Own nothing, have everything: Peer-to-peer networks and the new cultural economy

Item

Title
Own nothing, have everything: Peer-to-peer networks and the new cultural economy
Identifier
d_2009_2013:86a701cc099b:10168
identifier
10376
Creator
Goldberg, Greg,
Contributor
Patricia Ticineto Clough
Date
2009
Language
English
Publisher
City University of New York.
Subject
Social research | Mass communication | Information science | Copyright | Digital | Internet | Networks | Peer-to-peer | Value
Abstract
This dissertation investigates the relation between digital piracy and the economic viability of reproducing and distributing cultural content online. While scholars often characterize piracy as resistant or oppositional to capitalism, I propose that peer-to-peer networks played an integral role in the success of markets for content online. Drawing from historical and technical documentation in information theory and network science, and from Marxist cultural criticism of film and television, legal analysis, and social and political-economic theory, I argue that peer-to-peer networks, in circumventing the technical inefficiencies and juridical obstacles that held back other forms of piracy, catalyzed a novel form of economic value native to the Internet. Responding to what Marxist cultural critics have written about film and television, I explicate how the Internet produces value not only though the attention of its users (as television does), but through the transmission of data---value realized by Internet Service Providers. This is made possible, I argue, by the socialization of a non-human mode of the time: the time of uploading and downloading data. Lastly, I examine how lossy digital audio compression technologies, such as the MP3, participate in the socialization of this "transmission time."
Type
dissertation
Source
2009_2013.csv
degree
Ph.D.
Program
Sociology