마저 못한 잡다한 이야기들.... He spoke, we write @@
by sodal
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저작권, 사회적 생산, 그리고 동기에 관한 Benkler의 견해

"The wealth of networks"란 책(위키 버젼)에서,  하바드 법대 Benkler 교수가 말하는 

저작권에 관한...
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if any new information good or innovation builds on existing information, then strengthening intellectual property rights increases the prices that those who invest in producing information today must pay to those who did so yesterday, in addition to increasing the rewards an information producer can get tomorrow. Given the nonrivalry, those payments made today for yesterday's information are all inefficiently too high, from today's perspective. They are all above the marginal cost--zero. Today's users of information are not only today's readers and consumers. They are also today's producers and tomorrow's innovators. Their net benefit from a strengthened patent or copyright regime, given not only increased potential revenues but also the increased costs, may be negative. If we pass a law that regulates information production too strictly, allowing its beneficiaries to impose prices that are too high on today's innovators, then we will have not only too little consumption of information today, but also too little production of new information for tomorrow. (chapter 2)
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Peer production에 관한...
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The term "peer production" characterizes a subset of commons-based production practices. It refers to production systems that depend on individual action that is self-selected and decentralized, rather than hierarchically assigned.
-------, we see three distinct functions involved in the process. First, there is an initial utterance of a humanly meaningful statement. Writing an article or drawing a picture, whether done by a professional or an amateur, whether high quality or low, is such an action. Second, there is a separate function of mapping the initial utterances on a knowledge map. In particular, an utterance must be understood as "relevant" in some sense, and "credible." Relevance is a subjective question of mapping an utterance on the conceptual map of a given user seeking information for a particular purpose defined by that individual. Credibility is a question of quality by some objective measure that the individual adopts as appropriate for purposes of evaluating a given utterance. The distinction between the two is somewhat artificial, however, because very often the utility of a piece of information will depend on a combined valuation of its credibility and relevance. I therefore refer to "relevance/accreditation" as a single function for purposes of this discussion, keeping in mind that the two are complementary and not entirely separable functions that an individual requires as part of being able to use utterances that others have uttered in putting together the user's understanding of the world. Finally, there is the function of distribution, or how one takes an utterance produced by one person and distributes it to other people who find it credible and relevant. In the mass-media world, these functions were often, though by no means always, integrated. NBC news produced the utterances, gave them credibility by clearing them on the evening news, and distributed [pg 69] them simultaneously. What the Internet is permitting is much greater disaggregation of these functions. (Chapter 3)
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그리고 왜?
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First, why do people participate? What is their motivation when they work for or contribute resources to a project for which they are not paid or directly rewarded? Second, why now, why here? What, if anything, is special about the digitally networked environment that would lead us to believe that peer production is here to stay as an important economic phenomenon, as opposed to a fad that will pass as the medium matures and patterns of behavior settle toward those more familiar to us from the economy of steel, coal, and temp agencies. Third, is it efficient to have all these people sharing their computers and donating their time and creative effort? Moving through the answers to these questions, it becomes clear that the diverse and complex patterns of behavior observed on the Internet, from Viking ship hobbyists to the developers of the GNU/ Linux operating system, are perfectly consistent with much of our contemporary understanding of human economic behavior. We need to assume no fundamental change in the nature of humanity; [pg 92] we need not declare the end of economics as we know it. We merely need to see that the material conditions of production in the networked information economy have changed in ways that increase the relative salience of social sharing and exchange as a modality of economic production. That is, behaviors and motivation patterns familiar to us from social relations generally continue to cohere in their own patterns. What has changed is that now these patterns of behavior have become effective beyond the domains of building social relations of mutual interest and fulfilling our emotional and psychological needs of companionship and mutual recognition. They have come to play a substantial role as modes of motivating, informing, and organizing productive behavior at the very core of the information economy. And it is this increasing role as a modality of information production that ripples through the rest this book. It is the feasibility of producing information, knowledge, and culture through social, rather than market and proprietary relations--through cooperative peer production and coordinate individual action--that creates the opportunities for greater autonomous action, a more critical culture, a more discursively engaged and better informed republic, and perhaps a more equitable global community. (chapter 4)
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그리고 Intrinsic motivation
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Intrinsic motivations are reasons for action that come from within the person, such as pleasure or personal satisfaction. Extrinsic motivations are said to "crowd out" intrinsic motivations because they (a) impair self-determination--that is, people feel pressured by an external force, and therefore feel overjustified in maintaining their intrinsic motivation rather than complying with the will of the source of the extrinsic reward; or (b) impair self-esteem--they cause individuals to feel that their internal motivation is rejected, not valued, and as a result, their self-esteem is diminished, causing them to reduce effort. (chapter 4)
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좀 약한 것 같지요^^.


