Copyright Maximalists Try To Regroup And Figure Out How To 'Fight Back' Against The Public
from the that's-not-going-to-go-over-too-well dept
One of the more stunning things about the defeat of SOPA/PIPA and what appears to be the likely defeat of ACTA, is how the traditional copyright maximalists still haven't figured out what has happened or what it means. It seems positively unfathomable to them that the public got fed up with their shenanigans and said "enough is enough." That's why their first reaction was to blame companies and lobbyists -- because that's the only way they function. Now they're trying to figure out how to fight back.Last week, at the Fordham IP conference, which is a yearly gathering of mostly IP-maximalists, it seems that this attitude was on display in full force. Rebecca Tushnet's recap of some of the sessions is really quite stunning -- including a comment from a Fordham professor who apparently claimed that democracy was a bad thing because the public went against strict IP rights. As Tushnet noted:
Hugh Hansen suggesting that democracy was a really bad thing because citizens think short term and elites give us rights, and that’s why IP can only be protected without democracy, or as he put it, with "filters." (If by “us” you mean white men holding property. I do not believe I am exaggerating: he pointed to revolutionary Virginia as the great model for providing rights and the rest of American history as decline as things were turned over to the greedy proles. I obviously beg to differ, and this November the Commonwealth will indeed let me vote. I understand that Hansen likes to provoke, but the ugliness of his claims should not go unremarked.)Of course, this kind of elitist attitude seemed to permeate the event. Jamie Love alerted us to the news that European IP professor Mihaly Fiscor compared ACTA protests to Nazi rallies -- thus invoking Godwin's Law and ensuring that any reasoned debate will not be allowed.
One thing became clear: there is not even the slightest concern that perhaps the public has a point. No, sir. It must be that they're too clueless or uninformed to know what's best for them. Back in Tushnet's post above, she describes how Steve Metalitz -- a maximalist lawyer whose fingerprints appear on lots of ridiculous proposals, including ACTA -- said that the problem is that people don't know enough to know that they have to respect copyright for our own economic well-being. Hugh Hansen, the same guy who is apparently anti-democracy, went with the old trope that should automatically disqualify you from being taken seriously in these debates, by saying that "consumers will only be moral if they're taught that copying is wrong. Copying is just like shoplifting." The thing is, that line has been "copied" so many times, I guess we can conclude that Hugh Hansen is one immoral bastard. Of course, reality tells us that copying is nothing like shoplifting. But, I guess, if you want to close off any real conversation, you toss out ridiculous statements that are so laughable that no one takes you seriously.
Even David Kappos, the head of the US Patent Office -- and someone who should know better -- made a condescending comment about how "the adults in the room know" that everyone has to pay up for patent, or they're going to get sued. As Tushnet notes in response, things change once the people realize that the system is broken:
I couldn’t help but think in response to Kappos about what a lawyer might have said pre-NYT v. Sullivan etc.: “the adults in the room know that if you say negative things about public officials you’re going to get sued.” Sounds sort of like wisdom, but this conference isn’t just practice pointers, or at least I hope it isn’t; maybe it’s an adult thing to give up on a better world, but I don’t think so.Of course, it doesn't stop at just this one event. When I was in London last week, I learned of meeting to figure out how to respond to the "unprecedented attacks on IP rights." In the article about it, they highlight all of the awful things that the darn public has done lately:
Once again, it's not even considered possible that all of these actions were because of legitimate complaints. There isn't even the suggestion that perhaps some of this push back was due to massive and sustained overreach from the maximalists. Nope. It's all those stupid people in the public who need to be told by "the adults in the room" what's best for them, and any of their voices need to be "countered."Already this year, we have seen the blackout of websitesincluding Wikipedia that led to the shelving of the SOPA and PIPA legislation in the United States, and an organised attack on the Anti-Counterfeiting Trade Agreement in Europe, which has led to a delay in ratification and its possible abandonment.
In India, organisations like UNITAID haveprotested efforts to strengthen patent protection through free trade agreements, arguing they threaten affordable access to medicines in developing nations.
The panelists will discuss why IP owners, governments and others involved in the IP system need to address the more active and organised voices in civil society with communication, case studies and events.
Either way, one thing seems clear: the usual maximalists aren't about to stop pushing for maximalism and actually listen to the concerns of the public. Instead, they're about to go on the offensive, looking to tar and feather those who bring actual facts and evidence to the table.
