Chokepoint capitalism How big tech and big content captured creative labor markets and how we'll win them back

Rebecca Giblin

Book - 2022

"People are feeling squeezed because of chokepoint capitalism: exploitative businesses creating barriers to competition that let them take over markets and extract an unfair share of value. This book teaches how to spot those chokepoints, and what we can do to blow them up"--

Saved in:

2nd Floor Show me where

338.761004/Giblin
1 / 1 copies available
Location Call Number   Status
2nd Floor 338.761004/Giblin Checked In
Subjects
Published
Boston, Massachusetts : Beacon Press [2022]
Language
English
Main Author
Rebecca Giblin (author)
Other Authors
Cory Doctorow (author)
Physical Description
303 pages : illustrations (black and white) ; 24 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN
9780807007068
  • Part 1. Culture Has Been Captured
  • Chapter 1. Big Business Captured Culture
  • Chapter 2. How Amazon Took Over Books
  • Chapter 3. How News Got Broken
  • Chapter 4. Why Prince Changed His Name
  • Chapter 5. Why Streaming Doesn't Pay
  • Chapter 6. Why Spotify Wants You to Rely on Playlists
  • Chapter 7. What the US Shares with Rwanda, Iran, and North Korea
  • Chapter 8. How Live Nation Chickenized Live Music
  • Chapter 9. Why Seven Thousand Hollywood Writers Fired Their Agents
  • Chapter 10. Why Fortnite Sued Apple
  • Chapter 11. YouTube: Baking Chokepoints In
  • Part 2. Braking Anticompetitive Flywheels
  • Chapter 12. Ideas Lying Around
  • Chapter 13. Transparency Rights
  • Chapter 14. Collective Action
  • Chapter 15. Time Limits on Copyright Contracts
  • Chapter 16. Radical Interoperability
  • Chapter 17. Minimum Wages for Creative Work
  • Chapter 18. Collective Ownership
  • Chapter 19. Uniting Against Chokepoint Capitalism
  • Acknowledgments
  • Notes
  • Index
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Melbourne Law School professor Giblin (Code Wars) and Boing Boing cofounder Doctorow (Information Doesn't Want to Be Free) deliver a lucid and damning exposé of how big business captured the culture markets. Contending that anticompetitive practices are hollowing out the music, literature, video game, journalism, film, and TV industries, the authors untangle the complex web of contracts, regulations, and legal arguments deployed by corporations to maximize their profits and prevent new competitors from entering their markets. Interwoven with maddening tales of exploitation (the creator of the TV show Cold Case estimates that her agency, CAA, made 94 cents of every dollar she earned from the show) are detailed discussions of statutory licensing reform, copyright infringement detection systems, and other technical matters. The authors' proposed solutions include granting creators "an inalienable right to 'appropriate and proportionate' pay for the use of their work," and the creation of "a global, multi-language database with high quality metadata about who owns what sound recordings and songs in which countries." The book's broad scope, expert policy recommendations, and flashes of wit (Disney executives are "cartoon villains" for refusing to honor science fiction writer Alan Dean Foster's contracts) make it a must-read for anyone involved in these industries. (Sept.)

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved