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Transcript:
(Applause)I want to talk to you a little bit about user-generated content.I'm going to tell you three stories on the way to one argumentthat's going to tell you a little bitabout how we open user-generated content up for business.So, here's the first story.
1906. This man, John Philip Sousa, traveled to this place,the United States Capitol, to talk about this technology,what he called the, quote, "talking machines."Sousa was not a fan of the talking machines.This is what he had to say."These talking machines are going to ruin artistic developmentof music in this country.When I was a boy, in front of every house in the summer evenings,you would find young people togethersinging the songs of the day, or the old songs.Today, you hear these infernal machines going night and day.We will not have a vocal chord left," Sousa said."The vocal chords will be eliminated by a process of evolutionas was the tail of man when he came from the ape."
Now, this is the picture I want you to focus on.This is a picture of culture.We could describe it using modern computer terminologyas a kind of read-write culture.It's a culture where people participate in the creationand the re-creation of their culture. In that sense, it's read-write.Sousa's fear was that we would lose that capacitybecause of these, quote, "infernal machines." They would take it away.And in its place, we'd have the opposite of read-write culture,what we could call read-only culture.Culture where creativity was consumedbut the consumer is not a creator.A culture which is top-down, owned,where the vocal chords of the millions have been lost.
Now, as you look back at the twentieth century,at least in what we think of as the, quote, "developed world" --hard not to conclude that Sousa was right.Never before in the history of human culturehad it been as professionalized, never before as concentrated.Never before has creativity of the millionsbeen as effectively displaced,and displaced because of these, quote, "infernal machines."The twentieth century was that centurywhere, at least for those places we know the best,culture moved from this read-write to read-only existence.
So, second. Land is a kind of property --it is property. It's protected by law.As Lord Blackstone described it, land is protected by trespass law,for most of the history of trespass law,by presuming it protects the land all the way down belowand to an indefinite extent upward.Now, that was a pretty good systemfor most of the history of the regulation of land,until this technology came along, and people began to wonder,were these instruments trespassersas they flew over land without clearing the rightsof the farms below as they traveled across the country?Well, in 1945, Supreme Court got a chance to address that question.
Two farmers, Thomas Lee and Tinie Causby, who raised chickens,had a significant complaint because of these technologies.The complaint was that theirchickens followed the pattern of the airplanesand flew themselves into the walls of the barnwhen the airplanes flew over the land.And so they appealed to Lord Blackstoneto say these airplanes were trespassing.Since time immemorial, the law had said,you can't fly over the land without permission of the landowner,so this flight must stop.Well, the Supreme Court considered this 100-years traditionand said, in an opinion written by Justice Douglas,that the Causbys must lose.The Supreme Court said the doctrine protecting landall the way to the sky has no place in the modern world,otherwise every transcontinental flight wouldsubject the operator to countless trespass suits.Common sense, a rare idea in the law, but here it was. Common sense --(Laughter) --Revolts at the idea. Common sense.
Finally. Before the Internet, the last great terrorto rain down on the content industrywas a terror created by this technology. Broadcasting:a new way to spread content,and therefore a new battle over the controlof the businesses that would spread content.Now, at that time, the entity,the legal cartel, that controlled the performance rightsfor most of the music that would be broadcastusing these technologies was ASCAP.They had an exclusive license on the most popular content,and they exercised it in a way that tried to demonstrateto the broadcasters who really was in charge.So, between 1931 and 1939, they raised rates by some 448 percent,until the broadcasters finally got togetherand said, okay, enough of this.And in 1939, a lawyer, Sydney Kaye, started somethingcalled Broadcast Music Inc. We know it as BMI.And BMI was much more democratic in the artthat it would include within its repertoire,including African American music for the first time in the repertoire.But most important was that BMI took public domain worksand made arrangements of them, which they gave away for freeto their subscribers. So that in 1940,when ASCAP threatened to double their rates,the majority of broadcasters switched to BMI.Now, ASCAP said they didn't care.The people will revolt, they predicted, because the very best musicwas no longer available, because they had shiftedto the second best public domain provided by BMI.Well, they didn't revolt, and in 1941, ASCAP cracked.And the important point to recognizeis that even though these broadcasterswere broadcasting something you would call second best,that competition was enough to break, at that time,this legal cartel over access to music.
Okay. Three stories. Here's the argument.In my view, the most significant thing to recognizeabout what this Internet is doingis its opportunity to revive the read-write culturethat Sousa romanticized.Digital technology is the opportunityfor the revival of these vocal chordsthat he spoke so passionately to Congress about.User-generated content, spreading in businessesin extraordinarily valuable ways like these,celebrating amateur culture.By which I don't mean amateurish culture,I mean culture where people producefor the love of what they're doing and not for the money.I mean the culture that your kids are producing all the time.For when you think of what Sousa romanticizedin the young people together, singing the songs of the day,of the old songs, you should recognizewhat your kids are doing right now.Taking the songs of the day and the old songsand remixing them to make them something different.It's how they understand access to this culture.So, let's have some very few examplesto get a sense of what I'm talking about here.
