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June 15, 2004

Pirates, sharks and moral crusaders

"Pirates, sharks and moral crusaders: Social control in peer-to-peer networks" is the title of a study conducted by European researchers published on FirstMonday.

The article proposes self-regulation as an alternative to music industry ongoing tactic of inciting fear with lawsuits, fines and even jail to compensate damages. Jurgen S. Svensson and Frank Bannister investigated two different P2P networks with its social norms and the informal social sanctions that are used to enforce these norms. There’s some evidence that in P2P networks in which its users are not anonymous and have an ongoing relationship with all other peers will have lower incidence of exchange of unlawful content (e.g. child porn and pirated music.)

The results of this investigation indicate that some self-regulation already exists and suggest that it may be possible to strengthen this self-regulation to reduce the occurrence of some types of offences. However, there is a limit to the effectiveness of peer control of illegal and antisocial activities on the Internet.


Posted by yatta at 12:46 AM