Debate 4: Difference between revisions
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'''Pre-Class Poll''' [http://snappoll.com/poll/187739.php here] | '''Pre-Class Poll''' [http://snappoll.com/poll/187739.php here] | ||
[http://debate4digg.blogspot.com/ Debate 4 Digg Blog - Arugments on Here Can Be Digged and Commented] | |||
[http://cyber.law.harvard.edu/ilp2007/Debate_4/IP_Kills_Democracy Argument In Support of the Resolution] | [http://cyber.law.harvard.edu/ilp2007/Debate_4/IP_Kills_Democracy Argument In Support of the Resolution] | ||
[http://cyber.law.harvard.edu/ilp2007/Debate_4/Debate_4_Argument_Against Argument Against the Resolution] | [http://cyber.law.harvard.edu/ilp2007/Debate_4/Debate_4_Argument_Against Argument Against the Resolution] |
Revision as of 16:35, 24 April 2007
Date: Class 11, April 24, 2007
Students presenting:
- Renat Lumpau
- Michael Broukhim
- Drew Bennett
- Jon Bashford
- Amanda Devereux
- Adam Katz
The Question
"Resolved: The outcome of the digital intellectual property crisis is crucial to whether or not the use of the Internet ultimately has a positive impact in terms of strengthening democracies."
Topic: The Free Culture Movement
The connection between the politics of the Internet and politics on the Internet might lie in the movements â the human networks â that are fueled by digital culture. The non-profit Creative Commons, with its forty-some international organizations around the world, has established one such network; Global Voices represents another. A new movement, called Free Culture, is growing up close to home, on Harvardâs campus, among others. Is cyber-activism the new environmentalism?
Pre-Class Poll here
Debate 4 Digg Blog - Arugments on Here Can Be Digged and Commented