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Leaked ACTA Treaty Will Outlaw P2P
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Re: Leaked ACTA Treaty Will Outlaw P2P
I wonder how such a plan would be carried out and enforced.
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More to the question, I wonder how many will care?
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I just wonder what fantasy world DRM fans are living in if they think tighter rules will somehow magically stop piracy.
Rules by themselves do nothing, it's actions and enforcement that makes people take notice of rules. The less reasonable the rules become, the harder it is politically to enforce them. Look at the political damage the RIAA did to itself when they tried to prosecute children for downloading pirated music. Are people who make or buy multi-region DVD players REALLY going to be prosecuted? What moral case can be made against someone in Europe watching a legally bought DVD from America? |
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As I understand it, the treaty has not been passed. The subject should say 'would outlaw', not 'will outlaw'.
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Are they kidding my precious? Quite a number of IMs, internet TVs and lets not forget online games are actually P2P... For instance you all use one - Skype. Are they going to ban it?
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And what about my favorite media player VLC? Are they going to say that distributing it as free software is now illegal since it contains codecs to play DVDs without checking regions?
Hmmm I guess I'd better go and torrent all my friend's podcasts now before they suddenly become illegal :P |
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When the Nazis came for the communists, I remained silent; I was not a communist. When they locked up the social democrats, I remained silent; I was not a social democrat. When they came for the trade unionists, I did not speak out; I was not a trade unionist. When they came for the Jews, I remained silent; I wasn't a Jew. When they came for me, there was no one left to speak out. Martin Niemöller |
Re: Leaked ACTA Treaty Will Outlaw P2P
wow, i was reading that poem just yesterday in my english class.
What a coinkydink. |
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Since P2P traffic can use varying ports and encryption, I think this would be unenforceable.
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http://64.233.183.104/search?q=cache...ient=firefox-a |
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You know, big things started as small things. |
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I read the "leaked" document. It is only a 4 page outline highlighting the goals of the agreement. Nowhere does it say anything about banning P2P networks or the LEGAL sharing of information, etc. The target of any ban is illegal activity rather than the technologies used to propagate that activity.
Although I am against the erosion of civil liberties, this measure is designed to protect the intellectual property rights of the owners of the works (software, music, videos, etc.) in question. In other words, if you are not stealing other's works, then there is not much that you should be afraid of. I believe that the RIAA did mess up in prosecuting children for downloading music, but the fact remains that the children in question WERE illegally downloading the music. I fully believe that we need to monitor treaties such as these to protect our rights, but we should not be surprised to find out that we do not have the right to steal electronically. |
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For example the Amazon Kindle device lets you buy books in electronic format, but it's a format that can't be used on other similar devices, so it's forcing me to read my e-books on a particular line of products. And if Amazon stop making those products and my Kindle breaks, the books are gone forever. Another annoying thing: I can transfer my CDs to my tablet without any problem at all, but DVDs have a DRM system which prevents easy transfers. There's software which lets you by-pass the DRM, but this may or may not be legal. Pirates have no trouble transferring video files, so why do legal owners like me face restrictions? |
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I re-read the document again, and do not see anything that mentions banning multi-region DVD players....
I understand the frustration you have expressed with DRM preventing law-abiding citizens from using the media that they have licensed--I agree with you that you should be able to use what you have licensed on any device you have. I think that the solution here is that the market will hopefully punish those who use DRM (for example, I only buy MP3 files from Amazon now because their MP3s do not have DRM encoding). The problem is that the pirates have messed it up for the honest folks.... |
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You aren't stealing anything when you copy copyrighted material or violate a patent. In fact intellectual property owners are the ones doing the really wrong, albeit legally permitted thing, thing by preventing anybody else to use as they like what they think it's their, stifling innovation in the case of patents or creativity and maximum diffusion of ideas in the case of copyrighted works. They are the one causing real economical and social damage, so it's their activity that should be made illegal. |
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It's illegal because there's a law against it; IP is not a legal term, it's a term for constructing laws, and persuading people they're good laws.
It's easy to lump all IP issues together, as indeed many people on both sides do; it's not really very helpful, though, when current law is very different for patents, copyrights, trademarks, and trade secrets. While I am generally rather away from the IP side of things (WRT patents and copyrights, at least), it's crucial to make clear arguments on each issue, or you won't be as persuasive as you could be. It's clear you understand both the distinctions I mentioned above, but it seems you're not separating them in your argument effectively; as I'm an ally (though not a friend) in this fight, I wish you'd do better. ;) My arguments: Patents are wrong, because an arbitrary restriction placed on me by the government forbidding me to make and sell something is an infringement of my property rights; I am not harming anyone else's property, and the only valid government intervention is to prevent infringement on another's property. (For the purpose patents serve, namely to allow the inventor a profit, trade secrets work out nicely; inventors can shift to those for protection, so I'm not advocating such a radical shakeup as it might at first appear, but this really doesn't matter...)Cue replies stating that your post had them persuaded, but they ran away screaming when they saw mine... |
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I'm sorry Benson and luca, but none of what you say holds water.
