Tag Archive: Napster


Yesterday I wrote how impressed I had been by Clay Shirky’s blog article about the rise of Massive Open Online Courses (MOOCS) and the implications these have for ‘traditional’ educational establishments.

This article (‘Napster, Udacity, and the Academy’) is part of the reading resources for Week 2 of the Coursera MOOC ‘E-Learning & Digital Cultures’ being run by the University of Edinburgh.

In the interest of balance, the course organisers have also included a link to a critique of Shirky’s piece. This is by Aaron Bady, a doctoral candidate in English literature of the University of California and was published online in December 2012 by Inside Higher Ed.

Bady’s criticism is lamely argued and contains a series of misreadings of Clay Shirky’s article. For example Bady writes that “Shirky talks dismissively about his own education at Yale” whereas Shirky is at pains to praise Yale’sincredible intellectual community where even big lectures were taught by seriously brilliant people”.

It suits Bady’s misguided argument to brand Shirky as someone with a “vested interest in arguing the benefits of radically transforming the academe”. In other words, the charge is that he has an axe to grind against educational establishments that fail to move with the times. The absurd suggestion here is that Shirky is not being transparent and bent solely on heaping unwarranted praise on MOOCS. Continue reading

MOOCS AND METAPHORS

For week two of the Massive Open Online Course (MOOC)  – E-learning & digital cultures, students are asked to look into the crystal ball and imagine what the future holds for technology, language  and society.

The resources include a brilliant blog article by Clay Shirky likening the seemingly unstoppable rise  of MOOCs to the way MP3s (and Napster) transformed the way we consume and listen to music.

Even if you have no interest in subscribing to a MOOC, I’d urge you read this entertaining and informative piece.

A less happy choice of resource is that of the core text by graduate student, Rebecca Johnston, from Texas Tech University. When compared to Shirky’s sharply argued writing style this is as dull as dishwater.

In the course discussion forum, I explained why I this was a poor choice. I’m posting my gripes here too as a way of getting them completely off my chest: Continue reading

THE ETHICS OF MUSIC SHARING

Back in the day, I was never convinced by the ‘home taping is killing music’ argument any more than I would subscribe to the view that home cooking is killing restaurants.

On the contrary, the fact that I taped countless albums borrowed from friends or my local library satisfied my ravenous musical appetite  and introduced me to countless artists I would never otherwise have heard of.  I certainly didn’t buy any less music as a result

I recognise that the MP3 revolution is a different kettle of fish and offers a flood of free temptations for music obsessives but,even so, l don’t think that file sharing is killing music either.

Napster cat

As  fellow addicts will know there is no limit to how many new sounds you can consume and there’s never a point where you say ‘I have enough music to listen to and don’t need more’.

The more you hear, the more you want to hear – it’s an itch that never goes away.

A man who understands this craving is the founder of UbuWeb, Kenneth Goldsmith who presents an intelligent perspective on this issue  in an article in this month’s Wire magazine. Continue reading