Speech Analysis CEP 815 Larry Lessig: How creativity is being strangled by the law I decided to analyze Lessig‟s speech on “How creativity is being strangled by the law” for several reasons, the main one being my own interest in the subject of copyright laws and their influence on other people‟s work, be them amateurs or professionals. Lessig serves as Director of the Edmond J. Safra Foundation Center for Ethics at Harvard University and Professor of Law at Harvard Law School. Much can be said about his professional career, but the most striking point is that he serves on the board of Electronic Frontier Foundation and assertively defends the right to remix creatively. A short version of his biography can be found at http://lessig.org/info/bio/. His blog http://lessig.org/blog/also offers some insight into his expertise in the field of copyright laws critiquing. As for his education, Lessig earned a BA in economics and a BS in management from the University of Pennsylvania, an MA in philosophy from Cambridge, and a JD from Yale. He has received honorary degrees from The University of Amsterdam, Athabasca University, and The Georgian-American University. Lessig delivered his speech at a TED conference in Monterey, California on November 15, 2007. Although there is an annual membership fee of $6,000, which includes attendance of the conference, club mailings, networking tools and conference DVDs, viewing TED conferences online is completely free. In 19 minutes, Lessig managed to capture his audience’s attention through a combination of solid proof and a sense of humor appealing to most, if not all, speech analysts and conference goers. With his moderate pace and appropriate pauses, he gave his audience enough time to process his argument behind the need to alter the highly controversial issue of copyright laws to suit the 21st century, otherwise stamped as technology era. He addressed his audience with tact, keeping eye contact and a composure that reflect nothing less than the self-confidence and assurance of a veteran in the field of copyright laws. Lessig‟s main intention is first to educate people about copyright laws and then persuade them about the necessity to revise these laws. His main objective at the beginning is to prove to people that what seems to be an indubitable law can actually change over time. He does so with three shrewd examples leading to his argument and that clearly show how the law at that time had to change to suit the current trend. He starts off by accusing these laws of stifling creativity by creating a read-only culture instead of a read-write culture. He follows with an unusual example of a trespass law from the time before airplanes were invented, which stipulated that the owner of a piece of land actually owned what was below his real estate and all the space upward, indefinitely. This law seemed to work pretty well until the advent of airplanes, after which it would become impossible for flight operators to place a request to fly over other people‟s real estate, thus creating the need to revise the trespass law. That meant that the trespass law, indisputable for hundreds of years, could no longer be sanctioned in the modern world. In his Created by: Jean-Claude Aura
Date: February 2010
Page 1