Plenary
Lecture
Digital Music Libraries: From Deregulation to
Reconstruction
|
Assistant Professor Dionysios Politis
Dept. of Informatics
Aristotle University of Thessaloniki
Greece
E-mail: dpolitis@csd.auth.gr |
Abstract: During the last decades, music recordings
and productions worldwide have created a vast collection
of music resources, which lie interspersed in different
media on earth. Several years ago, it would imagine
impossible to organize suitably and make accessible to
any interested user all this huge volume of music data.
However, the advent of the Internet, the small (in size)
digital music files compared to broadband distribution
speeds, the disks of enormous capacity and the
development of computer music have led the scientists
and the industry in parallel to focus their efforts in
organizing great music collections, which are accessible
from the Web.
The Digital Music Libraries, whether registered as
taxable entities or not, have offered their users new
ways of interaction with music repositories and music
stores online. The same time, the more and more frequent
bypass of DRM policies has created a culture of
violation for the respect of intellectual property
rights and the distinction between legal and illegal has
blurred.
Apart from the legal matters evoked, a more profound
economic effect is burdening the music industry which is
highly deregulated and unprotected. Is there a viable
solution to the upcoming breakdown?
Brief Biography of the Speaker:
Dr. Politis received his BS, MSc and PhD from the
Aristotle University of Thessaloniki. He has also
received a Grad. Dip. in Computing from the Royal
Melbourne Institute of Technology as a scholar funded by
the Australian Government.
He teaches at the Dept. of Informatics of the Aristotle
University of Thessaloniki, while for several years he
served as a Scientific Collaborator of the Center of
International and European Economic Law in Thessaloniki.
His research interests focus on Computer Music, Legal
Databases and Human Computer Interaction. The lecture to
be presented is a culmination of his involvement to the
editing of the books Socioeconomic and Legal
Implications of Electronic Intrusion and E-Publishing
and Digital Libraries: Legal and Organizational Issues,
both published by IGI.
|