Three years ago
I published a book of short stories in Israel. The publishing house belongs to
Israel's leading (and exceedingly wealthy) newspaper. I signed a contract which
stated that I am entitled to receive 8% of the income from the sales of the
book after commissions payable to distributors, shops, etc. A few months later
(1997), I won the coveted Prize of the Ministry of Education (for short prose).
The prize money (a few thousand DMs) was snatched by the publishing house on
the legal grounds that all the money generated by the book belongs to them
because they own the copyright.
In the mythology generated by
capitalism to pacify the masses, the myth of intellectual property stands out.
It goes like this: if the rights to intellectual property were not defined and
enforced, commercial entrepreneurs would not have taken on the risks associated
with publishing books, recording records, and preparing multimedia products. As
a result, creative people will have suffered because they will have found no
way to make their works accessible to the public. Ultimately, it is the public
which pays the price of piracy, goes the refrain.
But this is
factually untrue. In the USA there is a very limited group of authors who
actually live by their pen. Only select musicians eke out a living from their
noisy vocation (most of them rock stars who own their labels - George Michael
had to fight Sony to do just that) and very few actors come close to deriving
subsistence level income from their profession. All these can no longer be
thought of as mostly creative people. Forced to defend their intellectual
property rights and the interests of Big Money, Madonna, Michael Jackson,
Schwarzenegger and Grisham are businessmen at least as much as they are
artists.
Economically and rationally, we should expect that the
costlier a work of art is to produce and the narrower its market - the more
emphasized its intellectual property rights.
Consider a publishing
house.
A book which costs 50,000 DM to produce with a potential
audience of 1000 purchasers (certain academic texts are like this) - would have
to be priced at a a minimum of 100 DM to recoup only the direct costs. If
illegally copied (thereby shrinking the potential market as some people will
prefer to buy the cheaper illegal copies) - its price would have to go up
prohibitively to recoup costs, thus driving out potential buyers. The story is
different if a book costs 10,000 DM to produce and is priced at 20 DM a copy
with a potential readership of 1,000,000 readers. Piracy (illegal copying)
should in this case be more readily tolerated as a marginal phenomenon.
This is the theory. But the facts are tellingly different. The less the
cost of production (brought down by digital technologies) - the fiercer the
battle against piracy. The bigger the market - the more pressure is applied to
clamp down on samizdat entrepreneurs.
Governments, from China to
Macedonia, are introducing intellectual property laws (under pressure from rich
world countries) and enforcing them belatedly. But where one factory is closed
on shore (as has been the case in mainland China) - two sprout off shore (as is
the case in Hong Kong and in Bulgaria).
But this defies logic: the
market today is global, the costs of production are lower (with the exception
of the music and film industries), the marketing channels more numerous (half
of the income of movie studios emanates from video cassette sales), the speedy
recouping of the investment virtually guaranteed. Moreover, piracy thrives in
very poor markets in which the population would anyhow not have paid the legal
price. The illegal product is inferior to the legal copy (it comes with no
literature, warranties or support). So why should the big manufacturers,
publishing houses, record companies, software companies and fashion houses
worry?
The answer lurks in history. Intellectual property is a
relatively new notion. In the near past, no one considered knowledge or the
fruits of creativity (art, design) as "patentable", or as someone's "property".
The artist was but a mere channel through which divine grace flowed. Texts,
discoveries, inventions, works of art and music, designs - all belonged to the
community and could be replicated freely. True, the chosen ones, the conduits,
were honoured but were rarely financially rewarded. They were commissioned to
produce their works of art and were salaried, in most cases. Only with the
advent of the Industrial Revolution were the embryonic precursors of
intellectual property introduced but they were still limited to industrial
designs and processes, mainly as embedded in machinery. The patent was born.
The more massive the market, the more sophisticated the sales and marketing
techniques, the bigger the financial stakes - the larger loomed the issue of
intellectual property. It spread from machinery to designs, processes, books,
newspapers, any printed matter, works of art and music, films (which, at their
beginning were not considered art), software, software embedded in hardware,
processes, business methods, and even unto genetic material.
Intellectual property rights - despite their noble title - are less about
the intellect and more about property. This is Big Money: the markets in
intellectual property outweigh the total industrial production in the world.
The aim is to secure a monopoly on a specific work. This is an especially grave
matter in academic publishing where small- circulation magazines do not allow
their content to be quoted or published even for non-commercial purposes. The
monopolists of knowledge and intellectual products cannot allow competition
anywhere in the world - because theirs is a world market. A pirate in Skopje is
in direct competition with Bill Gates. When he sells a pirated Microsoft
product - he is depriving Microsoft not only of its income, but of a client
(=future income), of its monopolistic status (cheap copies can be smuggled into
other markets), and of its competition-deterring image (a major monopoly
preserving asset). This is a threat which Microsoft cannot tolerate. Hence its
efforts to eradicate piracy - successful in China and an utter failure in
legally-relaxed Russia.
But what Microsoft fails to understand is that
the problem lies with its pricing policy - not with the pirates. When faced
with a global marketplace, a company can adopt one of two policies: either to
adjust the price of its products to a world average of purchasing power - or to
use discretionary differential pricing (as pharmaceutical companies were forced
to do in Brazil and South Africa). A Macedonian with an average monthly income
of 160 USD clearly cannot afford to buy the Encyclopaedia Encarta Deluxe. In
America, 50 USD is the income generated in 4 hours of an average job. In
Macedonian terms, therefore, the Encarta is 20 times more expensive. Either the
price should be lowered in the Macedonian market - or an average world price
should be fixed which will reflect an average global purchasing power.
Something must be done about it not only from the economic point of view.