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Filed Under: acta, david kappos, fordham ip conference, maximalist
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Let's really strive for IP Minimalism
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Re: Let's really strive for IP Minimalism
See http://www.law.indiana.edu/uslawdocs/declaration.html
The Statute of Anne (copied as the US Copyright Act, 1790 - see http://btlj.org/data/articles/25_3/1427-1474%20Bracha%20050911.pdf ) granted a privilege. It did not secure the unalienable right of an individual. See Paine: Human rights originate in Nature, thus, rights cannot be granted via political charter, because that implies that rights are legally revocable, hence, would be privileges:
The debate should be whether you abolish government, or just the anachronistic and unethical privileges granted in a less humane era (© 1709 by Queen Anne, and © 1790 by Congress).
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Re: Re: Let's really strive for IP Minimalism
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Re: Re: Let's really strive for IP Minimalism
We need leverage to fight back.
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Re: Re: Re: Let's really strive for IP Minimalism
Just as with slavery, people need to understand that such injustice is not necessary to produce cotton for their clothes, nor food for their tables, nor must people sacrifice their liberty that musicians may make music or that storytellers may write stories. The confiscation of our liberty is necessary only for the cartel's monopolies. To persuade a man to collect cotton, or a musician to make music, it is sufficient to pay them an equitable amount of money. See Kickstarter for a glimpse of how a musician's fans can exchange their money for the musician's music (without having to exploit or enforce an anachronistic and unethical 18th century monopoly).
People need to see the injustice of copyright (Richard O'Dwyer et al) and that it is necessary only to publishing corporations - not artists.
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Re: Re: Let's really strive for IP Minimalism
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Re: Re: Re: Let's really strive for IP Minimalism
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Re: Re: Re: Re: Let's really strive for IP Minimalism
So, what is copyright?
What we call ‘copyright’ is an 18th century privilege.
Copyright according to the definition you referred to is a privilege.
Your very first paragraph contains a mistake. Again according to the defintion you referred to the constitution recognizes our inalienable "rights" as follows:
We, the people, create law to recognise our rights, and create and empower a government to secure them.
What are our rights?
Rights are the vital powers of all human beings.
We have rights to life, privacy, truth, and liberty.
It does not recocognize the privilege of "copyright" as a right. It allows Congress to grant a monopoly to the authors and inventors to the fruits of their labors for a limited time. Your reference seems to prove my point.
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Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Let's really strive for IP Minimalism
Yes, a lot of people have been brainwashed to believe this - that because Congress did grant copyright, that therefore it must have been empowered by the people in The Constitution to grant this privilege... empowered by the people to secure their liberty - and then immediately abridge it in the state's interest.
It takes programming, bordering upon hypnosis, to read "secure the exclusive right" as "grant copyright" or "annul the right to copy in the majority to leave it in the hands of the few".
Check out http://archive.feedblitz.com/528094/~4007566 for some background reading with respect to monopolies and The Constitution. From that you should see why it is essential to understand the difference between a natural right to be secured and a privilege/monopoly granted by the state.
That Madison wanted to grant copyright is beside the point. The point is, he could only insert a clause that empowered Congress to secure a right. If he'd written the clause to empower Congress to grant the monopolies of copyright and patent it would have been struck out - or the Constitution would not have been ratified. Only after ratification did he /Congress legislate the Statute of Anne as a fait accompli.
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Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Let's really strive for IP Minimalism
The natural rights as enumerated in the The Declaration of Independence, as explained in your reference source, and in my quote above are "Life, Liberty, and the pursuit of Happiness". Please see here and read the full context of the second paragraph: http://www.archives.gov/exhibits/charters/declaration_transcript.html. You are going to need another reference that will conclusively prove that copyright is a natural right but was not important enough to include with "Life, Liberty and the Pursuit of Happiness" but you get to say that it is. Oh, by the way, since you referenced http://www.law.indiana.edu/uslawdocs/declaration.html in your first post, you will also now need to disprove what they said in that reference because it disagrees with you wholeheartedly. Copyright is not a "natural right", it is state granted. It says so right in the Constitution and it says so in your reference. Please go re-read it until you understand that.
