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2008-06-10
, 18:12
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Posts: 4,930 |
Thanked: 2,272 times |
Joined on Oct 2007
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#22
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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...
Copyright is even more clearly wrong, because it prevents the exercise of my own rights with pen and ink, without so much as involving a transaction with another person; it's transparently clear that I cannot be harming another's property, yet the government seeks to impose a restriction on it. (Again, for things worth protecting, protection is available; you can require people to sign a NDA before you give them your book, and then that is binding, preventing copying contrary to the terms of the NDA.)
I don't think economic and social damage have a thing to do with the laws that should be made; it's all about property rights and voluntary contracts. Moreover, what activity of theirs should be made illegal? Filing for the application of government force in their favor that is provided for by law? If you just shut (for example) the USPTO down, I don't think making the sending of patent filings to their old address a crime is necessary or useful... (This last paragraph, of course, is the place where I differ, making us mere allies...)
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2008-06-10
, 19:02
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Posts: 1,540 |
Thanked: 1,045 times |
Joined on Feb 2007
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#23
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2008-06-10
, 22:32
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Posts: 1,137 |
Thanked: 402 times |
Joined on Sep 2007
@ Catalunya
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#24
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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.
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2008-06-10
, 22:43
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Posts: 1,137 |
Thanked: 402 times |
Joined on Sep 2007
@ Catalunya
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#25
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2008-06-11
, 00:17
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Posts: 4,930 |
Thanked: 2,272 times |
Joined on Oct 2007
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#26
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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.
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.