Masters Degrees (Mercantile Law)
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Browsing Masters Degrees (Mercantile Law) by Author "Hauman, Mignon"
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Item Open Access A South African perspective on user-created content in cloud computing: a copyright conundrum(University of the Free State, 2014-01) Hauman, Mignon; Brits, P. S.English: The term “cloud computing”, i.e. “the cloud”, is used to describe a virtual platform in cyberspace from and to which a user can process store data that is literary, musical, artistic or informative in nature, and which is accessible via an Internet connection. The cloud therefore functions as virtual container that holds, processes and distributes all forms of copyrighted content, and which operates outside the confines of recognised territorial boundaries. The cloud is not only distributive but participatory. It fosters a “cut and paste” culture by allowing users to access, store, remix and create content. The cloud promotes user-created content, a term that encompasses and insurmountable range of actions by users with respect to cloud content available on the World Wide Web. Prominent scholars have devised a taxonomy for the categorisation and classification of cloud content to some degree, but there is wide spread acknowledgement that the nature of the cloud cannot be confined to a decisive definition, nor its content exact parameters. The inexact nature of the cloud and its content poses challenges for copyright law, a regime that is premised on a distinctive subject matter, confined to territorial boundaries and aimed at identifiable parties with respect to its application. In the cloud traditional copyright law seems wholly inadequate to provide regulation on matters of infringement, fair dealing and copyright recognition. Moreover, the inadequacy of the regime for cloud application threatens to weaken its validity as a mechanism that aims to promote the innovation of works for the benefit of the general public. If copyright law is to remain a valid instrument for the regulation of user-created content in cloud computing there is a definitive need to re-evaluate, revise and expand some of the regulatory devices thereof to accommodate the expectations and interests of cloud users. Finding a means to balance the rights of copyright holders against the interests of the general public has never been more critical, and policy makers have become ever aware of the need to develop a robust copyright regime for cloud application. Accordingly, this study aims to investigate the insufficiency of South African copyright law to adequately regulate the conduct of users who can acquire, remix, upload, derive and share vast amounts of copyrighted works via the Internet. The purpose of this study is to analyse potential developments in copyright law for cloud application in order to gain insight on the regulation and adjudication of user-created content within a South African context.