2005-04-21, 07:59 PM
I don't wish to fan the flames here and get off topic, but for the sake of clarity and discussion this is bothering me:
- 'Copyright' (in principle anyways) does not exist to automatically protect the rights of the owner of the intellectual property. It exists to set a limited period of statute during which the IP owner can exclusively benefit before those rights are dissolved and the work(s) becomes part of the public domain. This is stated in the constitution -
"...The congress shall have power ... to promote the Progress of Science and useful Arts, by securing for limited times to Authors and Inventors the exclusive Right to their respective Writings and Discoveries"
The idea - as I interpret it anyway - is that 'exclusive right' for *unlimited* time would be detrimental to 'the progress of science and useful arts' (I believe this notion of limited time also applies to patents), and is therefore a BAD thing - allowing the IP/ patent owner to benefit for a limited time before allowing competition/ interpretation is a reasonable 'middle ground'. However, IMHO the principle and intent of this has been bent and twisted by the same interested parties who (obviously) want to extend this limited period both in duration and scope. Increasingly, and more worryingly, the law is being defined to reflect the viewpoint of the IP Owner. Funny - Isn't the law supposed to reflect the constitution?
- Uploading and downloading music (or any form of media) is not illegal; copyright infringement is. Despite what the (interested) parties would have you otherwise believe, copyright infringement is not 'theft' - this distinction is made under the law (US Supreme Court, Dowling vs US, 1985), not by me. However, 'theft' is a far more emotive word and elicits a desired reaction among people, hence the adopted use of the "theft / piracy" vocabulary by the RIAA, MPAA, FACT, and the general media; yet more FUD, as far as I'm concerned.
Now, judging by the number of requests on here for Divx support, the queries to play VOB files over MVP, even the use of DVD2MPEG plugin, I would humbly suggest that there are one or two of us here who may have *unwittingly* infringed copyright in our time (hey, I even sing in the shower - guilty as charged).
Does that make us 'thieves'? I honestly don't believe so, but when one can face three years in prison for producing a crappy camcorder copy of a movie in a theater (with the Feds called, no less), there is something SERIOUSLY wrong with this picture. A lesser charge for shoplifting the DVD from Walmart; copyright infringement more serious than theft? Think about that.
And what just irks me the most is, well guess what? TV didn't sound the deathknell for cinema, video didn't kill the radio star, hometaping isn't killing music, and the 'industry' isn't losing 'billions of dollars'. Technological innovation and changing consumer demand are ultimately forcing the restructuring of the supply pipe - as they are supposed to do. This is a GOOD thing.
Personally, I quite like the canadian approach - I believe it is also applied in France as well. It appears to try and accomodate technological innovation and changing consumer demand, while ensuring IP owners benefit (however indirectly) from their 'exclusive right to their writings and discoveries'. I don't know if this is the answer, but it seems more progressive than attempting to shore up (an obviously dated) business model through legislative means - that suggests interventionism and is to my mind, a far more socialist concept that a few cents on a pack of CD-Rs.
Sorry for rambling on.
- 'Copyright' (in principle anyways) does not exist to automatically protect the rights of the owner of the intellectual property. It exists to set a limited period of statute during which the IP owner can exclusively benefit before those rights are dissolved and the work(s) becomes part of the public domain. This is stated in the constitution -
"...The congress shall have power ... to promote the Progress of Science and useful Arts, by securing for limited times to Authors and Inventors the exclusive Right to their respective Writings and Discoveries"
The idea - as I interpret it anyway - is that 'exclusive right' for *unlimited* time would be detrimental to 'the progress of science and useful arts' (I believe this notion of limited time also applies to patents), and is therefore a BAD thing - allowing the IP/ patent owner to benefit for a limited time before allowing competition/ interpretation is a reasonable 'middle ground'. However, IMHO the principle and intent of this has been bent and twisted by the same interested parties who (obviously) want to extend this limited period both in duration and scope. Increasingly, and more worryingly, the law is being defined to reflect the viewpoint of the IP Owner. Funny - Isn't the law supposed to reflect the constitution?
- Uploading and downloading music (or any form of media) is not illegal; copyright infringement is. Despite what the (interested) parties would have you otherwise believe, copyright infringement is not 'theft' - this distinction is made under the law (US Supreme Court, Dowling vs US, 1985), not by me. However, 'theft' is a far more emotive word and elicits a desired reaction among people, hence the adopted use of the "theft / piracy" vocabulary by the RIAA, MPAA, FACT, and the general media; yet more FUD, as far as I'm concerned.
Now, judging by the number of requests on here for Divx support, the queries to play VOB files over MVP, even the use of DVD2MPEG plugin, I would humbly suggest that there are one or two of us here who may have *unwittingly* infringed copyright in our time (hey, I even sing in the shower - guilty as charged).
Does that make us 'thieves'? I honestly don't believe so, but when one can face three years in prison for producing a crappy camcorder copy of a movie in a theater (with the Feds called, no less), there is something SERIOUSLY wrong with this picture. A lesser charge for shoplifting the DVD from Walmart; copyright infringement more serious than theft? Think about that.
And what just irks me the most is, well guess what? TV didn't sound the deathknell for cinema, video didn't kill the radio star, hometaping isn't killing music, and the 'industry' isn't losing 'billions of dollars'. Technological innovation and changing consumer demand are ultimately forcing the restructuring of the supply pipe - as they are supposed to do. This is a GOOD thing.
Personally, I quite like the canadian approach - I believe it is also applied in France as well. It appears to try and accomodate technological innovation and changing consumer demand, while ensuring IP owners benefit (however indirectly) from their 'exclusive right to their writings and discoveries'. I don't know if this is the answer, but it seems more progressive than attempting to shore up (an obviously dated) business model through legislative means - that suggests interventionism and is to my mind, a far more socialist concept that a few cents on a pack of CD-Rs.
Sorry for rambling on.