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#241 | ||||
King of the Bongo Drums
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[QUOTE=Sil_liS;1936659]
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Copyright is a limited right granted by the people to creators, and "fair use" is the reservation of rights by the people. Quote:
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"Fair use" is simply NOT an infringement of copyright, and anyone who refers to it as a privilege is speaking loosely and incorrectly. Last edited by Harmon; 01-25-2012 at 06:35 PM. |
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#242 | |||
Guru
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The fact is there is a very large percentage of the population that does favor perpetual copyright(such as tubemonkey on this forum, who is hardly a wacko), as there is also a very large percentage of the population that favors the abolition of copyright (such as giggleton and other posters on this forum). The CTEA Act of 1998 was named after Sonny Bonno, who was an ardent believer in perpetual copyright. Much of the testimony given in support of the CTEA were from people who support perpetual copyright. Their have been numerous articles published in mainstream magazines and newspapers arguing for perpetual copyright. Repeatedly on this forum copyright supporters have echoed the same sentiment: "Copyright is property, so why should the government have the right to come in and take away that property from my heirs after 70 years." So really, the "copyright should be perpetual" position is not extreme; if you believe that copyright is property, then why shouldn't you believe ownership should be perpetual? Now, you can believe that there are other interests at stake which puts limits on copyright that aren't put on other forms of property, but by no means is supporting perpetual copyright an extreme position if you believe copyright is property; indeed, it is the most intellectually coherent position. Consider this from the New York Times, hardly a purveyor of radical ideas: http://www.nytimes.com/2007/05/20/op...pagewanted=all Quote:
Likewise, if you believe copyright puts unneccessary and unproductive restrictions on people's liberty (the right to reproduce something you possess), or that copyright is not property, or that it is immoral to try to make something that is not scarce scarce, or that "freedom of information" trumps other concerns, or that copyright is a relic of the 18th century, or that there are more effective and efficient means of compensating artists in the digital age, or that copyright laws turn the vast majority of the population into criminals and the costs of enforcing copyright are greater than the returns to society, that the enforcement costs of copyright in the digital age would entail severe abridgement of arguablly more important rights, or that creative expression is such a fundamental part of human society that it needs no government enforced monopolies to be supported, or that humans are ingenious enough to figure out ways to make profits off their creative works in the absence of government protection, then it is by no means extreme to support abolition of copyright. If you are a believer in Free markets, then you might point out that the purpose of markets is to allocate scarce resources efficiently, and that copyrights, which are government enforced monopolies, create inefficient allocations of capitals. Both represent coherent philisophical positions on the nature of copyright, and both sentiments have been expressed by a number of posters on this forum, not all of whom are crazy. Quote:
In the examples given on this poll, there is clearly a position that one or the other would be the most beneficial for society. Those that argue for perpetual copyright do so because they believe it is a form of property that should be respected the same as any other form of property. In the latter position, people might argue that copyright is obsolete, and therefore society is worse off for continuing to enforce it at all. Additionally, you both seem to be assuming that the extreme position is always wrong, or that the moderate position is always right, which is a form of extremism itself. I think it was Thomas Sowell who said: "An extremist says let's burn everything down now. A moderate says let's burn everything down over a period of five years." Okay, that quote illustrates something a little different from what I was trying to say, but I thought it was amusing. ![]() Last edited by spellbanisher; 01-23-2012 at 04:08 PM. |
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#243 |
Grand Sorcerer
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How is that, exactly? I see copyrights as a government-enforced guarantee of fairness to the creator. Without said fairness, many creators would not bother to create, and you'd have no product. I suppose if you believe that it would be more efficient for a consumer to not spend money on anything, eliminating copyright (and therefore products) would be a more efficient allocation of capital...
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#244 |
Banned
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Copyright can be whatever you want it to be. It is extremely hard for anyone to know what would happen to creation if our creations were not "protected".
I would agree that our market is extremely inefficient and therefore due to be replaced by something more efficient eventually. I also think that this will coincide with the release of internet 2.0 |
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#245 | |
Wizard
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#246 |
eBook Enthusiast
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Can you explain? I'm afraid I don't understand your last post.
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#247 |
Grand Sorcerer
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I suspect he means that, without copyright, there would be no incentive to produce vacuous, ghost-written wastes of wood pulp by reality show train-wrecks, like the one above.
I could be wrong. |
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#248 |
Wizard
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#249 |
eBook Enthusiast
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One only has to look at some of the dreck on "Smashwords" to realise that there are people (I am reluctant to use the word "authors") out there who will inflict this kind of stuff upon the world even if there's no financial reward from doing so.
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#250 | |
Grand Sorcerer
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Sure, there will be people who write "just to write"... but people like that are not the target for copyright laws anyway, any more than a pedestrian is the target of seat belt laws. |
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#251 | |
Feral Underclass
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Do I want to know who Snooki is? |
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#252 | |
eBook Enthusiast
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#253 |
Grand Sorcerer
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#254 | |
Grand Sorcerer
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To give the devil AKA your POV it's due, I am going to link to the best presentation of the let's-excuse-piracy POV that I have found: File Sharing and Copyright Do I agree? No, but it certainly is a serious position difficult to refute. |
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#255 | |
Feral Underclass
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Quote:
http://www.oocities.org/galwaycyclis...seatbelts.html |
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