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UGC allows users to generate and share content such as text, images, and videos by placing it on online platforms for others to view. Examples of UGC include blogs, wikis, video and photo sharing sites, podcasts, microblogging, and social networks. Research estimates that by 2010, the number of times UGC content is downloaded will exceed 650 billion times, generating $8.5 billion in revenue for UGC-based businesses. Common categories of UGC include blogs, wikis, video and photo sharing sites, podcasts, microblogging, social networks, news sites, functional tools, and educational content.
1. The document discusses the history of copyright and how it has expanded over time from a limited term of 14 years to life of the author plus 70 years. This expansion has increasingly restricted creativity and a free culture.
2. New technologies like the internet have furthered the control over creative works as every action can now be considered a copy, yet laws and regulations have not kept up to enable unfettered access and sharing of content.
3. The dominance of large corporations in the software and media industries threatens to stifle innovation from new competitors through overbroad patents and aggressive use of copyright, while claims of potential harm from unregulated sharing have not been substantiated. Overall the document argues that society is
UGC allows users to generate and share content such as text, images, and videos by placing it on online platforms for others to view. Examples of UGC include blogs, wikis, video and photo sharing sites, podcasts, microblogging, and social networks. Research estimates that by 2010, the number of times UGC content is downloaded will exceed 650 billion times, generating $8.5 billion in revenue for UGC-based businesses. Common categories of UGC include blogs, wikis, video and photo sharing sites, podcasts, microblogging, social networks, news sites, functional tools, and educational content.
1. The document discusses the history of copyright and how it has expanded over time from a limited term of 14 years to life of the author plus 70 years. This expansion has increasingly restricted creativity and a free culture.
2. New technologies like the internet have furthered the control over creative works as every action can now be considered a copy, yet laws and regulations have not kept up to enable unfettered access and sharing of content.
3. The dominance of large corporations in the software and media industries threatens to stifle innovation from new competitors through overbroad patents and aggressive use of copyright, while claims of potential harm from unregulated sharing have not been substantiated. Overall the document argues that society is