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#106 | |
The Dank Side of the Moon
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What the guys up there are saying is that it is NEVER yours it belongs to society. That's why I made the analogy. You can either believe in private property (including ideas/copyright/patents) or not. There is really no difference in the way the concepts should work. |
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#107 | |
Paladin of Eris
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Second, slippery slope fallacy. To deny that an idea can be personal property does not deny the existence of personal property. You cannot own the moon or the sun, you cannot own the space in international waters. You cannot own an idea, both the wheel and the works of Shakespeare belong to the world. Governments who at least nominally work for the people can grant you a temporary monopoly, but they don't have to and thus we get into the question, why should they? So you can make money? Why should the government and my extension the people care if you make money writing books or digging ditches? Of course inventions might be useful, if people make them and don't share then they're useful to one person. If they're released into the wild then many can benefit. We could try watching something work and try to figure out how and maybe be able to make something similar ourselves, that's still advancement or we could try to convince someone to publish the plans or history book or whatever. You still don't see it do you? Publishing gets something out into the wild where it can be useful. No one but you cares if you make a penny. If a patent or copyright doesn't expire then there's no difference between creating or not. And then there's a second problem, the widget is made with things like screws and wheels and I don't see the inventors of those things being paid for them. No one's paying Shakespeare for the words he made up and no one's paying Moses for making any references to the book of Exodus. Well no problem no one really owns those things how could they? In the English speaking world these things come as naturally as breathing they're part of the culture we live in, in a way everyone owns an equal share. No problem, we'll just rent those things out in a non exclusive way and in return we get whatever else comes along to add to the pile that is the culture we live in. When you manage to do something that in no way builds on ANY public domain anything that came before then we can talk about society not having a claim on it. But the price of using our public domain is expanding our public domain. How long you can wait before doing that is a matter for debate. I advocate times much shorter than what the law currently allows. |
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#108 | |
The Dank Side of the Moon
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None of this is possible without the creativity of individuals (like the author of the o.p.) putting the objects out there in the first place. Copyright, Patents, IP, Public Domain, piracy and all the rest only exists because someone created something unique in the first place. Something that is whole and fully a product of their efforts. You have no right to it. You only get to enjoy it at the behest of the creator and due to the laws put in place to encourage and allow those creative people to be able to profit from their efforts. Once you destroy that (which clearly is your intent -- look at your sig) then all bets are off. What needs to happen is that the laws need to change to insure that intellectual property is treated AS PROPERTY and enforced and managed in as near an identical manner as real property as possible. As I have told you numerous times and in numerous threads - stop beating your one dead horse and stick to the topic at hand. |
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#109 | ||
Paladin of Eris
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When are you going to pay the creator for the use of wheels then? Not going to the store, pay for any wheel you add to any item you make yourself. For the roman alphabet. You think these ideas are property. TANSTAAFL pay up. Pay for every idea you use they're owned are they not? In fact pay for the idea of property and of course there's no set license so get permission too. Better get permission from the British to use the idea of copyright at all. it was their idea they own it what right do you have to use it.
