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Op-ed by Neil Turkewitz from MediumThere is an emerging narrative being crafted by copyright skeptics that the recent Taylor Swift incident related to the ownership of the master rights to her early recordings, like Prince before her, is somehow an indictment of copyright. This ignores all evidence to the contrary and seeks to erase Swift’s and Prince’s vigorous engagement to ensure modern and effective copyright protection to safeguard the integrity of the choices made by artists about how their works may be used. In addition, while I have great sympathy for Taylor Swift and love the idea of artists owning their own masters, to view her only as a victim of the copyright system and not simultaneously as a beneficiary is truly bizarre. But copyright cynics are willing to cast all reason and context aside in their mission — supported by Silicon Valley giants, to establish the proposition that creators’ rights and copyright are unrelated or worse yet, opposing forces. As I try to remind everyone — seemingly constantly if you want to protect creators — as I do, provide rights that are robust and easy to enforce. That don’t require an army to enforce. Expand meaningful consent — don’t shrink it and pretend that’s a form of liberation.Swift’s story is an indictment of sorts — an indictment of a system marked by negotiating asymmetries. Asymmetries between artists and labels, and between the creative community and internet platforms. We can address both of these simultaneously by creating a normative framework that allows artists to meaningfully protect their interests against any downstream user. Unauthorized uses exploited and monetized by internet platforms have largely eliminated the potential of disintermediation to empower artists, and have instead largely resulted in their further enfeeblement and precarity. We can change that by establishing greater accountability in the internet ecosystem — ending a system in which platforms are rewarded for willful blindness.Taylor Swift’s Story Is Indictment Of “Negotiating Asymmetries” and Call For Copyright Reform
In this piece, Neil Turkewitz offers a different take on the recent Taylor Swift rights ownership incident, arguing against viewing it as an indictment of copyright, and rather as a. Continue reading [https://www.hypebot.com/hypebot/2019/07/taylor-swift-revisiting-gulliver-and-the-grand-academy-of-l