Category Archives: Uncategorized

Wednesday’s Guest Speaker: Jas Purewal

Hello colleagues,

Will and I wanted to give you a brief overview of Wednesday’s guest speaker.

Jas Purewal is a lawyer at the London office of Osborne Clarke. He is a commercial and intellectual property lawyer with a focus on interactive entertainment and digital media. Jas is a regular commentator on recent developments in these fields in his Gamer/Law Blog and on twitter. Previously, Mr. Purewal was a disputes and media lawyer before joining Osborne Clark in 2011.

For Wednesday, Jas will be discussing the international law aspects of video game law.

Brendan and Will

Swedish Innovative Culture

Found these sites in my research for today’s class. Would welcome any other interesting links you guys might have..

Sweden:

http://www.globalpost.com/dispatch/news/regions/europe/111104/swedish-tech-has-its-abba-moment

http://socialinnovation.se/en/finally-a-national-strategy-for-social-innovation/

http://www.euclidnetwork.eu/news-and-events/sector-news/840-swedish-innovation-strategy.html

Link to actual Swedish Innovation Strategy Doc —  http://www.government.se/content/1/c6/20/25/58/ace0cef0.pdf

Also interesting and on topic. It’s a bit older, but gives a sense of the landscape in 2008http://ec.europa.eu/enterprise/policies/innovation/files/countryreports/sweden_en.pdf

Guest Speaker for 23 January 2013: Ian Verchere

Hello Colleagues,

In preparation for our guest lecture on Wednesday, 23 January 2013, here is some information on our guest speaker:

Ian Verchere is the co-founder and Chief Creative of the Vancouver-based video game production and development company Roadhouse Interactive.  Founded in 2009, Roadhouse specializes in games developed for browsers, social media, and mobile platforms and is currently developing Family Guy Online and MechWarrior: Tactics.

Ian has an interesting and varied past.  He was a professional downhill ski racer and coach in the early days of Whistler, an experience which let him to author the book V0N 1B0: General Delivery Whistler, BC.   Following an injury that ended his skiing career, he graduated with honours from the Emily Carr Institute of Art and Design in 1989.  He has founded video games companies, such as Radical Entertainment and Roundhouse Interactive, and worked on a wide variety of games, including SSX Tricky and NBA Street V.2 for Electronic Arts and the Sega Genesis title Beavis and Butt-head for MTV.  Ian has also co-authored a feature film screenplay with Douglas Coupland, which was sold to Disney.

The following GameZebo interview with Ian has a great overview of his history in game development and his involvement in the Family Guy project:

GameZebo: Ian Verchere talks Family Guy Online [interview]

Enjoy!

Brendan & Geoff

Stuff

1. Have updated the Syllabus.

2. News of the Week up.

3. Check out Michela’s “What Is Your Take” entry on violence research.

4. Added a few more links to “Aaron Swartz RIP”

5. Talk 2 is up (thanks to UBC CTLT). Trying (& failing so far) to get Roch’s slides up.

Thanks again to all who are contributing to the Blog.

jon

Moral rights and Harriette Potter

Interesting discussions today in class. Some thoughts and concerns:

I find it quite reasonable to recognize copyright protections for expressions and NOT ideas. If the goal of copyright is to promote and encourage new works and the dissemination of these works, what would affording “exclusivity for a period of time” on an idea even look like? I can imagine a 1984 scenario playing out whereby thought police are invoked to enforce some statutory damages on having contemplated on an idea that had previously been contemplated on .. by anyone…  It becomes absurd fast. Protections should only be granted to those individuals contributing to the commons/market place of ideas through expressions; if for no other reason than for lack of feasibility in copyright protecting “ideas”. Far be it from me to speak on the chaos of the modern patent system – perhaps in some other post since the “the tragedy of the commons” was raised and the bigger problem I see in the patent system is the tragedy of the ANTICOMMONS.

Ken raised some issues on the permissibility of mash-ups and extra contributions to the commons through such modification and additions.  I like the idea of the copyright modernization act allowing for such things under fair usage; but it doesn’t escape me that such things can easily be abused.

