Rejoignez getAbstract pour lire le résumé !

Free Ride

Rejoignez getAbstract pour lire le résumé !

Free Ride

How Digital Parasites are Destroying the Culture Business, and How the Culture Business Can Fight Back

Doubleday,

15 minutes de lecture
10 points à retenir
Texte disponible

Aperçu

How did you help destroy culture today?


Editorial Rating

7

Qualities

  • Innovative

Recommendation

Journalist Robert Levine knowledgeably argues that ideology, inaction, misunderstanding and self-interest have created a dangerous situation in which technology is destroying culture. Fortunately, the culture industry can survive if it takes action. In this factually grounded report, Levine passionately urges the culture community – from big publishers to guitar players – to act in its own best interests and to protect its products. getAbstract recommends his treatise to those involved in culture, futurists and anyone interested in a healthy economy where creativity pays.

Summary

The Problem with the Online World

Once upon a time, TV, radio, film and music were highly profitable businesses, fertile with cultural innovation. During the 1980s and 1990s, for example, the National Broadcasting Company (NBC) produced numerous hit shows – including Friends, Seinfeld and Miami Vice – that shaped popular culture. In 2003 alone, NBC generated $800 million in profit. Yet by 2010, it was on track “to lose more than $100 million.” When Comcast bought a controlling share in NBC, its broadcast properties listed “an on-paper value of zero.”

What happened in those seven intervening years? The Internet. The lawless online world is wrecking traditional media companies. Online distribution often occurs outside the market: People copy songs, TV shows, movies and books, and swap them for free. “File-sharing services” provide access to an infinite number of copyrighted songs. Legal services, like YouTube, depend on professional content: Seven of its most popular videos of all time are by major-label artists.

The rhetoric critics use to frame this problem exacerbates it: This is a battle of faceless, clueless corporations fighting...

About the Author

Robert Levine, a former executive editor of Billboard, is a features editor at Wired. He has written numerous articles for The New York Times, Fortune, Vanity Fair and Rolling Stone.


Comment on this summary