Someone is always doing something but they can't do it alone because everything builds on something else. The world doesn't owe you free copyright, no one got togther and decided to build a system around Kenny can build on what came before but after that progress stops because Kenny owns the changes forever. You are not the center of the universe and copyright was not passed to do you a favor. "to promote the progress of science and the useful arts" progress, not production, not profit, the didn't say let's create the profession of inventor or novelist. I'll post this quote again, try reading it, it was penned by someone who had a hand in drafting the language of the US constitution and the copyright clause in particular. Someone who I think would know the reasons behind copyright and patents. Quote:
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Clearly in the above he was completely against the perpetual monopoly you wish to create. We're talking about a man who went so far as to own PEOPLE, not some communist who thinks there's no such thing as property. And don't you dare accuse me of beating a dead horse when all you ever add is snide remarks about how everyone is a thief and how copyright was invented to line your pockets. Just because you want an indefinite monopoly without having to pay for it doesn't mean that's the purpose of copyright. Do you have anything at all to back up your arguments? I mean somethign besides wild claims and insults? Maybe some citations? Do you have James Madison writing somewhere that he never meant the limited time part of the copyright clause? |
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#110 | |
Addict
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The facts are, that patent laws became so generic and invasive, that the progress actually stops in many cases because of them instead of going forward. New screen technologies getting buried because LCD manufacturers are hitting new ideas with lawsuits for the patents, many new video codecs are in danger of becoming extinct because Mpeg-LA threatening them with lawsuits for patents which shouldn't have been awarded to begin with. It is not that dire yet in Copyright world, but it's getting there where consumers have no say in how they can use the books they bought, blog authors cannot comment on many things and fan fiction is moving like a little girl in the dark woods. But I guess nobody can convince you even after the examples with Shakespeare and all Arthurian legend literature mentioned before. Would you really prefer for the estate of Geoffrey of Monmouth, to stop Thomas Malory, Tennyson, Mark Twain etc from publishing their work? Never see Tristan and Isolda? Are you really that oblivious to facts? We had works of genius lasting over millenia created when there was no mention of copyright and still you try to scare us with drying up of creativity if the copyright will be curtailed to something much less invasive? Hard to believe to say the least. |
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#111 | |
Member Retired
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I think this was a pretty dumb move. Regardless of whether there was an "implication" that the work would remain up in its entirety or not (I think there was), this will probably alienate some of the author's core fanbase of potential book buyers. From a more general standpoint, I am sad to see that authors can still be pushed around in such matter and refuse to stand up to publishers. She could have negotiated, or sought a publisher who was more friendly to the idea of electronic online copies, or resorted to lulu self-publishing, or refused to publish at all while maintaining her standing in her community of fans, or done any number of other things.
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Last edited by Jaime_Astorga; 05-25-2010 at 11:08 PM. |
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#112 | |
Banned
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And - There are societies which functioned for centuries - and some which still exist - which did and do not believe in land ownership. They functioned fine, thank you very much. Society would go on without any form of IP rights, and while think they're appropriate to a degree, I don't pretend they're in any way necessary. This is not about "communism" or any of that nonsense, because that still relies on the concept of ownership, just a collective one. Neither have countries which reject - say - software parents (and that's most of them) suffered any particular disaster. Your "need" seems distinctly non-needy. More a particular philosophy which runs counter to a vast swathe of the population's opinion on the matter. I'll be quite happy to burn your philosophy down in flames should you propose them in the public arena here, since all you'd accomplish is to bring down IP as a whole, at best - and a vast and failing police state, at worst. Last edited by DawnFalcon; 05-25-2010 at 11:56 PM. |
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#113 | |
Wizard
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It matters not, it will be on the sharing networks regardless. Why? Because some people just want free stuff. Cheers, PKFFW |
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#114 |
The Dank Side of the Moon
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#115 | |
Wizard
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Last edited by HansTWN; 05-26-2010 at 07:24 AM. |
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#116 |
Guru
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Ah, but nobody suggested that, far as I can see. Also, you artfully dodged the question on "[h]ow precisely [to] enforce scarcity economics on a non-scarce product".
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#117 | |
zeldinha zippy zeldissima
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If you would like to refresh your memory of the guidelines, you can take a look at them at any time by clicking on "Guidelines" at the bottom of any page, or just click here. Thank you for helping us keep the discussion friendly and civilised. |
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#118 | |
Paladin of Eris
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Though I don't personally advocate the elimination of copyright just the shortening of it the sky wouldn't fall and the world wouldn't end. There were after all books music and other art before copyright was invented. |
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#119 | |
Wizard
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1.)A "creators' surcharge on internet access, just as everybody already pays a surcharge on all storage media in Europe (the proceeds are being distributed to the media companies by a government agency). 2.)Ad-supported books. Imagine the joy of having a full page ad on every second page of your ebook! If you have the ipad they will probably have a small video which can't be stopped every few pages, even more effective. When we really sit down and look reality in the face, then some might actually wake up and say "hey, I would rather decide who I support by paying directly". And by paying directly you can actually support those you deem "worthy". Not for the other two models. So, if we just throw up our hands and say "we can't stop the tide", we will sign over everything to Apple, Google, etc. Well, I will learn to live with it, but I will keep speaking up now, while there still is time. Maybe I am just a crazy idealist who stands up for other people's rights. Last edited by HansTWN; 05-26-2010 at 08:06 AM. |
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#120 | |
Wizard
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And, good news! The world won't end either way. |
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