"Observations on the conduct of the minority" first published in a pirated edition with title: Letter . to . the Duke of Portland on the conduct of the minority in Parliament. London, J. Owen, 1797. ; "First edition, first impression." -- Todd. ; 8vo: []⁴, a-h⁴, B-R⁴. ; Preface (p.[v]-lxxii) -- Letter to the Duke of Portland [dated 29 Sep 1793], with Observations. (p.[1]-94) -- Letter to ******* *******, Esquire, occasioned by the account given in a newspaper of the speech made in the House of Lords by the **** of ******* [Duke of Norfolk] in the debate concerning Lord Fitzwilliam, 1795 (p. 96-127) ; ESTC, ; Todd, W. Burke ; Mode of access: Internet. ; Pforzheimer copy: Disbound (with remnants of calf backstrip), in white envelope. -- In ink on half-title: No. 2 W; C.J. Sawyer, Oct. 1926.
x, 173 p. : il. ; 23 cm. ; Libro Electrónico ; Peers, Pirates, and Persuasion: Rhetoric in the Peer-to-Peer Debates investigates the role of rhetoric in shaping public perceptions about a novel technology: peer-to-peer file-sharing networks. While broadband Internet services now allow speedy transfers of complex media files, Americans face real uncertainty about whether peer-to-peer file sharing is or should be legal. John Logie analyzes the public arguments growing out of more than five years of debate sparked by the advent of Napster, the first widely adopted peer-to-peer technology. The debate continues with the second wave of peer-to-peer file transfer utilities like Limewire, KaZaA, and BitTorrent. With Peers, Pirates, and Persuasion, Logie joins the likes of Lawrence Lessig, Siva Vaidhyanathan, Jessica Litman, and James Boyle in the ongoing effort to challenge and change current copyright law so that it fulfills its purpose of fostering creativity and innovation while protecting the rights of artists in an attention economy. Logie examines metaphoric frames—warfare, theft, piracy, sharing, and hacking, for example—that dominate the peer-to-peer debates and demonstrably shape public policy on the use and exchange of digital media. Peers, Pirates, and Persuasion identifies the Napster case as a failed opportunity for a productive national discussion on intellectual property rights and responsibilities in digital environments. Logie closes by examining the U.S. Supreme Court's ruling in the "Grokster" case, in which leading peer-to-peer companies were found to be actively inducing copyright infringement. The Grokster case, Logie contends, has already produced the chilling effects that will stifle the innovative spirit at the heart of the Internet and networked communities. ; Illustrations Acknowledgments 1 Introduction: The Cat Is Out of the Bag 2 Hackers, Crackers, and the Criminalization of Peer-to-Peer Technologies 3 The Positioning of Peer-to-Peer Transfers as Theft 4 Peer-to-Peer Technologies as Piracy 5 The Problem of "Sharing" in Digital Environments 6 Peer-to-Peer as Combat 7 Conclusion: The Cat Came Back Appendix: On Images and Permissions Works Cited Index
Eugène Sue's novel Les Mystères de Paris created a stir when it appeared in 1842–43 in serial form in the daily Journal des Débats and in ten one-volume installments, plus a number of truncated and pirated editions. This rambling episodic work comprises over a dozen melodramas held together mainly by the direct or indirect involvement in them of the hero-savior Rudolph Grand Duke of Gerolstein, the miserly notary and arch villain Jacques Ferrand, the vulnerable sullied virgin Fleur-de-Marie, and the well-meaning aristocratic lady Clemence Marquise d'Harville. Longer than most serial novels, Les Mystères maintains its readers' interest with lurid exposés of Paris low life, heart-rending descriptions of the sufferings of the deserving poor, diabolical intrigues, knick-of-time rescues, and scenes of sex and violence at all social levels. Periodically the author interrupts his narrative with moralizing commentaries and proposals for social reform. Contemporary observers claimed that everyone from duchesses to house porters read Les Mystères de Paris for its sensationalism. It has also been argued that the book's working-class readers wrote so many letters to Sue urging him to stress the high moral qualities of his fictional workers—epitomized by the craftsman Jérome Morel—that their "collective constraint" transformed it from a book about the "dangerous" classes into a book about the laboring classes, and converted the author himself into a champion of their cause.
Intro -- Contents -- List of Figures -- Acknowledgments -- Introduction -- Part I: Printed Music -- 1. Tin Pan Alley's Near-Perfect Distribution System -- 2. Bootlegging Song Sheets -- 3. The Content and Uses of Song Sheets -- 4. Fake Books and Music Photocopying -- Part II: Broadcasting -- 5. Pirate Radio in Northwestern Europe -- Part III: Recordings -- 6. Illegal Copying of Phonograph Records -- 7. Illegal Copying of Tapes -- 8. Bootleg Albums as Unauthorized New Releases -- 9. Illegal Copying of Compact Discs -- 10. Song Sharing -- Conclusion -- Notes -- Bibliography -- Index.
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This research was motivated by the widespread buying and selling of pirated books that occurred in Bandung, one of them in the Cairo bookstore. Book piracy is one form of copyright crime that is prohibited and regulated in the MUI No.1 Year 2003 Fatwa concerning Copyright and Law No.28 of 2014 concerning copyright infringement. This research starts from the idea that the implementation of the sale and purchase of pirated books is a prohibited sale and purchase transaction based on the MUI No.1 Year 2003 Fatwa concerning Copyright and Law No.28 of 2014 concerning Copyright. However, in the implementation of the implementation of the law in the field must also pay attention to aspects of benefits and welfare for both the perpetrators and the impact on the wider community. This research method uses a case study method by conducting in-depth interviews (in-depth interviews), to bookstore owners Cairo City of Bandung. The analysis of the data is by linking the implementation of the sale and purchase of pirated books with the provisions of the law and legislation that apply, namely the Fatwa of MUI No.1 of 2003 concerning Copyright and Law No.28 of 2014 concerning Copyright. The results of this thesis reveal that: (1) that based on the data obtained there has been a sale and purchase of pirated books at the Cairo bookstore in Bandung City. the implementation of bookstore owners accept books from distributors and then sell them to students and the public. (2) while the benefits of buying and selling pirated books (a) never sell out (b) the price of the book is cheaper. Whereas the madharat (a) is very risky to be caught in a criminal case (b) the profits generated are not lawful. (3) according to Sharia Economic Law the sale and purchase of pirated books and the Fatwa of MUI No.1 Year 2003 concerning Copyright or Law No.28 of 2014 pirated sale and purchase constitutes injustice whose laws are unlawful. Harmonization that can be done is that book sellers try to contact authors and publishers so that there is a cheaper edition of the book so that it is affordable for students and the public, or give permission to reproduce with certain agreements.
Advertisements of publisher and others: [5] p. at end. ; Imprint on t.p. reads: New York : Printed and sold by Edmund M. Blunt . also by Edward Little ., Newburyport, August 1813. ; Probably a pirated abridgment by E.M. Blunt of a British work of the same title. Cf. At the sign of the quadrant / Harold L. Burstyn. 1957. p. 32. ; Cover title: Blunt's edition of seamanship and naval tactics. ; Shaw & Shoemaker ; Mode of access: Internet.