Dear c-r, In the case of ISP charges, I argued that we should have a sensible economic perspective -- realistic re/ cyber-future realities -- if we wanted to participate effectively in the legislative/regulatory debate. In the case of copyright reform, I argue that we need a sensible perspective about content-charging economics, unless we want to be on the defensive every time some wacko copyright proposal gets introduced. In the ISP case, I suggested looking at the upside: charges for services rendered actually favors our usage patterns, if the charging-unit is chosen appropriately. For copyrights, there's one particular upside scenario I offer for your consdideration, as it leads to some interesting observations. Consider the entrepreneurial opportunities for individuals and small independent producers in an environment with a certain kind of strong copyright enforcement. What kind of enforcement do I have in mind? To put it very crudely and over simplistically -- bear with me -- the idea would be that each message transfer is a transaction, any message can have a copy-price attached to it, and mailers are required to collect the price from the recipient if delievery is accepted. (No, this isn't original, and all kinds of details would have to be worked out.) I hope the mechanism-description did not obscure the simple idea -- that you can put things out for sale on the net, and know you'll get your royalty from every reader/listener/viewer. This could be an awesome enabler of people-culture on the net. Suppose you wrote good poetry (or legislative analysis), and suppose 10,000 folks would be glad to pay a nickle to read new releases of your work -- then you might be able to support yourself doing what you enjoy. We'd be cutting out the middleman publisher and keeping our net culture, but introducing a self-supporting mechanism. The big guys want similar strong copyright, but of course their goals are different. They want to tie-up ownership of premium content (Disney libraries, live sports, brand-name publications, etc.) and then charge an arm-and-a-leg for peeks. I'm not sure how successful we could be in preventing them from charging for "their" content the way they like. What we _might_ be able to do is influence the rate structures so that our own opportunities as producers/distributors are not forsaken. If we leave it to "them", they'll set up the tariffs so that low-price, small-list distributions incur prohibitive overhead costs in distribution or payment settlements. They seek the economic-model and level-of-control that they've enjoyed in the broadcast business. Does someone have a better vision-scenario in mind? Regards, Richard ~=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=~=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=~--~=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=~=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=~ Posted by Richard K. Moore - •••@••.••• - Wexford, Ireland Cyber-Rights: http://www.cpsr.org/cpsr/nii/cyber-rights/ ftp://www.cpsr.org/cpsr/nii/cyber-rights/library/ Cyberlib: www | ftp --> ftp://ftp.iol.ie/users/rkmoore Materials may be reposted in their _entirety_ for non-commercial use. ~=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=~=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=~--~=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=~=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=~