If you're such a moron to expand copyright to whenever, you shouldn't be surprised people don't honour it. To quote:
"And you will find that, in attempting to impose unreasonable restraints on the reprinting of the words of the dead, you have, to a great extent, annulled those restraints which now prevent men from pillaging and defrauding the living." -- Thomas Babington Macaulay, Speechs to House of Commons
on 5 Feb. 1841 Opposing Proposed Life + 60 Year Copyright Term
Before you try to "educate" people to adhere to your mad money-making scheme that is this copyright with durations above lifetimes, fix it. No copyright for the Dead. Fuck these Zombies!
... exists in Germany too, it's called (rather clumsy, because it's coined by courts, not just some lawyer) "Schutzrechtsberühmung".
And the applicable article regarding the parts quoted by techdirt would be §51:
"Allowed is the reproduction, dissemination and public rendition of a published work for the use as citation, insofar as the use in its extent is justified by its special use."
(translation by me, keeping the convoluted structure of the original).
So no matter which law applies, what techdirt did is still legal.
The real problem is that if we did carve out software from patentability, it's likely that crafty patent lawyers would quickly figure out how to rewrite patent claims to make them broadly cover the same concepts in a way that could be seen as not being "software."
Eh, that has already happened. Software is mathematics, and mathematics are not patentable. However, patent offices and courts have come up with a completely nonsensical definition of algorithm which they apply to judge software as being not mathematics. Kind of ruling that Pi is exactly equal to "3".
Software being mathematics is mathematically proofable. So there is actually no ambiguity involved. And as it happens, it also dispells all these arguments that come up all the time, like "but if it's in an ASIC" and whatever, because it defines totally clear what is patentable (In this case: the ASIC as such, but not the logic of any possible program that runs in it).
Now, the only problem is to get patent offices and courts to acknowledge the scientifc truth. And *poof*, all the software patents would be gone ;)
Apart from that, there's another big BUT: Having no software patents would NOT solve the problem. All the problems discussed at this conference would still exist.
Because most of them are inherent in the matter that is being subjected to patents (namely: the impossibility to draw clear borders to other things, ambiguity of the language, and the fact that most innovation happens gradually and everything depends on everything else).
There's only one thing where these inherent problems don't exist, and that's chemical compounds. And if you look at the statistics, you'll see that _everywhere_ but in pharmaceuticals legal expenses are much higher than gains with licensing. Which makes it clear that the patent system is not just defect, it's completely kaputt, broken by design, at best useless and more often damaging for everything but chemical components.
You can't fix it. The only thing there is to do is to abolish it for everything where it does not work.
As for chemicals, there are other problems. It produces monsters like Monsanto. However, that is not a problem within the patent system itself. In that case it works as it is supposed to work.
And I'm going to amend it: If you do, you won't get neither.
Security is also "security from being imprisoned without a charge", security is also "security from not being taken out of your home at night by the secret police", security is also "security from an unfair process", security is also "security from not being bombed by a drone because your neighbour happens to host a wanted criminal", security is also "security from being groped by some customs official". And so on.
What you get if you give up liberty is a totalitarian state. And you'll will find that in a totalitarian state, you've got no security at all.
Like it wouldn't spout fascist ideas of "giving up liberty"?
You've totally lost perspective. To you, this Obama Bush probably even looks "left-wing". I only see authoritarian extremists. Including that looney that wrote the above Washington-Post article.
Behold: http://politicalcompass.org/charts/us2012.php
Where are there the champions of liberty? Well, Jill Stein and Rocky Anderson probably, but they are both not extremely libertarian.
Like "if you're gambling away your money, you're going to be bankrupt?" Well, there used to be something like that, before some people decided to "bail-out" banks on account of them being big...
Anyway, a whole lot of the shenanigans banks are involved today could probably be prevented in just having a few very simple laws. Like "capital gains are subject to taxes" and "You may not lend out more than half the money you're indebted" or something like that... You can tell it's not going to be popular ;)
Well, it would be fine and all if anyone had thought of the future when writing the law.
Sometimes they did, sometimes they did not. And sometimes an entirely sensible law was changed in a way which produced problems in the future.
Like those morons that decided that copyright should be valid after the death of the author. There was no reason to change it to that, but rampant rent-seeking of publishers. They did it, and lo and behold, we've got a shitload of works nobody can publish anymore because nobody can find all the probable heirs and rightholders.
And it goes on. Loads of laws with specific exemptions for some technology, which will be obsolete in 20 years, but the law will still be wreaking havoc.
