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#166 |
Wizard
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#167 |
eBook Enthusiast
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OK, let me rephrase the question: can you give an example of a case where someone has been deemed to be in violation of copyright law by displaying a photograph showing a page of a book on a reading device? What makes you believe that it is a violation of copyright?
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#168 | |
King of the Bongo Drums
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Creators will still be able to profit if copyright is abolished. How much is open to question. In answering that question, you can assume a "static economy" or a "dynamic economy." If you assume a static economy - i.e., nobody does anything differently - then undoubtedly profits will be reduced for some and eliminated for others. If you assume a dynamic economy - aka "reality," - then profits will be reduced for some, eliminated for others, and increased for some. It's just that we don't immediately see how profits will be increased. But there is some glimmer of what will happen. In the music industry, for example, what seems to be happening among the kids who make very little by way of profit from sale of recorded music is that they make money selling "merch." (Which spellcheck wants me to correct to "mercy," perhaps not without reason...) Things being what they are in a capitalist economy, it's unlikely that copyright law will be abolished. It could be replaced, though, at least in theory, by a more consumer friendly law. But as you point out, there are the big corporations to be contended with, and they want more of the same. Since to a very large extent they have our "elected representatives" in their back pockets, they will get a lot of what they want - a distorted version of copyright that only accidentally protects the smaller artists. |
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#169 |
C L J
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Life+50 is fine provided SOPA doesn't pass. Donning an eyepatch and sticking a parrot on one shoulder never really harmed any author.
Maybe I should read the whole thread :-) |
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#170 | |||
Guru
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![]() Speaking of merchandise, I have a little cousin that just turned 3. For Christmas, he received nothing but Thomas the Engine themed stuff, from pajamas to books to toy tools. Ditto for his birthday a week ago. He probably got several hundred dollars worth of Thomas the Engine merchandise. In general, the entertainment industry makes more from merch than content sales. From The Economist Quote:
http://www.cracked.com/article_19012...s-suck_p2.html Quote:
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#171 |
Evangelist
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True, but it's not a very stable market--it's not something one would want to be making a living off. All that's needed for this market to be killed entirely is for Amazon to decide, in the interests of making the Kindle more popular, to write a better quality conversion script and convert all of PG en masse with it, for free.
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#172 | |
Grand Sorcerer
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As for the corporations, they have profit to pursue--nothing surprising in that--and they'll have to deal with the reactions of authors and consumers who question the worth of their efforts. Sure, authors sold works before copyright. And when it became easy to duplicate and redistribute someone's work without their permission, thanks to the printing press and other technologies, copyright was devised to restore fairness to the system and make it worth a creator's time and effort to create. No, it hasn't completely deterred theft, and some are cheated out of their profits now (mostly by those who ignore copyright laws). But all of these reasons are not sufficient to abolish copyright; they are good reasons to fix it and enforce it better. |
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#173 | |
Grand Sorcerer
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The internet situation is very different: There are no subsidies for content creators, and there are no tools in place to keep people away from content they want (at least, nothing that works well). If content like ebooks had a guaranteed source of profit, like ad subsidies, govt subsidies, or ways to keep freeloaders from accessing content without paying, copyright would quite possibly not be needed at all. Since ebooks and other digital content don't have these things, we need copyright laws to provide them. |
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#174 | |
Feral Underclass
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In the UK, writers get a few pence each time a book is borrowed from the library. We also had something called the Arts Council that would give people a grant to live on while they created something. Either, or both of those applied to independent creators of digital content would be a lot cheaper than continuing the "war" on piracy that will never be won. It could also be funded through lottery money (aka the gullibility tax), instead of that money going to wealthy organisations that don't really need it. |
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#175 | |
Junior Member
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#176 |
Grand Sorcerer
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Copyright laws have stopped incidents of copyright infringement. They are not perfect, nor have they caught everyone; but that's a fault of enforcement, not of the laws themselves. Again, lack of perfection is not a valid reason to junk a law; it's a reason to fix the law and better enforce it.