Imagine Joanne Rowling having just finished her final sentence on what could potentially be one of the world’s best selling novel’s “Harry Potter”. Now imagine Tyler-the-lazy-jerk doing little more than copying/mashing up/modifying every iteration of the name “Harry” and any other signals that the character is male. Imagine I modify it to be Harriette. The book may still be wonderfully written (as it’s substantially the work of a good writer), but now it’s in the genre of “homoerotic magical fantasy”. Worse, I may have greater resources through piracy/internet to propagate my version of the book. I may propagate the homoerotic version of the book so adequately that consumers are more likely to associate the story in that particular niche; and Joanne Rowling as a writer within that subculture. At the very least she’ll have lost control of her work and have gained the reputation (that she didn’t intend to have) of being a great homoerotic fantasy fiction writer. At the very worst, I’ll have destroyed any chance she had of being popular amongst her original target audience – young males not interested in reading about “witch…craft…”

I use this as the example because Joanne Rowling used JK Rowling as the author’s name (not having a middle initial) to simply make it ambiguous as to whether she was female; thereby not alienating herself from the overly sexist niche of young males who might have discriminated. The connotation is irrelevant, it could just have easily been modified to be white power literature (simply make Voldemort the only black character…); it’s that the original author loses control with anyone messing with the integrity of the work. Where’d late 90s music sensation “Creed” go? Did someone by chance mash up one of their songs with something a little too Christian Rock? Gain fans from a minority subculture at the cost of everyone else … ?

Imagine someone (or a corporation hired to do such things) doing malicious mash ups to out-compete and over propagate over an authors intent…  Imagine having no recourse because the legislator said it was “fair use”.

For Roch Ripley’s talk during Discussion Hour this coming Wednesday

Roch has asked that I post the following links which will tie into a discussion of the evolution of copyright. Have a look:

1) Michael Geist Blog Posting: Why Canada is Keeping the Flawed Digital Lock Rules (http://www.michaelgeist.ca/content/view/6033/125/)

2) Dr. Mihaly Fiscor, “MINIMUM OBLIGATIONS UNDER THE WIPO ‘INTERNET TREATIES’ TO PROVIDE ADEQUATE PROTECTION FOR TECHNOLOGICAL MEASURES WHICH CANNOT BE DISREGARDED IN THE NAME OF ‘FLEXIBILITIES’”: http://www.copyrightseesaw.net/data/documents/documents/a/4/a/a4a58eb56f54e896cff4e6d6e123ac04.doc

3) Parliament’s Legislative Summary of Bill C-11: An Act to amend the Copyright Act: http://www.parl.gc.ca/About/Parliament/LegislativeSummaries/bills_ls.asp?ls=c11&Parl=41&Ses=1&Language=E

jon

 

Has the Video-Game Industry Lost the Gun Debate: What is Your Take

First check out:  How the Video-Game Industry Already Lost Out in the Gun-Control Debate by Ian Bogost.

http://www.theatlantic.com/entertainment/archive/2013/01/how-the-video-game-industry-already-lost-out-in-the-gun-control-debate/267052/

What do you think? How are real and virtual guns the same/different from the perspective of causality? Are they lines on a continuum or “apples and oranges”?

Comments/critiques/thoughts?

jon

Latest stuff

1. Have moved Tyler’s post to What is Your Take.

2. Am about to try and get WordPress system to authorize students who provided email addresses to initiate posts.

3. Will try and get last classes News of the Week up tomorrow AM.

Wish me luck as I explore and learn WordPress for the first time.

jon

Course News

1. UBC Law has approved a grad student TA for our course. Associate Dean Harris has posted.

2. Todays slides are up.

3. UBC Centre for Teaching, Learning & Technology is very kindly working on a design for this site which should be implemented tomorrow. Will get News of the Week up as soon as possible once implemented.

4. “What’s Your Take?” will hopefully be the section to post thoughts, reactions and provocative discussion points.

5. Am going to keep office hours Wednesdays. Should have precise info to you by no later then next class – hopefully sooner.

6. See Tyler’s post speaking of provocative discussion. It’s right under my welcome post.

7. Thanks for today.

jon