사례: 헌혈과 매혈
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The present generation's efforts to formalize and engage it began with the Titmuss-Arrow debate of the early 1970s. In a major work, Richard Titmuss compared the U.S. and British blood supply systems. The former was largely commercial at the time, organized by a mix of private for-profit and nonprofit actors; the latter entirely voluntary and organized by the National Health Service. Titmuss found that the British system had higher-quality blood (as measured by the likelihood of recipients contracting hepatitis from transfusions), less blood waste, and fewer blood shortages at hospitals. Titmuss also attacked the U.S. system as inequitable, arguing that the rich exploited the poor and desperate by buying their blood. He concluded that an altruistic blood procurement system is both more ethical and more efficient than a market system, and recommended that the market be kept out of blood donation to protect the "right to give."  31  Titmuss's argument came under immediate attack from economists. Most relevant for our purposes here, Kenneth Arrow agreed that the differences in blood quality indicated that the U.S. blood system was flawed, but rejected Titmuss's central theoretical claim that markets reduce donative activity. Arrow reported the alternative hypothesis held by "economists typically," that if some people respond to exhortation/moral incentives (donors), while others respond to prices and market incentives (sellers), these two groups likely behave independently--neither responds to the other's incentives. Thus, the decision to allow or ban markets should have no effect on donative behavior. Removing a market could, however, remove incentives of the "bad blood" suppliers to sell blood, thereby improving the overall quality of the blood supply. Titmuss had not established his hypothesis analytically, Arrow argued, and its proof or refutation would lie in empirical study.  32  Theoretical differences aside, the U.S. blood supply system did in fact transition to an allvolunteer system of social donation since the 1970s. In surveys since, blood donors have reported that they "enjoy helping" others, experienced a sense of moral obligation or responsibility, or exhibited characteristics of reciprocators after they or their relatives received blood. (chapter 4)
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by sodal | 2008/11/05 12:49 | 2008 | 트랙백 | 핑백(4) | 덧글(3)
트랙백 주소 : http://afternews.egloos.com/tb/2124986
☞ 내 이글루에 이 글과 관련된 글 쓰기 (트랙백 보내기) [도움말]
Linked at Beyond Homophily.. at 2008/11/07 17:10

... 그 새로운 생산 양식을, 메커니즘을 peer production, social production, network production, citizen production, proam production, collaborative ... more

Linked at Beyond Homophily.. at 2008/11/12 13:57

... Information Economy" The Reds, the Blues, and the Greens-Benkler 저작권, 사회적 생산, 그리고 동기에 관한 Benkler의 견해 ... more

Linked at Beyond Homophily.. at 2008/11/12 14:03

... Information Economy" The Reds, the Blues, and the Greens-Benkler 저작권, 사회적 생산, 그리고 동기에 관한 Benkler의 견해---------- ... more

Linked at Beyond Homophily.. at 2008/11/27 07:06

... 것이다. ----------------- The Reds, the Blues, and the Greens-Benkler 저작권, 사회적 생산, 그리고 동기에 관한 Benkler의 견해 컨텐츠 퀄러티-relavance/accreditation-slashdot 케이스 스터디 Modularity & Gr ... more

Commented by jeeymn at 2008/11/06 09:35
높은 가격으로 인해서 information소비와 생산이 이루어지지 않게되어
information이 순환되지 않는게 잘 상상이 안되네요 ㅠ_ㅠ 두렵.. ㄷㄷ

갑자기 생각이 난건데, 만약에 저작권이 강화되고 위의 글에서 처럼
information product의 가격 점점 더 높아진다면
소비 시장의 한 쪽에서는 명품 information product 가 발생하지 않을까요?

어느 경제 시장에서나 명품은 생기기 마련이니까,
저작권 등으로 인해 information base economy가 고도화 되고 복잡해지면
그 와중에, 엘리트 집단에서 거래되는 명품 i/p도 생길것 같은 생각이 드는데..
지나친 상상일까요 ㅋㅋㅋㅋㅋ
Commented by jeeymn at 2008/11/06 10:34
commons-based peer production 의 예로는
Linux, Wikipedia, citizen worker....등이 있다고 하네요
citizen worker 중 한 사이트 → http://www.citizensci.com/
Commented by sodal at 2008/11/06 12:45
"명품 정보"가 정보의 극화 현상을 말하는 것이라면, 그것은 당연히.....지나친 상상이 아닙니다. Good point!

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