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#61 |
Grand Sorcerer
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#62 |
Wizard
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The real question is --- why is it good for society when a book enters public domain? A book that can be sold creates jobs at publishers and retailers. A PD book creates no value. And those who can't afford to buy it can always go to the library.
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#63 |
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As a counter argument, Hans, I'd suggest that there are far more people making money from producing and selling different editions of Dickens's work now than there were when the book protected by copyright. So, does society benefit from the fact that Charles Dickens's work is in the public domain? Yes, I think it does.
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#64 | |
monkey on the fringe
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#65 |
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#66 | |
Cloud Reader
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And to defend my claim that money is intangible while it is potentially tied to tangibility: if money is not spent, that is, tied to tangible goods, it is unnecessary (with certain exceptions that do not violate the rule). |
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#67 | |
Wizard
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#68 |
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#69 | |
Grand Sorcerer
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Why are copyrights so special? |
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#70 | |
Grand Sorcerer
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#71 |
Grand Sorcerer
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#72 | |
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#73 | |
Grand Sorcerer
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And I won't buy a comparison between a company and a book. Any company is a tool to generate produce to generate money. A book is not the tool, it's the produce. |
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#74 | |
Grand Sorcerer
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At death I can pass on my worldly goods, based upon what I earned. I can defer payment of money, lots of things. But I can't earn new money. The assets I pass on may earn income, but they do that irrrespective of my corporeal status. (Or who owns them.) Only copyright holders keep earning from their labor after death. Nobody else. I don't see the philosophical reason for them to be treated differently. |
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#75 |
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Sure they can. If you're in a company pension scheme, that pension will (generally speaking) continue to pay money to your wife after you die. Royalty payments are a writer's pension fund.
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