Wojciech Hardy

Office hours at the Faculty of Economic Sciences, room B201
Mondays, 13:45-14:45.
Wednesdays, 12:00-13:00.
Please send an e-mail first (!)

Conferences

Paliński, M., Jusypenko, B., Hardy, W., and Rożynek, S. (2023). What is personalization worth for Netflix users? Young Researchers Workshop, 22nd International Conference on Cultural Economics, Bloomington, IN, United States, June 26.

Hardy, W., Paliński, M., and Rożynek, S. (2022). Roblox and the Market for Virtual Experiences. 6th North American Workshop on Cultural Economics, Southern Economic Association 92nd Annual Meeting, Fort Lauderdale, FL, United States, November 19-21.

Hardy, W., Paliński, M., and Rożynek, S. (2022). Roblox and the Market for Virtual Experiences. 10th European Workshop on Applied Cultural Economics, Turin, Italy, September 8-10.

Hardy, W. (2022). Protecting the sales by delaying piracy – empirical evidence from video games and DRM. 10th European Workshop on Applied Cultural Economics, Turin, Italy, September 8-10.

Hardy, W., Matysiak, A. and van der Velde, L. (2022) Digitalisation, Changing Demand for Skills and the Gender Inequality in Earnings. European Population Conference 2022, University of Groningen, virtual.

Hardy, W., Paliński, M. and Rożynek, S. (2022) Promoting music through user-generated content – TikTok effect on music streaming. Warsaw International Economic Meeting 2022 (WIEM), Faculty of Economic Sciences, University of Warsaw, Warsaw, Poland.

Hardy, W. and Crosby, P. (2021) Using YouTube music charts and Google Trends to track social changes since the COVID-19 outbreak. 21st Association for Cultural Economics International Conference, Association for Cultural Economics International, virtual, July 6-9.

Hardy, W. (2021) American comic book market in times of digitisation (Polish: Rynek komiksu amerykańskiego w dobie cyfryzacji). KONline, Stowarzyszenie Avangarda, virtual.

Hardy, W. and Crosby, P. (2021) The impact of COVID-19 on how people spend their time during the day – based on YouTube and Google Trends data. Digitalization under the closer look of science seminar by DELab, University of Warsaw, virtual.

Hardy, W.  (2020) Internet piracy and video game sales – Evidence from two studies. Economics of Copyright in the Cultural and Creative Industries Workshop (CIPPM), Bournemouth, United Kingdom.

Hardy, W. (2020) Video games and DRM – protecting sales by delaying piracy. Conference of the Faculty of Economic Sciences of the University of Warsaw, Virtual.

Hardy, W. (2020) Video games and DRM – protecting sales by delaying piracy. Warsaw International Economic Meeting 2020 (WIEM), Faculty of Economic Sciences, University of Warsaw, virtual.

Hardy, W. (2019) Does digital piracy of comic books displace sales? Evidence from a survey of comics readers, 9th European Workshop on Applied Cultural Economics, Copenhagen, Denmark.

Hardy, W. (2019) Changes in the audiovisual market in the times of digitalisation – competing with piracy, new intermediaries and current trends, Komunikacja-Media-Kultura w erze nowych mediów, Warsaw, Poland.

Hardy, W. (2018) “No evidence of relationship” does not equal “evidence of no relationship” – a few words on the media misinterpretation of the “buried” EU report, CopyCamp 2018, Warsaw, Poland (Recording).

Hardy, W. (2018) Does unauthorized digital distribution of comic books displace sales? Evidence from readers survey, Warsaw International Economic Meeting (WIEM) 2018, Warsaw, Poland.

Hardy, W. (2018) Does unauthorized digital distribution of comic books displace sales? Evidence from readers survey, 4th International DELab UW Conference, Warsaw, Poland.

Hardy, W. (2018) Pre-release leaks of content as one-time incentives for switching to unauthorised sources, 35th Annual Conference of the European Association of Law and Economics, Milan, Italy.

Lewandowski, P., Keister, R., Hardy, W. and Górka, S. (2018) Routine and ageing? The intergenerational Divide In The Deroutinisation of Jobs in Europe, 2018 Jobs & Development Conference. Bogota, Colombia.

Hardy, W. (2018) Pre-release leaks as one-time incentives for switching to unauthorised sources of cultural content. 20th Association for Cultural Economics International Conference, Association for Cultural Economics International, Melbourne, Australia.