fran ilich on 11 Feb 2001 16:28:38 -0000 |
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[Nettime-bold] WHAT WE LEARNED FROM NAPSTER -- FORUM THURS 15 FEB 5-7 PM, BARTOSTHEATER |
MIT COMMUNICATIONS FORUM: "COPYRIGHT, COMMERCE AND CULTURE -- WHAT WE LEARNED FROM NAPTSTER" Thursday, Feb. 15, 2001 5-7 p.m. Bartos Theater MIT Media Lab Ames Street Cambridge Speakers: Eric Scheirer, Forrester Research Nisreen Shocair, Bertelsmann Content Group Respondent: Ingrid Volkmer, Visiting scholar in Comparative Media Studies, MIT Moderator: William Uricchio, Professor of Comparative Media, MIT Napster's tremendous grassroots popularity has generated intense debate about intellectual property rights in the digital age and has offered dramatic evidence for the public interest in on-line distribution of music and other media materials. Bertelsmann Content Group recently announced a collaboration with Napster to protect the interests of the recording industry while maintaining an infrastructure for grassroots file-sharing. This forum will offer a close look at the implications of those arrangements. How will this partnership affect the future of MP3 and file sharing? How will these new arrangements affect the recording industry? Will they preserve what has been vital about the grassroots Napster culture? What does Napster's example suggest about the broader issues of creativity and intellectual property in the digital era? Eric Scheirer is an analyst in the Media and Entertainment group of Forrester Research. He specializes in business-to-consumer delivery of entertainment content such as music, movies, and sports. He received his doctorate from the MIT Media Laboratory for his research on automated music-listening systems. Nisreen Shocair is Director of Business Development at Bertelsmann and is in charge of development in the Napster project. _______________________________________________ Nettime-bold mailing list [email protected] http://www.nettime.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/nettime-bold