Anti-Piracy Patent Stops Students From Sharing Textbooks
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  1. #1

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    Default Anti-Piracy Patent Stops Students From Sharing Textbooks

    Source: Anti-Piracy Patent Stops Students From Sharing Textbooks

    A new patent granted this week aims to stop students from sharing textbooks, both off and online. The patent awarded to economics professor Joseph Henry Vogel hopes to embed the publishing world even further into academia. Under his proposal, students can only participate in courses when they buy an online access code which allows them to use the course book. No access code means a lower grade, all in the best interests of science.

    For centuries, students have shared textbooks with each other, but a new patent aims to stop this “infringing” habit.

    The patent in question was granted to Professor of Economics Joseph Henry Vogel. He believes that piracy, lending and reselling of books is a threat to the publishing industry.

    “Professors are increasingly turning a blind eye when students appear in class with photocopied pages. Others facilitate piracy by placing texts in the library reserve where they can be photocopied,” Vogel writes.

    The result is less money for publishers, and fewer opportunities for professors like himself to get published. With Vogel’s invention, however, this threat can be stopped.
    The idea is simple. As part of a course, students will have to participate in a web-based discussion board, an activity which counts towards their final grade. To gain access to the board students need a special code, which they get by buying the associated textbook.
    Students who don’t pay can’t participate in the course and therefore get a lower grade.
    The system ensures that students can’t follow courses with pirated textbooks, as tens of thousands are doing today. Lending books from a library or friend, or buying books from older students, isn’t allowed either. At least, not when the copyright holders don’t get their share.
    Vogel’s idea leaves the option open for students to use second-hand textbooks, but they still have to buy an access code at a reduced price. This means publishers can charge multiple times for a book that was sold only once.
    Needless to say, publishers are excited about gaining more control in the classroom. Anthem Press of London has already expressed interest in the system and Pat Schroeder, president of the Association of American Publishers, also welcomes the idea.
    “For every rogue site that is taken down, there are hundreds more demanding similar effort. I can’t think of a more timely example of the need for additional tools,” he says.
    On the surface the idea might seem well-intentioned, but to proponents of an open knowledge society it goes completely in the wrong direction. If anything, the Internet should make it easier for students to access knowledge, not harder or impossible.
    While it’s understandable that publishers want to stop piracy, preventing poor students from borrowing textbooks from a library or friend goes too far.
    Perhaps it’s a better idea to approach the problem from the opposite direction.
    Thanks to the Internet, publishers are replaceable. And since many of the textbook authors are professors who get paid by universities, it is not hard to release books in a more open system.
    Professor Vogel believes that sending more money to publishers helps academia, which might be a flawed line of reasoning. Isn’t it much better to strive to make knowledge open and accessible, instead of restricting it even further?




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  3. #2
    Madhouse is offline Madhouse's Avatar T-I Gatekeeper

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    Oh textbook companies, trying to wring every cent they can from the wallets of poor college students.

  4. #3

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    Joseph Henry Vogel

    Joseph Henry Vogel, PhD is a professor of economics at the University of Puerto Rico-Rio Piedras, specializing in the UN Conventions on Biological Diversity and Climate Change.

    University of Puerto Rico-Rio ?
    Nothing personal but that's just an insignificant university, it isn't even ranked anywhere.
    UN Conventions on Biological Diversity ? isn't that modern eugenics ?
    Climate Change ? the man made global warming hoax ?
    So in other words he specialize in crimes against humanity and a hoax, great.

    Crappy professors make a crappy university I guess or maybe it's the other way around meh who cares.
    Last edited by LabChimp; June 10th, 2012 at 06:12 PM.

  5. #4

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    Kinda funny...in my country, professors even photocopy books, combine several books in to their own and sell as textbook

  6. #5

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    I have an idea... let's make it even HARDER for people to learn things! Who's with me?


  7. #6

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    This is really disappointing... books are supposed to share the knowledge and the money should only to help publishing it. Now its all about money.
    Even more sad when this comes from a Professor. This guy is obviously struggling with his low salary

  8. #7

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    University of Puerto Rico is not really important globally, but it is locally here in Puerto Rico. It is the only public university system, and as such its has dirt cheap tuition. While my federal aid barely covers half of my tuition, students at UPR usually can pay the entire tuition with their grants and still have money left over. About 70% of students get the full federal aid, which means most have money for books but they still don't buy them. Some like to take longer with their bachelor (finish in 6 years instead of 4) so they can milk the government for more money. I have been told this by some friends, altough I'm sure there most be good people studying there too.

    I study in Puerto Rico, but have only studied in smaller private non-profit colleges. The tuitions are higher but the quality of education is better. I like having a class with only 5 students so we can really learn from our professors. Our professors encourage us to photocopy. Some give us the copies themselves. In some classes, some actually gave us pdf copies of the textbooks. Thats because they understand we end up with so much student loans when we are done studying, and at smaller colleges every student is really a person.

    At UPR, a student is only a number, a student has no face or meaning. I've been told horror stories of how little the professors care about the students there, by very close friends and family members. And the administration doesn't care about students either. You may not know this, but during protests a couple of years ago, the police force was incredibly brutal to the students of UPR-RioPiedras. And this was encouraged by the schools administration.

    After reading this here, I predict another protest or something. Those guys really like to make a huge deal about everything. They pay the lowest tuition fees of all students in PR, yet they complain when the prices need to go up a little. I guess since almost all the student body qualifies for goverment aids, they are used to being given things for free and not really have to work hard. Not like me, who needs a full time job to pay while I'm at school. Or mike my girlfriend, who has taken student loans every year, and will someday work to pay.

    The thing is, the students will fight this, I'm sure of it. And they fight with violence, and the government will fight back. I'm just hoping it doesn't get to the point of the last protest. I'm pretty sure this wont be implemented globally, but locally it could be a bit of a nightmare.

    Oh, and I forgot to mention that professors are under payed. I'm pretty sure they don't sire the best, they hire what they can afford. The professors also had protests and went on strike. At the UPR RioPiedras campus there is always some sort of drama that ends in protests.

    The idea that this man had will be bad for so many people. But I have a better idea. Why don't they add the cost of books to the tuition at UPR. I'm sure the federal aid would cover it for most students. Then they basically force their students to pay for books, but really it will mostly be the government paying for the books. But leave the rest of the world out of it, because college is already expensive enough without having to buy many books. And there are so many people that spend every little penny they have just to get an education, we should not punish poor people with lower grades just because they can't afford books.

    PS. Sorry if this post is too long.

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