That is correct. However, that design was corrupted by extending the term of copyright past the lifespan of generations of humans. Currently copyright benefits authors and its remains
I fixed that. Obviously copyright past the lifespan of the author benefits its remains..
Assange willingly solicited leakers from the U.S. This is no different from any other spy agency in the world trying to recruit assets in a nation it wishes to gain secret information from.
I paraphrase: The New York Times willingly solicited whistleblowers from a company. This is no different from any other news agency in the world trying to recruit assets in a company it wishes to gain secret information from.
You miss one crucial bit: Public. So they would solicit "spies" for the public (which, by the way, includes you)?
I repeat here what would really work:
Fixing the problem would be minimizing the amount of people who have access to classified material. Since they tend to over-classify, nobody can work without that classified-access, so there's a huge amount of people who need that access.
The only rational course would be the declassify 90% of what gets classified right now, since it's not really important. And for the rest, you would not have to give 2 Million people access, but maybe only 50'000, so the chance of leaks would be very much lower.
But bureaucracies don't really work like that, since bureaucrats get power over other bureaucrats when classifying things. So everyone classifies and thus ever more people need access to that material...
...Well, at least "advances" are not what you want to have from publishers anymore, so why not just self-publish?
Hire your own free-lance editor (since the publisher will sue you for your advance anyway), get somebody who will publish it on all the usual e-book-shops, and you're set. And probably much cheaper than with a publisher..
The court misses some important points here, indeed. First, if people are paying levies for unauthorized downloads, society will perceive their actions to be justified.
That's NOT a problem. This is absolutely intended, because copyright applies to PUBLISHING, not to possession or acquisition. And most European countries do have exactly the same philosophy behind their copyright laws.
Second, people mainly use phones, computers and portable devices for music and films. Hardly anyone uses blank media any more. Therefore, levies on CD’s, for example, miss the objective.
Yes, if the levies are only on CD's it's of course absurd. The NRW Pirate Party (Germany) proposed a general levy on data storage devices not exceeding 5% of the retail price. Which sounds about sensible.
Third, if a levy is imposed, we get into the sticky situation where actual losses from downloading unauthorized content needs to be determined, which is a seemingly impossible task.
THAT is of course a problem. I can see here the big content producers profiting, but not the photographer of a cat, whose picture is widely circulated everywhere.
But these levies are already here, in the Netherlands, Germany(!), Sweden, Norway, Switzerland .. I don't know where else, but probably all over Europe.
Since the downloader can't tell whether something is illegal (only a judge can tell!), he must assume it's legal.
Besides, if somebody posts a picture of a cat somewhere, and you download it, how would you know whether this is itself was uploaded legally? And actually, it's like that with MOST material.
The "probably illegally uploaded" things are a minority if you factor in all the pictures, videos, posts and emails of everyone on this planet.
And you can't place the burden of proof onto the downloader; so you just don't.
Well, it's pretty self-explanatory if you look at the demographics. The brightest drive innovation, and the not-so-bright become bureaucrats and lawyers trying to stifle innovation.
Or maybe they get into professional sports, as it seems the US universities are mostly about.
We've still got too much backroom-dealings going on (especially when it comes to things like "Intellectual Property" or "Law enforcement"), where EU regulations are taken over without anyone talking about.
To be fair, it's the duty of the citizens (and representatives) to get informed about these things, and to demand a vote on them, but still, these international treaties get signed quite clandestinely, without much discussion or press reporting.
And the political party the most concerned about "foreign influence" which claims to be anti-EU, is of course the one immediately signing (or even driving the adoption of) any kind of international "Intellectual Property" or "Law Enforcement" treaties.
Well, anyway, the Swiss political system sure got its shortcomings, that's why I'm in the Swiss Pirate Party.
But our democracy sure is a hell lot better than the "winner-takes-all", "two-party", "elect-and-have-no-say-anymore"-system of the USA.
On the post: Recording Industry Could Catch More Flies With Honey, But Keeps Betting On Vinegar
Education only works with unalienated people
"And you will find that, in attempting to impose unreasonable restraints on the reprinting of the words of the dead, you have, to a great extent, annulled those restraints which now prevent men from pillaging and defrauding the living." -- Thomas Babington Macaulay, Speechs to House of Commons
on 5 Feb. 1841 Opposing Proposed Life + 60 Year Copyright Term
Before you try to "educate" people to adhere to your mad money-making scheme that is this copyright with durations above lifetimes, fix it. No copyright for the Dead. Fuck these Zombies!
On the post: Open Letter To Human Synergistics International In Response To Your Accusation That Techdirt Is Infringing
Copyfraud
And the applicable article regarding the parts quoted by techdirt would be §51:
"Allowed is the reproduction, dissemination and public rendition of a published work for the use as citation, insofar as the use in its extent is justified by its special use."
