Linked by Thom Holwerda on Mon 26th Apr 2010 23:11 UTC, submitted by UglyKidBill
Thread beginning with comment 420990
To view parent comment, click here.
To read all comments associated with this story, please click here.
To view parent comment, click here.
To read all comments associated with this story, please click here.
RE[6]: A crime is a crime
by Morgan on Tue 27th Apr 2010 15:50
in reply to "RE[5]: A crime is a crime"
I agree with you completely on this issue, but one thing you said stood out to me:
It is a corporation-infused concept that has no bearing in a modern democracy.
Sadly, a modern democracy is by definition corporate-owned. Look at every major democracy that exists today and tell me it isn't heavily influenced by the corporations within it. Call me silly, but I believe more and more we are moving towards a society typified by the cyberpunk genre of books and movies.
Soon we'll all be either corporate whores or rebels against the machine.




Member since:
2005-06-29
So, what do we have patents and copyrights for?
Trade secrets are covered enough by NDAs, which gives companies the legal handle to (rightfully so) seek compensation when an employee breaks said NDA. An NDA is particularly effective since it covers only the employer and employee, and doesn't extend towards journalists or other people who have had no part in signing said NDA.
Trade secrets are basically an NDA that extend to everyone, including you and I, even though we never signed any NDA or have ever agreed to not share any information. It gives companies yet another handle to blame their own failings (i.e., keeping stuff secret) on ordinary citizens who never had anything to do with the company in the first place.
Had we stuck to the concept of the NDA, then we would've never had to create countless dubious and shady legal provisions protecting "journalists", provisions which can be bent and broken depending on who has the most money (hint: it's not us).
It is a corporation-infused concept that has no bearing in a modern democracy. If you as a company are unable to keep the mouths of your employees shut, then that's YOUR failing, and your failing alone - not mine, not the media's.
Edited 2010-04-27 11:59 UTC