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Hardcover Darknet: Hollywood's War Against the Digital Generation Book

ISBN: 0471683345

ISBN13: 9780471683346

Darknet: Hollywood's War Against the Digital Generation

An indispensable primer for those who want to protect their digital rights from the dark forces of big media. -Kara Swisher, author of aol.com The first general interest book by a blogger edited... This description may be from another edition of this product.

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Format: Hardcover

Condition: Good

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Customer Reviews

5 ratings

This book really explains our times

I originally heard about this book, while I was listening to a recorded Q and A session of South by Southwest (SXSW). I'm really glad I followed up and got it. Lasica did a fantastic job explaining our culture and how we interact with technology and new media. This book really wraps up how different groups such as corporations, senators, pirates and musicians affect it. Things are happening that you won't necessarily agree with on all sides. Technology isn't as simple as making discoveries, because of the slow moving patent driven society we have become. The two sides covered brilliantly by Lasica are basically those who want or have ownership over information so they can control pricing, distribution, and those who want to use technology and media as creators, not just consumers. But it's the examples in the book that make it great...of the groups driven to darknets who don't want to be limited by laws that they feel are outdated, unjust, those who want information for everybody. These people from all walks of life are very interesting. Plus I loved all the references I learned about from reading it.

Brilliant

First heard of this book at Gnomedex2005. While there I watched JD speak on a panel about tomorrow's media and talk about participatory culture, user generated content and how the smarts are with the audience, not with the people on the stage. He is so passionate about the subject, and was having such a great time talking about the personal media revolution that I picked up a copy of his book that night. The only problem with this book, like a roller coaster when you are a kid, is that it ended too soon. 267 pages of fun, and interesting people and WTF? moments of corporate and legislative stupidity. JD isn't pro-piracy. JD isn't pro-RIAA/MPAA/MS. He lays out an excellent argument for why we need more moderation and common sense and why it is more important that we the people and our legislators have an understanding of historical record behind innovation and copyright and culture. Lasica tells a cautionary tale about what might happen if we let the regulators (business, MSM, govt agencies) have their way without our say. They want control over their content, and more importantly, their sources of revenue. He balances that with a strong warning to the big players: there are more pirates than there are lawyers, and they are fighting back against the limitations. Without being silly or sci fi, he takes the reader through a short tour of the darknets, giving the reader a peek into the people and motivation inside. This book touches on copyright, free culture, software, file sharing, business, Hollywood, professionals and amateurs. Lasica's writing style is fast and clean and very direct. It is a fun and fast read with a great set of footnotes at the end the user can follow up on. Google Lasica and ourmedia and see what else he is involved with regarding participatory media/culture.

Darknet - getting past the hype to see what remix culture means

In what is essentially a PR war of hysteria (on both sides), JD presents the middle ground, shifting the focus off the corporations and file-sharing teenagers. We learn about real people who, having become accustomed to technology in their lives, adopt it to create a richer media experience. These hobbyists have the tools and ambition to express themselves, except now the law has intervened. Before, fair use was an acceptable compromise because it was hard to make a perfect copy. Now with perfect duplicates, all fair use is suspect, since the tools used to digitally record a few seconds of a song or movie for a remix piece are the same that pirates would use to steal music or, worse, to profitably bootleg. Those tools illegally circumvent copy protection and the act is a crime no matter the intent. This is the tension JD describes is his book - a world where an absolute law applies to a range of activities, many of which seem perfect resonable and socially beneficial. JD presents no real answers because as a society we haven't come up with them yet. Darknet triggers important questions: is fair-use an intrinsic "right"? should it be? what can people repurpose for their own use in a non-commerical setting? how can that be defined/controlled? where are the mechanisms to license use of this content? JD points us to the root of the conflict: otherwise normal people become criminals in pursuit of creating their own art and entertainment - works as "trivial" as they are culturally important.

Opened my eyes to whats going on....

As someone who spends a lot of time online and in the television world, Ill be the first to admit that I havent read as many books as I would have liked to in recent years. ( Not sure if Dean Koontz and John Grisham count) But JD Lasicas "DARKNET" helps make up for all those nites in cyberspace wilderness. This is the best and most complete book Ive come across on the subject of the major transformations taking place in the media world. It wouldent suprise me if this book becomes the NWE BIBLE for the next generation of media... The trick is that Lasica dosent do what most Big-J Journalists do: Latch onto a huge media or tech company and tell its story. Yes, Microsoft, Sony, Intel, HP, Play important roles here, But the author burrows into whats really driving todays changes in the digital world, and its happining at the grassroots, much of it OUT of the spotlight. This should be a textbook for students students studying media or next-generation online business models. Its all here in ONE comprehensive package. Through example after example ( and LOTS of Beautiful no-nonsense writing) we see how Big Entertainment is spinning the public into believing this is a debate over piracy, when in reality the restrictions showing up in our digital gear are REALLY about preserving existing business models. But the most Interesting chapters are not about law or corperate shenanigans. I was blown away by the author's insights fleshing out the future of television, movies, music, and gaming. Media will change more in the next five years than it has in the last 50 years, Lasica writes. A few years from now, when millions of us will be walking around with mini computers in our pockets containing the storage capacity of today's Library of Congress, what kind of deal will we strike with the purveyors of information and entertainment? These are questions we should be debating today. Today we get to decide what kind of future we want for tomorrows media-saturated society. There are some stark choices before us all, if only "The Media" began telling us WHAT they are. But they WONT.. So get up to speed. READ "DARKNET" 5 STARS.......

Care about your digital toys? Read on!

I first became aware of the issues surrounding our digital freedoms a few weeks ago during the arguments before the Supreme Court in the "Grokster" case. The justices are expected to soon rule in the most important case of the digital age. I didn't fully appreciate the issues at stake in this case - and indeed, for all of us who care about how we may use our computers, our gadgets and other digital technologies - until I read an early copy of JD Lasica's "Darknet: Hollywood's War Against the Digital Generation." I've read Lasica's columns for years on the Online Journalism Review site as he argued passionately for citizen journalism and a forward-looking approach to the online medium by the major media players. In "Darknet," he takes those reporting skills and goes to town, providing the first journalistic, narrative-driven account of the culture clashes that mainstream new organizations seem to be only dimly aware of. (News flash: It's not about file sharing!!) Yes, some of this ground has been plowed before, but mostly by academics with little flair for making these issues accessible to a general audience. That's what I think "Darknet" brings to the table .... it tells stories rather than arguing fine points of copyright law. There's the pastor who commits a felony because he wants to use Hollywood movie clips in his sermons (it's a terrifically vivid and real representation of a geeky man of the cloth - but a lot of my secular friends behave the same way and would be shocked to learn how much of their behavior is already illegal). There's the inside look at movie piracy (has this been reported before? this was all new to me), with the interesting take on how Hollywood execs are ignoring the advice of their own consultants by refusing to make studio movies available on demand in a timely manner. There's the behind-the-curtain look at the workings of these intra-industry consortiums that are deciding how you and I can use our computers, PDAs, and digital TV sets, with little or no input from the public. Mostly, though, "Darknet" takes the pulse of the digital generation - young people especially - and winds up siding with their worldview of being producers and creators of content instead of one-dimensional consumers. That stands in stark contrast to the views of the people running the entertainment companies (and their Capital Hill errand boys). It's a disturbing, sobering and timely look at what's turning out to be a hugely important issue for those of us who aspire to be more than passive consumers of big media's infotainment machine.
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