Hacker Newsnew | past | comments | ask | show | jobs | submitlogin

> Unless you have a competing theory of ownership that explains why other assets can benefit the family of those who create things of value after death but not works of art, music, writing, etc., you haven't really made a cogent argument.

Easy. The ownership of intellectual property can indefinitely remain with the author (or be passed on to their children, spouses, etc).

We even have a great model for it now: NFTs.

The right to copy that work, however, isn't something that was either created or owned by the author. That exclusivity is a privilege granted by the state, introduced because it was believed to benefit the society overall.

You can inherit a car, but not a driver's license. The argument is that the exclusive license to copy a work of art is really more like the latter.



I think this is a specious argument. The value in intellectual property is the right to copy it. You can make a similar argument for other property: you own your car, but the right to drive it was not created by you. You own your house, but the right to occupy it and prevent others from occupying it is not created by you. It's not clear if you are arguing that there is some natural right to own and inherit a car that is granted by some authority other than the state and where that authority comes from.


>It's not clear if you are arguing that there is some natural right to own and inherit a car that is granted by some authority other than the state and where that authority comes from.

Sure! There is a natural right to own things: I have a thing, I am not giving it to you. I am the authority. If you want to have it, well, you'll have to do something. Because you can't drive my car while I'm driving it.

That was the problem that the communists ultimately couldn't resolve: people end up having things no matter what you do. My, mine are one of the first words humans learn to utter.

"Intellectual property theft" is a misnomer; like "identity theft".

>The value in intellectual property is the right to copy it.

You are almost correct.

It's not the right to copy. It's the exclusivity, enforced by the state. By definition, it's a privilege (not a right), and is created by punishment.

Information has no inherent value once it becomes public knowledge. The state needs to be actively involved for public information to have any value.

So, we're not talking about the right to copy that gets passed along. Nobody is talking about taking that right away.

It's the privilege to command the state to punish someone for making a copy without one's permission that we say shouldn't be passed along to one's heirs.




Guidelines | FAQ | Lists | API | Security | Legal | Apply to YC | Contact

Search: