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Wired Shut:
Copyright and the Shape of Digital Culture

Tarleton Gillespie

published June 1, 2007 by The MIT Press

 

Buy the book:

The MIT Press Amazon.com Powell's Books

 

comments from colleagues:

"Gillespie has boldly attempted a broad and deep analysis of copyright that integrates cultural, historical, legal, social, political, and technological perspectives--and he succeeds. This is an unusual, excellent, vitally important, and urgently needed book."
      -- Kirsten Foot, Associate Professor in the Department of Communication, University of Washington, co-author of Web Campaigning

"Wired Shut is an important book, essential for those who care about the future of digital technologies and information flows. The societal implications of digital rights management technologies have never been explored this deeply or comprehensively. DRM technologies are neither technological nor economic imperatives, and Gillespie shows that their social costs are avoidable. Bravo!"
      -- Pamela Samuelson, Richard M. Sherman Distinguished Professor of Law & Information, University of California, Berkeley

"Tarleton Gillespie has produced a lucid and essential corrective to the techno-fundamentalism afflicting our discussions of culture, economics, and policy. Wired Shut is instantly one of the most important books about copyright and technology available."
      -- Siva Vaidhyanathan, New York University, author of The Anarchist in the Library: How the Clash between Freedom and Control is Hacking the Real World and Crashing the System

"The book is not a screed against content owners, or a manifesto in favor of information wanting to be free, but rather a look by a non-lawyer at the way technology is being used by content owners to influence the design to technology. The greatest strength of the book is its demonstration of what it takes to marshal the various forces necessary to achieve that control: agreement among a diverse group of usually competitive content owners, the consumer electronics industry, standards groups, distributors, and Congress to name a few, as well as what it takes to beat back opposing forces. These issues tend to be treated in a cardboard fashion in other discussions, and it is a signal achievement of Professor Gillespie that he demonstrates the intensive effort it takes to accomplish such control."
      -- William Patry, Senior Copyright Counsel, Google Inc. Formerly copyright counsel to the U.S. House of Representatives, Committee on the Judiciary, formerly Policy Planning Advisor to the Register of Copyrights, formerly Law Professor, Benjamin N. Cardozo School of Law; author of the 7 volume treatise Patry on Copyright.


high praise, dubiously excerpted from longer reviews:

"Through resisting the simple classification of DRM as a technological 'thing' and contextualizing it instead as a complicated series of social, legal, political and industrial negotiations over consumer agency, Gillespie has crafted an important work that underscores the embeddedness of technology within all levels of cultural discourse."
-- Eric Harvey, New Media & Society, v10.4, August 2008

"Readers of the books will come away both a firm understanding of critiques related to DRM, but also with a much richer understanding of the structure of, and challenges to, the described industries important to attempts to create DRM. Burkart and McCourt focus entirely on the music industry, while Gillespie's work explores the music, movie, and digital television industries in addition to the industries' relationships with hardware vendors and regulators. Both books are a pleasure to read."
-- Kristin Eschenfelder, The Information Society, v24.4, August 2008

"Wired Shut brings a perspective and depth of analysis to the digital copyright debate that is all too often absent in the media or in Washington, and Gillespie poses provocative questions that anyone interested in this field would be wise to consider."
      -- Troy Schneider, Resource Center for Cyberculture Studies and New America Foundation, May 2008

"If you're new to the issue, Wired Shut can serve as an adequate, if sometimes unwieldy, overview. Where Gillespie can add to the debate is in his case studies."
      -- Benjamin Bates, Resource Center for Cyberculture Studies, May 2008

"These are all very complex issues. The best explanation, however, that I have seen of both the legal and technological histories of the problem is Wired Shut. All consumers and producers of digital materials should read it."
      -- Jeffrey Barlow, Interface: The Journal of Education, Community, and Values, v8.2, April-May 2008

"While Gillespie is not the first to claim that the future looks less than bright for the free flow of ideas and non-commodified culture, what he contributes is a sophisticated accounting of several key developments and the ways in which these developments have impacted our ability to use digital cultural products."
      -- Debora Halbert, Law and Politics Book Review, December 2, 2007

"He has created a unique space empowering us to become active and aware of issues that will vitally affect and determine our collective future."
      -- Maree Boyce, M/C Reviews: Culture and the Media, August 5, 2007

"A timely book with an important message."
      -- Science a Go Go, June 14, 2007


blog posts about the book:

1.8.08: Neural.it: "Tarleton Gillespie - Wired Shut: Copyright and the Shape of Digital Culture"

10.28.07: Managing Rights Management: "Wired Shut: Copyright and the Shape of Digital Culture"

12.4.07: Library Technology Issues: "Wired Shut: Copyright and the Shape of Digital Culture, by Tarleton Gillespie"

9.23.07: Question Technology: "Book Notes"

9.13.07: DigitalKoans: "Wired Shut: Copyright and the Shape of Digital Culture"

8.27.07: The Patry Copyright Blog (William Patry): "Tarleton Gillespie's Wired Shut"

7.17.07: TroySchneider.com (Troy Schneider): "When Does Imitation Become the Sincerest Form of Rip-Off?"

6.21.07: Reading Information Studies (Greg Downey): "The limits of the trusted system?"

6.21.07: Lex Ferenda (Daithí Mac): "Wired Shut: Tarleton Gillespie"

6.15.07: Differences & repetitions (Ted Striphas): "Summer reading"

5.29.07: Reading Information Studies (Kristin Eschenfelder): "Summer 2007 schedule is here"

5.22.07: Art, Science, and Tech.Interactions: "New and recent titles in STS. The MIT Press"

5.11.07: Shake Up the World (MK): "My Summer Reading List"

2.16.07: Sivacracy (Siva Vaidhyanthan): "Another great tech/law blog (and an even better book)"


syllabi using portions of Wired Shut:

Two Faces of Copyright Control, Wendy Seltzer, Harvard Law

Impacts of Technology, Gabriella Coleman, NYU

 

 

Watch my April 2007 book talk,
presented at Cornell's Mann Library:

See my Amazon list of the best books on "Copyright, Technology, and Digital Culture"

Watch my the introduction I gave at the "Download Debate III" panel discussion hosted by Cornell's UCPL program, back in April 2006: