There are many legal issues that plague the entertainment
industry. The rapid growth in technological advances has opened doors to
more copyright and intellectual property theft. Due to the undefined
lines in copyright and intellectual property laws are often violated. During my undergraduate degree instructors
often stressed the importance of obtaining written permission for copyrighted
images and music. They recommended websites
like creative commons and Getty images that allowed use of their products free
or at a discounted rate. Although the
options are there many people still use, download and pirate protect
products. This is partly because
everyone else does it without consequence.
Social Media and rapid advances in technology have blurred the lines of
what can and should be shared.
Recent economic studies have showed changes in how and what
people do and purchase. Rachael Botsmon
best described this new economic model as collaborative consumption. Collaborative
Consumption describes the rapidexplosion in traditional sharing, bartering, lending, trading, renting,gifting, and swapping reinvented through network technologies on a scale and inways never possible before. This new
model has becoming extremely successful and profitable as seen with companies
such as task rabbit, eBay and Craigslist.
This also applies to the great successes of mobile apps. The intellectual property protection for
these companies and many like them were secure long before anyone knew these
types of products and services were released.
How was it done?
The Facebook feud was one of the more famous and exploited
stories of intellectual property theft.
This was such an explosive and interesting story that filmmakers made it
into a movie. It didn’t due to bad in
the box office, but how did it play out in the courtroom?