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On Mon, 11 Apr 2005 17:18:06 GMT, Bob Miller
wrote: but if we stop compensating people who create intellectual property, it will simply stop being created. Hi Bob, This assertion is untested by simple virtue of the extension of copyright, and the continued abuse of patents. Being untested does not mean that it defaults to being true. Insofar as left/right/liberal/conservative politics go, Ben Franklin was very much against patenting. In his era, plagiarism was rife, but its penalty was weighed against purpose and claims and punished in the form of opprobrium. You were far more likely to be sued for slander than stealing ideas. Back then, if you couldn't pay the fine, they threw you in the slammer. But back to the assertion, there is every proof that this is simply not the case. One of the chief contentions that America is shipping its software jobs east (the far east, not Jersey) is that Asians will soon crowd the field with better programmers (or simply more, cheaper programmers) who will flood the capitalist market with their product. Creativity being what it is, and what intellectuals do, such product that is free and unencumbered has already washed the Asians out like a tidal wave. I can point at one example of creativity that confounds the monetary need for patent or copyright: http://sourceforge.net/ where you and others may observe more than 98,000 software packages are being offered for free (this is NOT crippleware) that are being built by more than 1 Million designers (creative individuals). They do ask for pledges, but this is not a condition of use. The Chinese don't need more programmers to burn illegal copies of M$ Office, but neither do I need to fly to Shanghai to buy them. Instead I can download Open Office for free (and certainly at less hazard to asian infections). Do I breathlessly wait for the next iteration now called Longhorn? That horse is so lame, M$ hasn't realized that the field has left it behind. If a million Indian Engineers could put it on wheels with a hemi under the hood, it still wouldn't pay their wages in rice when it hits the market. M$ daily pays the cost for exclusivity that eclipes copyright or patent. As far as creativity go, copyright and patent offer abysmal return unless you are a one note symphony composer. The ONLY software I have ever purchased in the last 10 years was for Agent (the newsreader I am now using to post to this forum) and Outpost Firewall. Both items were to protect me from the third piece of software I bought, M$ Win2K Pro which could now be easily replaced with Linux (which I now build custom business systems on). Absolutely every application that is mainstream can be replaced and upgraded to for FREE. In the spirit of compensation, not to the individual(s) who designed Open Office, but to the community at large, I have contributed my own Web Search Engines for FREE. My effort to produce them expended as much time, but far less cash in my pursuit of 5 patents (ego certificates). If any want to argue that this is far different from Mickey Mouse protection, I would offer that even if his copyright expired, there would still be protection through Trade Mark, and Licensing agreements. Really, the laws are manifestly and explicitly for intimidation alone. You can be sued for distributing the image of Moe Howard, but sky through with Abraham Lincoln's mug on a T-shirt. This is not about creativity, merit, or intellectual worth. It is simply about government sanctioned monopoly (and again, manifestly and explicitly so). As TR observed 100 years ago, expanded monopolies are bad for America. 73's Richard Clark, KB7QHC |
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