I don't disagree with you, but I can also see a logical argument for intellectual property rights, at least to some extent, but I agree your scenario is probably optimal.
I mean, linux optimizes the performance of your computer over windows... one of those is intellectual property and the other is not..
Why should we be able to illegally download music?
We shouldn't, but the simple fact is people have access to the internet and many don't respect the intellectual property of others.
I don't see any of the open source folks struggling to survive. Sharing works!
I'm learning about intellectual property on my own to prepare for the pro-intellectual property arguments in my law class (my professor even suggested perpetual patents...considering that's unconstitutional, I find it interesting that a law professor would suggest such a thing not that it'd be the first time), and was wondering if there were good arguments on why downloading music illegally is not unethical/immoral/or whatever else would make it be a "bad" thing.
How isn't it theft? I know one person had to buy the music somewhere along the lines, but to distribute it to potentially thousands of people when the record company only received the $10 for the original purchase, why or how isn't it stealing??
If someone is playing a song on a stereo, and you happen to walk up and take a listen, your auditory nerves further replicate an analogue of the signal and your brain creates a copy in your long term memory. In what way is this willful act of reproducing music across different media fundamentally different from MP3 sharing? In what way is this immoral? In what way is this theft?
Can someone own information? Can someone own a pattern?
If I recite a poem to a friend by memory, have I infringed on copyright? What if I write the poem down and show it to my friend instead? Is copyright infringement dependent on the medium of transmission (in this case, sound waves or visible light)?
Can this not be settled with contract law? No contract, no claim?
Of course. But current IP law says, for instance with patents, "you don't have the right to invent or create this machine".
That translates into, "I can use the force of government to prevent you from inventing or creating this machine even if you thought of it independently."
In other words IP law is meant to function outside contract. But it has no basis "in law" outside of a contract. Thus using legal force to enforce IP outside of a contract is a perversion of the law.
First off understand that law and morality are two separate lines, sometimes they intersect sometimes they don't.and was wondering if there were good arguments on why downloading music illegally is not unethical/immoral/or whatever else would make it be a "bad" thing.
It isn't theft; it's copyright infringement. You'll (hopefully) discover the two are NOT one in the same.How isn't it theft?
Actually, you are allowed to take a patent and create ONE of whatever it describes. You can't sell it however.
-t
It's not an ethics issue. It's a legal issue pure and simple. The RIAA marketing department wants you to think its somehow a moral / ethical issue when it is not.But I don't think 'republishing' or sending out copies(multiplying the original copy you bought) of the product is an ethical way of handling it.
Every time you sing a song and not pay the owner royalties, it is theft!
If you download instead of buying, that's pretty much the same thing as theft.
Actually it's not. It's copyright infringement. Big difference between the two.sorry, but that is theft![]()
You cannot copyright information, just the expression thereof.Can someone own information?
Perhaps, but they are indeed constitutional.Intellectual property laws are unlibertarian because they are protect intelectual monopolies.
As a libertarian, I support competition. When a patent is used, that patent destroys any potential competition for that product.
AbsolutelyPiracy has a history of stimulating markets.
No because information is not able to be copyrighted. But the expression of that information is.Intellectual property is irrational. No one would ever claim they could sue me if I memorized a recipe out of a copyrighted cook book and then told the recipe word for word to a friend.
The Founders I would believe disagree with you.We keep coming back to this. IP rights are not only stupid, they are anti-liberty people.
Books are available for free now on Google. Music is available for free and so are movies. So is software.who the hell is going to buy a book when you can get a copy for free?
Again the Founders would disagree. Also research the Statue of Anne.Copyrights and patents don't advance progress they hinder it, and on top of that, there is no rational legal foundation for copyrights or patents.
As the content providers of the world buy off more legislation look for them trying to enforce their IP via the arm of the government.The only reason they don't have a problem with it is because they can't monitor it - they have no way of knowing it's happening.
When I was in college as an audio engineer I was forced to memorize that quote.The music business is a cruel and shallow money trench, a long plastic hallway where thieves and pimps run free, and good men die like dogs. There's also a negative side. - Hunter S. Thompson