Legislators Can't See the Elephant in the Room
- Dr. Roy Schestowitz
- 2012-01-14 00:51:12 UTC
- Modified: 2012-01-14 00:51:33 UTC
Summary: Officials are concerned about a patent of Facebook for all the wrong reasons, failing to see that software patents as a whole are a problem
ACCORDING to yet another new Facebook patent, this brainchild/alter-ego of Microsoft is tracking users in nefarious ways. We wrote about the subject in Spanish.
Legislators question Facebook over tracking patent
[...]
Indeed, many of these patents are little more than a strategy of blocking other firms from using the tech - or an attempt to force other companies to pay licensing fees.
Paying someone for a monopoly on tracking. Ain't the patent system just lovely? While
Fish & Richardson are growing and Bloomberg (business press)
plays up the "IP" system to the tune of
granting of a monopoly on networking or other
software (
Openwave "plans to focus on selling its patents") as seen in
press releases, we cannot help asking: why don't officials go to the root of the problem and also revise this whole crazy system known to some as "IP" -- the idea that people can "own" ideas? The problem is the funding source of most politicians, who in turn do not represent the public; they serve corporations.
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Comments
Michael
2012-01-14 01:25:40
What? That would be evil and wrong! The government has no right to step in and remove IP protections from companies and individuals who make products!
There goes your argument! You want it both ways... full protection for OSS but no protections for others. Completely hypocritical.
saulgoode
2012-01-14 11:42:04
Likewise, it is the government's prerogative to emend, abrogate, or rescind any monopoly they have granted upon copying and distribution of so-called "intellectual property". Furthermore, it is not only the right of the government to do so, they have the obligation to do so if the granted monopoly does not serve the public's interest (Article 8 of the U.S. Constitution).
"Intellectual property" is not an entitlement, it is government-granted monopoly toward a particular segment of society (artists, authors, musicians, programmers, etc) which encroaches on the rights of others in that society; just as the monopoly that WXYZ has been granted to broadcast TV (on certain frequencies in the Detroit area) encroaches on other people's rights to do likewise. In all such government grants the interest -- and justification -- lies in how society benefits, not the recipient of the grants.
So, yes. The government does indeed have the authority to revoke the monopolistic prerogatives that permit Free Software programmers to place conditions upon certain activities with respect to their code -- indeed the government has the obligation to do so if it were determined that licenses such as the GPL are not in the public interest. However, I would argue that the GPL is hardly the place to "start" such curtailing of copyright grants; the GPL actually does a better job protecting society's interest than base copyright law itself and should better qualify as the last place visited.
For what it's worth, I am not at all opposed to the imposition of copyright monopolies at the conceptual level, just as I am not opposed to other government granting of monopolies on TV/radio stations, power grids, water supplies, and timber harvesting. It is, after all, the very purpose to engage in such administration of such resources. But the only valid argument pertinent to determining the details of how, or whether, such monopolies should be granted is their potential for benefiting society. Any discussion premised upon concern over an entitlement of the grant recipient is entirely nugatory; no such entitlement exists.
Michael
2012-01-14 16:42:25
I say the government has no right to take what you own, except in rare circumstances such as eminent domain or evidence collection for certain crimes. You believe that what we own the government should be able to take from us at any time if doing so would benefit society.
Fair enough? Remember: we are not talking exclusive use of a public / natural resource, such as a water supply or radio spectrum - we are talking exclusive rights to our own property that we created. Not the raw materials to do so.
saulgoode
2012-01-15 02:48:30
A mistake on my part. It is Article I, Section 8 of the Constitution which empowers Congress to "... secur[e] for limited Times to Authors and Inventors the exclusive Right to their respective Writings and Discoveries;".
An exclusive right to something -- whether a physical object, a resource, or an activity -- is nothing other than a monopoly on that thing. If only you are permitted to exploit it, then you monopolize its exploitation.
