Creating and innovating new works however requires a lot of commitment from the owners and therefore the need for motivation hence without such encouragements people tend to pull away from creating more works. United Nations Conference on Trade and Development has particularly argued that copyright supports creativity by giving individuals and the creative industries in which they are involved strong incentives to invest time, effort and money in creating, producing and distributing works. Copyright assures the ownership among creators hence they feel that they are secure financially, socially and economically.
Copyright is a property right that excludes others from unauthorised copying hence encourages the principle of originality. These principles ensure that copyright only protects original creative works but at the same time allowing the sharing ideas, facts and information as a way of encouraging people to engage in more creative works. Professor Edmund Kitch at University of Virginia argues, copyright allows limited protection of owners so as to create works with similar distinctiveness as those created in movies, novels and TV shows (Kitch, 2000).
Therefore, copyright forbids unauthorised copying and distribution of contents but at the same time encourages creativity among other people who are especially inspired by previous works. Therefore protection of copyright is helpful to both the copyright owner and the consumers because it ensures fair and productive competition and at the same time provides incentives to creativity. In this digital age one is able to efficiently and easily record a program using a VCR without the knowledge of the copyright owner.
In addition, even if the owner is made aware it will be very expensive for the owner to try protecting his/her work against all existing program recorders. These actions have therefore raised concerns from copyright owners on the dangers of making copies of their contents without their formal consent hence violating the rights of copyright owners whereby they are the only ones legally allowed to make copies of their works. However as Lewis Hyde acknowledges this could result in the violation of consumer rights where they are not allowed to make copy of the content they have legally purchased.
The strong craving of limiting the use of contents by consumers has raised intense debates on the legalities of the actions of the copyright owners to put such absurd jurisdictions on the use of contents that have been legally acquired by consumers. Hyde gives an example of the e-book adaptation of Alice in Wonderland which contains the ominous warning that it cannot be read aloud. He terms this rules as ridiculous and unrealistic rules that have been put forward by copyright owners with the intent of protecting their work hence the need of understanding that some copyright laws that had been enacted in an era when digital technology was not in existence have now become outdated and need to be abolished.
He proposes the adoption of strategies that embrace the existence of digital technology but at the same time promote fair use and profitability. Previous technological innovations such as photocopying machines and VCRs raised debates on protection of intellectual property therefore necessitating for mechanisms that could ensure a balance between consumers and copyright owners. Today the use of digital technology has evoked intense debates among many copyright owners claiming that their intellectual property rights have been deprived hence discouraging them from creating more works.
Critics have responded by arguing that copyright law as well as patent law has effectively been marred and has seemed to favour copyright owners. Apparently, the digital technologies have changed the very nature of intellectual property to its very core to such an extent that we need to totally lessen intellectual property rules. These critics are of the view that any data that is transmitted in digital or electronic formats should not solely be controlled by copyright owners because they are concerned that the technologies employed for copy protection can easily overstep their boundaries more than current legal protections and lead to the collapse of fair use rights that most people around the world now expect.
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