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by kingsuper20
1816 days ago
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>Copyright doesn't just benefit huge corporations. For instance, without it, independent artists who rely on copying for distribution (authors, musicians, etc.) would find it much more difficult to make money off their work, That doesn't look like it's the point to me. ""[the United States Congress shall have power] To promote the Progress of Science and useful Arts, by securing for limited Times to Authors and Inventors the exclusive Right , to their respective Writings and Discoveries." " As I read that, copyright is there to 'promote progress', not to maximize gains. No doubt there is a million linear feet of case law that got us where we are. Honestly, I rather like this whole question of copilot. I solidly appreciate the brilliance of github as a honeypot. |
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What better way to promote said Progress than by making sure said Authors and Inventors can make enough money off their work to keep doing it? As written, it's a roundabout way to get at the instrumentality of capital, but if that's not what they had in mind then I'm not sure what they were getting at. Without copyright, a creator's rights to their own work aren't diminished; it's just that everyone else's are expanded to the same level.
(I'd love to know if I'm way off base about this. I'm not a lawyer, and I'm sure it's been discussed to death.)
> Honestly, I rather like this whole question of copilot. I solidly appreciate the brilliance of github as a honeypot.
I think it's really cool, and I'd probably use it myself. As much as my favorite kinds of programming (e.g. writing experimental text editors) might not benefit from it, in my day job I sure would love to spend less time filling in boilerplate and looking up mundane API details.
I don't mean to single Github out in my mention of big corporations benefiting from copyright law. Scraping vast quantities of copyrighted data to build new products is a common business model at this point, and--like other new IP-related paradigms enabled by modern information technology--I think it deserves a fresh look, being mindful of just what it is we're trying to accomplish with copyright law. As you say, it's not always obvious, even in written law.