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#271 | |
cacoethes scribendi
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![]() The problem with trying to mimic a $1000 bottle of wine is that it is self defeating. Typically a significant proportion of the price of a $1000 bottle of wine comes from its rarity value. If it is no longer rare the price will drop and your $20 wine will be a mimic of a $20 bottle of wine. And yes, being cheap to reproduce is a real and relevant difference between IP and most other sorts of property (tangible and non-tangible) - for now, anyway. IP can be consumed without being used up. In theory this lack of scarcity should prevent it from being treated as a property, but in practice it hasn't turned out that way - or not so far. It's rather circular, but I think IP is able to be treated as a property because it has been treated as property. Originally this was partly supported by the fact that reproduction of IP met with scarce resources (paper and time etc.), but having established itself as property IP is not moving over just because we found cheaper ways to reproduce it. |
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#272 | |
Wizard
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I address the argument that "IP is the same as PP and should be treated the same" by trying to show how IP and PP are actually quite different and therefore it would be unworkable to treat them the same. You respond repeatedly suggesting and implying (if not specifically stating) that I am wrong and being extreme. Now it seems you actually agree they should be treated differently but you just don't like my arguments trying to explain how they are actually different. Holy F***ing cow this has been an entire waste of time! Why didn't you simply state "does it really matter if they are the same? There are useful reasons to treat them differently." To which I would have replied "totally agree with you, I was just trying to show they are not the same and it is non-nonsensical to treat them the same because of that." And for the record, perhaps one of those genuinely useful reasons for treating them differently is because treating them the same would cause complications and result in an unworkable and not very positive outcome for all concerned! Which I have stated numerous times. |
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#273 |
Karma Kameleon
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Let it be noted - all property rights are a social construct. And across societies and time have been treated quite differently.
The qualities of IP are no more or less intrinsic than any other type of property. |
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#274 | ||
Wizard
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IP = Intellectual Property PP =Physical property. Yes both are property. The argument was that IP (Intellectual property) rights should be treated the same as PP (Physical property) rights. To quote... Quote:
To address that argument it is necessary to address whether Intellectual property is the same as Physical property. Let's go with that shall we...... Disregarding "copyright", which is an added set of laws pertaining to what can and can not be done with IP, lets look at Physical Property law. The law states I can not steal your house from you. You have the physical property right to own that house, pass it down to whoever you like, etc. However, the law has nothing to say about copying your physical property and I can do so to my hearts content. I can exactly duplicate your house and make it my own. I can build multiple exact copies and sell them to anyone I like. The only thing stopping me is "copyright" law. Nothing in physical property rights law prevents me from doing the above. So lets treat intellectual property the same as physical property. Lets do away with copyright law and put it all under physical property law. Now I can not steal the intellectual property that makes up the Harry Potter books from JK Rowling, and she can pass that down to whomever she likes but I can legally copy the Harry Potter books and sell as many copies as I like. Are we all happy? Last edited by PKFFW; 10-28-2019 at 02:33 AM. |
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#275 | |
Wizard
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And as social constructs they can be made any way society wants. The same, different, whatever. So I'd still be interested in any rational argument that supports treating intellectual property rights the same as physical property rights. That argument should address why they should be treated the same when IP is clearly different to PP. That argument should also state whether the person presenting that argument supports the right of anyone to copy intellectual property just as they are allowed to copy physical property. If not, then that argument should also address why not. Last edited by PKFFW; 10-28-2019 at 02:33 AM. |
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#276 |
cacoethes scribendi
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I don't get where your sense of surprise is coming from. Two days ago I said and you acknowledged:
I don't actually agree that it is minutia. If you use the wrong reasons for deciding that IP should be treated differently then there is a good chance any solution offered will be inappropriate ... which I suppose means you might still be right about part of it: if you try and build a solution based on those incorrect assumptions it probably will be unworkable. Last edited by gmw; 10-28-2019 at 01:55 AM. Reason: whoopsies |
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#277 | |
Wizard
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For example GRRM. He writes his first book when he is young, and it takes him literally decades until he finishes the series. You cannot have the first book expiring before the last is even written. It should receive the same life+whatever copyright. The whatever will depend on where in the world you are looking if you want different terms in different countries. |