Further, since it state granted by the Constitution in order to "Promote the Progress of the Arts", it can certainly be abridged again. Just as it has been extended from the original 14+14 year to life of the author plus 50 years (and if you could also give a good explanation of how a dead author/inventor is incented to create anything more it would be extremely helpful to the rest of us). The whole purpose of copyright was not in the state's or artist/inventor's interest, it was in the interest of the public. The current form of copyright will prevent any new works from entering the public domain for another 60 years, that is not in the public's interest at all. So, please stop ranting and start explaining.
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Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Let's really strive for IP Minimalism
2. Property is not a natural right. It too is a grant by operation of law, a legal construct, and by no means is that right perpetual and inviolate.
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Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Let's really strive for IP Minimalism
So, if you want to understand the meaning of the Progress clause, this is a good place to start.
As to property, privacy is a natural right (the individual's innate power to exclude others from the spaces they inhabit and the objects they possess) and it is from privacy that possessions and thence property derives. We are at liberty to exchange our possessions, and the truth of our exchanges establishes the transfer of title.
Of course there are some things decreed to be property that are not naturally so, e.g. radio frequencies. However, this does not invalidate the natural rights of the matter.
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Re: Re: Re: Let's really strive for IP Minimalism
Though in intent and practice copyright and patents conferred a privilege of exclusivity for a a short period of time, not a right. The word right entered into the discussion in the early part of the 19th Century on both sides of the Atlantic as an IP maximalist move by publishers to convince authors and inventors that the privilege of exclusivity was, in fact a right and there to ensure that authors and inventors could make money (actually the publishers could) in a very successful propaganda campaign.
The difference is that rights are inherent and present from birth till death. In short there's no expiration date. As copyright and patents both have expiration dates they are then a grant of privilege. Never mind for a moment the insane length of copyright these days.
In the United States both are intended to expand the useful arts and sciences not limit either which is how maximalists view them both. As property and therefore with boundaries.
In the United Kingdom and the Commonwealth the meaning of copyright was to enhance and expand education, another way of saying "useful arts and sciences". Patent law was intended to reduce or eliminate trade secrets which interfered with the rapid change brought on by the Industrial Revolution and needed by it. Again, another way of saying "useful arts and sciences".
Until the last third of the 20th Century the notion of either copyright or patent was "intellectual property" would have been laughed at followed by a puzzled look and the question "what to you mean?" As the intent of neither copyright or patents were to award property rights as it's understood with real property, possessions or your cat/dog the expression was meaningless. IP Maximalist's have been slaving away for half a century to pretend that the grant of a temporary "privilege" is the same as a grant of property rights, absurd as it is.
Assuming that they are a grant of property rights cancels out their original purpose in England and as declared in the United States Constitution. It allows for the kind of silliness we see far too much of these days complete with claims that the grant of exclusivity is a natural right and ought to be put on the same ground and the right of free speech. Which, as I said, is absurd.
The legal system is trapped in narrow views of both as they applied, very well, 40 years ago. Let's say pre-1881 when the IBM PC appeared and made desktop computing respectable, followed by the birth of the World Wide Web in 1992, followed by the rapid expansion of "broadband" home connections to the Internet and the Web in the late 1990 and continues to this day, though mostly in remote regions and the third world. The first world is now at saturation level.
The HTML and associated protocols made information available in quick and,. often(!) readable forms as documents linked up to each other as projects like search engines appeared so you had a chance to find things. HTML and the Web changed users from passive consumers of data an information to authors and researchers and creators in their own right. This scares the hell out of IP maximalists who, once they figured this out, have been champing at the bit ever since to tighten laws around so-called intellectual property, as they invented a thing called piracy and then plead poverty or potential poverty while still pulling in record profits as a result.
(Something only politicians with their hands out for donations would believe.)
Your term "monopoly" is the correct one even if there is no difference between monopoly and "the individual's exclusive [privilege]" granted by copyright and/or patent in practice, or in law. But monopoly, copyright and patent are granted privileges they are not natural rights or rights in any form.
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I have an idea that will fix everything
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Re: I have an idea that will fix everything
You have my axe.
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Re: Re: I have an idea that will fix everything
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Re: I have an idea that will fix everything
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Re: Re: I have an idea that will fix everything
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Re: Re: Re: I have an idea that will fix everything
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Re: Re: Re: Re: I have an idea that will fix everything
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Re: Re: Re: I have an idea that will fix everything
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Re: Re: Re: Re: I have an idea that will fix everything
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Re: Re: I have an idea that will fix everything
"Give me a shotgun and I will travel the world, killing the Lex Luthor's of IP maximalism."
Lobo Santo:
"You'll need more than just one guy to do that...
