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Re: WOS4: The Creative Anti-Commons and the Poverty of Networks.


From: Quirk
Subject: Re: WOS4: The Creative Anti-Commons and the Poverty of Networks.
Date: 16 Sep 2006 08:48:56 -0700
User-agent: G2/1.0

WOS4: The Creative Anti-Commons and the Poverty of Networks.

By Dmytri Kleiner


The Wizard of OS conference is currently underway in Berlin, as is to
be expected, the fourth edition of this biannual gathering of
proponents of free software, free culture and alternative economics has

brought together a fascinating group of presenters and participants.


The dominant themes of this year's conference are centred around the
work of Lawrence Lessig and his many collaborators in the Creative
Commons family of resources and projects, and Yochai Benkler's ideas
relating to "commons-based peer-production" or "Social Production" as
expressed in his book "The Wealth of Networks."


In his key-note address Lessig presented a history of culture framed in

the idea of a "Read-Write" culture, a culture of free sharing and
collaborative authorship, having been the norm for the majority of
history and having been, over the course of the last century, thwarted
and exterminated by Intellectual Property legislation and converted to
"Read-Only" culture dominated by a regime of Producer-Control .


In his presentation Lessig bemoans a number of recent travesties where
the work of artists was censored by copyright law, mentioning DJ
Dangermouse and his "Grey Album" and "Jesus Christ: The Musical" by
Javier Prato, both projects torpedoed by the legal owners of the music
used in the production of the works, similar to the experiences of
Negativland and John Oswald before them.


It is important to note here that in all of these cases the wishes of
the artists, consumers in the eyes of the law of the music in question,

was subordinated  to the control of the legal representatives of the
producers, The Beatles and Gloria Gaynor respectively.


The specific problem expressed, then, is that Producer-control of
culture, by creating a Read-Only culture is a hindrance to culture;
destroying the vibrancy and diversity of popular cultural on behalf of
the narrow interest of a few privileged "producers" at the expense of
everybody else.


The idea of producer-control is presented in contrast to the idea of a
cultural "commons" a common stock of value that all can draw from and
contribute to. The "commons," then, denies the right of
producer-control and instead insists on the freedom of consumers. Thus,

the "free" in "free culture" specifically refers to naturally
unhindered freedom of "consumers" to make use of the cultural common
stock and not the state-enforced "freedom" of "producers" to control
the use of "their" work. Or more to the point, the idea of a cultural
commons does away with the distinction of producers and consumers of
culture-- seeing them as being in fact the same actors in an ongoing
iterative cultural discourse.


Lessig argues that now, as a result of the Creative Commons and
commons-based peer-production, Read-Write culture is reborn anew; the
beneficiary of a rich-commons and a wealthy network.


The questions must be asked: Is the "Creative Commons" really a
commons? And in what way is the network really wealthy? Or more
specifically, who is a position to convert the use-value available in
the "commons" into the exchange-value needed to acquire essential
subsistence or accumulate wealth? Who are the real material
beneficiaries of the wealth of the network?


The website of the creative commons makes the following statement about

it's purpose:
"Creative Commons defines the spectrum of possibilities between full
copyright -- all rights reserved -- and the public domain -- no rights
reserved. Our licenses help you keep your copyright while inviting
certain uses of your work -- a 'some rights reserved' copyright."


(http://creativecommons.org/learnmore)


The point of the above is clear, the Creative Commons, is to help "you"

(the "Producer") to keep control of "your" work. The right of the
"consumer" is not mentioned, neither is the division of "producer" and
"consumer" disputed. The Creative "Commons" is thus really an
Anti-Commons, serving to legitimise, rather than deny, Producer-control

and serving to enforce, rather than do away with, the distinction
between producer and consumer.


The producer is invited by the Creative "Commons" to chose the level of

control they wish to apply to "their" work, including such choices as
forbidding duplication, derivate works and "commercial" use of the
work, specifically providing a framework then, for "producers" to deny
"consumers" the right to either create use-value or material
exchange-value of the "common" stock of value in the Creative "Commons"

in their own cultural production.


This is more than evident by the fact that, even had the Beatles and
Gloria Gaynor published their work within the framework of the creative

commons, it would still be their choice and not the choice of  DJ
Dangermouse or Javier Patro, whether "The Grey Album" or "Jesus Christ:

The Musical" should be allowed to exist.


The legal representatives of the Beatles and Gloria Gaynor could just
as easily have used Creative Commons licences to enforce their control
over the use of their work.


Thus, the very problem presented by Lawrence Lessig, the problem of
Producer-control, is not in anyway solved by the presented solution,
the Creative Commons, so long as the producer has the exclusive right
to chose the level of freedom to grant the consumer, a right which
Lessig has always maintained support for.


The Creative Commons mission of presenting for the producer the
"freedom" to chose the level of restrictions their work is published
under stands in distinct and essential contrast to the mission of
advocates of commons-based production: The denial of the distinction of

producers and consumers, and the denial of the right of
Producer-control of the common stock.


