Matthew David
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The impossibility of technical security
Intellectual property and the paradox of informational capitalism
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This chapter examines the contradictions of information and communications technology in the production, distribution and regulation of 'informational goods'. It highlights the crisis tendencies within a system that generates surplus but which cannot survive without scarcity, as well as the impossibility of technical solutions to such insecurity. The chapter outlines the dual processes of geographical expansion and technological development by which capital seeks to secure its dominance. The rise of the networked economy and informational goods witnesses the reinvention of an old spectre within capitalism, that of uncontrolled surplus. Technical security of informational goods in the globalised world becomes increasingly difficult to enforce, due to the schizophrenic character of technology. Like intellectual property and copyright law, technical systems of regulation can be ignored or manipulated in such a fashion as to suit the agendas of those wishing to benefit from them.

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