Thursday, October 16, 2014
My Passion
Many people will most likely say that I am passionate about Michael
Jackson and I am, but right now I have a passion for Barnard College as
well. For me Barnard College is the school of my dreams because it is an
all female college with division I basketball and the majors that I
intend to study. The best part about Barnard is that it is in the city.
The benefit of that is that anytime I want go home I can just take the
train. To me being in a female dominated society is very powerful and a
major step from high school. I feel that if I go to Barnard I will meet
people who are serious about what they need to get done who are willing
to commit to that. Also being able to be on a basketball team with
females who really admire the sport and not just use it as an excuse to
have something good to say about themselves is very exciting. After I
graduate from Thurgood Marshall Academy I hope to be wearing that
Barnard college sweater on 116th street.
Tuesday, October 7, 2014
It's not fair
I feel that the definition of plagiarism is too complex and the laws
are too specific and allow no room for people to reiterate the ideas of
others. Yesterday in class we discussed "What is plagiarism?" and "What
laws are put into place to protect people's ideas?" There were many loop
holes that later made me angry because I felt that if an artist puts
his work out there for others to read then he must want them to share it
with others. I know sometimes people steal others work for their own
egocentric purposes, however, if they want to share their favorite
lyrics from a song they should have the right to do so because it helps
the artist sell more albums and have more people download his music. I
feel that these laws are implemented to protect people's publishing
rights, but there are times when individuals accidentally sign away
there copy rights; now tell me why are there no plagiarism laws for
that.
An example of how even plagiarism laws could not even protect artists is The Beatles. Last year I read the book, Michael Jackson: The Madness, The Music, The Whole Story, where I learned that Michael Jackson bought the copyrights of nearly all the Beatles' songs. When John Lennon and Paul McCartney signed their first contract they gave away all their copyrights without even knowing it. After years went by, in 1985 Michael Jackson was able to buy the copyrights to an entire catalog of The Beatles songs for $47 million. It was funny because Michael Jackson even warned Paul McCartney that he was going to own all of his songs. Now I am most definitely not mad at Michael because what he did was completely legit, but I also feel sorry for Paul McCartney because he does not own the rights to songs that he put all of his hard work into. This story made me feel that we focus too much on people stealing peoples work instead of focusing on how an author can keep his work.
An example of how even plagiarism laws could not even protect artists is The Beatles. Last year I read the book, Michael Jackson: The Madness, The Music, The Whole Story, where I learned that Michael Jackson bought the copyrights of nearly all the Beatles' songs. When John Lennon and Paul McCartney signed their first contract they gave away all their copyrights without even knowing it. After years went by, in 1985 Michael Jackson was able to buy the copyrights to an entire catalog of The Beatles songs for $47 million. It was funny because Michael Jackson even warned Paul McCartney that he was going to own all of his songs. Now I am most definitely not mad at Michael because what he did was completely legit, but I also feel sorry for Paul McCartney because he does not own the rights to songs that he put all of his hard work into. This story made me feel that we focus too much on people stealing peoples work instead of focusing on how an author can keep his work.
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