In an uncharacteristic bit of theater, the Social Science Research Council has released a new report on Media Piracy in Emerging Economies with a Consumers Dilemma. Come from a higher-income country? No free report for you!
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From the Social Science Research Council Blog:
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Not unexpectedly, our Consumers Dilemma license for the report has
generated some controversy. To recap, the CD license creates different
paths to acquiring the report: first, we have an IP address geolocator
that sends visitors from high income countries toward an $8 paywall
when they download the report; all other resolvable IP addresses get
free access.
Criticism so far has taken two general forms:
1) That we are being unfair in constraining access in high-income
countries by setting an $8 pay wall. This divides further into what
I’ll call a ‘CC left’ position, which thinks the report should be
Creative Commons-licensed (and therefore free to everyone), and a
‘Grumpy Right’ position which appears to just resent being asked to pay
$8 when others are getting it for free.
2) The view that the license is cheap theater unworthy of the
scientific purpose of the study. Since this complaint is
underspecified so far, I’ll assume it includes 1 but is mostly about
the commercial reader license, which gets read as juvenile sticking it
to the man.
Maybe some clarification is in order here. The reader is faced with a dilemma: pay the
legal price, acquire it through pirate channels, or
don’t bother with it. In most of the countries we’ve studied in this
report, the results of this calculation with respect to DVDs, music,
and software are strikingly consistent. Media goods are highly
desired, exorbitantly priced with respect to local incomes, and freely
available through pirate channels. High rates of piracy and tiny
legal markets are the result. We’ve written 400+ pages about this
dysfunctional form of globalization and its causes.
The resulting consumers dilemma is a ubiquitous experience in
medium and low-income countries but one that confronts the American or
European reader much less frequently and with much less
intensity. The global market is made for those consumers. It is
priced and distributed for them.
The Consumers Dilemma license
is a way of reversing that equation and, in the most minor ways,
requiring an explicit engagement with it. Among the surreal aspects,
that simple choice can subject you to crushing civil and criminal
penalties, but you can rest easy knowing that only very rare, arbitrary
examples will be made (and none in our case). Now that’s theater. Our
license has a theatrical side, to be sure, but it also stays true to
the experiences documented in the report. Those experiences–the
personal choices and the market and price structure that informs
them–are the report’s primary subject.
(* Go here if the resolution of your dilemma is to pay the $8 for the report).
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