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by zeroname 2817 days ago
> Allow me to rephrase: that disproves your statement, "nobody would invest millions into figuring out the right arrangement of atoms that cures some disease, if there wasn't a way to profit from that."

You really want to play that dumb semantic game? Fine, I'll play: I didn't specify financial profit. When publicly funded research leads to the cure for a disease, then the public profits.

> Everything else is noise.

No it isn't, "everything else" is the whole damn point that you fail to address.

1 comments

If calling false statements false is a "semantics game," then yes I'm happy to play.

>Fine, I'll play: I didn't specify financial profit. When publicly funded research leads to the cure for a disease, then the public profits.

Your attempt to walk back isn't credible. Your immediately previous sentence that this backs up was "IP laws also support innovation." Tautologically, if your goal is public benefit then it belongs in the public domain, with no need for IP protection.

_Unless_ your purported goal of "public benefit" is just private enrichment in disguise: corporate R&D subsidies, wherein publicly-developed tech is handed over to private companies for "commercialization" (typically by licensing it 'for a song' compared to the taxpayer's risky R&D expenditure, with private companies cherry-picking 'winner' technologies to license while the public picks up the tab for the many inevitable losers that come from anything risky). This is very common, of course.

If your true goal is public profit then no IP is needed. Only if your goal is private profit (handing over an exclusive license to one's buddies) does IP come into play.

> Your attempt to walk back isn't credible.

I'm not walking back on anything, you claim you "disproved" my statement as false, I "proved" it to not be false, even if one wanted to play a stupid semantic game. I'd prefer we didn't play that game in the first place.

> Your immediately previous sentence that this sentence back up was "IP laws also support innovation." Tautologically, if your goal is public benefit then it belongs in the public domain, with no need for IP protection.

Of course my goal isn't "public benefit". Like I originally said, the point behind the statement is maintaining private investment. But my statement, as written, isn't wrong as you tried to show. My intention is entirely orthogonal to the statement being false, you're raising a false dichotomy. You failed at your nitpicking, that's all. Did I even think about all that when writing the sentence? Of course not, I didn't expect to end up debating someone who would resort to such primitive tactics.

You've weaseled away from the issue since the beginning, namely that private investments far exceed public investments and that without a way to protect that investment (i.e. through intellectual property), that money would disappear. If you want to argue that everything would be surely better if the government researched, developed and marketed novel drugs, then do that. Make a good case for it. Don't go about nitpicking casually written sentences, it's intellectually embarrassing. It just shows you're a waste of time to talk to.

>private investments far exceed public investments

Nope, sorry. Public investment just fell below 50%... for the first time since WWII. https://www.sciencemag.org/news/2017/03/data-check-us-govern...

>It just shows you're a waste of time to talk to.

haha, you're a peach.

Attack the messenger to your heart's content. Game, set, match.