Seymour said:
Quoting an interview about abandonware, which also has clear contributionses that aren't as lulzy
Man I can't help but be amazed at the intellectual contributions you guys bring into this
Here's a revolutionary idea: Tim Schafer is an employee. He gets paid, and gives up rights in return for that. If I'm a bricklayer, and I build a wall, I don't come back in 10 years to take it away brick by brick and give them away. Why not? It's not my property.
It's like that in many roads of society. People depend on a structure working rather than getting directly paid. Developers are just a part of that. Are they all exempt from the normal system of an economy that is as big as it is simply because direct trade between people with coincidence of needs is no longer our only source of income? No. They do their job, they get paid, and they do so because they're part of an industry that works. Fucking revolutionary, I know, right?
What you put against it is an unsure untested economic pipe-dream that only has historical analogies in the late Soviet-Union/early Russia's system of "author's rights" and sounds about as tenable as jumping off a high-rise and hoping to float. I'd know which one I'd pick as a dev.
I wonder what an IP debate between people with economic degrees would look like. Little like this hogwash I would wager.
Seymour said:
become the sole beneficiary of a system originally designed to regulate books
Don't forget that monopoly of force was originally just about the fortification of the nation-state and since it was originally just about that it has no possible expanded validity in the modern age
Hey, since you put yourself forward to be an expert on legal evolution and the way the IP concept has been reformed (particularly since the Trade Act of 1974, which is apparently when books were made?), I wonder how you feel about the World Trade Organization's response to the reformed author's right and intellectual property in the civil code of Russia in 2005, particularly within the framework of TRIPS-regulated reform in newly emerging countries in the global economy. I think specifically of
Human Resources and Intellectual Property in a Global Outsourcing Environment: Focus on China, India, and Eastern Europe by Butterfield, Mason, Payne, and Trumble, or
The New Innovation Frontier? Intellectual Property and the European Court of Human Rights by Helfer. My knowledge is fairly limited to putting the IP framework into practical reforms over the last decade but you obviously have much wider and steadier intellectual ground to stand on.
Hell, since you have so obviously considered all the practical implication of Intellectual Property reform rather than just shouting about how we should be living in an idealized society where everyone gets a fair share (by which you mean you should be allowed to take stuff for free), I'm interested in hearing how you think the 100 billion in US losses due to IP infringement (2010 reports as per section 182 of the U.S. Trade Act of 1974) would in no way blow back on the developers you are fighting for. In fact, I'm curious to hear how, exactly, you think these guys are getting paid.
Hear me, brave Codexers! I strongly request that if you feel the need to justify your thievery, to at least put some effort into creating an excuse that stands up to even the basest economic/legal scrutiny. This hippy nonsense is kind of boring
Man, why do I always get lured into IP debates? They're so friggin' asinine.
*masturbates vicariously*