You have my axe."
Anonymous Coward:
"And my bow."
And my boats
Ay....(all together now)....the king of the north! (cheers)
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Re: I have an idea that will fix everything
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Re: I have an idea that will fix everything
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Re: I have an idea that will fix everything
Wait, what?
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Re: Re: I have an idea that will fix everything
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Re: I have an idea that will fix everything
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Re: I have an idea that will fix everything
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Re: I have an idea that will fix everything
And a bag of salt
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Re: I have an idea that will fix everything
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Re: I have an idea that will fix everything
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Legitimate complaints?
Or how about how the EFF refers to anyone wielding a copyright as a "troll"? That's legit?
Or how about your way of calling someone a maximalist just for not agreeing with your Big Search enriching game of IP anarchy? I bet 100% of the folks at this conference are perfectly okay with grey area behavior like sharing newspapers or libraries, yet you start tarring them with slanted terms.
So what are these legitimate complaints? Why don't you list them instead of shaking your fist again to do more astroturfing for those anti-democratic billionaires at Big Search.
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Re: Legitimate complaints?
"EFF refers to anyone wielding a copyright" boB, you are so full of shit.
"I bet 100% of the folks" And you would lose, AGAIN, and AGAIN, as you always do.
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Re: Re: Legitimate complaints?
I appreciate a shill who can take the time to have some pride in well crafted shifty arguments--and even moreso those who can convince you they do indeed believe such outright ludicrous notions.
Now then, let's give the man some dephlogisticated air and let him spew forth his message across the aether!
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Re: Re: Re: Legitimate complaints?
If bob REALLY wants to be a shill and get paid, maybe he should brush up on the refresher course we gave in Mike's weekly report on Sunday. Time to go study and practice, bob.
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Re: Re: Re: Re: Legitimate complaints?
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Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Legitimate complaints?
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Re: Re: Re: Legitimate complaints?
I agree wholeheartedly with your entire comment. Bob, while usually daffy and skilled at misrepresenting the statements of others, at least has arguments, seems to actually believe them, usually presents them in an understandable manner, and offers more than just personal attacks. I don't think he's a troll at all, and I think he actually adds something to our conversations here.
The actual trolls, particularly the recent ones who don't even bother making any points and just sling nonsensical insults, have a lot to learn from Bob.
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Re: Legitimate complaints?
Copyright law is in disrepute for a very good reason: It potentially forbids noncommercial sharing even when the transaction is private.
There are probably millions of copyright infringements taking place among family and friends.
The people has no moral incentive to obey a law making them criminals equal with pirates sharing over the internet.
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Can you use a different name?
The truth is that we've already taken back copyright because IP maximalists have abused it for decades(centuries?). We are just now getting around to making those changes a part of law.
It's the old camel analogy. You know the one. Let a camel stick his nose in your tent and soon you'll have the whole camel. In this case, it was our idiot elected servants who let the camel in and now the owner of the tent is using a stick to beat it back outside again.
Stop whining. It's your own fault. Stay out of my tent.
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Re: Can you use a different name?
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Re: Legitimate complaints?
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Re: Legitimate complaints?
Not to real trolls.
They'd be insulted!
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Re: Legitimate complaints?
The day libraries are considered "grey areas" is the beginning of the end of civilization.
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Re: Re: Legitimate complaints?
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Re: Re: Re: Legitimate complaints?
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Re: Re: Legitimate complaints?
And as far as I remember, when the first public libraries showed up in England, the ones who benefited from the government monopoly on book publishing actually went after the government asking them to ban libraries.
Thankfully, politicians at the time were not idiot enough to be carried away by their faulty arguments.
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Re: Legitimate complaints?
Why is that an intellectually bankrupt idea? Instead of attempting to goad Mike into a fight, why don;t you actually put forth some evidence to your claims? I won't expect a response, because all you want to do is coax Masnick into an online word brawl like a 13 year old kid, instead of actually debating things on level ground.
By the way, they were not saying that SOPA "would" censor the internet, they were saying it "could." The law itself is broad enough to be abused to accomplish just that.
I think it's also hilarious you call out Mike for not listing his complaints, when you can't even put forth a valid argument to support your own point. I guess we shouldn't expect that of you...you know to think and formulate instead of sit on the sidelines and call fouls.
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Re: Re: Legitimate complaints?
Some very healthy donations to Wikipedia during their fund drive didn't hurt either.
