WHAT IS YOUR STANCE ON IP? QUESTION: Hello Curt. Whats your - TopicsExpress



          

WHAT IS YOUR STANCE ON IP? QUESTION: Hello Curt. Whats your stance on IP especially taking Kinsellas arguments into account? (Derogatory reference to Kinsellas personality edited out. - Ed.) :) ANSWER: (Sorry, this ended up in my Other email for some reason. If you friend me then I will get your emails. I didnt see this one.) In the abstract I agree with the principle that easily accessible licenses for limited monopolies are not beneficial for consumers. However, that rational argument may or may not mean much in practice. 1) IP does appear to rapidly affect business willingness to invest. So, just like property rights exclude people from commons to facilitate the willingness to take risks, IP excludes people from opportunities in order to facilitate the willingness of individuals to take risks. So empirically speaking and rationally speaking, these are trade-off questions not matters of truth and falsehood. 2) Humans dont like free riding and we intuitively dislike direct copying - seeing it as a case of free riding. I think the question is limited to whether youre fooling someone or not (trademarking). So as long as youre not violating a trademark, which is a question of weights and measures, (fraud), then I think its hard to argue against copying anything at all. The test is pretty empirically simple - if you can glance at something for two seconds and tell the original from the copy, then its not a trademark violation. If you can then it is. Its a pretty simple test. We have proven it over and over again. 3) For licensed monopolies, I think it is entirely moral to appeal to the people asking for a limited monopoly to produce a good that the market cannot reliably produce. This tends kind of thing tends to be limited to very specific goods (health and medicine) or expensive original research in physical sciences, or high risk investments with high benefit to the commons (transportation and infrastructure). All that occurs is that private investment takes risk and reward, with some lottery bonus from the commons, that if they succeed they will recover their costs free of predation from others. Again, this is a purely pragmatic thing. And as long as such things are put out to bid, so that whomever wins gets the benefit, then I think its just a rational choice to get individuals do off book research and development on behalf of the commons in exchange for winning a lottery if they succeed. However I see these licenses as exceptions on the same level as laws, not grants to be easily obtained without serious discretion. 4) My problem with the rothbardian (ghetto) ethic is that its advocating free riding on the work of others, and NOT a matter of competition if you did not conduct the research yourself. Competition is not free riding, since you are doing a better job of voluntarily organizing production and satisfying customers. However, benefitting from someone elses research and development and capturing the rewards for it is simply free riding. Again, I see the Rothbardian ethic as simply an obscurantist set of arguments meant to justify parasitism rather than enforcing the fundamental requirement for rational cooperation: that we all contribute to production without parasitism upon others. Humans punish cheaters. The only way to increase the velocity of production and trade is to increase trust, and the way to increase trust is to suppress all free riding so that every individual is forced to participate in production, rather than engage in parasitism. Rothbardianism is simply a complex, overloaded, obscurant argument meant to justify ghetto parasitism. It is irrational to choose a stateless polity with low trust and persistent retribution over a stateful polity with low trust and high suppression of retribution. This is why people demand the state: to suppress immoral and unethical people such as rothbardians, so that a high trust society can develop. An anarchic or private polity will only be possible to form under a high trust society that prohibits all free riding with the exception of kin. Curt Doolittle PS: Im sure this will generate nonsense but Im pretty sure my argument is rock solid. Just how it is. Rothbardians need to get over it.
Posted on: Fri, 27 Jun 2014 09:34:49 +0000

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