The iRacing thread just got my mind going a bit on the topic of copyright (and "IP" in general) and I thought it would be interesting to gauge the popular opinion on the subject...
To cut right to the chase, I'm getting more and more convinced the whole concept of copyright is a dead end and that it will eventually disappear. More importantly I'm convinced this won't really hurt most of the creative people making a living "because of" copyright, like programmers, musicians etc. Let me explain why.
If you look at copyrighted material through the goggles of free market capitalism, the product itself (a piece of music or a program) has infinite supply. Once the initial copy is created and the costs of creating that copy are paid you can create any number of copies from the original at no additional cost. This makes the total cost of all copies trend towards 0.
The only reason a music file or a program has any value at all is because we have laws in place which artificially give them value - copyright. This worked more or less okay back in the days when copying a book or a piece of music was rather expensive and time consuming in and of itself, but with the advent of computers and the internet this expense has all but disappeared. While copying a piece of music tape to tape like in the "old" days took some time, effort and money (an empty tape at the very least), copying it now is done in seconds through Bittorrent at virtually no cost. And so, the amount of copyright infringement has sky-rocketed.
Now you have two choices, keep copyright the way it is and use extreme amounts of time, effort and money to try to keep the "market" from doing what comes naturally (The RIAA/MPAA approach), or you just drop the whole concept and try to find alternate ways to make money within this new system and with this new technology.
For a musician that would be the good old live show. People may be able to download your record, if you have one, but they won't be able to download the experience of seeing you live. Nor will they be able to download your merchandise. There's a lot of money to be made there and copyright is not important at all to keep this money flowing, quite the opposite.
If your recorded music is free you may reach a much larger audience than would be otherwise possible and if you're good your reputation will build purely through word of mouth. This means more people come to your live shows and more people buy your merchandise. There are already artists out there doing something very similar to this, and they are able to make a comfortable living that way. Will they become hugely popular multi-millionaires like many of the stars of today? Most likely not, but they'll get by, and so will many, many others like them. I find it much more appealing to have a huge creative community alive and thriving, than a few filthy rich super-stars and their managers that get all the cash.
For a programmer it's a bit different of course, since few would pay to see live programming on stage, but it's still possible to make money in the absence of copyright. I'm living proof of that. As a web-developer I program and configure web-sites for my customers and I can honestly say my "ownership" of the code I produce means absolutely nothing to me. I'm not hired because of the code I own, I'm hired because I have skills the people hiring me don't. They aren't able to create a good web-site, so they hire me to do it for them.
Furthermore the fact that the code I produce is effectively public domain means that the amount of time and effort spent reinventing something others have done before can be limited. Instead of doing every project from scratch or paying license fees for existing products to base my stuff on, I can just modify some existing code and get stuff done in half the time. This means less cost for the people hiring me to do some work for them, which is good for the economy as a whole.
Of course the loss of copyright would hurt for a lot of businesses currently thriving on selling software licenses and a lot of existing jobs would be lost, but at the same time a lot of new possibilities would open up in customising existing software and the savings the rest of the economy would have on software spending would be extremely beneficial. In my view that's an overall win.
Now, I'm not deluded enough to think removing copyright over night wouldn't create chaos and mayhem in the various industries and hurt a lot of people in the process, but I do think that's where we eventually have to end up; will end up. The current system just isn't working and we're wasting way too much time and effort trying to patch it back to a working state. We need to face the realities and adapt to them.
If anyone made it all the way down here (thank you by the way ), I'd like to hear your thoughts on the subject. I'd love nothing more that to be proven wrong if you can find some obvious flaws in my reasoning.
To cut right to the chase, I'm getting more and more convinced the whole concept of copyright is a dead end and that it will eventually disappear. More importantly I'm convinced this won't really hurt most of the creative people making a living "because of" copyright, like programmers, musicians etc. Let me explain why.
If you look at copyrighted material through the goggles of free market capitalism, the product itself (a piece of music or a program) has infinite supply. Once the initial copy is created and the costs of creating that copy are paid you can create any number of copies from the original at no additional cost. This makes the total cost of all copies trend towards 0.
The only reason a music file or a program has any value at all is because we have laws in place which artificially give them value - copyright. This worked more or less okay back in the days when copying a book or a piece of music was rather expensive and time consuming in and of itself, but with the advent of computers and the internet this expense has all but disappeared. While copying a piece of music tape to tape like in the "old" days took some time, effort and money (an empty tape at the very least), copying it now is done in seconds through Bittorrent at virtually no cost. And so, the amount of copyright infringement has sky-rocketed.
Now you have two choices, keep copyright the way it is and use extreme amounts of time, effort and money to try to keep the "market" from doing what comes naturally (The RIAA/MPAA approach), or you just drop the whole concept and try to find alternate ways to make money within this new system and with this new technology.
For a musician that would be the good old live show. People may be able to download your record, if you have one, but they won't be able to download the experience of seeing you live. Nor will they be able to download your merchandise. There's a lot of money to be made there and copyright is not important at all to keep this money flowing, quite the opposite.
If your recorded music is free you may reach a much larger audience than would be otherwise possible and if you're good your reputation will build purely through word of mouth. This means more people come to your live shows and more people buy your merchandise. There are already artists out there doing something very similar to this, and they are able to make a comfortable living that way. Will they become hugely popular multi-millionaires like many of the stars of today? Most likely not, but they'll get by, and so will many, many others like them. I find it much more appealing to have a huge creative community alive and thriving, than a few filthy rich super-stars and their managers that get all the cash.
For a programmer it's a bit different of course, since few would pay to see live programming on stage, but it's still possible to make money in the absence of copyright. I'm living proof of that. As a web-developer I program and configure web-sites for my customers and I can honestly say my "ownership" of the code I produce means absolutely nothing to me. I'm not hired because of the code I own, I'm hired because I have skills the people hiring me don't. They aren't able to create a good web-site, so they hire me to do it for them.
Furthermore the fact that the code I produce is effectively public domain means that the amount of time and effort spent reinventing something others have done before can be limited. Instead of doing every project from scratch or paying license fees for existing products to base my stuff on, I can just modify some existing code and get stuff done in half the time. This means less cost for the people hiring me to do some work for them, which is good for the economy as a whole.
Of course the loss of copyright would hurt for a lot of businesses currently thriving on selling software licenses and a lot of existing jobs would be lost, but at the same time a lot of new possibilities would open up in customising existing software and the savings the rest of the economy would have on software spending would be extremely beneficial. In my view that's an overall win.
Now, I'm not deluded enough to think removing copyright over night wouldn't create chaos and mayhem in the various industries and hurt a lot of people in the process, but I do think that's where we eventually have to end up; will end up. The current system just isn't working and we're wasting way too much time and effort trying to patch it back to a working state. We need to face the realities and adapt to them.
If anyone made it all the way down here (thank you by the way ), I'd like to hear your thoughts on the subject. I'd love nothing more that to be proven wrong if you can find some obvious flaws in my reasoning.