非物质化数据与人类欲望:互联网与复制文化

M. Allen
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引用次数: 6

摘要

自Licklider在20世纪60年代以来,网络计算的有影响力的支持者已经设想电子信息是相对较少(甚至单一)数量的“来源”,通过互联网等技术分发。最近,利维在《成为虚拟》一书中写道:“在网络空间中,由于任何一点都可以从其他任何一点直接访问,因此用超文本链接取代文件副本的趋势日益增加。最终,只需要一个文本的实体范例”。从理论上讲,超文本意味着“副本”的终结,以及对原始内容的访问点的倍增。但是,在实践中,互联网上充斥着复制,或大或小,既有人类有意识的行为,也有计算机自主的功能。有效和廉价的数据存储,鼓励计算机用户保存他们下载的任何有用的东西,以免他们找到的链接“中断”;而浏览器并不是“浏览”互联网,而是将所有内容的副本下载到客户端机器上。毫不奇怪,针对“复制”的重要监管限制了我们对“复制”的理解,以维持对“原创”的法律虚构,以保护知识产权。在本文中,我将首先通过一系列的例子来证明,“复制”不仅仅是对音乐和软件的版权侵犯,而且是互联网行为的一个决定性的、多方面的特征。然后,我将论证,互联网在非物质化的数字数据与人类主体性和欲望之间产生了一种互动,从根本上挑战了原创性和复制的概念。沃尔特·本雅明(Walter Benjamin)谈到摄影时说:“一个人可以(用底片)拍出任意数量的照片;要求‘真实’的印刷品是没有意义的。”在网络空间,问哪一个是副本是没有意义的。
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Dematerialised data and human desire: the Internet and copy culture
Since Licklider in the 1960s influential proponents of networked computing have envisioned electronic information in terms of a relatively small (even singular) number of 'sources', distributed through technologies such as the Internet. Most recently, Levy writes, in Becoming Virtual, that "in cyberspace, since any point is directly accessible from any other point, there is an increasing tendency to replace copies of documents with hypertext links. Ultimately, there will only need to be a single physical exemplar of the text". Hypertext implies, in theory, the end of 'the copy', and the multiplication of access points to the original. But, in practice, the Internet abounds with copying, both large and small scale, both as conscious human practice, and also as autonomous computer function. Effective and cheap data storage that encourages computer users to keep anything of use they have downloaded, lest the links they have found, 'break'; while browsers don't 'browse' the Internet - they download copies of everything to client machines. Not surprisingly, there is significant regulation against 'copying' regulation that constrains our understanding of 'copying' to maintain a legal fiction of the 'original' for the purposes of intellectual property protection. In this paper, I will firstly demonstrate, by a series of examples, how 'copying' is more than just copyright infringement of music and software, but is a defining, multi-faceted feature of Internet behaviour. I will then argue that the Internet produces an interaction between dematerialised, digital data and human subjectivity and desire that fundamentally challenges notions of originality and copy. Walter Benjamin noted about photography: "one can make any number of prints [from a negative]; to ask for the 'authentic' print makes no sense". In cyberspace, it makes no sense to ask which one is the copy.
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