All of what you just stated is irrelevant to the IP discussion. I've acknowledged multiple times the fact that creating music and other abstract concepts requires time and effort, and I've also explained how copying a song or a certain arrangement of words does not in anyway deny the innovator from keeping and using/selling the original compilation. Hence there is no aggression and no loss of profit, whereas enforcing IP laws inherently requires an initiation of aggression for doing nothing more than using private property in a certain manner.If the print is there and your state has not ruled against such strictures then you may have to wrangle with lawyers.
What is missing from the anti-IP people most of the time that the issue is profiting from another's work. As well all the rainbow fairy dust tales of the artists just releasing all these superb works if IP was abolished is disingenuous as a quick thought experiment states that to produce a well crafted artwork in the realms of imagery or music takes time. In the real world during that time there is overhead from eating, drinking, energy and living quarters outlay. Under your system of non-acknowledgement of the talent and time and focus taken to produce said work they should release it to the world and let a bunch of miserly bastards just take it for their own with no tribute. Under my system the artist's time is being compensated at the point the original work is duplicated. You can then play the gambit of, well if it is good people will pay him. OK..so he starts getting paid and along comes Psychopath Inc. who sees the people love the work and sends a message to his factory to immediately begin mass duplication and ship it to all the markets outlets he has garnered from picking the best artist's work to mass duplicate and giving the consumer a fair price to him, having the ability to buy mass quantities of raw materials and the artist whop originated the work not having those resources.
In the anti-IP system there will be a world of starving artists making pizzas and flipping burgers, whilst a small conglomerate of fraudulent ripoff artists gets bigger and bigger stealing one idea after another till there is never any point in any artist trying to make a living from being an artist.
Rev9
Also, the claim that all artists and musicians would be starving without IP is simply not true. Original artworks will always be worth enormous sums of money despite attempts of forgeries, and musicians are always free to go on tour sell their performance which cannot be exactly reproduced just to name a few examples. Some artists and musicians who solely depend on IP to make money will suddenly find themselves in difficult times, but it's not correct to claim the entire industry will suffer.