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all the research on this matter has been performed by libertarian weirdos
But of course these companies will be competing against cheaper rip offs by chinese manufacturers who don't pay the R&D costs, if we're going down the road of no IP at all.Trefoil said:So basically if you're selling the software, you're actually selling the medium it comes on, and lots of companies like Sun, IBM, Nokia, Google, etc generate revenue by adding 'value': advertisements, helpdesk support, a mobile phone, etc.
They seem to think they're doing much better with patents.Schroedinger said:... and they aren't now?
At which point do you acknowledge the absence of a horse when you're closing the barn door
Patents ARE NOT copyright. You should probably learn the difference before you try to argue a point about either one.Enteebee said:They seem to think they're doing much better with patents.
Now I'll take your point as implying that it's all good to get rid of one form of IP (copyright) and not another (patents). I'm not going to take a particular stance here but this might be of interest to you guys arguing over whether we should have intellectual property to discuss types of protections which you feel are necessary/valid.Me said:But of course these companies will be competing against cheaper rip offs by chinese manufacturers who don't pay the R&D costs, if we're going down the road of no IP at all.
Or perhaps this post by Graney later on:Trefoil said:Personally I support taking copyright back to its original time period of 5 years (perhaps 10 at the absolute maximum) instead of the pathetic 75 years or so it is now.
Maybe instead of blindly defending a broken system and trying to paint us as 'radicals', you could actually have a sit and think about whether the current system is functioning optimally and as it was originally intended, or if reform is needed. Who knows - you might even then be able to participate intelligently in this discussion with us.Graney said:I am willing to conceded that perhaps, a five or ten year at most, term of copyright is a reasonable idea.
No, he doesn't really, since he was responding to me, not you. It was absolutely naive of him to believe that I ascribe to exactly the same set of beliefs as you.Graney said:Eh, enteebee makes a fair point
I wasn't arguing with you until you decided to point out to me that patents are not copyright, which isn't something I was claiming at all. You were explaining how the software industry does fine without our current copyright laws... I was pointing out that this is less likely to be true without IP protections for hardware manufacturers. I wasn't trying to claim that you support getting rid of patents or anything else, I was just pointing out in the context of a thread about IP being eliminated that your point only works best with certain IP laws in place.Trefoil said:Hey, NTB, here's an idea: actually bother to read my posts if you're going to try arguing with me.
If you did that, you might just manage to comprehend this post of mine at the start of the thread:
Or perhaps this post by Graney later on:
Maybe instead of blindly defending a broken system and trying to paint us as 'radicals', you could actually have a sit and think about whether the current system is functioning optimally and as it was originally intended, or if reform is needed. Who knows - you might even then be able to participate intelligently in this discussion with us.