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Re: Re: Re: Legitimate complaints?
Established in your mind, maybe, but not in anyone elses. Google arrived to the game late, as has been pointed out many times in the past, and had little if anything to do with the uproar. If you want someone to blame, it was Wikipedia and Reddit, and neither are owned by or have much to do with Google.
But again, you have your facts and the rest of the world has it's own. Feel free to avoid letting reality enter into your fantasy.
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Re: Re: Re: Legitimate complaints?
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Re: Re: Re: Legitimate complaints?
Wait, what? I've heard people offering the opinion that Google used lies and fear tactics, but as of yet nobody has actually pointed out any of these "lies". This seems far from being an established fact.
If it's so established, then please offer the evidence for supporting the assertion. It should be easy to do.
Also, I have to address the insinuation that Google was some kind of instigator in the protest. They weren't. Google was dragged, late and not entirely willing, into their position by the popular outcry.
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Re: Re: Re: Re: Legitimate complaints?
The "lies and fear" part seems to stem from the fact that people were looking at how these laws could be used as written, rather than how the maximalists originally intended them to be used. The fact that there were widespread unintended consequences and highly dangerous attacks on free speech are ignored, since they are either too technically clueless to notice them or blind to how broad the law was as written. Add that to the fact that some protests were based on the original document drafted in secret, rather than the amended document offered as a half-assed peace offering at the time, and they pretend that these are "lies" rather than fact.
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Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Legitimate complaints?
Thanks PaulT, I was thinking the same thing myself, but you did a pretty good job summing it up.
The "lies and fear" part seems to stem from the fact that people were looking at how these laws could be used as written, rather than how the maximalists originally intended them to be used.
This has always been what bothered me about the letter-of-the-law vs. spirit-of-the-law debate. The whole fact that we base our laws on what we think the people who made the law were thinking leaves a big gray area when it comes to morality laws like this. When it is a law about running a stoplight, anyone who looks at the law knows exactly what the person was thinking when they made that law. It is a safety issue...if someone runs a red light, other people who are travelling through the intersection on a green light are put in danger. However, in the case of SOPA, it is really difficult to know what it is that the author was thinking when they wrote the law, other than protecting the profits of publishers and the middlemen because they gave the author some dough in exchange. It isn't that it is difficult to understand, but that it is difficult to believe that when a judge and jury gets ahold of this...that they may not go a different way. Too many variables.
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Re: Legitimate complaints?
really want to show one example of EFF going after someone who licences their content under CC-SA. Copyleft is using copyrights to keep the content freely accessible.
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Re: Re: Legitimate complaints?
only as far as it pushes their point of view and or agenda
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Re: Re: Re: Legitimate complaints?
EFF has nothing to do with copyleft, though they have been involved in lawsuits about violations of the GPL. Copyleft is pretty much a Richard Stallman thing. And as Stallman has said, if copyright didn't exist for software, neither would copyleft. Fairusefriendly is right, the only time folks have been sued for violating copyleft, it is because they took GPL works and modified and distributed them without releasing the source (as required by GPL.) Thus, copyleft is using copyrights to keep the content freely accessible.
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Re: Re: Legitimate complaints?
only as far as it pushes their point of view and or agenda
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Re: Legitimate complaints?
If "Big Search" (as your failed argument contends) is anti-democratic, what's that say about the MPAA and RIAA, who BUY laws?
Corporations running the government is known as Fascism.
And as long as Astroturfing from big media continues, the United States will descend into Fascism.
Regardless of what you think about copyright, bob, that's something that none of us want.
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Re: Legitimate complaints?
> perfectly okay with grey area behavior like
> sharing newspapers or libraries
The fact that you believe public libraries are 'gray area behaviors' pretty much puts you in the insane maximalist category without Masnick having to say anything else about it.
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Re: Legitimate complaints?
Some things just make sense to share in this world. A basic tenet should always be- if an idea makes sense to someone in kindergarden, then why shouldn't the same principle of sharing make sense as an adult.
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Re: Legitimate complaints?
SABAM is spending time and resources to contact local libraries across the nation, warning them that they will start charging fees because the libraries engage volunteers to read books to kids.
Volunteers. Who – again – READ BOOKS TO KIDS.
http://thenextweb.com/media/2012/03/13/belgian-rightsholders-group-wants-to-charge-libraries-for -reading-books-to-kids
That's. The. Problem.
