This link has been bookmarked by 6 people . It was first bookmarked on 08 May 2008, by Pavel Zemliansky.
"Permission culture is a term often employed by Lawrence Lessig and other copyright activists to describe a society in which copyright restrictions are pervasive and enforced to the extent that any and all uses of copyrighted works need to be explicitly leased. This has both economic and social implications: in such a society, copyright holders could require payment for each use of a work and, perhaps more importantly, permission to make any sort of derivative work."
Permission culture is a term often employed by Lawrence Lessig and other copyright activists to describe a society in which copyright restrictions are pervasive and enforced to the extent that any and all uses of copyrighted works need to be explicitly leased. This has both economic and social implications: in such a society, copyright holders could require payment for each use of a work and, perhaps more importantly, permission to make any sort of derivative work.\n\nThis term is often contrasted with remix culture.
"Permission culture is a term.. to describe a society in which copyright restrictions are pervasive and enforced.. that any and all uses of copyrighted works need to be explicitly leased.. both economic and social implications.."
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