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zakruti.com » Knowledge, science, education » Crash Course
Media Policy & You: Crash Course Media Literacy #9

Media Policy & You: Crash Course Media Literacy #9

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Rating: 4.0; Vote: 1
Copyright and other media regulations have always been a bit tricky, but the internet made all of that infinitely more complicated. But what does all of that mean for you, the consumer?
Date: 2022-04-04

Comments and reviews: 10


400k people per year are bitten by snakes.
138k die.
150k are amputees and physiologically messed up.
Congrats corona you just barely passed snake bite victims. And it's only been 4 months
650k die from flu.
Here's the big one. It's called heart disease. Brought on by stress bad health and most importantly. you guessed it. poverty.
18 million die every year to heart disease.
The number of deaths brought on a monopolized mass media is disturbing. It dwarfs all the corona deaths you will ever see. Mass hysteria sponsored by a monopolized mass media.
Wow. The real epidemic is the media Monopoly. Until you break it up and punish severely the handful involved.

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A clip compilation might not compete directly with the show, but TV stations sometimes create similar videos which which it would compete. These TV stations do pay licensing fees for the shows.
A more clear cut example would be selling character themed t-shirts. They do not directly compete with the copyrighted work, but they do compete with other services that might be willing to pay licensing fees.
I'm not saying your example was wrong. You said -may-, and a court might say that it was fair use. Like you said, it's not clear cut. Also I'm not saying this is how it should (or shouldn't) be; I just want to help people be aware of the gray areas.

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Wish we could live in a post-monetary society so that we could stop pretending that the concept of ownership make sense for digital creation. -ownership- only makes sense when there is sparsity of the thing that's owned. Digital media is infinitely copy-able so legal limitations like copyrights are enforcing and imposing a paradigm that doesn't fit with the digital world, because the rest of society's structure is still stuck in a sparsity-based world.
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When this series first started, I immediately hoped it would cover media ethics. You're. sort of going over that, looking forward to it being covered in more detail. Still waiting on -how it's sometimes irresponsible to reveal the truth-.
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One thing I find interesting that wasn't mentioned is what happens to your digital footprint when someone dies. The last time I looked into this was years ago, but there were no laws for this sort of thing. Are there any now?
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Great course, well presented. I feel to be in far greater control of my media consumption, and it's influence.
I look forward to carrying on, but I've got this inexplicable, uncontrollable urge to watch -Titanic-.

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Fair use is a honey pot, the only way we can adapt to media and the internet without losing our rights is to abolish copyright and put in place something more akin to anti-plagiary laws.
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So what about when someone - like a record company - claims ad revenue on what you made? Are the elements you put in, like the clip show, still yours under fair use?
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Define tiny portion of copy right work as that is to vague. Depends per copy right material?
Also there are false DMCA claims all the time on you tube.

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I love how so much of the media I consume is majorly from a millennial stand point so they keep calling GenZ they while I'm like no not they me.
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