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Ask Slashdot: How Do I Explain Copyright To My Kids?

orgelspieler writes: My son paid for a copy of a novel on his iPad. When his school made it against the rules to bring iPads, he wanted to get the same book on his Kindle. I tried to explain that the format of his eBook was not readily convertible to the Kindle. So he tried to go on his schools online library app. He checked it out just fine, but ironically, the offline reading function only works on the now-disallowed iPads. Rather than paying Amazon $7 for a book I already own, and he has already checked out from the library, I found a bootleg PDF online. I tried to explain that he could just read that, but he freaked out. "That's illegal, Dad!" I tried to explain format shifting, and the injustice of the current copyright framework in America. Even when he did his own research, stumbling across EFF's website on fair use, he still would not believe me.

Have any of you fellow Slashdotters figured out a good way to navigate the moral, legal, and technological issues of copyright law, as it relates to the next generation of nerds? Interestingly, my boy seems OK with playing old video games on the Wayback Machine, so I don't think it's a lost cause.

7 of 327 comments (clear)

  1. What's the problem? by Motard · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Perhaps your son should explain copyright to you.

    1. Re:What's the problem? by DontBeAMoran · · Score: 4, Insightful

      It's easy, it's in the freakin' name: the right to make a copy.

      A fixed number of years after publishing, giving time authors to earn money for their work, we are legally allowed to make copies.

      Just because Hollywood and others corrupted the system and killed the spirit of the original law doesn't mean it vanished from the core idea of copyright.

      --
      #DeleteFacebook
    2. Re:What's the problem? by arglebargle_xiv · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Even when he did his own research, stumbling across EFF's website on fair use, he still would not believe me.

      Your son has all the makings of a fine upstanding citizen-unit. Obey, Consume, Conform, Submit, Marry and reproduce, No independent thought. Buy, Watch TV. Do not question authority.

  2. Start with the US Constitution by erice · · Score: 4, Insightful

    It's actually pretty brief and clear:

    Article I Section 8. Clause 8 – Patent and Copyright Clause of the Constitution. [The Congress shall have power] “To promote the progress of science and useful arts, by securing for limited times to authors and inventors the exclusive right to their respective writings and discoveries.”

  3. Re:Pull Him Out of Public School by vux984 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The most important skill and experience you take away from public school is the ability to deal with the public.

    Homeschooled kids lose out on that big time, and no, your church, sports, and social field trips you organize with other homeschooled kids is not a substitute.

    If you are worried about the education get a tutor and do some homework with the kid, but 8 hours a day learning reading, writing, social studies, math, and science from Mom & Dad doesn't prepare them for any sort of real world.

    And don't forget that you brainwash your kids too, just with the ideas and beleifs you hold. Public school for all its flaws, exposes them to other ideas, some good, some bad... and frankly the fact that he is intelligently debating with his kid about the ethics of copyright is probably the best possible outcome.

  4. Re:Pull Him Out of Public School by ShanghaiBill · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The most important skill and experience you take away from public school is the ability to deal with the public.

    Homeschooled kids lose out on that big time

    Can you cite any evidence that this is true? With five minutes of googling I located research that found homeschoolers equally or slightly better socialized, according to several different metrics, and none that found they were worse.

  5. Re:You need to figure out something else first by berj · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Paper books aren't definitively better, not by a long shot.

    When I want to read paper books on my 1 month vacation to a remote island in the south pacific I have to lug them around with me. They take up space and add weight even when I'm done with them.

    With digital books I can bring my entire library with me on my iPad and read whatever and whenever I want. And if I manage to find good Wifi somewhere I can even buy more books.

    I've done trips both ways (lugging paper books around and downloading a ton of reading material to my iPad) and the latter is infinitely more preferable.

    Aside from some special books I like to keep in my collection, I've transferred my entire library to digital and I couldn't be happier. I think the big "a ha" moment came for me shortly after I bought a kindle a decade ago. I ended up getting stuck in an airport overnight after a missed connection. Everything was closed. I was able to buy a book right on the spot to read while I waited for the first flight of the morning.

    With rare exceptions I haven't bought a paper book since.