| > Infringing copying on any scale required significant financial investment in the past. No it didn't. More, yes. But 40 years ago you just needed two VCRs and a blank tape. The only thing preventing mass reproduction was copyright law. And pre-copyright this is also what happened. Because it was just not that hard. Even 500 years ago. > I'm guessing most infringement is today is casual-- created by the ease of copying brought on by everybody carrying around mobile computers with those ultra-cheap network connections. I bet less now than 20 years ago. Today you can buy spotify, apple music, google music, or whatever. You can stream stuff. Blockbusters didn't die because of piracy, but because of streaming. > I'm not aware of the "legalize murder to preserve freedom" lobby It's your argument. If a thing cannot be prevented, then it should be legal. Right? > Equating copyright law and murder is equally nonsense. That's wilfully missing the point. Take shoplifting instead, then. |
The actual argument is that society has fundamentally changed after the invention of computers. People copy, transfer and even modify copyrighted works every day without even blinking. It happens on an even larger scale than and at a fraction of the cost of VHS tape copying. Copyright no longer makes sense in the 21st century: it's become natural to infringe.
The fact that copyright no longer guarantees artficial scarcity is just yet another sign that it should probably go away.