Skip to main content
Home

Main navigation

  • Home
  • Series
  • People
  • Depts & Colleges
  • Open Education

Main navigation

  • Home
  • Series
  • People
  • Depts & Colleges
  • Open Education

Net Neutrality on the Internet: A Two-sided Market Analysis

Series
Oxford Internet Institute - Lectures and Seminars
Embed
A discussion of net neutrality regulation in the context of a two-sided market model.
Platforms sell Internet access services to consumers and may set fees to content - and application providers on the Internet. When access is monopolized, for reasonable parameter ranges, net neutrality regulation (requiring zero fees to content providers) increases the total industry surplus as compared to the fully private optimum at which the monopoly platform imposes positive fees on content providers. However, there are also parameter ranges for which total industry surplus is reduced. Imposing net neutrality in duopoly with multi-homing content providers and single-homing consumers increases the total surplus as compared to duopoly competition with positive fees to content providers.

Episode Information

Series
Oxford Internet Institute - Lectures and Seminars
People
Nicholas Economides
Keywords
surplus
consumers
monopoly
industry
net neutrality
access
regulation
Governance
competition
internet
policy
content provider
market
Department: Oxford Internet Institute
Date Added: 08/03/2010
Duration: 01:30:48

Subscribe

Download

West Papua symposium - Closing Plenary

Series
Oxford Transitional Justice Research Conference - Justice and Self-Determination in West Papua
Embed
Phil Clark chairs the final plenary discussion from the Oxford symposium on Justice and self-determination in West Papua.

Episode Information

Series
Oxford Transitional Justice Research Conference - Justice and Self-Determination in West Papua
People
Phil Clark
Muridan Widjojo
Jos Marey
Charles Foster
Agus Sumule
Kaveh Moussavi
Jennifer Robinson
Budi Hernawan
Keywords
jurisprudence
justice
otjr
transitional justice
west papua
law
conflict
Department: Centre for Socio-Legal Studies
Date Added: 08/03/2010
Duration: 02:27:29

Subscribe

Download

Peer to Peer and the Music Industry: The Criminalization of Sharing

Series
Oxford Internet Institute - Lectures and Seminars
Embed
Examining technical, legal and cultural strategies by the recording industry to persuade people that file-sharing is impossible, immoral, un-cool or dangerous, and the failure of these strategies. Alternative business models are discussed.
The period from the advent of the compact disc in 1982 to the first significant file-sharing system in 1999 saw the greatest period of profitability in the history of recorded music. The decade since 1999 has seen an equally radical collapse. What seems obvious in hindsight was largely ignored at the time. The very efficiency of digital reproduction and distribution promised or threatened to eliminate scarcity, and hence threaten the possibility of market exchange in informational goods. Markets require regulation and a market in informational goods requires the suspension of the free circulation of information. This has been attempted by technical means (surveillance and encryption); legal means (in prosecutions for copyright infringement); and by cultural means (the attempt to persuade people that file-sharing is impossible, immoral, un-cool or dangerous). These interlinked strategies have failed. This talk will examine these technical, legal and cultural strategies and their failure. In the context of such failure it is worthwhile looking at alternative business models. Where free culture is a way of life, it can also be shown to be a more effective condition for making a living, at least for performing artists, if not for today's major record labels. The five traditional 'functions' of the established recording industry (production, manufacture, promotion, distribution and rights management) are no longer best performed through the centralized model of the major label. Whilst once at the cutting edge of what Castells called the capitalist perestroika of an emergent network society; today's informational monopolies (of which record companies are just one example), hierarchical and bureaucratic to their core, appear more like late-Soviet monoliths when set against a digital multitude that innovates and circulates past, through and beyond them.

Episode Information

Series
Oxford Internet Institute - Lectures and Seminars
People
Matthew David
Keywords
file sharing
recorded music
economics
business
copyright
crime
encryption
recording industry
free culture
rights management
information goods
regulation
market
internet
policy
peer to peer
distribution
law
digital reproduction
Department: Oxford Internet Institute
Date Added: 08/03/2010
Duration: 01:26:28

Subscribe

Download

West Papua symposium - opening plenary - Papuan History in Perspective

Series
Oxford Transitional Justice Research Conference - Justice and Self-Determination in West Papua
Embed
First discussion session from the Oxford Symposium on Justice and self-determination in West Papua. Chaired by Anne Booth.

Episode Information

Series
Oxford Transitional Justice Research Conference - Justice and Self-Determination in West Papua
People
Anne Booth
Pieter Drooglever
Albert Kersten
Keywords
jurisprudence
justice
otjr
transitional justice
west papua
law
conflict
Department: Centre for Socio-Legal Studies
Date Added: 08/03/2010
Duration: 01:01:55

Subscribe

Download

West Papua symposium - opening remarks

Series
Oxford Transitional Justice Research Conference - Justice and Self-Determination in West Papua
Embed
Opening remarks from the Convenor of Oxford Transitional Justice Research, Phil Clark, at the Oxford symposium on Justice and Self Determination in West Papua.

