[-empyre-] Week Four - Design
christopher sullivan
csulli at saic.edu
Wed Jun 23 02:57:13 EST 2010
Hi Michael.
The notion that the present "copyright economy" system is not working out well
for writers, is true, but it is working out well for those that have an
audience, and open access, where there is no exchange but "hype" is not an
answer.
Why should creative people not be paid for there work? we all want free health
care, but the assumption is that the doctors get paid.
I feel that you are looking at how the system does not work for unpublished
or vanity press authors. if they where producing a play, there would be no one
in the house, and then they could complain that the current theater system is
not working for them.
I still do not see an answer or even strategy coming out of this that
pays writers for there work. and why is anonymity so important, that is an
unnecessary appendix from political activism, in totalitarian countries or
moments. it is just style for any other kind of work.
Let's see where the discussion goes next week. Chris.
Quoting Michael Dieter <mdieter at unimelb.edu.au>:
> Hey empyre,
>
> I'd like to introduce our final guests for the topic of Publishing in
> Convergence under the topic of design: Femke Snelting and Pierre
> Huyghebaert from Open Source Publishing, and Mat-Wall Smith and Andrew
> Murphie from Fibreculture.
>
> However, just before doing so, Iâd like to chime in with some thoughts on
> OA, if only to emphasize that the critiques of free culture presented so
> far have not by default been arguing in favor the existing regimes of
> copyright and intellectual property. As Gary notes, it is widely
> recognized that these systems are highly exploitative, exclusionary and
> (moreover) completely inadequate for the age of networked media:
>
> > Of course Iâm aware that in-work academic labourers are paid by their
> > institutions and many have a lot to benefit from making their research
> > and publications available on a free and open basis. And, yes, âfor
> > other kinds of writers, the idea of free culture may simply result in
> > more alienated labourâ, as Emmett Stinson quite rightly points out.
> > However, at the same time, and as others have suggested, the vast
> > majority of (non-academic, non-affiliated) authors, artists and
> > musicians actually benefit very little from the current copyright
> > economy, too. A few top stars may earn a lot, but most people donât. An
> > Authorâs Licensing and Collecting Society Study from 2007 suggested that
> > the âtypical earnings of a British professional writer aged 25-34 are
> > only £5,000 per annumâ. In his recent book, Nice Work If You Can Get It,
> > Andrew Ross even goes so far as to argue that 'in the court of public
> > opinion, corporate IP warriors can always win points by broadcasting the
> > claim that they are defending the labor rights of vulnerable artists.
> > Yet the historical record and the experience of working artists today
> > confirm that the struggling proprietary author has always been more of a
> > convenient fiction for publishers to exploit than a consistent
> > beneficiary of copyright rewards. Culture-industry executives are able
> > to masquerade as the last line of protection for artists, when in fact
> > they are systematically stripping them of their copyrights.' If so, then
> > it might not be just academic labourers who have things to gain from
> > experimenting with different kinds of economies and âalternate
> > modernitiesâ.
>
> With this concluding point, however, I also wonder what 'might be gained'
> from those unsupported artists and authors openly contributing to free
> culture. There is a strong argument to make that vying for 'exposure' or
> 'hype' only further fuels a mode of communicative capitalism that
> maintains the secondary parasited role of knowledge or creative labor in
> deeply problematic ways (especially combined with the still dominant UGC
> logic of 'social media' platforms). This is why, for me, it's not about
> moving back to the existing IP regimes if you're critical of the
> 'theoretically correct' support of free culture. Rather, it's simply
> willing to ask how can art and cultural works might exist in network
> societies outside of patronage, care-giving or charity, AND residual
> systems of property.
>
> This is, of course, why Creative Commons appears so problematic. Besides
> issues of a paradoxical inverted ownership model and of structured versus
> unstructured commons, without any material compensation for artists, such
> initiatives are more invested in assisting the Law come to terms with
> digital and networked technologies (copying-machines), than with
> supporting cultural production per se (Lessig is very clear on this
> point).
