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by rmrfstar
2231 days ago
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I like your hypothetical, but I'm going to change it a little. Let's say Amazon records its warehouse workers and captures data which it can use to train industrial robots at some future date. Those industrial robots have $X of economic value. Who created that value? Did the workers whose data enabled it? Did the DARPA/NSF funded university system who pushed the techniques to the point of being production-ready? Or was all the value created by the Amazon engineer who blended the established modelling techniques and the data? It's an honest question about the source of value creation and whether inputs are being priced reasonably, efficiently, or fairly. |
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Public DARPA knowledge is presumably available to every American citizen (or at least it ought to be, since they presumable paid for it). So is employee behavior.
In general, I'm not sure you should be paid for simply having knowledge. You must apply it. Patents represent a recapture of the process for producing knowledge (however poorly one may argue they do it), but those come with an expiration date too.
That is to say, all knowledge eventually loses its price, and some never had any to begin with.