and copied rare records in the 1930s; radicals pitched piracy as a mortal threat to capitalism in the 1960s, while hip-hop DJs from the 1970s onwards reused and transformed sounds to create a freer and less regulated market for mixtapes. Each challenged the idea that sound could be owned by anyone.The conflict led to the contemporary stalemate between those who believe that information wants to be free and those who insist that economic prosperity depends on protecting intellectual property. The saga of piracy also shows how the dubbers, bootleggers, and tape traders forged new social networks that ultimately gave rise to the social media of the twenty first century. Democracy of Sound is a colorful story of people making law, resisting law, and imagining how law might shape the future of music, from the Victrola and pianola to iTunes and BitTorrent.
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