
by Trotskylvania » Wed Aug 17, 2011 11:33 am
Your Friendly Neighborhood Ultra - The Left Wing of the Impossible
Putting the '-sadism' in PosadismKarl Marx, Wage Labour and Capital
Anton Pannekoek, World Revolution and Communist Tactics
Amadeo Bordiga, Dialogue With Stalin
Nikolai Bukharin, The ABC of Communism
Gilles Dauvé, When Insurrections Die"The hell of capitalism is the firm, not the fact that the firm has a boss."- Bordiga

by Four-sided Triangles » Wed Aug 17, 2011 12:19 pm

by Intellectual Pornography » Wed Aug 17, 2011 12:24 pm
by Sibirsky » Wed Aug 17, 2011 2:30 pm

by Moral Libertarians » Wed Aug 17, 2011 2:40 pm
Terra Agora wrote:A state, no matter how small, is not liberty. Taxes are not liberty, government courts are not liberty, government police are not liberty. Anarchy is liberty and anarchy is order.

by ZombieRothbard » Wed Aug 17, 2011 3:12 pm
Trotskylvania wrote:This is a tangent off the libertarian "seasteading" thread
While many modern libertarians are not fans of intellectual property rights, it seems clear that they perform a very important purpose in a capitalist economy. Specifically, they reduce the risk to investors when funding research and innovation. It's a basic truism that copying someone else's idea is cheaper and faster than innovating it yourself. Absent patents, any innovation would be up for grabs in the free market, and the firms that spent no capital to develop the innovation could, once they catch up to the lag with the innovator, produce the innovation cheaper, having not had to recover the R&D investment.
This creates a perverse incentive to not innovate and just copy others.
Each individual firm acting in its rational self-interest would, however, create an aggregate diseconomy, with R&D and innovation drying up because the competitive costs are just too great. In the face of such clear market failure, I don't see how any reasonable person could be opposed to patents, of all things.

by Trotskylvania » Wed Aug 17, 2011 3:30 pm
ZombieRothbard wrote:Intellectual property is simply a grant of monopoly privilege, which is not compatible with a capitalist system. It is a policy decision based on an assumption that cannot be proven or even supported, that grants of monopoly incentivize innovation. Shakespeare wrote without copywrite protection, so can everybody else.
ZombieRothbard wrote:It is sad that copying others is considered perverse. Innovation is all about copying others, building upon their ideas and making them slightly better. In the history books you hear about the Wright Brothers inventing aircraft, but actually there were many other people who may have even flown before them. They simply built on others ideas, just as most other successful entrepreneurs do. And the Wright Brothers went around suing people over intellectual property violations for years, ensuring the U.S. didn't even have an adequate air force to enter into WWI! (According to Jeffrey Tucker).
ZombieRothbard wrote:And I believe a majority of human history was lived without patents or copywrite. The monarchies started granting them as ways to benefit favored persons (Patent coming from the word "patente" which means "open letter" from the monarch). So it shouldn't be too hard to believe innovation can occur without it.
Your Friendly Neighborhood Ultra - The Left Wing of the Impossible
Putting the '-sadism' in PosadismKarl Marx, Wage Labour and Capital
Anton Pannekoek, World Revolution and Communist Tactics
Amadeo Bordiga, Dialogue With Stalin
Nikolai Bukharin, The ABC of Communism
Gilles Dauvé, When Insurrections Die"The hell of capitalism is the firm, not the fact that the firm has a boss."- Bordiga