Episode Information

Series
Oxford Transitional Justice Research Conference - Justice and Self-Determination in West Papua
People
Phil Clark
Keywords
jurisprudence
justice
otjr
transitional justice
west papua
law
conflict
Department: Centre for Socio-Legal Studies
Date Added: 08/03/2010
Duration: 00:05:49

Subscribe

Download

Standing Neustadt on his Head: The Leadership Style of Dwight D. Eisenhower

Series
Rothermere American Institute
Embed
Fred L. Greenstein (Professor of Politics Emeritus, Princeton University) delivers the 2010 John Lees Memorial Lecture at the American Politics Group conference.

Episode Information

Series
Rothermere American Institute
People
Fred Greenstein
Keywords
american politics group
eisenhower
neustadt
politics
Department: Rothermere American Institute
Date Added: 05/03/2010
Duration: 00:51:24

Subscribe

Download

Pre-1500 Printed Books

Series
The Bodleian Libraries (BODcasts)
Embed
The earliest printers spread from Mainz in Germany where Gutenberg first had his printing house to Venice, Rome, Paris, and the Netherlands. Examples from all of these centres of 15th-century printing are found in Bodleian collections.

Episode Information

Series
The Bodleian Libraries (BODcasts)
People
Paul Nash
Keywords
books
manuscripts
library
bodleian
Department: Bodleian Libraries
Date Added: 05/03/2010
Duration: 00:12:18

Subscribe

Download

Cooperation, Norms and Conflict: Towards Simulating the Foundations of Society

Series
Complexity and Systemic Risk: Hilary Term Seminar Series 2010
Embed
In order to understand social systems, it is essential to identify the circumstances under which individuals spontaneously start cooperating or developing shared behaviors, norms, and culture.
In this connection, it is important to study the role of social mechanisms such as repeated interactions, group selection, network formation, costly punishment and group pressure, and how they allow us to transform social dilemmas into interactive situations that promote the social system. Furthermore, it is interesting to study the role that social inequality, the protection of private property, or the on-going globalization play for the resulting 'character' of a social system (cooperative or not). It is well-known that social cooperation can suddenly break down, giving rise to poverty or conflict. The decline of high cultures and the outbreak of civil wars or revolutions are well-known examples. The more surprising is that one can develop an integrated game-theoretical description of phenomena as different as the outbreak and breakdown of cooperation, the formation of norms or subcultures, and the occurrence of conflicts. Delivered by Professor Dirk Helbing, Professor of Sociology, in particular of Modeling and Simulation, Swiss Federal Institute of Technology Zurich, Switzerland.

Episode Information

Series
Complexity and Systemic Risk: Hilary Term Seminar Series 2010
People
Dirk Helbing
Keywords
culture
behaviour
society
complexity
social
21school
Department: Oxford Martin School
Date Added: 05/03/2010
Duration: 00:59:42

Subscribe

Download

027 Hydrogen part 3 Eigenfunctions

Series
Quantum Mechanics
Embed
Twenty seventh lecture in Professor James Binney's Quantum Mechanics Lecture series given in Hilary Term 2010.
Creative Commons Licence
Creative Commons Attribution-Non-Commercial-Share Alike 2.0 UK (BY-NC-SA): England & Wales; https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/2.0/uk/

Episode Information

Series
Quantum Mechanics
People
James Binney
Keywords
mathematics
Physics
quantum mechanics
Department: Department of Physics
Date Added: 05/03/2010
Duration: 00:50:39

Subscribe

Download

026 Hydrogen part 2 Emission Spectra

Series
Quantum Mechanics
Embed
Twenty sixth lecture in Professor James Binney's Quantum Mechanics Lecture series given in Hilary Term 2010.
Creative Commons Licence
Creative Commons Attribution-Non-Commercial-Share Alike 2.0 UK (BY-NC-SA): England & Wales; https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/2.0/uk/

Episode Information

Series
Quantum Mechanics
People
James Binney
Keywords
mathematics
Physics
quantum mechanics
Department: Department of Physics
Date Added: 05/03/2010
Duration: 00:48:46

Subscribe

Download

Pagination

  • First page
  • Previous page
  • …
  • Page 2690
  • Page 2691
  • Page 2692
  • Page 2693
  • Page 2694
  • Page 2695
  • Page 2696
  • Page 2697
  • Page 2698
  • …
  • Next page
  • Last page

Footer

  • About
  • Accessibility
  • Contribute
  • Copyright
  • Contact
  • Privacy
  • Login
'Oxford Podcasts' X Account @oxfordpodcasts | Upcoming Talks in Oxford | © 2011-2025 The University of Oxford