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Old 03-21-2016, 01:45 AM   #1
darryl
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Join Date: Nov 2011
Location: Australia
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Evils of Copyright and Intellectual Property in General

The intellectual property laws of all of the major developed nations is irretrievably broken. Whilst intellectual property laws are desirable and even necessary they have become a travesty. With few exceptions, they no longer serve the public policy aims which purport to justify their existence. In fact, in many cases, they now do outright harm.

One of the areas where this is most apparent is the area of scientific publishing which has become news with the suit by Elsevier seeking to shutdown the pirate science paper website. Thanks to Nate for his blog's link to an article on Techdirt which can be found at (https://www.techdirt.com/articles/20...assively.shtml)


Our dysfunctional intellectual property system has in turn lead to the development of a similarly dysfunctional system of academic publishing which leeches money from the education system, exploits authors and places severe restrictions on access to academic papers. The pirate website has arisen as a result of this, and is undeniably in breach of copyright laws on a massive scale. To use the language adopted by some, they are "pirates" "stealing" academic papers. I'll resist the Robin Hood analogy, because I have no idea what if anything the site's operators in fact gain, though they seem to be making these papers available for free to all who seek them. It is ironic that the breaking of the Copyright law in this instance seems to in the public interest where the law itself operates against it. In this case I suggest to you that the moral high ground (though not the legal) belongs to Long John Silver. These laws badly need review free of the lobbying of those who benefit from them, generally huge companies with huge lobbying budgets. We need laws that are truly in the Public Interest badly. And yesterday. But I'm not holding my breath.

Last edited by WT Sharpe; 03-21-2016 at 02:54 PM. Reason: Remove name of pirate site.
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