(translation by me, keeping the convoluted structure of the original).
So no matter which law applies, what techdirt did is still legal.
On the post: Some Thoughts On Fixing Problems In The Patent System
Software Patents
Eh, that has already happened. Software is mathematics, and mathematics are not patentable. However, patent offices and courts have come up with a completely nonsensical definition of algorithm which they apply to judge software as being not mathematics. Kind of ruling that Pi is exactly equal to "3".
Software being mathematics is mathematically proofable. So there is actually no ambiguity involved. And as it happens, it also dispells all these arguments that come up all the time, like "but if it's in an ASIC" and whatever, because it defines totally clear what is patentable (In this case: the ASIC as such, but not the logic of any possible program that runs in it).
Now, the only problem is to get patent offices and courts to acknowledge the scientifc truth. And *poof*, all the software patents would be gone ;)
Apart from that, there's another big BUT: Having no software patents would NOT solve the problem. All the problems discussed at this conference would still exist.
Because most of them are inherent in the matter that is being subjected to patents (namely: the impossibility to draw clear borders to other things, ambiguity of the language, and the fact that most innovation happens gradually and everything depends on everything else).
There's only one thing where these inherent problems don't exist, and that's chemical compounds. And if you look at the statistics, you'll see that _everywhere_ but in pharmaceuticals legal expenses are much higher than gains with licensing. Which makes it clear that the patent system is not just defect, it's completely kaputt, broken by design, at best useless and more often damaging for everything but chemical components.
You can't fix it. The only thing there is to do is to abolish it for everything where it does not work.
As for chemicals, there are other problems. It produces monsters like Monsanto. However, that is not a problem within the patent system itself. In that case it works as it is supposed to work.
On the post: Google Asks Germans To Protest 'Pay To Link' Proposal As It Comes Close To Becoming Law
This is war against scientific work and culture
And what's more, being banned from repeating "news" means effectively you're not allowed to share culture. Some kind of corporate censorship on news.
This is incredibly bad and a threat to democracy.
On the post: Washington Post: Yes, We Need To Give Up Liberty For Security
Re: I'm just gonna say it
Security is also "security from being imprisoned without a charge", security is also "security from not being taken out of your home at night by the secret police", security is also "security from an unfair process", security is also "security from not being bombed by a drone because your neighbour happens to host a wanted criminal", security is also "security from being groped by some customs official". And so on.
What you get if you give up liberty is a totalitarian state. And you'll will find that in a totalitarian state, you've got no security at all.
On the post: Washington Post: Yes, We Need To Give Up Liberty For Security
Re:
You've totally lost perspective. To you, this Obama Bush probably even looks "left-wing". I only see authoritarian extremists. Including that looney that wrote the above Washington-Post article.
Behold: http://politicalcompass.org/charts/us2012.php
Where are there the champions of liberty? Well, Jill Stein and Rocky Anderson probably, but they are both not extremely libertarian.
On the post: Why DC And Silicon Valley Don't Mix Well
Re: Re: FTFY
Anyway, a whole lot of the shenanigans banks are involved today could probably be prevented in just having a few very simple laws. Like "capital gains are subject to taxes" and "You may not lend out more than half the money you're indebted" or something like that... You can tell it's not going to be popular ;)
On the post: CNN Counts Patents, Mistakes Them For Inventiveness
Keeping up laws
Sometimes they did, sometimes they did not. And sometimes an entirely sensible law was changed in a way which produced problems in the future.
Like those morons that decided that copyright should be valid after the death of the author. There was no reason to change it to that, but rampant rent-seeking of publishers. They did it, and lo and behold, we've got a shitload of works nobody can publish anymore because nobody can find all the probable heirs and rightholders.
And it goes on. Loads of laws with specific exemptions for some technology, which will be obsolete in 20 years, but the law will still be wreaking havoc.
On the post: Bizarre Trend: Journalism Professors Using Klout Scores As Part Of Students' Grades
Privacy Nightmare
On the post: Former Copyright Boss: New Technology Should Be Presumed Illegal Until Congress Says Otherwise
Re: Re: Correct and so very wrong
I fixed that. Obviously copyright past the lifespan of the author benefits its remains..
On the post: US Military Classifies Wikileaks As 'Enemy Of The United States'
Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re:
I paraphrase:
The New York Times willingly solicited whistleblowers from a company. This is no different from any other news agency in the world trying to recruit assets in a company it wishes to gain secret information from.
