Combating copyright piracy: A Malaysian perspective

During th,e era of analog technology, musical works were stored by encoding the works in a physical medium, such as music cassettes, videotapes, vinyl records and other forms of magnetic tapes. Reproduction of any musical work from those media would result in deterioration in quality of the reprodu...

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Main Author: Tay, P.S.
Format: Conference or Workshop Item
Language:English
Published: 2008
Subjects:
Online Access:http://eprints.um.edu.my/11248/1/COMBATING_COPYRIGHT.pdf
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author Tay, P.S.
author_facet Tay, P.S.
author_sort Tay, P.S.
collection UM
description During th,e era of analog technology, musical works were stored by encoding the works in a physical medium, such as music cassettes, videotapes, vinyl records and other forms of magnetic tapes. Reproduction of any musical work from those media would result in deterioration in quality of the reproduced music. This was a direct result of the inherent nature of analog technology. At that time, music piracy, which typically took the form of the unauthorized reproduction of music into records or cassettes which were then illegally sold for commercial gains, was a phenomenon which was not as serious as it is today. The deterioration in quality upon subsequent reproductions of analog works and the limitations of reproduction equipment served as a natural obstacle to widespread music piracy. All these were to change with the advent of digital technology, which allowed the means of reproducing an unlimited number of perfect copies very speedily, without any loss (n the quality of the reproduced music. CD and DVD burners became a common feature and contributed to the incidence of music piracy. At the same time, further developments in digital technology and the Internet have made it possible for Internet users to access, reproduce and store Internet contents. The music industry is currently undermined by the availability of file sharing of music services over the Internet using peer-to-peer technology. Peer-to-peer technology enables Internet users to exchange fifes with each other directly or through an intermediary server. In the light of the current serious state of music piracy worldwide and, also, in Malaysia, this paper examines the legal weapons which are available in Malaysia to combat music piracy, both in the physical and digital world. It also discusses the efforts of the Malaysian Government and music organizations in the country to curb the incidence of music piracy.
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spelling um.eprints-112482014-12-18T01:15:13Z http://eprints.um.edu.my/11248/ Combating copyright piracy: A Malaysian perspective Tay, P.S. DS Asia During th,e era of analog technology, musical works were stored by encoding the works in a physical medium, such as music cassettes, videotapes, vinyl records and other forms of magnetic tapes. Reproduction of any musical work from those media would result in deterioration in quality of the reproduced music. This was a direct result of the inherent nature of analog technology. At that time, music piracy, which typically took the form of the unauthorized reproduction of music into records or cassettes which were then illegally sold for commercial gains, was a phenomenon which was not as serious as it is today. The deterioration in quality upon subsequent reproductions of analog works and the limitations of reproduction equipment served as a natural obstacle to widespread music piracy. All these were to change with the advent of digital technology, which allowed the means of reproducing an unlimited number of perfect copies very speedily, without any loss (n the quality of the reproduced music. CD and DVD burners became a common feature and contributed to the incidence of music piracy. At the same time, further developments in digital technology and the Internet have made it possible for Internet users to access, reproduce and store Internet contents. The music industry is currently undermined by the availability of file sharing of music services over the Internet using peer-to-peer technology. Peer-to-peer technology enables Internet users to exchange fifes with each other directly or through an intermediary server. In the light of the current serious state of music piracy worldwide and, also, in Malaysia, this paper examines the legal weapons which are available in Malaysia to combat music piracy, both in the physical and digital world. It also discusses the efforts of the Malaysian Government and music organizations in the country to curb the incidence of music piracy. 2008-10 Conference or Workshop Item PeerReviewed application/pdf en http://eprints.um.edu.my/11248/1/COMBATING_COPYRIGHT.pdf Tay, P.S. (2008) Combating copyright piracy: A Malaysian perspective. In: Korean Studies in Southeast Asia in the New Era of Cultural Interactions, 08-10 Oct 2008, Bangkok, Thailand.
spellingShingle DS Asia
Tay, P.S.
Combating copyright piracy: A Malaysian perspective
title Combating copyright piracy: A Malaysian perspective
title_full Combating copyright piracy: A Malaysian perspective
title_fullStr Combating copyright piracy: A Malaysian perspective
title_full_unstemmed Combating copyright piracy: A Malaysian perspective
title_short Combating copyright piracy: A Malaysian perspective
title_sort combating copyright piracy a malaysian perspective
topic DS Asia
url http://eprints.um.edu.my/11248/1/COMBATING_COPYRIGHT.pdf
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