The Production, Use, And Dissemination of Knowledge And Information in The Global Communications Network Cover Image

The Production, Use, And Dissemination of Knowledge And Information in The Global Communications Network
The Production, Use, And Dissemination of Knowledge And Information in The Global Communications Network

Author(s): László Fekete
Subject(s): Communication studies, ICT Information and Communications Technologies
Published by: Masarykova univerzita nakladatelství
Keywords: Intellectual property; public domain; knowledge and information; tangible and intangible goods; knowledge spillovers; public goods; private goods; regulatory giving; private ordering; distributive jus

Summary/Abstract: It goes without saying that knowledge and information are the most valuable commodities in the new economy. Though knowledge and information as private goods could provide great business opportunities for rights holders in the global communications network, they exhibit the distinctive characteristics of public goods. Therefore, the commodification of knowledge and information requires a strict proprietary regime which restrains free access to them and enforces effective legal protection over their production, use, and dissemination. If the accessing and using rights of the individual users were free and unlimited the legal entitlements of rights holders would be worthless. Besides this common belief, many legal scholars, philosophers, scientists, and social scientists also emphasize that knowledge and information are social and cultural products made, shared, settled, and revised in democratic discourses, open scientific debates, and the pragmatic self-understanding of society. Therefore, the basic notions of mainstream economic paradigm about scarcity, exhaustibility, rivalry, and excludability, which are the distinctive characteristics of tangible goods, can be hardly applicable to the production, use, and distribution of knowledge and information. In some respects, knowledge and information are not fit into the framework of neoclassical economics.

  • Issue Year: 3/2009
  • Issue No: 2
  • Page Range: 239-258
  • Page Count: 20
  • Language: English
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