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6.7.2004
 The Glass is 89% Full 
The New York Times Magazine (June 6) has an article "What the Bagel Man Saw" (link is short-term) about an economist who reformed and went into the business of "Bagel Day" -- once-a-week deliveries of bagels and doughnuts to offices. People pay on an honor system, and the focus of the article is about the nuances of non-payment rates. (Factoids: those higher up the corporate food chain cheat more than those lower down, and "law firms aren't worth the trouble.")

The overall payment rate over the years is 89%, but the variation is considerable among workplaces. Also, theft of the money boxes is only 1 in 7,000 per year.

This is cheery news for the IP debate over downloading. It means that the overwhelming majority of people do indeed recognize both the moral and the practical need to pay, to be fair to the provider and to one's fellow workers, and to keep those bagels coming. No one rationalizes, "Well, he is coming anyway, so the marginal cost of this bagel is only a dime and he is ripping me off."

So, as the content industry has long argued, the key to solving the downloading problem is to reinforce people's innate moral sensibilities, and, of course, to make the musical bagels readily available over the Internet at reasonable prices.

posted by James DeLong : 6/7/2004 09:22:00 AM

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Home Page
6.7.2004
 The Glass is 89% Full 
The New York Times Magazine (June 6) has an article "What the Bagel Man Saw" (link is short-term) about an economist who reformed and went into the business of "Bagel Day" -- once-a-week deliveries of bagels and doughnuts to offices. People pay on an honor system, and the focus of the article is about the nuances of non-payment rates. (Factoids: those higher up the corporate food chain cheat more than those lower down, and "law firms aren't worth the trouble.")

The overall payment rate over the years is 89%, but the variation is considerable among workplaces. Also, theft of the money boxes is only 1 in 7,000 per year.

This is cheery news for the IP debate over downloading. It means that the overwhelming majority of people do indeed recognize both the moral and the practical need to pay, to be fair to the provider and to one's fellow workers, and to keep those bagels coming. No one rationalizes, "Well, he is coming anyway, so the marginal cost of this bagel is only a dime and he is ripping me off."

So, as the content industry has long argued, the key to solving the downloading problem is to reinforce people's innate moral sensibilities, and, of course, to make the musical bagels readily available over the Internet at reasonable prices.

posted by James DeLong : 6/7/2004 09:22:00 AM

This page is powered by Blogger. Isn't yours?

 

IPcentral WebLog
Blog Main
Recent Posts
  Property Rights on the (Internet) Frontier
The JEC on Free Trade
Webcasting Royalties
File Sharing
A la Carte Cable Pricing
RoundUp (TM) on the Flower of Innovation
Send not to know . . .
Kill Jack (as in Valenti)
Kill Bill (as in Gates)
Cato Program on P2P
Archives by Month
  December 2003
January 2004
February 2004
March 2004
April 2004
May 2004
June 2004
July 2004
August 2004
September 2004
October 2004
November 2004
December 2004
Links
  PFF Blog
Atom.xml Site Feed
   
 
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