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#278 | |
Wizard
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I am surprised you would spend so much time implying and suggesting that I am wrong and being extreme when you don't actually believe that to be the case. I am surprised you would seemingly wish to waste both your time and my own arguing back and forth about something which it now appears you agree with totally but simply for different reasons. I'm surprised you wouldn't simply start by stating "I agree they are different but don't think it matters. I agree they should be treated differently but for different reasons to you and here are those reasons...." END EDIT. Firstly, I suggest you refer to my most recent posts if you are interested. I believe I was responding to a different argument than what you think. Ergo, your responses about why I am wrong and extreme are not relevant because they do not relate to what I was actually addressing and discussing. However, if you are still interested and have a clear understanding of the argument I was actually addressing and if you wish to do so, Please list any incorrect assumptions I made. IP is actually different to PP. That's not an assumption, that is fact. Therefore, IP rights should not be treated the same as PP rights. That is not an assumption it is an assertion. So, if you are interested, enlighten me as to which assumptions I even actually made in my argument and, if I actually made any, why they are wrong. Last edited by PKFFW; 10-28-2019 at 02:29 AM. |
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#279 | |
cacoethes scribendi
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As for "Neither of which points you made", I offer the following examples (enclosed in spoiler tags so others don't have to suffer the repetition)... Spoiler:
All those were taken from before the offending post. I think we should call it quits. We seem to be going backwards rather than forwards. |
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#280 | ||||||
Wizard
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Sorry for not using spoilers for the rest, I could not work out how to separate each of your comments, reply to them and wrap it all in spoilers. Quote:
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So, I take it back, you did make it clear you agree IP and PP should be treated differently. The rest I stand by. Could have all been avoided had you concentrated on making your point rather than trying to tell me why I was wrong and my arguments are irrelevant. I would agree my arguments and analogies would be a distraction and would be irrelevant if no one had actually made the argument that IP rights and PP rights should be treated the same. You see, to address that argument it is actually quite relevant to firstly determine if IP and PP are actually the same. If IP and PP are the same then it makes eminent sense to treat them the same. It only makes sense to treat IP and PP differently if they are in fact different things. You jumped in and decided I was wrong, and my arguments a distraction and irrelevant and it was vitally important you informed me why that is so because you had no idea what I was actually responding to and discussing. Quote:
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#281 |
cacoethes scribendi
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It's easy to miss or lose track when both posters are as verbose as we can be. Such is life. I keep promising myself I'm not going to get involved in another one of these discussions, but I never seem to learn.
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#282 |
Wizard
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#283 | |
Grand Sorcerer
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Government granted monopolies have been around for a long, long time as well. They have never been treated as property because, what the crown can grant, the crown can take away. The most famous monopoly was the British East India Company which was chartered by Queen Elizabeth in 1600 and lasted until 1874. It's monopoly was removed in 1858 following the Indian rebellion of 1857. So, it lasted about as long as a modern copyright! ![]() |
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#284 | |
Karma Kameleon
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There are differences between PP and IP of course. Else we wouldn’t have two different terms. But the “property” part is the same and thus I see no reason, for fiction, that there is a time limit to ownership. It’s an opinion, not an interpretation of any given actual law. I limit this continuation of ownership to those active economic IP. Abandoned fiction should fall into the public domain. Ongoing economic properties should remain with the rights holder. The public has no more claim on Mickey Mouse than they do over somebodies family farm that’s been handed down for generations. This is different than patents because there is only so many ways to make Aspirin. Giving a time limited patent after which point all of society gets to benefit allows progress. I see no such valid time limitation for fiction. There are endless ways to create a story. |
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#285 | ||
cacoethes scribendi
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Of course, you are right that those types of rights are underwritten by tangible things, but once you introduce rights in place of the real thing thing you begin to introduce interesting complications. eg: if everyone wants their irrigation water at the same time (which is quite common) then you run into capacity issues. This sort of thing gets people playing fast and loose with timing and other details and we end up with something akin to Pratchett's "pork futures" (well, not really, but hopefully you get what I mean). I see those early rights not as the same thing as IP rights, but as a necessary lead up to the possibilities of intangibles. |
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