week10 - after reading
1.
Remix culture (sometimes read-write culture) is a ultimate term used to describe a society that allows and encourages derivative works by combining or editing existing materials to reproduce works or products. The growth of proprietary copyright restrictions over the past few decades has increasingly restricted this practice by legal gruesome effects. Remix culture for cultural works involves former free and open-source software for software movement, which encourages reuse and remixing of software works.
2.
Remix culture must be shared and created by others in order to survive. This is because the participation culture is established by becoming a contributor, especially because many teenagers who grow up with this media culture participate. This type of lecture strengthens the correlation between participatory and remix cultures, while emphasizing their importance in literary evolution.
3.
Students draw images, text, and other information from various source sources in a displayable format, such as slide presentations, to demonstrate their understanding of the reviewed materials. Media culture consumers can become producers because they begin to see art and content as repurposing or reinventing them. In fact, according to an article by the Popular Music Society, the idea of remix culture has become a defining feature of modern technology that integrates all forms of digital media that consumers are producers of.
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