Free Ride: How the Internet is Destroying the Culture Business and how it Can Fight Back

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Vintage, 2012 - Business & Economics - 305 pages

'Information wants to be free', said influential technologist Stewart Brand at a 1984 hacker convention. These words became the mantra that shaped the Internet, and the conflict he predicted has led to a revolution in the way that our culture is funded and consumed.

We have come to demand free content online, mistaking the packaging of physical products for what we were acutally paying for - the creative content. Newspapers are being pressured to give their content away for free online; music sales have plummeted due to piracy; and Amazon is using its market power to drive down the price of ebooks.

Technology companies are making millions from content created and funded by others, reducing the value of culture in the process. How did the media industry lose control over its destiny? What are the consequences? And are we headed for cultural meltdown if the media can't stop the free ride?

'Levine is an engaging, provocative writer. An entertaining read' Observer

'A book that should change the debate about the future of culture' New York Times Book Review

'Important' Sunday Times

'It's a vital discussion that we need to be having' Irish Times

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About the author (2012)

Robert Levine was the executive editor of Billboard and has written for Vanity Fair, Rolling Stone, and the arts and business sections of the New York Times. Before that, he was a features editor at New York magazine and Wired. He holds a B.A. in politics from Brandeis and an M.S.J.from Northwestern University's Medill School of Journalism. He now covers the culture business from New York and Berlin. Free Ride is his first book.

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