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December 22, 2017, 12:22:06 PM |
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this sort of thing is so, so pointless
Blockchain tech will do precisely nothing to help enforce copyright legislation, it's just an expensive way to administer a database that's now pretty trustworthy anyway (blockchains work best for abstract data where a centralised administrator of the database is prone to corruption, i.e. money and banks are a perfect use-case for blockchains).
Maybe this type of system could be useful to prove attribution of work. Copying copyrighted material might not be considered wrong in the 21st century, but plagiarism remains unethical. However, plagiarists have a problem in the 21st century: it's too easy to discover plagiarists in the internet age, everyone has the tools they need to research attribution when all easily plagiarised work comes from digital sources to begin with. A blockchain might make the research easier and more definitive (depending on how common the use of such a blockchain would be), but it's really no different from the copyright registration use-case: an expensive way to do something that isn't difficult to do already. A solution looking for a problem.
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