RobertJasiek wrote:FlyingAxe wrote:What is the fundamental difference between these kinds of information that makes some of them property and others not?
Their different treatment by law.
No bearing on morality of the action. Kidnapping a West African and kidnapping a West Virginian at one point was treated differently by the law. Both actions were equally immoral. On the other hand, criticizing the king at one point was illegal, while criticizing your neighbor was not. Yet, neither action was immoral (on the other hand, jailing or fining a person for criticizing a king was).
More than that is applied. People in civilisations under law create work under those conditions so that they can maintain their living. If there were civilisations with different law, then people would work differently or even work in entirely different areas to enable themselves to maintaing their living under those different circumstances. Which is theoretically entertaining but irrelevant under current international etc. copyright law.
No, this is erroneous.
Improvement (and maintenance) in living can happen without the law, as long as nobody is interfering with anybody’s rights. When one does, the law interferes. But it is erroneous to say that the law itself drives the civilization forward.
Furthermore, the law does not create rights, it recognizes them. When it recognizes the rights that do not exist, the particular law is not a real law, it is a legal fiction. Legal fiction leads to violation of other people’s rights when it is enforced. (For instance, right of a husband to relations with his wife is a legal fiction that has been in place in most civilized countries until very recently. In the UK, until early 90s. In the US, until 70s, I think. Its enforcement led to marital rape.)
Force is a strong word. Copyright law usually issues fines rather than imprisonment. It requires being the manager of Rapidshare or whatever together with particularly aggressive behavioru to risk imprisonment.
First, I suppose the US government will forgive me the fine if I refuse to pay it? At no point will there be any men in uniform coming and enforcing the fine one way or another?
Second, so, when the owners of Rapidshare are imprisoned because of a legal fiction, that is not a case of force being applied to someone immorally?
That you want to see?:)
Yes, protection from violence is the only reason I want to see for violence being applied to another human being. Call me old-fashioned.
Indeed. Have fun opening a book store in a street full of book stores!:)
Well, if I am good, I will have good sales. But my point is: I am violating nobody’s rights if I do that.
There is a distinction between property and intellectual property. Information in general is not intellectual property but specific kinds of information (such as most commercial go books' contents) is.
A statement you have not justified in any way. Intellectual property is the physical property on which information is stored. You certainly can own that. And I certainly may not steal that. But once I copy information onto my storage device (be it my brain or my hard drive), you cannot own that information, since you cannot own that device.
Unless you believe that "information" exists in some imaginary Platonic realm. In that case, a) you have to prove its existence, b) you still cannot justify my restriction to its use, since it is non-scarce.
Not transactions are possessed but the money once the transaction will have been completed.
Huh? You own the money in your customers’ pockets that they may pay you in future if they decide to buy your product? Doesn’t this contradict their own ownership of that money before the sale has happened? In case you are wondering, yes, I am serious. I don’t think you can own other people’s money before they gave it to you willingly.
Advocating copyright is not robbing organs. Be serious.
No, but justifying violating individuals’ rights for the "improvement of society" (utilitarian approach to morality) leads to gross violation of human rights seen in Germany, US, Japan, USSR, and other countries in the 1930s.