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Permanent link: http://hdl.handle.net/1959.3/196669
- Title
- Constructing the pirate audience: on popular copyright critique, free culture and cyber-libertarianism
- Author(s)
-
Lobato, Ramon
- Abstract
- Digital copyright has become a key site of debate and dissent as a generation of consumers accustomed to file-sharing of proprietary content seeks to assert its rights more aggressively. A vocal anti-copyright movement has emerged, rallying around a free-speech defence of piracy honed in opposition to the hardline approach to intellectual property (IP) enforcement pursued by the US entertainment lobbies. This article discusses recent attempts at collective legitimation within this movement, with a focus on the implicit critiques of copyright that underpin pro-piracy discourse. I conclude that if this kind of popular copyright critique is to be more than a pet cause for early adopters, it needs to begin with an inclusive philosophy of access that does not reify the creative consumer as the normative citizen of the information society.
- Publication Type
- Journal article
- Research Centre
- Swinburne University of Technology. Faculty of Life and Social Sciences. Institute for Social Research
- Source
- Media International Australia, No. 139 (May 2011), pp. 113-123
- Publication Year
- 2011
- FOR Code(s)
-
1605 Policy and Administration;
1608 Sociology;
2002 Cultural Studies
- Keyword(s)
-
Copyright;
Enforcement;
Intellectual property;
Piracy;
Social movements
- Publisher
- University of Queensland
- Publisher URL
- http://www.uq.edu.au/mia/2011-issues#139
- Copyright
- Copyright © 2011 University of Queensland. The accepted manuscript is reproduced in accordance with the copyright policy of the publisher.
- ISSN
- 1329-878X
- Full Text

- Peer Reviewed
