| Physical property rights, which I strongly support, are not a law of nature. lions and tigers dont have property rights. They are a concept, but one is no more natural than another. matter exists, knowledge exists. exclusive monopoly to one or the other is no different. RE Cars: I think the analogy is apt, but you you ignore the time an effort that goes into creating one. Who would build or buy a car if someone could just get in and drive off. The same is true for literature. Why spend years writing a book, play, or song, if the first person that hears or sees it reproduces it for everyone and you recieve nothing. It is just like spending time building a car for someone to drive off with it. Your argument focuses on the user, not the creator. >and if someone else gets in my novel and drives off with it, why, i can still read it as easily as before. Thats all an well for the consumer. The car thief doesnt care either, as long as there are cars to steal and idiots buying cars. You might argue that peope will create literature out of innate desire,as an argument how screwing them over wont impact incetives, but how is that different from physical property. You think someone has a deep drive to write the next great ammercian novel, but not grow food, so it is ok to steal one, but not the other. What if people want to grow food, does that then justify stealing it? I just think it is extremely hypocritical to dismiss IP creators while protecting the car makers or food growers. IF someone wants to create IP for free, grow food for free, or build cars for free- They CAN! |
Maybe it does justify, if stealing doesn't mean depriving the owner of the food.
> IF someone wants to create IP for free, grow food for free, or build cars for free- They CAN!
I want to create IP for free, but I don't have a surplus of time to create it. IP holders deprive me of the surplus, because it's going to reduce the value of their “property” if I create IP for free.