Linked by Thom Holwerda on Mon 30th Apr 2012 15:25 UTC
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How is ownership of one's own creation theft? Copyright is legal acknowledgment of one's own creation.
Because "one's own creation" often, practically never, contains purely original material. If you're willing to define copying as theft, then it's your fault for playing with such a bad definition that includes the creation of any work that borrows from others.
RE[8]: The two extremes
by dylansmrjones on Wed 2nd May 2012 06:36
in reply to "RE[7]: The two extremes"
Nobody is stealing any creation. If the creation is not physical is not a creation, but a thought. Thoughts cannot be owned. "Intellectual property" is ownership of thoughts incl. ownership of other persons thoughts if these thoughts are derived thoughts of another person's thinking. So basically with copyright you get to claim ownership on my thoughts. Copyright is no right but a privilege, and in a free society there are no privileges and therefore no copyright.




Member since:
2005-10-02
You can only steal something if it is material. If it is not material you cannot take it and therefore cannot steal it. The entire concept of "immaterial property" is broken.
If violating copyright is theft, then copyright itself is theft.