textabstractThis paper discusses whether a copyright compensation system (CCS) for recorded music—endowing private Internet subscribers with the right to download and use works in return for a fee—would be welfare increasing. It reports on the results of a discrete choice experiment conducted with a representative sample of the Dutch population consisting of 4986 participants. Under some conservative assumptions, we find that applied only to recorded music, a mandatory CCS could increase the welfare of rights holders and users in the Netherlands by over €600 million per year (over €35 per capita). This far exceeds current rights holder revenues from the market of recorded music of ca. €144 million per year. A monthly CCS fee of ca. €1.74 as...
Digital Rights Management (DRM) has been widely viewed by the music industry as an effective strateg...
File sharing may substantially undermine the intellectual property rights of digital goods. This pap...
ACL-2International audiencePiracy and the peer-to-peer diffusion of music deprive artists of income ...
This paper discusses whether a copyright compensation system (CCS) for recorded music—endowing priva...
This paper discusses whether a copyright compensation system (CCS) for recorded music—endowing priva...
This paper discusses copyright compensation systems (CCS) -- that provide licenses for downloading a...
Much economic, political, judicial and legal attention has been showered on the significant changes ...
The current licensing regime practiced by collective rights organizations (“CROs”) is preventing rig...
Copyright provides a long term of legal excludability, ostensibly to encourage the production of new...
[Excerpt] The laws that determine who pays whom in the digital world were written, by and large, at ...
Online piracy may substantially undermine intellectual property rights of digital goods. There is mu...
"The general consensus among the copyright piracy literature is that economic incentives and enforce...
This paper briefly discusses an alternative legal model to assure remuneration for non-commercial ma...
This paper examines the restructuring of online rights management that the E.U. Commission recently ...
Digital technologies are often said (1) to enable a qualitatively new engagement with already exist...
Digital Rights Management (DRM) has been widely viewed by the music industry as an effective strateg...
File sharing may substantially undermine the intellectual property rights of digital goods. This pap...
ACL-2International audiencePiracy and the peer-to-peer diffusion of music deprive artists of income ...
This paper discusses whether a copyright compensation system (CCS) for recorded music—endowing priva...
This paper discusses whether a copyright compensation system (CCS) for recorded music—endowing priva...
This paper discusses copyright compensation systems (CCS) -- that provide licenses for downloading a...
Much economic, political, judicial and legal attention has been showered on the significant changes ...
The current licensing regime practiced by collective rights organizations (“CROs”) is preventing rig...
Copyright provides a long term of legal excludability, ostensibly to encourage the production of new...
[Excerpt] The laws that determine who pays whom in the digital world were written, by and large, at ...
Online piracy may substantially undermine intellectual property rights of digital goods. There is mu...
"The general consensus among the copyright piracy literature is that economic incentives and enforce...
This paper briefly discusses an alternative legal model to assure remuneration for non-commercial ma...
This paper examines the restructuring of online rights management that the E.U. Commission recently ...
Digital technologies are often said (1) to enable a qualitatively new engagement with already exist...
Digital Rights Management (DRM) has been widely viewed by the music industry as an effective strateg...
File sharing may substantially undermine the intellectual property rights of digital goods. This pap...
ACL-2International audiencePiracy and the peer-to-peer diffusion of music deprive artists of income ...