Date: 2009-02-06 03:20 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] merriehaskell.livejournal.com
Given my job is very bound up in copyright law, and also, I work in a library, I cannot advocate downloading when there are libraries.

And yet, I believe in less stringent copyright laws, but by that I mean, this "life plus 70 years stuff" is utter nonsense, and I will probably have my literary executors release all my stuff within 10 years of my demise or earlier/later depending on what age I am/my children are when I die. I'm a huge fan of creative commons.

I almost gave downloading dead authors a pass, but at the same time, no.

Date: 2009-02-06 03:39 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] fiction-theory.livejournal.com
Given my job is very bound up in copyright law, and also, I work in a library, I cannot advocate downloading when there are libraries

Not that I'm all about downloading with obnoxious abandon or anything, but to play devil's advocate for a moment?

Yes, there are libraries, but they're not always accessible to people the way the internet is. Even in NYC, the branch of the Queens Library that's closest to me and that serves the Glendale area is probably the most pathetic library I've ever seen, and the next closest library is a rather convoluted bus ride away from me (because public transport in Queens sucks).

It's actually easier to go into Manhattan or Brooklyn than it is to try to find the next closest branch in Queens (which is also rather sad, because apparently nobody in Queens deserves a good library).

Also, I grew up in two small(ish) Southern town. The library I went to as a kid had two rooms of books, and three tables. And that was the public library. That was it. Not to mention that I'm not sure there *was* a bookstore in that town (it had like 8000 people in it). And yet that library in the 1990's is still better stocked than the one in the Glendale area, sadly.

If I lived in a place like that, rather than NYC (you can't swing a dead cat in this city without hitting a book) - I can't say that downloading books illegally wouldn't be a little more attractive to me.

Not advocating anything here, mind you, but libraries aren't perfect places with every book in history, and often people don't feel like they can go there, don't understand how to use it, or how to get a library to get a book for them (interlibrary loan and whatnot) if it isn't right there on the shelves in front of them.

I agree with you about the collector gene in your comment above. I think for some people, the downloading is about getting gobs and gobs of stuff.

But I do think there might be some folks who, for reasons of access and money, might download certain things they want and there is something different about that. It doesn't necessarily make it better or more right, but I think it's another category.

Date: 2009-02-06 03:58 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] denoue-moi.livejournal.com
Dude. The town you lived in after that was not much better.

The library where we grew up was totally in the ghetto. When I was about 14, I was there waiting for my mom to pick me up, and some guy thought I was a prostitute. "Are you walking freely?"

Had a couple more books though.

Date: 2009-02-06 04:15 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] fiction-theory.livejournal.com
Dude. The town you lived in after that was not much better.

No damn kidding. How sad was that place? I actually managed to read half their shelf of SF/F in, like, two months because that's HOW LITTLE they had. And I totally went through their entire collection of books about mythology. They had precisely twelve books on the subject, IIRC.

Yeah. If I were still living there and didn't have access to the bookbarn or a really super posh Barnes and Noble, I'd probably be downloading hardcore, especially since Davis-Kidd went belly up and now there's only the Books-A-Million and I hate that place. They're like the most Christianized non-Christian bookstore I've ever seen. God forbid you should go to Books a Million and be an atheist.

When I was about 14, I was there waiting for my mom to pick me up, and some guy thought I was a prostitute. "Are you walking freely?"

Oh, dude, the library was totally creepy. My parents used to drop me off there and forget when it closed (at noon on Saturdays) and I'd be stuck out there. Oh my god, it was scary.

Date: 2009-02-06 04:19 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] denoue-moi.livejournal.com
Holy crap, that's terrible! Poor kid.

The thing about it is, that's a town with a population of 100K when you consider the surrounding county. They could do better, but nope, it's all chain restaurants and strip malls.

Date: 2009-02-06 04:27 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] fiction-theory.livejournal.com
Holy crap, that's terrible! Poor kid.

Yeah, one time I was waiting and this sort of strange guy tried to talk to me and he was kind of crazy looking. I started crying. He went away when I peed my pants because I'd been standing out there for twenty minutes, the library was locked up and I needed a bathroom so bad that I couldn't think straight.

In my defense, I was 12 and alone and didn't know how I'd get home if my parents didn't come get me.

And yet, still, I persisted in going there because there weren't books anywhere else and I don't think Davis Kidd opened until a couple of years later.

They could do better, but nope, it's all chain restaurants and strip malls.

Somehow, I feel this the crux of everything that's wrong with Jackson. Maybe this is the thing that we've been trying to articulate for years about Jackson being a sinkhole of DESPAIR.