You miss one crucial bit: Public. So they would solicit "spies" for the public (which, by the way, includes you)?
I repeat here what would really work:
Fixing the problem would be minimizing the amount of people who have access to classified material. Since they tend to over-classify, nobody can work without that classified-access, so there's a huge amount of people who need that access.
The only rational course would be the declassify 90% of what gets classified right now, since it's not really important. And for the rest, you would not have to give 2 Million people access, but maybe only 50'000, so the chance of leaks would be very much lower.
But bureaucracies don't really work like that, since bureaucrats get power over other bureaucrats when classifying things. So everyone classifies and thus ever more people need access to that material...
On the post: US Military Classifies Wikileaks As 'Enemy Of The United States'
Re:
Well, if the state is a nation of law, anyway...
On the post: Penguin Taking Underperforming Authors To Court To Recoup Paid Advances
Sounds like the end of publishers
Hire your own free-lance editor (since the publisher will sue you for your advance anyway), get somebody who will publish it on all the usual e-book-shops, and you're set. And probably much cheaper than with a publisher..
On the post: Absurdity Of Copyright Policy Leaves Dutch Supreme Court Confused
That's NOT a problem. This is absolutely intended, because copyright applies to PUBLISHING, not to possession or acquisition. And most European countries do have exactly the same philosophy behind their copyright laws.
Second, people mainly use phones, computers and portable devices for music and films. Hardly anyone uses blank media any more. Therefore, levies on CD’s, for example, miss the objective.
Yes, if the levies are only on CD's it's of course absurd. The NRW Pirate Party (Germany) proposed a general levy on data storage devices not exceeding 5% of the retail price. Which sounds about sensible.
Third, if a levy is imposed, we get into the sticky situation where actual losses from downloading unauthorized content needs to be determined, which is a seemingly impossible task.
THAT is of course a problem. I can see here the big content producers profiting, but not the photographer of a cat, whose picture is widely circulated everywhere.
But these levies are already here, in the Netherlands, Germany(!), Sweden, Norway, Switzerland .. I don't know where else, but probably all over Europe.
On the post: Absurdity Of Copyright Policy Leaves Dutch Supreme Court Confused
Re:
Since the downloader can't tell whether something is illegal (only a judge can tell!), he must assume it's legal.
Besides, if somebody posts a picture of a cat somewhere, and you download it, how would you know whether this is itself was uploaded legally? And actually, it's like that with MOST material.
The "probably illegally uploaded" things are a minority if you factor in all the pictures, videos, posts and emails of everyone on this planet.
And you can't place the burden of proof onto the downloader; so you just don't.
On the post: Garbage In, Garbage Out On Studies Concerning Which Countries 'Lead' In Education
What should the not-so-bright do?
Or maybe they get into professional sports, as it seems the US universities are mostly about.
On the post: Cambodia Wants Mandatory Surveillance Cameras In Internet Cafes
There, I fixed it.
On the post: Apple Accused Of 'Violating The Rights' Of Iconic Swiss Railway Clock
Re:
http://farm3.staticflickr.com/2680/4193737950_c36577969f_b.jpg
It's about 50cm in diameter. So this is just a thumbnail, which is covered by the right to quote parts of a work and fair use.
Might be a design patent tough.
On the post: Switzerland Questions Crazy Hollywood Claims About File Sharing... Ends Up On Congressional Watchlist
Re: Re:
http://www.schweizermedien.ch/fileadmin/schweizermedien/brancheninfos/medienbudget/2011_Medienbu dget.pdf
(You can replace the 2011 with 2005 to 2010 to get older reports; in german).
That's 3150 SFR (about 3350 USD) per household a year, half of which is spent on content. Not counting companies.
Italy is a different case, since they've got no money ;)
On the post: Switzerland Questions Crazy Hollywood Claims About File Sharing... Ends Up On Congressional Watchlist
Re: Ahem...
We've still got too much backroom-dealings going on (especially when it comes to things like "Intellectual Property" or "Law enforcement"), where EU regulations are taken over without anyone talking about.
To be fair, it's the duty of the citizens (and representatives) to get informed about these things, and to demand a vote on them, but still, these international treaties get signed quite clandestinely, without much discussion or press reporting.
And the political party the most concerned about "foreign influence" which claims to be anti-EU, is of course the one immediately signing (or even driving the adoption of) any kind of international "Intellectual Property" or "Law Enforcement" treaties.
Well, anyway, the Swiss political system sure got its shortcomings, that's why I'm in the Swiss Pirate Party.
But our democracy sure is a hell lot better than the "winner-takes-all", "two-party", "elect-and-have-no-say-anymore"-system of the USA.
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