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by kiba
6251 days ago
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The improtance of property in capitalism is that it allocate scarce resources such as land, computers, etc efficently. I do not see how musics and source code fit in the overall scheme of property rights. Rather, copyright and patents actually violate property rights by forbidding people who actually own a copy from distributing new copies at will or building on the copy at will. (Remind me why it needs to last 20 years or 13 years, or whatever years? If it is property rights, than it should last infintely.) In any case, your assertion that without copyright and patent, there would be no innovation is well contested by a book called Against Intellectual Monopoly. |
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Most decisions in economy are taken in a very rational. A pharmaceutical company will decide how much to invest in researching and getting approved a certain drug based on the chance of success and the potential profits. The profits depend directly on the time it has exclusive rights on that product. If it's only until a competitor reverse engineers the product, then it could only be a few months. If it's 20 years, the profits are completely different. It will invest in both cases, just very different amounts. The length of the copyright should be computed to maximize overall benefits to society. A large enough investment, but not too long.
Another case is software patents. There is a very big difference between patenting ideas (usually considered a very bad idea) and patenting software (usually considered necessary). An interesting example: most people decide to use (and pay for) Windows, even when there are free alternatives. Why? Because it simply is better. All those money invested in developing it (based on the expectation of future profits) just make a difference.
Or collections of otherwise non-copyrighted data, like maps. Making a map is extremely expensive. Copying one on the other hand is extremely cheap. What incentive would a map maker have to do all this work?
All these are very different cases, and they have to be treated as such. Simply saying all IP laws are not necessary because RIAA is evil is not a solution.
My personal preference tends to be towards eliminating copyright for non-commercial purposes, with a broad definition of what is commercial. Listening to music at home would not be commercial, but in a restaurant (or any other public place) it would be. But I only consider this my _opinion_. I admit it's limited and with flaws, and I am aware that "the devil is in the details". And most of all, I firmly believe this is a complex problem, which does not have a simple solution.
I will take I look at the book you mentioned. I am curious how it treats some particular cases, like some of the above.