WebRef Update: Featured Article: Scholars Discuss Open Code Benefits
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Scholars Discuss Open Code Benefits
Technology Rulings Too Hasty, Open Code Rules
Fans of free software and music found some allies this weekend who said if lawmakers don't understand technology they shouldn't try and regulate it.
Leading constitutional cyber-lawyer Lawrence Lessig led the discussion this past weekend on the future of IP rights and open code on the Net, launching the first John Seely Brown Symposium on Technology and Society here in Ann Arbor, Michigan. Sponsored by the University of Michigan's School of Information and Dr. Brown, himself a U-M graduate, the symposium is the first of five annual lectures by internationally known scholars on the implications of technological advancement for societies.
Lessig, author of "Code and Other Laws of Cyberspace," said judges and legislators are making too many decisions too soon about certain technologies before they fully comprehend their long term effects on society. "The plea is that people have enough humility to understand that their first intuitions about technology aren't always correct," he said. Lessig cited a recent court decision against MP3.com as a reason to worry.
Open Code's Implications
On Saturday, three speakers discussed "The Implications of Open Source Software": John Seely Brown, U-M alum, chief scientist at Xerox, director of PARC, and author of "The Social Life of Information," Michael D. Cohen, Professor of Information at the U-M and author of "Harnessing Complexity," and Lawrence Lessig, famed Harvard Law professor, special master to the Microsoft trial, and author of "Code and Other Laws of Cyberspace." The roundtable was well-attended, with a standing room only crowd at Ann Arbor's Michigan Union. Here are some highlights:
Lessig started off the discussion with a tribute to Richard
Stallman, who preached the gospel of open code and its values: the
importance of architecture, universal access, and facilitating
sharing. Lessig called Stallman our "modern Moses" who succumbed
to carpal tunnel syndrome. The torch was then taken up by Linus
Torvalds of Linux fame. "In free software, there is an implied
philosophical difference between sharable social services and
controlled ones," Lessig said. Lessig gave a little history saying
"The whole world of science is an open code movement. The
university doesn't compile itself and only make itself available
to those who compile it."
"Poems and songs exist in the commons - they are not controlled.
Culture and science both are open source projects. However the
history of the last 100 years are dominated by control and
copyright - controlled by structures of control. To the extent
that code is closed, that too is not something we have a right to
use and access." This lack of access is the threat of closed
code.
Lessig stressed that "Balance is important in each of these
contexts. There is a cultural code space in the public domain where
people have the right to share ideas and systems. Open code also
makes transparent the structure that controls people's lives.
Cyberspace will be defined by software and hardware. To the extent
that code is closed, it is a sequence of rules that govern your
life.
Think about AOL, a closed system. What is being collected?
There's no good way to answer that, the rules are secret and
hidden. Important values are implied by open code, that's not
the world we live in real space. Doors are not locked, we hope.
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"In the digital world there's not necessarily a link to taking
physical property. In the commons, with cultural resources, you
can take a song or poem and I still have it. Economists called
these 'non-rivalrous goods,' which have weird economic properties.
What rules do we make that create the greatest sharing and
productivity but maintain the wide distribution of the original
copyright holder? We need the ability to control the creation of
structure to compensate people for what they do, without giving
them control."
Next: More From the Symposium This article originally appeared in the September 14, 2000 edition of the WebReference Update Newsletter.
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welcome Revised: Sept 15, 2000 URL: https://webreference.com/new/opencode.html
Written by Andrew King and