flOvermind wrote:In my argumentation, the "currently accepted societal norms over sharing of non-digital media" is the fixed point, and since that worked in the past, it can serve as a useful baseline for digital media. You have it the other way round, you are arguing that there are some "traditionally" accepted behaviours that are actually morally wrong, and with digital media we have the opportunity to change that.
I think it is hard for me to assume that "because something has worked in the past it is morally right". There are cannibalistic societies, societies where the age of sexual consent and child-bearing / marriage is 13, and it wasn't that long ago where formally challenging people to a fight to the death to defend one's honour would not have been considered murder. These all "worked" (either in the past, or currently), and yet they are hardly clear cut moral issues.
Morality has evolved, and will continue to do so no doubt. As a result I think it is important to keep "the way things are currently being done" in line with the fundamental reasoning behind what is considered moral and immoral at any given time, with respect to making adequate and proportionate laws.
flOvermind wrote:No, not at all. Actually, I'm saying the opposite. I'm saying the *author* of the idea should get something for the implementation. So if I took GoGoD and put it online (ignoring for a moment the question of getting permission), I would have to pay something for that, possibly even per download.
But I'm also saying that the author should get something for the implementation *only*. In particular, he should not get anything for a resale (transfer, *not* copy). The author was already paid for this concrete implementation, he doesn't need to be paid again. For a copy, it's different: That's something new, and the author should get something for it.
I apologise, I read what you were saying as "proportionate to the number of instances of their implementation", rather than "proportionate to the total implementations of the their idea". It still leaves a very grey area around derivative works, but that's unavoidable
flOvermind wrote:By that logic, for example, it would also be morally totally all right to make unlimited copying legal, if you somehow determine how many copies are in circulation and then compensate the author proportionally (doesn't need to be linear) from tax money. Is that model a good idea in practice? Don't ask me. But morally speaking, it sounds fair ... Going to a library, borrowing a book and then not buying it because I didn't like it, is morally all right, too. That's of course something where law and morale has to diverge: You can't make (or more accurately: enforce) a law that someone has to pay if and only if it was enjoyable... I'm actually saying the same thing: I'm arguing you should be able to transfer ownership freely through resale and borrowing. That's under the implicit assumption that people that really like something they only borrowed will feel morally obliged to buy their own copy after giving it back. Another implicit assumption is that someone who really likes a book will not sell it (again out of a moral obligation to reward the author). Maybe that's a bit naive, but I took those two assumptions as so self-evident that there's no need to explicitly state them. Personally, I would never sell a book that I like, and I often buy books after borrowing them.
I agree with all of this! It makes me wonder whether there's a market for a "digital borrowing service", something akin to the way dropbox functions, where effectively you can lend things out by a file transfer rather than copying, which would allow for something potentially legal digitally. Of course you can circumvent it by making copies before you transfer it, but then you can circumvent it by putting it in dropbox or uploading to ftp anyway - at least it would be having a legitimate service which, correctly used, would maintain the spirit of the law (as I interpret it at least).
flOvermind wrote:Same here, and fascinatingly the same sentiment led to completely different points of view, that in the end seem to converge on basically the same thing
Yes, a very interesting discussion in the end, I thoroughly appreciated your points of view on it all