Oh, and don't forget the attempted shakedown of Google and Yahoo for publishing news snippets:
Last year, the Belgian courts decided that Google was infringing on newspapers' copyrights just by linking to stories. Google was ordered to remove those links, at which point the newspapers started whining about "harsh retaliation" -- even though it was the court's decision, not Google's, and it was the newspapers' legal action that brought this about.
Sadly, the German government doesn't seem to have been paying attention to that rather ridiculous saga -- or maybe simply doesn't care -- and has just announced that it will bring in a compulsory licensing scheme for the use of even "small parts" of journalistic articles on commercial sites (original German).
http://www.techdirt.com/articles/20120305/09161017982/german-government-wants-google-to-pay-to-s how-news-snippets.shtml
If that went through, you know your RSS feed? Assuming you have one on Netvibes or Google Reader, that is. Basically, you'd have to pay to use it. That's the problem.
The system was meant to help with education, now it's all about teaching us to accept being charged for the same thing over and over again. The only people who benefit from copyright are the people who own it, and that's not always the authors.
I'm sick of being lied to, sick of being lectured by people who think I'm a criminal idiot, and sick of being told I have to accept this. I don't want to.
No legislation without representation!
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Re: Legitimate complaints?
See, bob, this is why you make it so easy for people to make fun of you.
http://www.techdirt.com/articles/20120407/02183318421/yet-another-copyright-troll-case-kicke d-out-court-with-excellent-reasoning-judge.shtml#c128
You actually think the likes of John Steele, Evan Stone and Terik Hashmi as not trolls.
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Big Search is the anti-democratic evildoer here
http://dealbook.nytimes.com/2012/04/16/stock-split-for-google-that-cements-control-at-the- top/
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Re: Big Search is the anti-democratic evildoer here
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Re: Big Search is the anti-democratic evildoer here
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Re: Big Search is the anti-democratic evildoer here
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Re: Big Search is the anti-democratic evildoer here
I am a citizen of the United States and a member of the human race. I care deeply about laws that effect me as a citizen and mankind generally. When my government does something stupid, it is difficult to just up and leave my country, and it's darn near impossible to leave the world.
The Google board can do what they want to eliminate democracy in their shareholder meetings. It causes a bit of a pain for the few who cared. Your corporate masters trying to eliminate democracy in my country, though, is an entirely different matter. No one will die because Page, Brin, and Schmidt get decide how to lead Google. Lots of people will die because we give monopolies to drug companies to extract high prices out of dying people. No one will be censored because it's slightly more difficult for Goldman Sachs to get its way in Google shareholder votes. Lots of people are and will be censored if the MPAA and RIAA had their way in twisting the laws of every country around them.
If you have a problem with Google, by all means let the world know. But when you try to equate Google's share dilution plans to the sickening reduction in rights of all mankind in exchange for slightly more obscene profits proposed by copyright maximalists, I will stand here and tell you simply and succinctly: go to hell.
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Re: Re: Big Search is the anti-democratic evildoer here
This however, I would gladly give 2.
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Re: Big Search is the anti-democratic evildoer here
"Perhaps it’s not surprising that Google’s shareholders aren’t up in arms, considering that when Google went public in 2004, the founders made it very clear that, through a dual-class share structure, they intended to maintain control of the company."
"To its credit, Google has been upfront about its plan. “We recognize that some people, particularly those who opposed this structure at the start, won’t support this change — and we understand that other companies have been very successful with more traditional governance models,” Mr. Page and Mr. Brin wrote. “But after careful consideration with our board of directors, we have decided that maintaining this founder-led approach is in the best interests of Google, our shareholders and our users.”"
Dont like it? Dont buy shares and dont use any of their services.
I bet you found that story through Google.
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Re: Re: Big Search is the anti-democratic evildoer here
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Re: Big Search is the anti-democratic evildoer here
BTW...
"corporate democracy"
You know what the REAL term for that is?
Fascism.
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Re: Big Search is the anti-democratic evildoer here
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Re: Big Search is the anti-democratic evildoer here
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Or, in another way, that the best "compromise" in copyright law is the one that extends the maximum benefit to copyright interests, even to the detriment of all other interests or positions.
In my own opinion, I see a copyright maximalist as a person who threatens to poison the town's well if they won't allow him to charge people for the water within.
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There is a broad spectrum of people who, for whatever their reasons, do support copyright law, including all of the academics who regularly rail whenever copyright legislation moves in a direction with which they happen to disagree.
