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In our interview we discuss not only his research on music piracy, but his views on whether traditional books face the same fate as vinyl and CDs.
It seems to me that we might be recovering this idea of the public good when you look at recent activism against the Stop Online Piracy Act (SOPA), as well as the Supreme Court’s very good decision in the Myriad Genetics case. I’m not much of an optimist, but I think the book at least shows there’s a back-and-forth, a push-and-pull. That’s the idea behind the title—there was a “democracy of sound” in the sense that democracy involves a lot of friction, a lot of sharp elbows and contention. The fact that there has been a fight at all is a source of hope.
[[Category:Interviews]] [[Category:Media History]] [[Category:Music History]] [[Category:Legal History]] [[Category:United States History]] [[Category:History Interviews]]{{CategoryMediawiki:InterviewsUS History}} <div class="portal" style="width:85%;">[[File: Angels_of_the_Underground_.jpg|thumbnail|left|175px]]==[[Angels of the Underground: Interview with Theresa Kaminski]]==The Oxford University Press recently published Theresa Kaminski's Angels of the Underground: The American Women who Resisted the Japanese in the Philippines in World War II. Kaminski's book follows the lives of four American women who were stranded in the Philippines after Japan invaded during World War II. Publishers Weekly described her book as a "fast-paced true story" that documents how these women resisted Japanese occupation. {{ContributorRead more|Angels of the Underground:Clinton SandvickInterview with Theresa Kaminski}}</div>