The Free Software foundation, publishers of the GPL, take a very
different approach in their definition of "free," insisting on the
"four freedoms:" The Freedom to use, the freedom to study, the freedom
to share, and the freedom to modify. This is consistent with the idea
of "free" in the history of free culture, for instance, the journal
"The Situationist International" was published with the following
copyright statement:


"All texts published in Situationist International may be freely
reproduced, translated and edited, even without crediting the original
source."


Even earlier, Woody Guthrie including the following note in a 1930s
songbook distributed to listeners who wanted the words to his
recordings had the following message:


"This song is Copyrighted in U.S., under Seal of Copyright #154085, for

a period of 28 years, and anybody caught singin' it without our
permission, will be mighty good friends of ours, cause we don't give a
dern. Publish it. Write it. Sing it. Swing to it. Yodel it. We wrote
it, that's all we wanted to do."


In all these cases what is evident is that the freedom being insisted
upon is the freedom of the consumer to use and produce, not the
"freedom" of the producer to control.


If free culture is really intended to create a common stock for
cultural peer-production, then the framework provided must specifically

be designed in such a way that can not be used to attack free culture,
the GPL and the terms presented by Woody Guthrie and the Situationist
International pass this test, the Creative Commons does not. Moreover,
proponents of free cultural must be firm in denying the right of
Producer-control and denying the enforcement of distinction between
producer and consumer, Lawrence Lessig and the Creative Commons, affirm

both the right and distinction of the Producer and therefore are the
sworn enemies of free culture, and thus their usage of the cases of DJ
Dangermouse and Javier Patro to promote their cause is nothing other
than an extravagant dishonesty.


However, despite the fact that the Creative Commons is an Anti-Commons,

there is indeed a free culture movement, since the emergence of
copyright law it has been denied by cultural actors such as Woody
Guthrie, the Situationist and countless others within such movements as

Folk, Dada, Neoism, Incidentalism and other manifestation of denial of
producer-control too numerous to mention. There is indeed a large stock

of free culture and free software that make up the common stock in
Benkler's wealthy network.


Yochai Benkler's conception of Social Production, where a network of
peers apply their labour to a common stock for mutual and individual
benefit, certainly resonates with age-old proposed socialist modes of
production, particularly in the libertarian socialist tendencies, where

a class-less community of workers ("peers") produce collaboratively
within a property-less ("commons-based") society. Clearly, even Marx
would agree that the ideal of Communism was commons-based peer
production.


The novelty of Social Production as understood by Benkler is that the
property in the commons is entirely non-rivalrous property:
Intellectual property and network transferable or accessible resources.

Property with virtual no reproduction costs.


There is no denying that Benkler's wealthy network has creating
astounding amounts of  wealth. The use-value of this information
commons is fantastic, as evident by the use-value of Free Software, of
Wikipedia, of online communications and social networking tools, etc.


However, if commons-based peer-production is limited exclusively to a
commons made of digital property with virtual no reproduction costs
then how can the use-value produced be translated into exchange-value?
Something with no reproduction costs can have no exchange-value in a
context of free exchange.


Further, unless it can be converted into exchange-value, how can the
peer producers be able to acquire the material needs for their own
subsistence?


The wealthy network exists within a context of a poor planet. The root
of the problem of poverty does not lay in a lack of culture or
information (though both are factors), but of direct exploitation of
the producing class by the property owning classes. The source of
poverty is not reproduction costs, but rather extracted economic rents,

forcing the producers to accept less than the full product of their
labour as their wage by denying them independent access to the means of

production.


So long as commons-based peer-production is applied narrowly to only an

information commons, while the capitalist mode of production still
dominates the production of material wealth, owners of material
property, namely land and capital, will continue to capture the
marginal wealth created as a result of the productivity of the
information commons.


Whatever exchange value is derived from the information commons will
always be captured by owners of real property, which lays outside the
commons.


For Social Production to have any effect on general material wealth it
has to operate within the context of a total system of goods and
services, where the physical means of production and the virtual means
of production are both available in the commons for peer production.


By establishing the idea of commons-based peer-production in the
context of an information-only commons, Benkler is giving the
peer-to-peer economy, or the competitive sector, yet anther way to
create wealth for appropriation by the property privilege economy, or
the monopoly sectors.


The Read-Write society as described by Lessig and the Peer-to-Peer
economy as described by Benkler is therefore nothing but a mirage.


For free cultural to create a valuable common stock it must destroy the

privilege of the producer to control the common stock, and for this
common stock to increase the real material wealth of  peer producers,
the commons must include real property, not just information.


There is no doubt that the work of Lessig and Benkler can help us
understand the issues faced in the ongoing class struggle of labour
against property, however their work, as presented, is at best
insufficient and at worst, just another attempt of apologists of
property-privilege to confuse the discourse, poison the well, and
crowd-out a genuinely revolutionary analysis.


----
Copyleft Idiosyntactix 2006, all rights detourned under the terms of
the Woody Guthrie General License Agreement.



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