nadiatims Wrote:Icecream Wrote:What possible good does it do to have a product compete with itself? Creative works should compete against each other. Giving a product copyright doesn't artificially grant it protection from competition with other creative products it grants it protection from competition with itself.
How about we apply that to other products too. Farmer A grows apples, therefore farmer B must grow oranges, because having competitors supply the same product is bad for consumers right? Beside you could significantly alter Harry Potter and still get sued, suppose you try to compete by offering the same story with an alternate ending, or set in china instead of UK.
Yeah, well i'd easily agree that copyright is too tight on stuff like that. I don't really care if someone takes an idea from someone elses work and creates something new from it... though i think it really should be significantly different from the original. If someone took the Harry Potter books and simply changed all the names of places and people and resold it as their own work, that's clearly just stealing. They haven't put significant labour into doing that.
But in general, we were talking about direct duplication of the original right? i.e. something that doesn't add any value to the product at all.
As for Farmer B, well, it makes no sense to flood the market with Apples when there's demand for Oranges. But he's welcome to grow a different type of apple that'll appeal to a different sector of the apple market. But like you said, it's difficult to apply the argument properly in physical terms, because Farmer B would be growing his own apples in any case, not taking Farmer A's apples and selling them or giving them away without permission.
nadiatims Wrote:Icecream Wrote:However, the free copying and distribution of creative products creates a distortion in the market as to how much people do pay for things (rather than how much they would be willing to pay for things were that not happening), and it becomes very difficult to measure what the true demand is.
You're getting this all backward. IP laws distort the market by jacking up the price of duplicates and reducing the value of an idea at the point of creation. This is a distortion of the natural market, because devoid of copyright enforcement, people have always been free to emulate that which they witness through their senses. And people with good ideas are free to keep them secret, sell them, or get paid to generate them, but only once. Suppose we all had the ability duplicate objects. Do we still have to pay farmer B every time we want an orange...?
nadiatims Wrote:Icecream Wrote:Suppose there's a town that produces Levi jeans. A large group of citizens riot in the town and take over the jeans factory, and decide they'll give away all the jeans for free. People from all over come and get a pair of jeans, and meanwhile the shops in the surrounding areas end up not being able to sell many of their Levi's any more.
Would that be an accurate reflection of the demand for Levi's??
What's more, because there's free distribution of Levi's, the sale of Wranglers goes down. Is that an accurate reflection of the demand for Wranglers?
That would cause a temporary dip in the demand for jeans until the factory went out of business then the demand would increase again. I guess you're talking about what would happen if the rioters would be a constant force, well in that case you're basically describing socialism which is unsustainable and leads to economic collapse. The problem with this analogy though is that physical property and intellectual property are not the same. Physical property is scarce (you can't duplicate an orange) but non-new ideas aren't. Even without IP, new ideas have economic value, it just can't be sold under the current copyright model unless unforced under the threat of violence.
Again, i think you're undervaluing the act of creating a creative product. They aren't the same as "ideas", which can be thought up multiple times by different people. You can't sell an "idea for a fiction book" for instance. Both of us could have the idea for a book about a talking cat who takes over the neighbourhood for example, but it's impossible for us to come out with the same finished work.
Again, no amount of digital copies of the original makes it a "non-scarce idea". I think you're conceiving of what makes a "new idea" in the totally wrong way, which is leading to a unjustified perception of copyright.
How many George Orwell novels are there? Each different George Orwell novel represents a "new idea". It doesn't matter how many copies of each individual novel there are, the fact is that the ideas that have come from George Orwell to make up each novel are excruciatingly scarce.
A copy of an original creative work adds no value to the product... we're still reliant on George Orwell for a "new idea" if we consider his work valuable. And if we consider his work valuable, we should pay for it, precisely because his "ideas" (novels) are scarce, no matter how many copies of each one there might be.
(^^Am i writing this clearly? I don't know exactly how to express this best.)
Your way of conceiving of scarcity seems to be fallacious, because you aren't measuring scarcity in the same way across both physical products and creative products.
In the physical product's case, you're considering scarcity by it's physical properties for it's
production, but in the case of the creative products, you're conceiving of scarcity not as a factor of production but as the copy of the end result itself.
Supposing that duplicating objects physically became totally free... well, thats the end of capitalism, isn't it. But even then, we'd probably want to find another system to reward good quality products vs. bad quality ones.
It's possible that a different system of compensation would be better for creative products now the original can be duplicated at no cost, but it would again have to be an alternative system to a traditional capitalist model, and i doubt you'd agree to it. For instance, making all creative products free and paying their creators by online demand recognition systems through taxation. That's the only alternative i can really think of that would fairly reward creators while the rest of the products in the world still run by the traditional capitalist system. Because we still need to reward the creators for making good or bad quality work, and for the labour time and other costs that go into making high quality creative products. A simple 1st on the market principle isn't going to do that efficiently, i think, and as i argued above, doesn't reflect the actual scarcity, or actual demand for high quality original works.
Edited: 2012-01-25, 9:49 am