Date: 2009-02-06 04:42 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] denoue-moi.livejournal.com
Dear god. Poor little Meg!

And yep, that was exactly where all the insane homeless hung out because the mission was down there and the food bank.

When a Starbucks opened downtown a couple streets over just across from the courthouse, they used to come over and talk or beg all the time. Of course, encountering a mentally ill drug addict when you're in your 20s with a group of people is totally different from encountering one when you're all alone, 12, and totally need to pee.

That Starbucks is closed now. I guess the court crowd didn't go for them, and no one likes to go downtown at night there.

You know, it's funny. I never go to Davis Kidd here in Nashville. Maybe when Unemployment '09 ends, I should go.

And yeah, exactly, about Jackson. It gets larger, but it never grows.

Date: 2009-02-06 04:15 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] merriehaskell.livejournal.com
Libraries aren't perfect places with every book in history, and often people don't feel like they can go there, don't understand how to use it, or how to get a library to get a book for them (interlibrary loan and whatnot) if it isn't right there on the shelves in front of them.

Of course. Librarians are working on this all the time--or should be. The graying of the profession is changing things big time. The Library 2.0 movement is about getting everyone up to a basic level of information literacy and then moving them past that into information proficiency.

I reckon that if you're smart enough to figure out how to download something and yet can't figure out to got a library or ask a librarian what the other options are, that's--just how it is.

And maybe, even if you try the library and find, yeah, the library is junk. Budgets don't support endless ILLing, either, even if you do stumble across that resource. But if someone is going to experience a moral quandary over illegal downloading, the library should cross one's mind.

I mean, this poll is about the moral argument, right? At what point do you decide to do something illegal?

There's a question in here somewhere too about... why can't a person just wait? Why does the gratification have to be instant? I know the answer, of course, but I don't think we should stop asking the question.



Date: 2009-02-06 04:30 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] fiction-theory.livejournal.com
I mean, this poll is about the moral argument, right? At what point do you decide to do something illegal?

Exactly. And that's sort of what I want to puzzle out. Because I don't think most people who download think of themselves as doing something that's bad, or "that bad", and I'm curious about that. Sure, downloading a book illegally isn't like, rape or murder or anything, but there is an element of right and wrong.

Date: 2009-02-06 04:33 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] merriehaskell.livejournal.com
And I guess that's my point. Try the library before you start, and maybe I'll forgive you. :)

Date: 2009-02-06 04:41 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] fiction-theory.livejournal.com
If it makes you feel any better, given the chance, I'd actually prefer checking out books from authors/genres I like from the library than downloading, because that's just as good as sharing, but people get paid for it and those who can't afford books can have access.

Plus, it means that a book you love is there on the shelf, waiting to attract another reader. It spreads the love.

Also? I can make a dent in what the library purchases, you know? If they see that SF/F books (for example) are big hits, they'll order more.

I'd love to try to do that with the Glendale library, their entire non-fiction collection takes up exactly five shelves of the size that would fit easily in my house. Not that I blame the librarians. Queens isn't really channeling any funds into the place, and they can't even afford to pay a librarian to be there more than a few hours a weeks (which means on Tuesdays, Saturdays, Sundays, and sometimes Mondays the place is closed, or closes at 3).

Date: 2009-02-06 06:12 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] merriehaskell.livejournal.com
That "you" was completely generic. :) And the "I" was "as a writer with books, some day in the future." Didn't mean it to sound all accuseish.

LJ cut off my reply, sorry!

Date: 2009-02-06 04:36 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] fiction-theory.livejournal.com
Of course. Librarians are working on this all the time--or should be. The graying of the profession is changing things big time. The Library 2.0 movement is about getting everyone up to a basic level of information literacy and then moving them past that into information proficiency.

That's a BIG task, and it shouldn't just be librarians doing it. I'm not sure what educators are doing in regards to this topic (a lot, I hope), but some of this should be covered in schools.

I know that the only reason that I know as much about how to navigate a library as I do is because I had a really, really dedicated elementary school librarian, Mrs. Wilcox (god rest her wonderful soul), who from the first grade to the fifth made damn sure we knew how to find anything and everything in that library, and didn't think that there was such a thing as being too young for a card catalog or the Dewey Decimal system.

We used to have "find a certain book/type of book" contest and games in the library during our time there. I was so totally good at it.

But I got lucky with her, you know? I never even knew who the librarians at my other schools were. And god only knows how many kids had schools that had no libraries or libraries they never went into.

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