And to reiterate the point I was originally making, the power of Congress to grant this "exclusive Right" is not unconditional -- the Constitutional authority mandates that the granted monopoly be purposed to "promote the Progress of Science and useful Arts". Congress does not have the authority to grant exclusive rights to WXYZ just because they want to "reward" the shareholders of WXYZ, nor do they have the authority to reward the authors of copyrighted content merely to "reward" or benefit the creator. The overarching consequent of the monopoly grant must be premised on the beneficial furtherance of science and the useful arts.
No, I do not think you've correctly identified where are disagreement lies. I believe in what you say and am also opposed to government authority to seize privately owned property.
Our differences stem (to my assessment) from your calling "property" that which is not in actuality property; or more directly, inconsistencies between our views in what "ownership" of property comprises.
If I give, or sell, some real property to you, barring any pre-established agreements between us, then I no longer "own" that property and have no say in what you are to do with it. By the same token (were there no copyright law in existence), were I to give you a book I had written, I should have no say in what you do with that book. This is the natural state of property.
However, copyright encroaches upon the "natural state" and, in effect, imposes a de facto, pre-established agreement to the ownership transfer of that book (indeed to all ownership transfers of instances of copyrighted works). This to my mind is the way the copyright regime should be viewed -- we can then productively engage in discussion suitable about the terms and conditions of the pre-established agreement, recognizing the Constitutional limitations upon the degree of Congressional authority available.
With your view of copyright as an ownership entitlement presumably being the "natural state" of things, there are just too many inconsistencies to expect any productive discussion to ensue -- e.g., reconciling your statement that "IP protections have been extended to far, far too long in my view" with the idea of copyrights being "owned property" which is a natural entitlement of the creator.
I agree that there is some degree of disjunction in the comparison to airwave broadcasting, but the similarities are significant in considering the issue of government encroaching upon the natural state of things (whereby anybody could broadcast whenever and wherever) in an effort to benefit the public.
As I've stated, I am not at all opposed to the concept of copyright. Properly considering it as a pre-established "sales contract" governing the transfer of ownership of copyrighted works, having certain rights by default exclusively retained by the author greatly simplifies the ability of authors and creators to market their work (without resorting to explicit contractual agreements with each and every recipient of the work), and I would recognize that this offers an incentive for the authors to publish their work (it also obviates the legal intricacies of enforcing those agreements under contract law). These are, to my mind, ways in which government institution of copyright law can benefit the public being governed.
Nonetheless, the copyright regime as it currently stands is in dire need of reform, with which you apparently would agree. However, your present viewpoints of copyright as "exclusive rights to our own property" does not provide any guidance on identifying and addressing the necessary issues in reforming the law because your starting premise is that copyright ownership is the natural state of the rights being discussed. How can one ever hope to analyze the merit of a law, or to contrive its scope and authority, if one starts by presuming the law itself is the natural state of things? No, it is only by first examining how things would transpire without the law altogether that such an analysis take place, and your viewpoint of copyright fails in this regard.
Michael
2012-01-15 18:50:58
saulgoode
2012-01-16 06:45:34
If I give you an apple ("real property") then that apple is now yours to do with what you will. Of course, we could come to some sort of understanding before I give you the apple that you, by taking the apple, agree to somesuch as 1) paying me a dollar, 2) not selling the apple to anyone else, 3) not making a pie out of it, 4) not planting the seeds, or n) whatever conditions we both come to agree upon. But if I don't bother to specify any pre-conditions, or to get your consent to them, then by default you are free to do any of those things.
Now let's say I wrote a poem and give it to you. I would treat the transaction in a similar light. The default transaction is that you then are free to do with that poem, the "property" that has been given to you by me, whatever you want. The poem is "my property" to do with as I please up until the point that I give it to you. If I wish to retain any control over what you might do with that poem then such stipulations should need to be specified before you receive the poem.
