Law in the Internet Society

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CrystalMaoFirstPaper 4 - 19 Oct 2011 - Main.DevinMcDougall
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Potential Topic: Freemium Open Access

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-- AustinKlar -- Oct 19 2011 \ No newline at end of file

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. I just wanted to chime in to note that if you want to frame your paper around the question of what justice requires, you will probably need to develop an account of what justice is. That will be a fairly serious undertaking. It seems like most of the material you've got here is less about normative questions, and more about the business side of things, the empirical question of "what works" rather than normative question of "what justice requires." Rather than asking if justice will allow or disallow companies monetizing content through advertising, you might want to narrow down to the question of: does an advertising or other premium type thing work as a business model to a) generate profit and b) actually increase access to content. One potential issue there is the question of how much longer content-embedded advertising will exist as a business opportunity. Bitstreams are easy to filter, as the folks at AdBlock? have demonstrated. This is not good for people who want to make money off inserting things people don't want into their bitstreams.

However, the 'accompanying services' model has worked well for many free software companies, eg, RedHat? , Ubuntu, etc. The concept of "accompanying services" can also be extended, as Austin suggests, to include customizations - charging customers for special customizations of material. However, while this applies to software, it is difficult to see how it would apply to books and music.

-- DevinMcDougall - 19 Oct 2011

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Revision 4r4 - 19 Oct 2011 - 17:22:13 - DevinMcDougall
Revision 3r3 - 19 Oct 2011 - 13:29:39 - AustinKlar
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