RE: virus: Yarr! Pirate

From: Blunderov (squooker@mweb.co.za)
Date: Mon Mar 29 2004 - 14:33:55 MST

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    rhinoceros
    Sent: 23 March 2004 03:26 PM
    To: virus@lucifer.com
    Subject: virus: Yarr! Pirate

    OK, P2P is "piracy." But so was the birth of Hollywood, radio, cable TV,
    and (yes) the music industry.

    [Blunderov]Apparently it goes back even further.

    Trade Secrets: Intellectual Property and the Origins of American
    Industrial
    Power

    by Doron S. Ben-Atar

    304 pages, Yale University Press (April 2004) ISBN: 030010006X
    (available
    through booksellers such as Amazon - unfortunately only the $38
    hardcover is
    on offer at the moment)

    Doron Ben-Atar is associate professor of history at Fordham University.

    Book Description
    During the first decades of America's existence as a nation, private
    citizens, voluntary associations, and government officials encouraged
    the
    smuggling of European inventions and artisans to the New World. At the
    same
    time, the young republic was developing policies that set new standards
    for
    protecting industrial innovations. This book traces the evolution of
    America's contradictory approach to intellectual property rights from
    the
    colonial period to the age of Jackson.

    During the seventeenth and early eighteenth centuries Britain shared
    technological innovations selectively with its American colonies. It
    became
    less willing to do so once America's fledgling industries grew more
    competitive. After the Revolution, the leaders of the republic supported
    the
    piracy of European technology in order to promote the economic strength
    and
    political independence of the new nation. By the middle of the
    nineteenth
    century, the United States became a leader among industrializing nations
    and
    a major exporter of technology. It erased from national memory its years
    of
    piracy and became the world's foremost advocate of international laws
    regulating intellectual property.

    "Ben-Atar tells the remarkable story of how the fledgling United States
    used
    pirated technology to lay the foundation for its future industrial might

    even as it grappled with the timeless question of who owns knowledge,
    revealing a previously hidden face of the early republic. A major
    contribution to the field, Trade Secrets should also be read by students
    of
    modern intellectual property and international economic
    development."--Bruce
    H. Mann, University of Pennsylvania

    "Doron Ben-Atar's elegant study moves from customary appreciations of
    the
    Founding Fathers to the tough realities facing statesmen establishing a
    viable republic, technologically and commercially backward. Ben-Atar
    guides
    the reader through these thickets of intellectual thievery and smuggling

    with aplomb and wit."--Peter Gay, Sterling Professor of History
    Emeritus,
    Yale University

    "Using a comparative, transatlantic framework, Trade Secrets provides a
    lively, original, ironic analysis of the contradictory ways that early
    national and state policy makers encouraged the innovation that
    propelled
    America's industrial revolution."--Richard D. Brown is co-author of The
    Hanging of Ephraim Wheeler: A Story of Rape, Incest, and Justice in
    Early
    America

    "Doron Ben-Atar's Trade Secrets opens a fascinating, and hitherto
    little-known, chapter in early American history: the importance of
    'technology piracy' to national development. Taken as a whole, the book
    is a
    remarkable fusion of intellectual, legal, political, economic, and
    social
    history; considered page by page, it offers trenchant analysis
    interspersed
    with lively narrative vignettes. And the issues it raises, most
    especially
    those concerning intellectual property, have much currency even
    today."--John Demos, Yale University

    ---
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