Now if you are skeptical that what I just described is the real nature of "intellectual property", consider that the preceding paragraph is an entirely accurate description of how my sharing a poem (story, song, etc) with you is treated under current copyright law -- IF I did not write the poem down on paper, or record it on a tape, or otherwise "fixate it in a permanent medium" before sharing it with anybody. If I merely recited the poem to you, having never made a tangible copy of its "creativeness", then there is no copyright protection extended to it.
How can that be? By your reasoning the poem is my property, both before and after I've shared it with you. Why is the government letting you "steal" my property? If my poetic creation is my property, it should not matter whether I've committed it to paper. I created it, it's mine; and I should be able to tell everybody else what they can and cannot do with it. Yet that is not what the law says. The law isn't recognizing my poetic creation as "property", nor is the government protecting it.
I think there does exist a natural concept of "property" and that the "man-made artificial construct" to which you refer is not that which creates property, but that which deals with how society treats the retention, disposition, and transfer of ownership rights for property. In other words, society makes laws about the ownership of property, but it does not make property -- even a lawless society has property, it is just a matter of its ownership being dictated by "might makes right".
I do not even particularly object to the concept of treating an artistic creation as "property" -- and remain generally opposed to government seizure of citizens' property -- but then to be consistent one should necessary treat that creative work in a "property-like" fashion. If the creation is "property" then when it is passed from one person to another, and the person should be receiving that "property" -- if he is not, then it is not really "property". Ironically, it is copyright law which is not treating "intellectual property" as real property. As long as I keep my property to myself, I completely agree. But if the "man-made artificial construct" which we call law is to intervene and declare that when I give it to you, I retain it, then that intervention needs to be justified as producing a societal benefit because this is a deviation from both the lawful and the lawless laws of property (just as government confiscation of property by means of "imminent domain" need be justified).
Michael
2012-01-16 07:32:52
saulgoode
2012-01-16 18:11:34
Copyright is not about protecting any rights of the person who creates the work, it is about abrogating the rights everybody else.
So you are saying that copyright law as it currently exists is unreasonable (at least we can agree on that). Because under the law there is no copyright protection afforded until the work is recorded in some tangible manner. If you tell me a poem you've written, sing me a new song, or relate an improvisational story then they are NOT protected by copyright law (Title 17, ۤ 102 "Copyright protection subsists, in accordance with this title, in original works of authorship fixed in any tangible medium of expression").
You are NOT focused upon personal rights because the way that copyright law works is to take away the rights of everybody but the author. The rights of the author are not affected by copyright law one way or the other -- I have the right to give you my poem and then still have the right to go and give it to someone else. I can turn it a song, or even make a movie out of it; nothing that you do after receiving my poem takes away any of my rights to do anything that I couldn't do before giving the poem to someone us. So if your moral focus is upon "personal rights" and you don't approve of rights being taken away from people, then your professed morality should stand in opposition to copyright law.
And have you ever rented a house, a car, a golf cart, ... anything ... without first signing some sort of contract? That is an important distinction from a transfer of ownership through giving or selling. When we buy or are given a copyrighted work, we don't actually own it -- the government has intervened and imposed an automatic, pre-established "sales contract" which restricts the rights of the buyer in a manner very similar to how leases or rental agreements work. (This is in fact how you treat the subject with the remainder of your response, so I'll consider those points already addressed.)
This is to what I was referring earlier: copyright law should be considered a pre-negotiated sales contract, or perhaps more aptly a rental contract since the buyer actually acquires very few ownership rights. The problem is that the vast majority of the population was not involved in the negotiations and are growing increasingly dissatisfied with the terms of the agreement -- and well they should be.
If the lobbyists of Hollywood and TIn Pan Alley are to be believed and "piracy" is running rampant, this should serve as a clear indication of that dissatisfaction and that it is time to renegotiate the contract -- not that government should be unilaterally cracking down on the people whose rights have been taken away.
Michael
2012-01-16 18:43:57
saulgoode
2012-01-16 20:44:57
But I've already explained that, unless a "physical copy" is made, there is no IP protection. I've requested that you address how that reconciles with your view. Yes, I agree there is confusion, but it is not on my part.