Certainly not everyone who may support some form of copyright law are "copyright maximalists". Thus, there must be a set of specific criteria by which "copyright maximalists" are distinguished from all others.
I happen to believe that copyright law can be quite beneficial. At the same time I believe that by joining Berne the US was required to change its laws to reflect the historic European model (long terms, no formalities, etc.), and that doing so was a mistake. Whatever its weaknesses, I believe that the 1909 act was much more aligned with the original Copyright Act of 1790. In stark contrast is patent law, which even as it exists today follows the general outline of the original Patent Act of 1790.
Certainly, I do not see my views as being those of a "copyright maximalist". Hence my original question.
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And I don't think the copyright maximalist is interested in more creative output (thanks to the internet, we're all drowning in a sea of creative output). They are only interested in profiting financially from that creative output, or in controlling access to that creative output. They think stricter laws will give them more money and more control.
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Copyright Maximalists are those that seek to expand (or maximize) the scope and reach of copyright law while trampling the rights of the individual.
It's funny that you would get your panties in a bunch over a fairly neutral descriptive term. Given your reaction, you would think that we were using terms like Robber Baron or Troll.
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Simple. When they look at economic data showing that copyright has not caused increased output, they fight on the moral level.
When the fight moves away from the moral aspects of copyright, they push for ex post facto laws (what was once legal is now illegal) that criminalize the behaviors of the populace.
And when they are faced with public opposition for the first time in 3 decades, they blame one entity for all of their problems. (Google)
Those typify the maximalist position.
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Response to: Anonymous Coward on Apr 17th, 2012 @ 8:41am
I think it's rather obvious what a copyright maximalist is. A person who seeks to enforce and protect their copyright and broaden the scope of copyright using any means necessary up to and including severely restricting the general rights of all human beings, in an effort to maximize profits while barely caring for "promoting the progress of science and the arts".
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See MPAA, RIAA.
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Not half as bad as the use of "pirate" or the utterly false "thief" by the ACs here.
OK, so which term would you rather we use? The term is rather simple, and obvious. A copyright minimalist would be somebody who wishes to reduce copyright to the minimum acceptable length and reduce its scope as much as possible. A copyright maximalist seeks to expand the scope of copyright and enforce it to its maximum limit - as we have seen repeatedly done over the last few decades.
Explain, why is the latter term not applicable to those its used against? If it is applicable, why should it not be used as the descriptive term it is?
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Wait, that's infringement...
What? Now I'm confused...
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> maximalists" is well beyond the point of
> wearing thin.
Almost as thin as the 'copyright is theft!' meme.
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"The unknown future rolls toward us, and I face it for the first time with a sense of hope. Because if a machine, a maximalist, can learn the value of sharing culture, maybe we can too."
Oh wait, that hasn't happened yet...
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US vs THEM
What I think is quite telling about the copyright debates is that it's entirely framed as "us" vs. "them". The IP owners, governments and "others involved in the IP system" vs. the public. First, the "IP owners" in these debates are largely publishers and patent hoarders, not the actual creators and inventors. Those owners' only real interest is protecting profits--not the creators and inventors, and certainly not the public. Second, the governments should NOT even be on one side or the other. No measure of rational debate is possible if the ones making the laws pick one side and exclude all others. Third, the "others" camp are members of the public too, though some have forgotten. These ridiculous laws effect them as citizens, and as IP participants. It should surprise no one that more of these "others" are joining the "organized voices" camp.
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Re: US vs THEM
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The Earth is Flat
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Re: The Earth is Flat
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Re: Re: The Earth is Flat
Not quite. Some people thought the world was on the back of turtle. It was theorized that world was round since the Greeks and through out history their are examples of writers and figure heads expressing this view. However a large part of the uneducated rabble believed all kinds of stupid things.
Some Christian nutbags claimed the earth was flat long after (6th century) every other educated man had moved on, of course because the bible told them so.
So yes Columbus "knew" it but at many times in history all kinds of people believed all kinds of things. Columbus and then Magellan were the first people to provide experiential proof that the world was indeed round.
But you are not wrong that peoples belief in a flat world has been blown out of proportion.
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Re: Re: Re: The Earth is Flat
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Myth_of_the_Flat_Earth
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The Earth is Flat
What he believed and what his crew of unwashed illiterates believed are two entirely separate things.
