My muse is sadly thin.
Hyde is working on a book about why these ideas and works of art should be owned by the commons, rather than by individuals. His thesis is that limiting ownership of creative works also limits human creativity in ways we can't begin to imagine (mostly because there's no way to know that we're missing out on them).
I've been trying for a week to write up my notes from the event, but I keep getting bogged down by amusing quotes (see: "beating back the bounds," "fattening your muse") and a train of thought that winds through medieval England, Scottish printing presses and Roman law to somehow end up at John Cage's 4'33".
This is not to say that Hyde's presentation was less than coherent: many others, including fellow Berktern Joey Mornin, blogging machine David Weinberger and Ethan Zuckerman, have posted recaps.
But potential blog posts have painfully short half-lives, and in half an hour I'm heading back to the Berkman conference room for a talk by Beth Kolko on how communications technology takes on different meanings in resource-constrained environments. I'm going to force myself to live-blog this one.
Labels: berkman
2 Comments:
this isn't that surprising. there are many people who just want to have blogs in an early stage but then after, they are already lost. the reason, they do not have time to blog. why start if you do not want to finish?
By Chelsea Larosa, at June 17, 2009 at 10:38 PM
this is very sarpriseing ,, for people its wonder ..
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