Tagsadvertisement
architecture
art
assignment
Barack Obama
Comics
design
fashion
film
graphic design
Hillary Clinton
Humor
In-class Exercise
information design
Iraq
Maps
news
Pedagogy
pedagogy examples
photography
photography
Political Propaganda
politics
Propaganda
science
visual art
Visual Rhetoric
war
Writing Exercise
youtube
NavigationDisclaimerThese blog entries represent the views of their authors, not necessarily those of the CWRL, the University of Texas at Austin, or any of its affiliated entities. |
Invasion of the fashion snatchers: copyright or class conflict?This week the Village Voice reported that Anthropolgie is joining the legion of designers suing Forever 21, the chain that (re)produces trendy looks for the masses (read: their clothes are really cheap). Anna Sui campaigned against the store during Fashion Week (she handed out t shirts with the store's owners on a "wanted" poster) and Diane Von Furstenberg is lobbying Congress to "improve" copyright law when it comes to fashion. Trackback URL for this post:http://viz.cwrl.utexas.edu/trackback/139
|
Recent comments
|

For an interesting capitalistic argument for knockoffs, see James Surowiecki’s article in The New Yorker on why knockoffs are good for the fashion industry.
via Boing Boing
(For more crazy copyright stuff, see the debate over the Harvard Coop’s claim that their prices are their intellectual property here and here and here.)