|
|
|
Jamie LaRue Speaks
February 15, 2007 - Digital and Personal Rights Hold Surprises
As
I've written before, I am a "delegate" to an international library
cooperative called OCLC.
So
far, this has entitled me to attend the quarterly meetings in Ohio. OCLC pays
for the trips. In exchange, I attend about 2.5 days of meetings, often intense,
for which I have to prepare in advance, and at which I'm expected to contribute
something thoughtful and useful.
This
year, OCLC decided that since it is an international business, it should hold a
meeting outside the U.S.
But
we didn't go too far. My meeting is in Canada. I'm writing this from Quebec
City. It's a wonderful and fascinating place.
I
have two stories about this trip.
First,
many of you have an interest in downloading audio books to an electronic
player. The electronic player of choice is Apple's iPod. Several people have
asked me, sometimes with great anger, why the library doesn't offer
downloadable books in the iPod format.
OCLC
is one of the major brokers of deals like this. So one of the things I did at
the conference was to ask Jay Jordan, President and CEO of OCLC, how come
libraries can't buy Apple downloads.
His
answer was interesting -- and the same answer as last year. We still don't have
a deal, but it's not for lack of trying.
Steve
Jobs, CEO of Apple, has a different view of "Digital Rights
Management" than other companies, namely, book publishers and Microsoft.
Generally speaking, Jobs is inclined to have fewer copying restrictions on
digital formats (book, music, movies) than some publishers want.
In
my view, Jobs has it right: he is far more trusting of consumers to use the
products they have purchased legally. Microsoft is more accommodating to the
publishers who fear that their products will be given away, at a financial loss
to distributor and artist alike.
Bottom
line: publishers like the more restrictive Microsoft formats. They won't
release their properties to Apple to sell to libraries. So we can't buy them.
We'll
keep trying, but I don't see this changing in the short term.
Here's
the second story. One of our speakers at the conference was Michael Adams. He
presented data from his book, "Fire and Ice: The U.S., Canada, and the
Myth of Converging Values." Like the U.S., Canada has a Boomer generation.
Back in the 60s and 70s, they, too, were extremely distrustful of authority,
rowdy and challenging to the system.
But
in the U.S., Boomers changed in midlife, tilting very much toward increasing
respect for authority. Some have even described them (think culture wars,
family values, etc.) as "moralistic."
Adams
does surveys, in Canada and the U.S. both. He asked whether or not people
agreed with the statement, "The father of the family must be master in his
own house."
In
1992, 42% of Americans agreed; in 1996, 44%; in 2000, 49%; and in 2004, 52%.
In
Canada, things have been mostly heading the other way. In the same years, to
the same statement, 26%, 20%, 18%, and 21% of Canadians agreed.
There
were other questions, but they added up to the same general trend: U.S.
citizens were moving strongly toward greater alignment with authority and
judgment; at the same time, Canadians were moving toward individualism and
tolerance.
I
asked the obvious question: why the differences? After all, our media and
advertising output surely affects them as much as us.
I'm
not sure I bought the answer. Adams said it came down to historical tradition.
But
that doesn't make sense. Did you know that early Canadians declined to join the
United States experiment because they couldn't go along with the separation
of church and state?
Today,
though, Canadians are far less likely to attend religious services than
Americans, because Canadians are far less religious.
At
the same time, the U.S. was founded on a belief in "life, liberty, and the
pursuit of happiness." Those are pretty individualistic goals.
Canada
was founded on "peace, order, and good government." Mostly, Canadians
believe they get it, too: their government spends less of its Gross National
Product on health coverage than the U.S., and covers everybody.
It's
all a little puzzling.
The
point to all this is that as an international non-profit, developed in the U.S.,
OCLC can't just assume that people in different nations (or even different
computer companies in the same nation) share the same values. The U.S. and Canada
are cousins, and there are some big surprises in what we do, and don't, believe
together.
It's
likely that the differences won't be any smaller elsewhere.
[Disclaimer: LaRue's views are his
own.]
©
2006, James LaRue. |
Article
Options:

Printer
Version
PDF Version
|