The Future of Ideas

The Fate of the Commons in a Connected World

4.0 based on 190 reviews.

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Product Description

The Internet revolution has come. Some say it has gone. In The Future of Ideas, Lawrence Lessig explains how the revolution has produced a counterrevolution of potentially devastating power and effect. Creativity once flourished because the Net protected a commons on which widest range of innovators could experiment. But now, manipulating the law for their own purposes, corporations have established themselves as virtual gatekeepers of the Net while Congress, in the pockets of media magnates, has rewritten copyright and patent laws to stifle creativity and progress.
Lessig weaves the history of technology and its relevant laws to make a lucid and accessible case to protect the sanctity of intellectual freedom. He shows how the door to a future of ideas is being shut just as technology is creating extraordinary possibilities that have implications for all of us. Vital, eloquent, judicious and forthright, The Future of Ideas" "is a call to arms that we can ill afford to ignore.

Product Details

  • Media: Paperback Book, 384 pages
  • Publisher: Vintage Books USA (Oct. 31st, 2002)
  • ISBN-10: 0375726446
  • ISBN-13: 9780375726446
  • Dimensions: 5.32 x 8.02 x 0.84 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 0.63 lbs

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Customer Reviews

  • Book Rating 4 out of 5
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    by Simon from Siegen, Germany | Jul 10, 2009

    “But commons also produce something of value. They are a resource for decentralized innovation. They create the opportunity for individuals to draw upon resources without connections, permission, or access granted by others.”

    Das mittlerweile zum Klassiker mutierte Werk des Kommunikationsgenies Lawrence Lessig war vor acht Jahren, 2001, bahnbrechend. “It deserves to change the way we think about the electronic frontier”, wird die Los Angeles Times auf dem Titelblatt zitiert. Tatsächlich darf man sich nach der Lektüre fragen, warum das Konzept der Commons, zu deutsch “Allmende”, noch nicht in den Köpfen der Masse angekommen ist.
    Lessig erklärt dieses Konzept und überträgt es auf den digitalen Raum. Später sollte sich daraus das Projekt “Creative Commons” entwickeln. Auf diesen positiven Ansatz verweisen aber nur die letzten Seiten des Werkes; ansonsten geht es dem Rechtsprofessor eher darum, vor einem Verlust der Freiheiten des Internets zu warnen.
    Auch wenn Lessig wie in seinem genialen Vorträgen großartige Beispiele wählt, um sein Anliegen zu verdeutlichen, wird das Werk in der zweiten Hälfte teilweise zu sehr auf diese konkreten Fälle bezogen und ist dann, im Nachhinein betrachtet, auf Irrwegen unterwegs.
    Am schwersten wiegt aber, dass Lessig sein Buch leider, leider für Amerikaner geschrieben hat. Das ist nicht so schlimm, wenn er auf Besonderheiten des Rechtssystems, einzelne Gesetze wie das DMCA etwa, eingeht. Es wird aber unerträglich, wenn er auf jeder zweiten Seite betonen muss, dass sein Anliegen nichts mit Kommunismus zu tun hat. Überhaupt sind viele Ideen zu brilliant im durchaus komplexen System amerikanischer Politbefindlichkeiten verortet, um wirklich glänzend rüberzukommen. Zusammen mit den häufigen Wiederholungen macht dieser Balast “The Future of Ideas” zu einem Werk, bei dem man gerade an seinen besten Stellen überlegen muss, wie gut es sein könnte, wäre es für ein progressiveres Publikum (zu dem ich selbst mich zähle) geschrieben.



  • Book Rating 4 out of 5
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    by Brian from The United States | Nov 2, 2009

    Interesting book, if a bit repetitive. The big fight over net neutrality happened after this book was published. While this book didn't precisely predict this issue, it certainly foreshadowed it and showed the progression of increasing levels of control over the internet. Still, there is some hope of Congress officially passing a net neutrality bill. I wish that there were some hope for copyright and patent reform, which is seriously broken. This book highlighted the problems with copyright and how the internet is making "perfect control" more attainable. I used to work as a software developer and had to avoid some ridiculous software patents, so I knew first-hand that the copyright/patent system was broken before. What I didn't realize was the extent, which is truly frightening. This book was a depressing read. It laid out many of the system's problems and then only gave overly optimistic solutions.



  • Book Rating 3 out of 5
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    by G from Washington, DC | Jun 12, 2009

    This is probably the most wide-ranging of Lessig's three books that I've read (I'm going backwards, I suppose), which means it's also the least successful (in part because it's the oldest). Still, he as always makes good points. I think Free Culture is probably the best of his books that I've read (still have to get to Code 2.0).



  • Book Rating 5 out of 5
    Read Reviews on Goodreads

    by Logjam from  | Dec 5, 2008

    Copyright and control issues in realms of data networking and broadcasting are compared in detail. The emphasis is on being mindful of software and legal developments that will affect what a U.S. citizen can access in the public domain.



  • Book Rating 2 out of 5
    Read Reviews on Goodreads

    by Yair from Palo Alto, CA | May 26, 2009

    Good information, great discussion of the battles of incumbent industries vs. new technology and public interest but a bit repetitive and dry.



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