Yet that is the reality of the legalities of the situation.
If you lend or lease something than fine, but we are not talking about that. Both those activities entail an agreement between the recipient and the provider, otherwise providing someone with something, by default, transfers the right of the receiver to avail himself of that thing.
Michael
2012-01-16 21:46:05
saulgoode
2012-01-16 22:45:01
See above. (Note: I am disappointed that you are reticent to discuss this aspect in greater depth as it is the crux of the debate.)
Why?! When you purchase a plot of land, should it just be assumed that you own the airspace above it, extending infinitely out into outer space? Because this was the viewpoint up until 1946 when the US Supreme Court finally recognized that advancements in the technology of aviation made it untenable -- i.e., too costly to the progress of mankind -- to continue the age-old doctrine of "property" which would require that any corn farmer in Podunk could sue airlines for "trespassing".
The assumptions of copyright may have been acceptable in the past, but no longer. The cost to society of the government saying "you can't make a copy" to each and every citizen in the world -- except the person who created the original instance -- in the past was not that onerous. Making copies was expensive and demanded considerable investment. At the time it was quite reasonable to protect the interests of those who invested in the technology required to produce such copies economically. Such is no longer the case; it is virtually zero-cost for any poet, song writer, or author to have his works distributed throughout the world. So please explain why society should continue to provide billions of dollars in subsidy to those who are mired in the old technology of printing out creative expression on pieces of paper or plastic when distribution of that creativity and knowledge is now effectively free? Are you so blindered in your view that you don't see this as waste of humanity's resources?
Well, I am not. You are an anachronism, a relic of the past. I have no doubt -- regardless of whatever million-dollar infringement convictions or whatever transitory, misguided anti-technology laws enacted -- that within a decade or two, the current copyright regime will be viewed in the same ridiculous light as expecting airplanes to stop and pay a toll every time they cross a property line would be today
Michael
2012-01-17 00:02:14
You have given me a poem as one might give someone a book. You can read it and enjoy it and even include it in your personal library. You can read it to others and even let others read it, but you cannot claim ownership of the IP. You cannot, for example, sell the rights to a publisher to have them sell it for your benefit (in the original or altered state). You can, of course, be inspired by it and write similar poetry, but you cannot plagiarize it. This is how it works with most books you buy right now... you are buying the book, not the IP that allowed the book to be created / generated. You can also give me the rights to a poem or book. Then you can do with it as you want: turn it into a movie, alter it, record it in chipmunk voice and sell it for a profit. You own the IP.
These are very different things. So when you say you give me a poem you need to specify which you mean. In general, the first is assumed unless you specify the second (and, in reality, there can be all sorts of nuances in both). Well, the very idea of "property" is "concocted" and "intangible". The items covered by property rights may or may not be tangible, but the concept of "property" never is... you cannot show me natural "property" because it is a man-made concept. When you say you have given me the poem you are not specifying what you mean... see above. I am happy to discuss any aspect of this in greater depth. If I let you stay at my house for the night, it should be assumed you will respect my rights. I should not have to include everything in a written contract. I do not see why this would be in question (not that it is not wise to include such a contract for a house, but for every book and CD and DVD you buy... that is just silly!) I have no opinion on the side issue of how high your air space should extend. So no IP protections at all? No more Hollywood movies or novels or medicines? That just seems insane. It not only is not a benefit to society (though one might argue the absence of Hollywood might be such... <grin>), it makes no sense to demand people show their use of their own property is more important than the use by society... to just assume eminent domain takes over in all cases of IP. I simply have no sympathy for such communal ownership of my property (I do not support Communism, even if restricted to just IP). Movies, programs, music, etc. all cost money to make and take time to make. I do not see why this is even in question. The whole idea that because it is easier and cheaper to infringe on anthers' rights we should just give up on trying to protect rights at all is bizarre in my book. I agree the laws need to change... I just do not think they should change to accept communal ownership (Communism) of all IP. Then again, I also do not Bellevue in unfettered Capitalism.