YouTube, questions haven't changed
The YouTube difficulties are the same difficulties that have existed for many, many, many years and have only been of the utmost concern in many consumer goods, then in '99 it was digital music, i.e. Napster and the peer-to-peer network disease that, seemingly, millions took part in.
The argument is over copyrights. Covered best in a public service annoucement provided by Youth For Human Rights International titled "Copyright" (which can also be found on YouTube).
The point in it all is that of ethics, a human right covered by the United Nations document, adopted over 50 years ago, titled the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, which in it's unabridged form reads:
ARTICLE 27... (1) Everyone has the right freely to participate in the cultural life of the community, to enjoy the arts and to share in scientific advancement and its benefits.
(2) Everyone has the right to the protection of the moral and material interests resulting from any scientific, literary or artistic production of which he is the author.
It is not a question of money loss or gain, it's a point of ethical conduct, and for that the subject of exchange. Is there any exchange? Has there been work done for you, in which you did not exchange back for? Would you work for nothing? Not even in the acknowledgement that you HAD WORKED?
See the human rights documents as mentioned above. More references include:
Human Rights Leader David Miscavige
UNITED
Citizens Commission on Human Rights
Labels: copyright, david miscavige, ethics, human rights, united

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