I agree that the patent and copyright systems need serious reform (copyright terms are now FAR too long for example). But to argue patents and copyright should be abolished altogether is like arguing that governments shouldn't collect taxes because it infringes on your civil liberties. First of all patents. Trade secrets are NOT a viable alternative to patents, because the profits from patents ultimately come from sales of a product. If you sell a product, it's by definition available to the public and can be freely analysed and cloned by rival manufacturers. Once a product is available, the only thing keeping profits going to the inventor or licensee is a patent. Of course some people sell their developments as trade secrets to another company under licence, so they never need to manufacture it themselves. But if you take away patents, then licences become worthless, and if licences are worthless then researchers have no way of making any money from their inventions. Even if researchers wanted to do research for its own sake, where will the money come from? Who will pay the researchers' rent and food? Who will buy the equipment? Who will buy the materials? Secondly, copyright. All of the above applies to copyright too, as soon as you put a book (or whatever) on sale it can be cloned by rival publishers. That means no one has any incentive to pay the content creator anything: bookshops don't, publishers don't, readers don't. Again, some content creators could work for free, and some do, but a lot of content requires profits in order for it to exist at all. I know someone who spent three years researching and writing a book as a full time job, and there's no way that book could have existed if the author wasn't getting paid for it, and the publisher only paid them because they knew there would be a good chance of profits at the end of it. It's annoying, but profits are what make many things possible. Take them away and there's simply no one willing to fund a lot of projects. The alternative, of everything being funded through taxes, works for some things but not everything, and a completely centralised government generally works very badly. |
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Take a look at this essay Patents and Copyrights: do the benefits exceed the cost? (warning: it's a pdf). Note that I cannot say that I agree with all the theories on that site (in fact I'd say I disagree with most of them), but I judge the essay by its content, not based on where it's from. And you certainly cannot say they're proposing to fund everything through taxes or that everything should be state controlled ;) |
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Note that I didn't say there would be no change; merely that it doesn't take away all protections. It only removes the unjust (and incidentally, economically harmful) protections. Quote:
So, since they come out better off for a while, and no worse after that, they'd fund research. In fact, there would be increased incentive for innovation, since you have to make an improvement every year to beat your old product (cloned by others) as well as the competition; there's no possibility of stagnation while there are innovations to be made. Quote:
Well, I suppose, if one works on the presumption that they can copy it instantly, or at least within 24 hours... You know, it costs money to scan and print a book, too; not quite as much as getting a manuscript from an author and printing the book, but it's not free. And you don't know which book is gonna be a big seller until after sales have already peaked, in most cases. So it's not such a profitable proposition as you might think. And there's still licenses; require buyers to sign an agreement if you like, and sue those who reprint. Quote:
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What's annoying is argument on the basis that someone, somewhere (or a lot of people, a lot of places) will be worse off if we stop them from forcibly restricting the actions of others with their own property... It's no surprise people will be worse off if we change things; we could argue in favor of slavery, because slaveholders would have been better off without abolition. (In fact, I assume you actually would claim that some (appropriately weighted) summation of all people is better off; you've made no effort to establish such a metric, though, and the weighting function is subject to no end of debate; with an appropriately selected weighting scheme, slavery would still be arguable as an overall good, even though it stomps on some people's rights.) Quote:
But I'm not advocating funding through taxes; that's a false dichotomy. As I've pointed out, profits would continue to motivate things; and without the use of force to prevent certain production, it's rather likely that greater economic efficiency would be obtained as a result. You've said that my arguments don't hold water; that idiom means that they have "holes" or logic flaws in them; yet you fail to point out anything about them, and instead pursue an explanation of what the consequences are. I can only interpret this as an implicit rejection of my premises regarding property rights, and a very vague implicitaion that your premises are related to the best outcome. While disagreements on principles of government are (to say the least) difficult to resolve objectively, I think it's clear that mine may be applied more reliably; in general, principles of government regarding valid actions and restrictions are superior to principles regarding outcomes, because they don't suffer from the law of unintended consequences with every application. Quite frankly, I don't think it's worthwhile to have a policy discussion on the basis of outcomes; the socialist will say that if we abolish property, everything will be great, the anarchist will say if we abolish government, everything will be great, and so on. (The cynic may say that if we abolish political discussion, everything will be great.) While studying history is instructive in choosing a set of direct principles (by comparing outcomes of governments established close to those principles), it's not at all helpful for actual policy discussion. |
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