>
> Just as a side-note, the Venture-Communism project interests me a lot in
> this respect, since it's at least willing to experiment with figuring out
> ways that artists can autonomously make a living under networked
> conditions. Dmytri Kleinerâs overview: âVenture Communism is an
> investment
> model designed to be a form of revolutionary worker's struggle. The
> Venture Commune is a type of voluntary worker's association, designed to
> enclose the productivity of labour and enable the possibility of the
> collective accumulation of Land and Capital, which, in the endgame, will
> eventually allow the workers to buy the entire world from the
> Capitalists.â http://www.telekommunisten.net/WhatIsVentureCommunism
>
> OK, to move along now to the introductions, itâs my pleasure to invite
> Femke and Pierre from Open Source Publishing, and Mat and Andrew from
> Fibreculture to the list. Following the debates this week around OA, we'd
> like to also draw attention to the complexities of informational design
> underpinning experimentations with digital publishing. This has already
> been gestured to in a post by Joost Kircz, since the rise of e-books
> suggests a return to the weird kinds of media objects that characterized
> the hypertext and multimedia CD-ROM era. More pragmatically, thereâs new
> questions of open fonts, the rapidly expanding field of informational
> visualization and database management to consider, along with effective
> architectures for collaboration (i.e. Liquid Books, the Institute for the
> Future of the Book).
>
> Again, a lot to talk about! By way of drawing the discussion to a close
> over the next few days, however, there might be relevant links for all
> contributors here: from the design of software-enabled technologies as
> reading devices, neurological/affective intensities, to questions of
> access, control and economics, I look forward to reading your posts!
>
> Bios:
>
> Pierre Huyghebaert <http://www.speculoos.com> Exploring several practices
> around graphic design, he currently drives the studio Speculoos. He is
> interested in using free software to re-learn to work in alternate ways
> and collaboratively on cartography, type design, web interface, schematic
> illustration, teaching and book design.
>
> Andrew Murphie is associate professor at University of New South Wales in
> the School of English, Media and Performing Arts. His research interests
> include media philosophy and sociology; social impact of models and
> practices of mind from cybernetics to neuroscience; electronic arts, music
> and design; open access publishing and education; continental philosophy,
> cultural theory; digital humanities. He has a special interest in
> Guattari, Deleuze and Whitehead, and post-connectionist theories of
> thinking processes. He is the founding editor of The Fibreculture Journal
> (running since 2003, now published by the prestigious Open Humanities
> Press), and a member of the editorial boards of Performance Paradigm,
> Dancecult: Journal of Electronic Dance Music Culture, and Scan. He is
> involved in research with the Senselab in Montréal, and with Kolding
> Design School in Denmark, where he was a guest Professor in December,
> 2009. He is currently a Chief Investigator (with Anna Munster) on an
> Australian Research Council Discovery Project, 2007-2010: Dynamic Media:
> Innovative Social and Artistic Developments in New Media in Australia,
> Britain, Canada and Scandinavia since 1990.
>
> Femke Snelting <http://snelting.domainepublic.net/> is an artist and
> designer residing in Brussels, developing projects at the intersection of
> design, feminism and free software. Together with Renee Turner and Riek
> Sijbring, she forms De Geuzen <http://www.geuzen.org/> (a foundation for
> multi-visual research). Femke is member of Constant
> <http://www.constantvzw.org/> and participates in Samedies
> <http://samedi.collectifs.net/>, femmes et logiciels libres. With Pierre
> Huyghebaert and Harrisson, she initiated the design and research team Open
> Source Publishing <http://ospublish.constantvzw.org/> (OSP).
>
> Mat Wall-Smith is a media theorist and experimentalist with several years
> experience in sound design and as a lecturer in media studies at
> University of New South Wales, Sydney. He is currently writing a PhD about
> ecologies of thought, affect and technology drawing on the philosophical
> work of Brian Massumi and Bernard Stiegler. He is a member of the
> Fibreculture Journal editorial committee.
>
>
> Cheers,
>
> --
> Michael Dieter
> School of Culture and Communication
> University of Melbourne
>
http://www.culture-communication.unimelb.edu.au/research-students/michael-dieter.html
>
> _______________________________________________
> empyre forum
> empyre at lists.cofa.unsw.edu.au
> http://www.subtle.net/empyre
Christopher Sullivan
Dept. of Film/Video/New Media
School of the Art Institute of Chicago
112 so michigan
Chicago Ill 60603
csulli at saic.edu
312-345-3802
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