by Moral Libertarians » Wed Aug 17, 2011 3:34 pm
Trotskylvania wrote:ZombieRothbard wrote:Intellectual property is simply a grant of monopoly privilege, which is not compatible with a capitalist system. It is a policy decision based on an assumption that cannot be proven or even supported, that grants of monopoly incentivize innovation. Shakespeare wrote without copywrite protection, so can everybody else.
Shakespeare made his money from the production of plays, not the writing of them.
ZombieRothbard wrote:It is sad that copying others is considered perverse. Innovation is all about copying others, building upon their ideas and making them slightly better. In the history books you hear about the Wright Brothers inventing aircraft, but actually there were many other people who may have even flown before them. They simply built on others ideas, just as most other successful entrepreneurs do. And the Wright Brothers went around suing people over intellectual property violations for years, ensuring the U.S. didn't even have an adequate air force to enter into WWI! (According to Jeffrey Tucker).
Patents and patent law has come a long way since then. More often than not, patents are filed to prevent litigation, and it's very rare for aggressive patenting litigation to occur. Further, patents also encourage the publication of ideas. To file a patent, you need to provide schematics and other relevant data, espescially if you want the patent accepted. This allows competitors to study it. And patents have a short life span; they're essentially an IP holder entering a property into the public domain with short term restrictions.
ZombieRothbard wrote:And I believe a majority of human history was lived without patents or copywrite. The monarchies started granting them as ways to benefit favored persons (Patent coming from the word "patente" which means "open letter" from the monarch). So it shouldn't be too hard to believe innovation can occur without it.
That was never in question. Patents were originally created during the age of nationalism to promote the growth of science and the arts, and in general, they have facilitated that during the capitalist stage of development. What the evidence suggests is that on the whole, patents help promote exchange of ideas, not stifle it.
Coca-Cola never patented the recipe for it's signature cola, because that would have required them to publicize the recipe.
Terra Agora wrote:A state, no matter how small, is not liberty. Taxes are not liberty, government courts are not liberty, government police are not liberty. Anarchy is liberty and anarchy is order.

by ZombieRothbard » Wed Aug 17, 2011 3:43 pm
Trotskylvania wrote:Shakespeare made his money from the production of plays, not the writing of them.
Patents and patent law has come a long way since then. More often than not, patents are filed to prevent litigation, and it's very rare for aggressive patenting litigation to occur. Further, patents also encourage the publication of ideas. To file a patent, you need to provide schematics and other relevant data, espescially if you want the patent accepted. This allows competitors to study it. And patents have a short life span; they're essentially an IP holder entering a property into the public domain with short term restrictions.
That was never in question. Patents were originally created during the age of nationalism to promote the growth of science and the arts, and in general, they have facilitated that during the capitalist stage of development. What the evidence suggests is that on the whole, patents help promote exchange of ideas, not stifle it.
Coca-Cola never patented the recipe for it's signature cola, because that would have required them to publicize the recipe.

by Veblenia » Wed Aug 17, 2011 4:07 pm
ZombieRothbard wrote:Trotskylvania wrote:Shakespeare made his money from the production of plays, not the writing of them.
That is true, and it is what would likely happen in a society without intellectual property.

by Sociobiology » Wed Aug 17, 2011 4:14 pm

by SpectacularSpectacular » Wed Aug 17, 2011 4:18 pm
Sociobiology wrote:I've been turned around on this while patents may have been useful open source and short term patents, and defensive publication have actually been proven to stimulate innovation better. technology has reached a point that the long stasis period patents create is becoming a major inhibitor to innovation.

by Veblenia » Wed Aug 17, 2011 5:29 pm
ZombieRothbard wrote:Trotskylvania wrote:This is a tangent off the libertarian "seasteading" thread
While many modern libertarians are not fans of intellectual property rights, it seems clear that they perform a very important purpose in a capitalist economy. Specifically, they reduce the risk to investors when funding research and innovation. It's a basic truism that copying someone else's idea is cheaper and faster than innovating it yourself. Absent patents, any innovation would be up for grabs in the free market, and the firms that spent no capital to develop the innovation could, once they catch up to the lag with the innovator, produce the innovation cheaper, having not had to recover the R&D investment.
Intellectual property is simply a grant of monopoly privilege, which is not compatible with a capitalist system. It is a policy decision based on an assumption that cannot be proven or even supported, that grants of monopoly incentivize innovation. Shakespeare wrote without copywrite protection, so can everybody else.