Intellectual products are very price sensitive and highly elastic. Lower prices
will be more than compensated for by a much higher sales volume. There is no
other way to explain the pirate industries: evidently, at the right price a lot
of people are willing to buy these products. High prices are an implicit
trade-off favouring small, elite, select, rich world clientele. This raises a
moral issue: are the children of Macedonia less worthy of education and access
to the latest in human knowledge and creation?
Two developments
threaten the future of intellectual property rights. One is the Internet.
Academics, fed up with the monopolistic practices of professional publications
- already publish on the web in big numbers. I published a few book on the
Internet and they can be freely downloaded by anyone who has a computer or a
modem. The full text of electronic magazines, trade journals, billboards,
professional publications, and thousands of books is available online. Hackers
even made sites available from which it is possible to download whole software
and multimedia products. It is very easy and cheap to publish on the Internet,
the barriers to entry are virtually nil. Web pages are hosted free of charge,
and authoring and publishing software tools are incorporated in most word
processors and browser applications. As the Internet acquires more impressive
sound and video capabilities it will proceed to threaten the monopoly of the
record companies, the movie studios and so on.
The second development
is also technological. The oft-vindicated Moore's law predicts the doubling of
computer memory capacity every 18 months. But memory is only one aspect of
computing power. Another is the rapid simultaneous advance on all technological
fronts. Miniaturization and concurrent empowerment by software tools have made
it possible for individuals to emulate much larger scale organizations
successfully. A single person, sitting at home with 5000 USD worth of equipment
can fully compete with the best products of the best printing houses anywhere.
CD-ROMs can be written on, stamped and copied in house. A complete music studio
with the latest in digital technology has been condensed to the dimensions of a
single chip. This will lead to personal publishing, personal music recording,
and the to the digitization of plastic art. But this is only one side of the
story.
The relative advantage of the intellectual property corporation
does not consist exclusively in its technological prowess. Rather it lies in
its vast pool of capital, its marketing clout, market positioning, sales
organization, and distribution network.
Nowadays, anyone can print a
visually impressive book, using the above-mentioned cheap equipment. But in an
age of information glut, it is the marketing, the media campaign, the
distribution, and the sales that determine the economic outcome.
This
advantage, however, is also being eroded.
First, there is a
psychological shift, a reaction to the commercialization of intellect and
spirit. Creative people are repelled by what they regard as an oligarchic
establishment of institutionalized, lowest common denominator art and they are
fighting back.
Secondly, the Internet is a huge (200 million people),
truly cosmopolitan market, with its own marketing channels freely available to
all. Even by default, with a minimum investment, the likelihood of being seen
by surprisingly large numbers of consumers is high.
I published one
book the traditional way - and another on the Internet. In 50 months, I have
received 6500 written responses regarding my electronic book. Well over 500,000
people read it (my Link Exchange meter registered c. 2,000,000 impressions
since November 1998). It is a textbook (in psychopathology) - and 500,000
readers is a lot for this kind of publication. I am so satisfied that I am not
sure that I will ever consider a traditional publisher again. Indeed, my last
book was published in the very same way.
The demise of intellectual
property has lately become abundantly clear. The old intellectual property
industries are fighting tooth and nail to preserve their monopolies (patents,
trademarks, copyright) and their cost advantages in manufacturing and
marketing.
But they are faced with three inexorable processes which
are likely to render their efforts vain:
The Newspaper
Packaging
Print newspapers offer package deals of cheap content
subsidized by advertising. In other words, the advertisers pay for content
formation and generation and the reader has no choice but be exposed to
commercial messages as he or she studies the content.
This model -
adopted earlier by radio and television - rules the internet now and will rule
the wireless internet in the future. Content will be made available free of all
pecuniary charges. The consumer will pay by providing his personal data
(demographic data, consumption patterns and preferences and so on) and by being
exposed to advertising. Subscription based models are bound to fail.
Thus, content creators will benefit only by sharing in the advertising
cake. They will find it increasingly difficult to implement the old models of
royalties paid for access or of ownership of intellectual property.
Disintermediation
A lot of ink has been spilt regarding
this important trend. The removal of layers of brokering and intermediation -
mainly on the manufacturing and marketing levels - is a historic development
(though the continuation of a long term trend).
Consider music for
instance. Streaming audio on the internet or downloadable MP3 files will render
the CD obsolete. The internet also provides a venue for the marketing of niche
products and reduces the barriers to entry previously imposed by the need to
engage in costly marketing ("branding") campaigns and manufacturing activities.
This trend is also likely to restore the balance between artist and
the commercial exploiters of his product. The very definition of "artist" will
expand to include all creative people. One will seek to distinguish oneself, to
"brand" oneself and to auction off one's services, ideas, products, designs,
experience, etc. This is a return to pre-industrial times when artisans ruled
the economic scene. Work stability will vanish and work mobility will increase
in a landscape of shifting allegiances, head hunting, remote collaboration and
similar labour market trends.
Market Fragmentation
In
a fragmented market with a myriad of mutually exclusive market niches, consumer
preferences and marketing and sales channels - economies of scale in
manufacturing and distribution are meaningless. Narrowcasting replaces
broadcasting, mass customization replaces mass production, a network of
shifting affiliations replaces the rigid owned-branch system. The
decentralized, intrapreneurship-based corporation is a late response to these
trends. The mega-corporation of the future is more likely to act as a
collective of start-ups than as a homogeneous, uniform (and, to conspiracy
theorists, sinister) juggernaut it once was.
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Sam Vaknin is the author of Malignant Self Love - Narcissism Revisited
and After the Rain - How the West Lost the East. He is a columnist for Central
Europe Review, United Press International (UPI) and eBookWeb and the editor of
mental health and Central East Europe categories in The Open Directory and
Suite101.
Web site: http://samvak.tripod.com/















