I get a lot of E-mail from friends and readers, and some of it gets on this blog if I feel that it is interesting enough, funny enough or just plain strange enough to make people sit up, take notice, and think about it a bit.
A few days ago I got an E-mail with "Things that took me 56 years to learn" and decided to put it on the blog since it was good writing and good advice.
Now the person who sent it to me didn't say who wrote it and I published it as presented to me.
The first few letters I got about it were nice and made me happy that I made someone else happy!
(You know,like.... "I'm glad that you're glad that I'm glad" sort of thing.)
-Lori F. Allan the first one about made me pee my pants.
-Jayrene i will never forget about that person being rude to the waiter is not a nice person at all... these are somethings i have to learn...
-Mary Fagan Great, great stuff!
Then Kenn T got in on the action and made himself a self-proclaimed protector of the Internet.
-Kenn T. Yes, I've read a lot of this before...Most of it is worth repeating. Or copying!!!
The way he put the last part suggests that there was something underhanded or nefarious about this whole piece and I was trying to dupe people into thinking it was my own work when nothing could be further from the truth.
It was put here to be enjoyed, not analyzed and run down.
So then Leo got in on the act and asked an innocent and quite normal question.
-Leo L. I have read this from other sources. Did you write it?
To which I replied!
-Allan Janssen No I didn't write it. The author was not mentioned on the site I got it from, so it must have been that "anonymous" guy we all read about.
To this Leo had to get his two cents worth in as well.
-Leo L. I think that such things floating through the Internet should be allowed on Gather but that we should explain the source if we did not write it.
-Allan Janssen Leo are you one of those guys who thinks that unless something is 100% original it can't be used? There is so much floating around the Internet that is not credited and if this automatically makes it un-usable then we are in trouble. And what about "creative-commons" and copyleft?
Get off your high horse and just enjoy the words, don't agonize over where they came from.
Anyway, to make a long story short, I would like both Leo and Kenn to read this article about copyright laws that was featured on my main blog "Perspective" a while back.
The Myth Of Original Creators, guest post by Mike Masnick from the creativity-is-built-upon-others-ideas dept.
We recently wrote about how many different sources Shakespeare used in writing King Lear, some of which he apparently copied verbatim.
However, it seems quite likely that what Shakespeare did with those words created something wholly unique and valuable (at least, it's withstood the tests of time).
Yet, this idea that taking the works of others and doing something with them to make them new and wonderful seems to be an anathema to the "true believers" in copyright, who insist that creativity is about being wholly original, and almost never about building on the works of those who came before.
Yet, there's almost no evidence to support this.
Nearly any creative work can be shown to be built upon the works of those who came before (hell, even our own copyright law is copied from others').
Law professor Peter Friedman recently had a few interesting blog posts that helped highlight this.
First, he noted that the very notion of an author as the originator of a new work is a relatively recent phenomenon, and part of the Romantic Movement.
However, prior to that, the view was much more akin to what we're actually seeing today with online tools of creation: "creative endeavors are derivative and collaborative, that originality is not the product of isolated genius but of, well, remixing."
He then goes on to discuss the blues musician Robert Johnson -- considered by many to be the "quintessential" Blues musician.
However, a recent study into Johnson's work suggest that his fame and renown is basically an accident of history.
Some British musicians heard Johnson's music, and since they'd never heard it before, they credited him for it, even though he was mainly copying (and building on) the work of others:
Conceptions of Robert Johnson's work highlight the context dependent nature of notions of originality.
Originality is yet another characteristic of copyright ability that is not always easy to delineate in actual contexts of creation.
However, what might seem original to those in one context may not seem as original in other contexts.
Consequently, within the context of African American audiences of the 1920s and 1930s, Johnson's work probably did not seem startlingly original in the way that it did to British and other musicians and audiences listening to Johnson's music, often in relative isolation, in the 1950s and 1960s.
This later audience was largely removed from the original context of other music that was prevalent at the time Johnson produced his music or able to listen to a limited and likely biased sample of such music.
For early African American blues listeners, what seemed original and interesting was very different that what seemed interesting and original to the largely white blues fans that were the major force behind the blues revival in the 1950s and 1960s.
For the latter, romantic conceptions about the blues were closely tied to notions of authenticity that are often unsuited to musical creation in living musical traditions.
As a result, what is perceived as original may depend in significant part on the contexts within which listeners hear music.
Friedman also points back to another recent post where he discusses the nature of content creation, based on a blog post by Rene Kita.
In it, she points out that remixing and creating through collaboration and building on the works of others has always been the norm.
It's what we do naturally.
It's only in the last century or so, when we reached a means of recording, manufacturing and selling music -- which was limited to just those with the machinery and capital to do it, that copyright was suddenly brought out to "protect" such things.
But, today, with the rise of the Internet, and the ability for anyone to perform those roles, we run smack dab into conflicting interests.
People still want to create the way they always have, but the industry of the last century, that has relied on copyright law to make its product seem different and "original" freaks out about this ongoing content creation.
Culture is a conversation.
Every act of culture is a reply to something, a restatement, correction, modification, reworking.
Lawyers are constantly debating how much modification is required to make a work legal.
Thus, you may 'create' a new instance of The Blues(TM Martin Scorsese), by shuffling the notes and words around by a set amount.
Shuffle too little and you're in trouble with the law.
Shuffle too much and the purists start screaming rape.
Still, artists are trained to recognize what is a new song and what a version and their publishing companies have experts to deal with these matters.
And there we enter the crux of the matter:
Copyright law is corporate law. Or it used to be.
Previously, it took heavy investment to publish art, music, writing, so it was always done by companies and professionals.
Today, squirting anything into a blog is an act of publishing.
The legalese you signed by clicking when you started your blog forbids any use of copyrighted material that you don't own.
Suddenly, instead of plain ordinary citizens entitled to sing "Poops, I did it again" or tape Brad Pitt's face in a toilet bowl onto a postcard to a friend, we are all professional artists required to Create Art from Scratch. This is because we are no longer just having a conversation, in which we quote from everything we have seen and heard without any thought of Creation and Originality.
Your piddling little blog is a Publishing Enterprise held to the same legal standards as Time Warner Inc, except that you do not have the funds to pay for any borrowings.
You have been muzzled.
This is why people are angry.
Their normal modes of expression have been turned into a crime.
They know they are only safe from prosecution because they are small fry - unless someone decides to make an example of you.
Thus, any time you post some photoshoppery or a musical mash-up you risk having it summarily deleted and your account cancelled for criminal cultural activities.
It's nice to see more and more people recognizing and speaking out about these things.
The idea that there is a single "author" or "creator" who deserves to get money any time anyone else builds upon his or her works is something that should be seen as increasingly ridiculous as people recognize that all works are created based on the works of others, and it's inherently silly to try to charge everyone to pay back each and every one of their influences in creating a new work.
Allan W Janssen is the author of the book The Plain Truth About God (What the mainstream religions don't want you to know......!) and is available as an E-Book H E R E! and H E R E! And as a paperback H E R E ! and H E R E !
Visit the blog "Perspective" at http://allans-perspective.blogspot.com


Comments: 6
O.K. This was interesting.
What's happened to copyright law in the last decade or so actuially stifles creativity by extenind the length of copyright protection and "protecting" original content. As I recall, many of Disney's copyrights were about to expire, so that corporation, along with others, lobbied to get extensions.
Allan - Wow! You quoted me on a post! I have arrived! I've been following your humorous and provocative posts since I landed on Gather. I've encountered numerous such aggravations myself. Originality? There are 397,000 works published every year. What are the chances? I have an article called "Nothing New Under the Sun" on http://fagan-authorspot.blogspot.com/ you might find gratifying.
then there is the 'test' that proved if you put 100 chimps in a room with 100 typewriteers (computers now) that they will eventually write the complete works of Shakespeare!