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#177 | |||||
Guru
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In the current economic malaise the savings rate has risen while wages have either declined or stagnated. Since most Americans are desiring to save more (despite falling wages) to pay down debt, their propensity to spend on luxuries, such as entertainment, is very low. However, the amount spent on entertainment is a very small percentage of GDP (something like 1-2%), so even a small change in the spending habits of the population could have a significant impact on the entertainment industry. Suppose, for instance, that revenues for the entertainment industry are 1% (150 billion dollars) of GDP. If American's increased the amount of money they spent on entertainment by half a percent, that would increase revenues by 75 billion dollars, equaling a 50% increase for the entertainment industry. Would that justify stricter enforcement of copyright (or an extension of it, which is more relevant to this thread)? First, I think your characterization of copying as theft is wrong; reproducing something is not the same as taking something. Even so, congress (and the government in general) must always act to balance competing interests. Even if you were to suppose that copyright infringement is theft, that does not necessarily follow that it must be enforced at all costs. You would not, for instance, try to prevent shoplifting by putting a police officer in every store. The costs of that enforcement would greatly exceed any benefits from it. I think Doctorow puts it well: "why are we prepared to sacrifice free speech, free assembly, privacy, and human rights for an industry that outperforms the US economy overall, nets more foreign profits than the pharmaceutical industry or the food sector, and is enjoying year-on-year growth?" As for your contention that copyright infringement hurts small-time artists--that is unlikely as well. I am not saying that no small-time artist has been hurt, but it is unlikely that in general small-time artists are hurt by infringement. The entertainment industry is notoriously top-heavy--much less than 1% of all creative work is commercially viable, and only a small percent of that is very profitable. It is that 1% of creative works that would mostly be affected by infringement, and even if in ideality there would be no copyright infringement even for the massively profitable works, that still doesn't mean that congress should act aggressively to ensure that Avatar has 1.7 billion dollars in revenues instead of 1.5 billion. Additionally, the works of small-time or relatively obscure artists tend to have very high price elasticities; this means that even a very small change in price would dramatically decrease demand. Thus, it is very unlikely that many copyright infringers would purchase the works of obscure artists at the price they are willing to sell their works if you were to more strictly enforce copyright. I'm not trying to rationalize illegal downloading, I'm just pointing out that it is unlikely that obscure artists would be even marginally better off if copyright was more strictly enforced. The entertainment industry has very large profit margins, about 23%. Increasing the profit margins for the entertainment industry will not benefit the overall economy. Considering that those profit margins represent rent, an extra billion dollars spent on the entertainment industry will not create nearly as many jobs as an extra billion dollars spent in the rest of the economy; when discussing the lost profits of the entertainment industry we never consider the interests of people who would have jobs but don't because of the inefficiencies caused by the massive amounts of rent-seeking due to copyright laws. http://www.ey.com/US/en/Newsroom/New...-entertainment Lobbyists in the entertainment industry often point out that infringement costs jobs. This is assuming that a dollar not spent on entertainment is a dollar stuffed in a mattress and not spent or invested. From societies perspective, all that matters is whether a dollar spent on entertainment creates more economic value than a dollar spent elsewhere, and in general, the answer is that it does not. Indeed, it is much worse, because increased profits for the entertainment enables them to spend more on lobbying and campaign donations, distorting the democratic process. This goes back to the original copyright regimes, whether that is the Copyright Act of 1790 or the Statute of Anne in 1706 which the Copyright Act was modelled after;the purpose of the government protection and granted monopoly called copyright (enforced using societies resources) is to "To promote the Progress of Science and useful Arts," or in the words of the Statute of Anne, "for the Encouragement of Learning." Somehow this has been morphed into a belief that copyright supersedes all other rights and must be enforced at all costs. The question that should concern congress is not how to best enforce copyright, but whether or not the copyright regime (or copyright in general) is the best way to "Promote the progress of Science and useful Arts." Quote:
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I have read a few proposals for funding content producers without copyright. One is Artistic Freedom Vouchers, proposed by Dean Baker. http://www.cepr.net/documents/public...ip_2003_11.pdf Quote:
Last edited by spellbanisher; 01-20-2012 at 01:37 PM. |
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#178 | ||||
Wizard
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From here: Quote:
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#179 | ||
King of the Bongo Drums
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If you raise it timely, it must be addressed by your opponent, or you win (assuming that you can prove the facts underlying the defense, or if your opponent fails to deny the facts you allege). And at no point does a judge have the discretion to refuse to consider a timely raised affirmative defense that is properly pled. That would be reversable error. |
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#180 |
King of the Bongo Drums
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There's an awfully good thread on copyright here:
http://ricochet.com/main-feed/James-...s-not-stealing |
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