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by acyou
405 days ago
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I used to think that way as well, then I started to participate in standards development. Now, I think it's more valuable to society to have the standards properly developed, funded and regulated. You could say the same of literally any other aspect of society. Why can't it be free? Well, someone has to pay. It's a nice thought, until it meets reality. Regulation has a cost and a benefit. Compliance has a cost and a benefit. Non compliance has a cost and can have a benefit. People using/complying to standards usually benefit and are therefore good people to have pay the compliance cost, rather than shifting the tax burden onto society as a whole (someone else can pay)! It's not free, we just need to pay. (If you're not paying, you're the product) |
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I'm literally paying those folks to do the job anyways with my property taxes. Then I'm paying them again to actually file a permit. Then I'm paying them again for the inspection.
The costs of standards development is a pittance compared to most other expenditures these entities make.
Your approach leads to de-facto guild systems where inside knowledge is transferred within a legally permitted group, and then used to extract more tax from people through the form of elevated service prices and reduced competition. Further compounded by the fact that this inside knowledge is, quite literally, just the legal requirement.
Frankly - no. I cannot disagree more strongly. I don't believe secret, pay-to-view laws should allowed. Full stop.
If ignorance of the law is not an excuse - the law damn well better by publicly displayed and accessible for all.
My county doesn't even have the modern NEC codes available for library checkout (the latest edition they have is 2001).
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I don't mind paying for the regulation, I think the current closed source and copyright protected payment structure is unethical. Frankly - I also don't think it's working very well.