by Robert Magoo » Wed Aug 17, 2011 5:32 pm

by Daistallia 2104 » Wed Aug 17, 2011 6:08 pm
SpectacularSpectacular wrote:Sociobiology wrote:I've been turned around on this while patents may have been useful open source and short term patents, and defensive publication have actually been proven to stimulate innovation better. technology has reached a point that the long stasis period patents create is becoming a major inhibitor to innovation.
I agree with this, especially in regards to genetic(more accuretly protein) patents.
Robert Magoo wrote:Economic arguments are unnecessary. If a person has the right to their labor, ip must be protected. When you write a piece of software and claim it as yours, you have just as much right to make that claim as you would a physical good. Patents can go way overboard, but I don't think the concept of intellectual property is inherently flawed.

by ZombieRothbard » Wed Aug 17, 2011 6:10 pm
Robert Magoo wrote:Economic arguments are unnecessary. If a person has the right to their labor, ip must be protected. When you write a piece of software and claim it as yours, you have just as much right to make that claim as you would a physical good. Patents can go way overboard, but I don't think the concept of intellectual property is inherently flawed.

by Daistallia 2104 » Wed Aug 17, 2011 6:10 pm
Veblenia wrote:The story of capitalism's development has been largely thecreation and exchange of new forms of propertyinvention of new forms of theft, beginning with the Enclosure Movement right on up to swap derivatives.

by Robert Magoo » Wed Aug 17, 2011 6:13 pm
Daistallia 2104 wrote:SpectacularSpectacular wrote:
I agree with this, especially in regards to genetic(more accuretly protein) patents.
Patents on genes are particularly pernicious.Robert Magoo wrote:Economic arguments are unnecessary. If a person has the right to their labor, ip must be protected. When you write a piece of software and claim it as yours, you have just as much right to make that claim as you would a physical good. Patents can go way overboard, but I don't think the concept of intellectual property is inherently flawed.
IP generally doesn't protect a person's right to their own labor, but rather prevents someone from enjoying the right to their own labor. If I record a CD I own, that is my labor, not the record company's, not the recording studio's, not the artists, but mine.

by Daistallia 2104 » Wed Aug 17, 2011 6:13 pm
ZombieRothbard wrote:Are idea's a scarce resource? No, they aren't, therefor they are not property.
Also, unless you claim ownership over what is in somebody elses mind, IP cannot be considered property.
l
by Robert Magoo » Wed Aug 17, 2011 6:13 pm
ZombieRothbard wrote:Robert Magoo wrote:Economic arguments are unnecessary. If a person has the right to their labor, ip must be protected. When you write a piece of software and claim it as yours, you have just as much right to make that claim as you would a physical good. Patents can go way overboard, but I don't think the concept of intellectual property is inherently flawed.
Are idea's a scarce resource? No, they aren't, therefor they are not property.
Also, unless you claim ownership over what is in somebody elses mind, IP cannot be considered property.

by Veblenia » Wed Aug 17, 2011 6:14 pm
Daistallia 2104 wrote:Veblenia wrote:The story of capitalism's development has been largely thecreation and exchange of new forms of propertyinvention of new forms of theft, beginning with the Enclosure Movement right on up to swap derivatives.
Corrected for accuracy. (The enclosue movement is a particularly nice example of naked theft, BTW.)

by ZombieRothbard » Wed Aug 17, 2011 6:17 pm
Daistallia 2104 wrote:ZombieRothbard wrote:Are idea's a scarce resource? No, they aren't, therefor they are not property.
Also, unless you claim ownership over what is in somebody elses mind, IP cannot be considered property.
When you, Sibirsky, and all all agreee, albeit for different reasons, I am scareful.l


by ZombieRothbard » Wed Aug 17, 2011 6:19 pm

by Veblenia » Wed Aug 17, 2011 6:21 pm
ZombieRothbard wrote:Robert Magoo wrote:I'm claiming ownership of the product of my mind, not somebody else's.
You are also claiming ownership over other peoples property and body, since you are saying that they cannot do with their property what they wish (configure it in a particular way, sell it, use their vocal chords in a certain way, play a guitar in a certain way etc.)
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