I’m going to talk a little bit more about copyright and Big Content this week. By “Big Content”, I am referring to the corporations that produce movies, televisions, records,
books and even web sites. I thought I’d start by
introducing something that “copyfighters” (those who fight for better
copyright laws and against bad business practices that use copyright as a stick to beat more money out of customers) often talk about: business models. You will often hear a copyfighter
refer to how a Big Content company or cartel will often use copyright
as a means of protecting an outdated business model. Before I talk
about Big Content’s outdated business models, let’s look at a business
model that’s already extinct as a result of technological improvements: Big Ice.
I’ll let one of my role models (especially given my line of work), former Apple evangelist Guy Kawaski do the talking for this one. Years ago, he made a high school commencement address titled Hindsight, a “top ten list” of
advice to the graduating class. Item number eight was “Challenge the known and embrace the
unknown”. It went like this:
One of
the biggest mistakes you can make in life is to accept the known and resist the
unknown. You should, in fact, do exactly the opposite: challenge the known and
embrace the unknown.
Let me tell you a short story about ice. In the late
1800s there was a thriving ice industry in the Northeast. Companies would cut
blocks of ice from frozen lakes and ponds and sell them around the world. The
largest single shipment was 200 tons that was shipped to India. 100 tons got
there unmelted, but this was enough to make a profit.
These ice harvesters,
however, were put out of business by companies that invented mechanical ice
makers. It was no longer necessary to cut and ship ice because companies could
make it in any city during any season. These ice makers, however, were put out
of business by refrigerator companies. If it was convenient to make ice at a
manufacturing plant, imagine how much better it was to make ice and create cold
storage in everyone’s home.
You would think that the ice harvesters would
see the advantages of ice making and adopt this technology. However, all they
could think about was the known: better saws, better storage, better
transportation. Then you would think that the ice makers would see the
advantages of refrigerators and adopt this technology. The truth is that the ice
harvesters couldn’t embrace the unknown and jump their curve to the next curve.
Challenge the known and embrace the unknown, or you’ll be like the ice
harvester and ice makers.
Can
you imagine what things would be like today if the ice harvesters
managed to lobby the government into restricting the activities of the
icebox manufacturers and later on, the refrigerator manufacturers?
That’s exactly what Big Content would like to do to the high-tech
industry.
More on this topic later.
2 replies on “Big Content: Ice Harvesters of the 21st Century”
Interesting article in today’s Star.
It talks about how many of the innovations brought about by hacking the original Xbox were incorporated by Microsoft into the Xbox360.
Challenging the known and embracing the unknown is the only way to innovate.
One of the scary aspects of DVD players & DVD’s that most people don’t realize is that if the movie companies wanted to, they could disable the fast forward and skip chapter buttons during advertisements and previews, forcing you to watch through.
Although, this seems unlikely now, so did ads in movie theaters.
The MPAA and DMCA are the forces attempting to control how we enjoy our entertainment.
Be aware.
I hope Tucows embraces this philosophy. By the way, Tucows finally got a Yahoo message board and some people are claiming to have contacts within Tucows. They say Mark Cuban will become a Director at the company.
I find it hard to believe.