Breaking and Entering My Own Computer: The Contest of Copyright Metaphors
Communication Law & Policy 13 (2008) 231-274
59 Pages Posted: 28 Feb 2008 Last revised: 24 Nov 2015
Date Written: 2008
Abstract
In the current debate over copyright law, those who support maximum copyright protections have advanced their agenda largely via the metaphor of ownership in physical property. As part of this metaphorical system, they have successfully argued that digital rights management (DRM) systems deserve legal protections befitting locked doors. This paper is a discourse analysis of this related system of metaphors and of opponents' metaphorical and non-metaphorical responses.
Scholars who oppose the maximalist vision of copyright have devoted considerable thought to the problem of metaphors, including especially the search for arguments including metaphors that can challenge the metaphor of property. This article concludes there is still more work to be done on this count. As an incremental contribution to this conversation, the article suggests additional arguments, including additional metaphors in search of a new means to conceptualize copyright law.
Keywords: metaphor, legal rhetoric, discourse analysis, copyright, technical protection measures, digital rights management, digital media, technology law
JEL Classification: K39, K11
Suggested Citation: Suggested Citation