I bet you get a lot more creationists among the ranks of the enlisted ranks even today. If this kind of divide exists today, there's no good reason to expect that it wouldn't have been worse in the 15th century.
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It's the Church at that time that said the world is round.
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I meant they said it was flat, contradicting the bible.
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"unprecedented attacks on IP rights."
I have had enough and am about an inch away from boycotting these producers. So far I have continued to purchase my entertainment though as of late I have been aware and favouring the products by companies not trying to control the world.
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Re: "unprecedented attacks on IP rights."
I buy entertainment second-hand.
It's cheaper, and doesn't benefit the copyright holders (who don't pay the content creators, anyway.)
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Re: Re: "unprecedented attacks on IP rights."
It's cheaper, and doesn't benefit the copyright holders (who don't pay the content creators, anyway.)"
Sadly, these same morons are using that as an excuse to try and shut down the second hand market, rather than address the reasons why people want to buy used (and the positive effects resales have on new sales).
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Re: Re: "unprecedented attacks on IP rights."
Yes, that's why all movie stars and musicians are on foodstamps...
You're a fucking idiot.
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Re: Re: Re: "unprecedented attacks on IP rights."
I use open source for My Computer, I play open source games, I use open source for word processing.
SO HOW THE FUCK AM I A THIEF??
I'm also a 6'4 210 lbs marathon runner with a black belt in Muay thai, Say it to my Face Bob.....
"Come at me bro"
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Re: Re: Re: Re: "unprecedented attacks on IP rights."
And anyone who doesn't agree with them is a thief. At least that's what they tell us.
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Wait, you mean they're not?
I thought the whole reason why the RIAA/MPAA have been campaigning for SOPA was precisely to feed the starving artists?
You mean it was all a lie and the industry is NOT dying?
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Re: "unprecedented attacks on IP rights."
Copyright has been continually expanded since it's inception to give "artists" more and more perks, while giving nothing back to the public.
They broke their side of the original deal, and now they are surprised and angry that the people are breaking theirs?
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The "masters" spend every waking moment trying to write new laws and force Congress to pass them otherwise they withdraw their campaign contributions. Or they force ISP's to impose severe restrictions on their own customers/subscribers.
The "masters" then assume every customer who purchases their merchandise is a potential pirate and blatantly accuse every customer or being a potential pirate.
Slavery at its finest. SEE? Slavery still exists.
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Elietists
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where you are only allowed what freedom you can PAY for
wait isnt that like left wingers ? only view is their view.
your a racist bigot or thief unless you agree to what we say
we are the elite , because we have the education / money and you the unwashed masses are nothing but trash
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Of course, just as they were yesterday's fascists by definition. Fascism is the merging of corporations and government.
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Re: Re: Re: I have an idea that will fix everything
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War on Piracy
It's pretty clear that the "War on Drugs" is not the best example of government policy but it looks like pure genius stacked against the actions of these desperate gatekeepers struggling to hold onto powers they simply can't have in this digital age.
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Re: War on Piracy
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And so on, staggering from each manufactured crisis to the next...
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Lazy Bastards
There are a number of industries that have been impacted by the free flow of information over the internet. They simply adapt and move forward. Why is it that the content industry is having such a hard time understanding this?
They can push for all the laws they want but they are fighting against their customers. Its a no win situation for them. They can try to fight the global internet and their customers to the death...OR they could adapt their business model to the current realities of technology.
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Re: Lazy Bastards
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Re: Re: Lazy Bastards
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source: history.
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They were calling me a thief because I (used to) download movies... so I stopped doing that out of paranoia. Result: I also stopped buying DVDs/BDs, because, as it turned out, I always bought movies that I liked after downloading them. No, I can't watch them in a theater: I rarely leave my apartment due to health problems.
They were calling me a thief because I ripped my DVDs to my hard drive, so I stopped doing that as well. Result: I stopped buying everything else I could get on DVDs (TV series and such), because I tend to scratch the discs to death in a month or so (again, health problems). I'd rather spend money on something more useful that several copies of the same disc.
Now they're also calling me uneducated for not supporting their point of view. Considering I'm a creator myself (two children's books), I find it annoying. I do respect copyrights of other creators, which is why I used to buy all the stuff I could (and did) get for free... that they appear to not really want me to see in the first place? And who really gets the money I pay for it in the end?
Remind me - why do they expect me to give them money?
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Mihaly Fiscor
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