J
JacquesMaritain
Guest
Hi SAG:I know very little about our trademark and copyright laws, but it just seems to me that Disney’s desire to protect their Mickey Mouse creation should not have even been categorized as literature. I think it should have been considered an invention, product and /or trademark and handled by those laws instead. I would agree that long copyright laws only serve the greedy and are not in the best interest of culture and the promotion, dissemination and availability of knowledge and truth inspired by the written word. There is a spiritual value to anything that can be considered worthwhile and we, as a society should consider the worth to the community more than the worth to an individual, even if that person is the creator of intellectual property. From a spiriutal standpoint, we are all just conduits of God’s gifts and they are given for the benefit of all, not just the person who receives them. I have a personal experience that somewhat explains what I mean. As a designer in the garment industry, I once designed a very successful line of clothes…(actually I had unwittingly created a trend). I got very little monetary compensation for this collection (just a weekly salary over a few months) but my line increased business for the entire garment industry from NY to LA for over 5 years! Millions, if not billions were added to the GNP and though I did not recieve even a fraction of the profits, my creativity did tremendous good for the economy as a whole. That I was able to trigger this wealth (and the subsequent jobs it created) made me feel very humbled and grateful for the talents and skills God gave me. There is, I believe, a value to our talents and efforts that far exceeds individual compensation, and our laws should be fluid and non-stifling enough that creativity can express itself to the benefit of us all.
Wow! What a wonderful testimony! I feel that way sometimes myself. I know I didn’t make millions of dollars for anyone but it is so incredibly humbling for me to come across a website, even at random, and read a discussion about the natural sciences, or physics, or astronomy, and hey, what do you know? There’s a hyperlink to one of my papers in the scientific journals…I touched someone’s life/thinking, and they noted that. Or maybe someone uses some of the code I write to solve another problem, and is grateful. That’s all the reward I ever wanted, and wow how God has blessed me. God lent me the ideas and things I wrote about in the science journals; He is the author of all of it, not me, I cannot “own” it for myself, it belongs to humanity, it is part of our common human culture, I wouldn’t dare to take possession of it, or lock it away, or deny it to others, so I humbly offer it, for free, to anyone that wants it. Good for you!
Now in the post above I gave a “baby-steps” approach to filesharing (which is not stealing, if you think about it for a minute). Stealing is wrong because you are taking something away from someone, so they can’t use it anymore; when you copy something on a computer, all you are doing is making 2 copies, where before there was only one, and the original person who purchased the first copy is not harmed in any way, shape or form. He still has the program that you allegedly stole.
How is this possible? Well, you didn’t steal it, you duplicated it. Filesharing is just asexual reproduction on a computer: cloning, if you like. Where there was once one thing, now there are two identical things. Ultimately the “things” are not real objects, all they are are rearrangements of the magnetic bits on a computer hard drive; when one computer said 0110110 and the other said 0000000, now both computers say 0110110. The first computer “teaches” the second one a new way to orient its bits, if you want.
To the Purists and Tecchies: they might argue, wait, the filesharing websites like Isohunt/The Pirate Bay use magnet links/DHT now, instead of separate .torrent files, so they don’t even host them anymore, so why are you going on about .torrent files…and that’s fair…but the copyright people here are still stuck in the mode of thinking that a movie (like Steal This Film) is a physical, tangible object, like a car (if you can steal a physical car and that’s bad, then yes, I suppose you can steal a movie and that’s bad too. The model is wrong; they just don’t realize that yet. In their defence, they are well paid NOT to realize it, indeed they won’t even let themselves think about it, so higher reasoning shuts down, it’s just too threatening, and you get the automatic response: “downloading is stealing”). So you have to help them evolve to the current state of filesharing, ca 2012 (hint: its not about physical objects anymore. not that it ever was. If I took a photograph of a portrait of your Aunt Mabel hanging on the wall, does the portrait suddenly vanish after I take the photo? If I tape a song off the radio onto a cassette tape, does the song get stolen, and thus “taken away” from any of the other radio listeners? Clearly not. These are not physical objects).
Jacques