Here's something called Anime Music Video, first example,taking anime captured from televisionre-edited to music tracks.(Music)This one you should be -- confidence. Jesus survives. Don't worry.(Music)(Laughter)And this is the best.(Music)My love ...There's only you in my life ...The only thing that's bright ...My first love ...You're every breath that I take ...You're every step I make ...And I ....I want to share all my love with you ...No one else will do ...And your eyes ...They tell me how much you care ...(Music)So, this is remix, right?(Applause)And it's important to emphasize that what this is notis not what we call, quote, "piracy."I'm not talking about nor justifyingpeople taking other people's content in wholesaleand distributing it without the permission of the copyright owner.I'm talking about people taking and recreatingusing other people's content, using digital technologiesto say things differently.Now, the importance of thisis not the technique that you've seen here.Because, of course, every technique that you've seen hereis something that television and film producershave been able to do for the last 50 years.The importance is that that technique has been democratized.It is now anybody with access to a $1,500 computerwho can take sounds and images from the culture around usand use it to say things differently.These tools of creativity have become tools of speech.It is a literacy for this generation. This is how our kids speak.It is how our kids think. It is what your kids areas they increasingly understand digital technologiesand their relationship to themselves.
Now, in response to this new use of culture using digital technologies,the law has not greeted this Sousa revivalwith very much common sense.Instead, the architecture of copyright lawand the architecture of digital technologies,as they interact, have produced the presumptionthat these activities are illegal.Because if copyright law at its core regulates something called copies,then in the digital world the one fact we can't escapeis that every single use of culture produces a copy.Every single use therefore requires permission;without permission, you are a trespasser.You're a trespasser with about as much senseas these people were trespassers.Common sense here, though, has not yet revoltedin response to this response that the law has offeredto these forms of creativity.Instead, what we've seenis something much worse than a revolt.There's a growing extremism that comes from both sidesin this debate, in response to this conflictbetween the law and the use of these technologies.
One side builds new technologies, such as one recently announcedthat will enable themto automatically take down from sites like YouTubeany content that has any copyrighted content in it,whether or not there's a judgment of fair usethat might be applied to the use of that content.And on the other side, among our kids,there's a growing copyright abolitionism,a generation that rejects the very notionof what copyright is supposed to do, rejects copyrightand believes that the law is nothing more than an assto be ignored and to be fought at every opportunity possible.The extremism on one side begets extremism on the other,a fact we should have learned many, many times over,and both extremes in this debate are just wrong.Now, the balance that I try to fight for,I, as any good liberal, try to fight for firstby looking to the government. Total mistake, right?(Laughter)
Looked first to the courts and the legislatures to try to get themto do something to make the system make more sense.It failed partly because the courts are too passive,partly because the legislatures are corrupted,by which I don't mean that there's briberyoperating to stop real change,but more the economy of influence that governs how Congress functionsmeans that policymakers here will not understand thisuntil it's too late to fix it.So, we need something different, we need a different kind of solution.And the solution here, in my view, is a private solution,a solution that looks to legalize what it is to be young again,and to realize the economic potential of that,and that's where the story of BMI becomes relevant.Because, as BMI demonstrated, competition herecan achieve some form of balance. The same thing can happen now.We don't have a public domain to draw upon now,so instead what we need is two types of changes.
First, that artists and creators embrace the idea,choose that their work be made available more freely.So, for example, they can say their work is available freelyfor non-commercial, this amateur-type of use,but not freely for any commercial use.And second, we need the businessesthat are building out this read-write cultureto embrace this opportunity expressly, to enable it,so that this ecology of free content, or freer content,can grow on a neutral platformwhere they both exist simultaneously,so that more-free can compete with less-free,and the opportunity to develop the creativity in that competitioncan teach one the lessons of the other.
Now, I would talk about one particular such planthat I know something about,but I don't want to violate TED's first commandment of selling,so I'm not going to talk about this at all.I'm instead just going to remind you of the point that BMI teaches us.That artist choice is the key for new technologyhaving an opportunity to be open for business,and we need to build artist choice hereif these new technologies are to have that opportunity.But let me end with something I think much more important --much more important than business.It's the point about how this connects to our kids.We have to recognize they're different from us. This is us, right?(Laughter)We made mixed tapes; they remix music.We watched TV; they make TV.
It is technology that has made them different,and as we see what this technology can do,we need to recognize you can't killthe instinct the technology produces. We can only criminalize it.We can't stop our kids from using it.We can only drive it underground.We can't make our kids passive again.We can only make them, quote, "pirates." And is that good?We live in this weird time. It's kind of age of prohibitions,where in many areas of our life,we live life constantly against the law.Ordinary people live life against the law,and that's what I -- we are doing to our kids.They live life knowing they live it against the law.That realization is extraordinarily corrosive,extraordinarily corrupting.And in a democracy, we ought to be able to do better.Do better, at least for them, if not for opening for business.Thank you very much.(Applause)
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