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Royal Society Issues IP Charter 250

An anonymous reader writes "The Economist and the Guardian both have stories about the release of the Adelphi Charter – an international blueprint for how intellectual property should be made – by Britain's Royal Society for the Encouragement of Arts, Manufacture and Commerce. The Economist says “The Adelphi group are a varied crew ranging from Gilberto Gil, the Brazilian culture minister (and pop star) to Sir John Sulston, a Nobel-winning scientist who helped decode the human genome, and James Boyle, a law professor at Duke University. They believe that the intellectual-property system is starting to lean so far in favor of private enrichment that it no longer serves the public interest.” The charter calls for evidence-based policy, and a balance between rights protection and the public domain. It also condemns business method and software patents."
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Royal Society Issues IP Charter

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  • ...top mice vote to bell cat.
  • Fatalism (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Chrontius ( 654879 ) on Sunday October 16, 2005 @08:14PM (#13806181)
    "Top mice vote to bell cat" Yeah, yeah, more we can't win attitude.

    Will current posters please instead offer suggestions for how to get the Government to pay attention instead of whining? Or at least, do both? How many millions of smart (don't prove me wrong) people read this? We're a force of Nature on the Internet, capable of manually DDoSing servers into a meltdown.

    Let's turn that power to doing good -- statistically, at least one person here is bound to have a good idea.
    • Re:Fatalism (Score:5, Insightful)

      by Raul654 ( 453029 ) on Sunday October 16, 2005 @08:27PM (#13806239) Homepage
      "Will current posters please instead offer suggestions for how to get the Government to pay attention instead of whining?"

      Easy answer - in discussions with 'said government officials, point to other innovative or useful applications of copyleft and the public domain. GNU and the GPL, Project Gutenberg, and Wikipedia are probably the best examples. (Full disclosure - I am a prolific Wikipedia contributor). The surging disaster that is copyright and patent protection threatens such projects. On the other hand, their redistributable nature has made them wonderful sources of the most unexpected applications - witness the incorporation into google of Wikipedia's database for Google Answers.
      • Re:Fatalism (Score:5, Insightful)

        by The OPTiCIAN ( 8190 ) on Monday October 17, 2005 @02:07AM (#13807467)
        Before I continue - I realise that you aren't the source of the copyleft phrase, but you're using it which is why I'm posting here.

        This whole 'copyleft' catchphrase really does our cause no favours. It muddies the water and scares off people who are not left who should be our allies. Hayek is arguably the definitive right-wing, twentieth century economist. Look at this paragraph from p35, _The Fatal Conceit: The Errors of Socialism_, 1988:
        """
        Just to illustrate how great out ignorance of the optimum forms of delimitation of various rights remains - despite our confidence in the indispensability of the general institution of several property - a few remarks about one particuilar form of property may be made.

        [... he introduces immatierial property rights invented recently having to do with as example literary productions and technological inventions]

        The difference between these and other kinds of property rights is this: while ownership of material goods guides the user of scarce means to their most important uses, in the case of immaterial goods such as literary productions and technological inventions the ability to produce them is also limited, yet once they have come into existence, they can be indefinitely multiplied and can be made scarce only by law in order to create an inducement to produce such ideas. Yet it is not obvious that such forced scarcity is the most effective way to stimulate the human creative process. I doubt whether there exists a single great work of literature which we would not possess had the author been unable to obtain an exclusive copyright for it; it seems to me that the case for copyright must rest almost entirely on the circumstance that such exceedingly useful works as encyclopaedias, dictionaries, textbooks and other works of reference could not be produced if, once they existed, they could freely be reproduced.

        Similarly, recurrenc re-examinations of the problem have not demonstrated that the obtainability of patents of invention actually enhances the flow of new technical knowledge rather than leading to wasteful concentration of research on problems whose solution in the near future can be foreseen and where, in consequence of the law, anyone who hits upon a solution a moment before the next gains the right to its exclusive use for a prolonged period (Machlup, 1962).
        """

        I realise 'copyleft' is meant to be cute, but it's really unstrategic. A lot of people tend to think that impies bad economic underpinnings when the word 'left' is used.
        • Re:Fatalism (Score:3, Interesting)

          by Znork ( 31774 )
          The whole IP terminology is defective. Consider for example that as state enforced and state granted monopolies the concept of IP has little in common with free market economy, and even less with any form of 'property'. As a taxation system where the monopoly rent can be compared to a private taxation right on specific products, the IP concept is far from both left and right politics and really shows its roots; it's mostly comparable to some form of feudal economy system where nobles were given such monopol
    • Re:Fatalism (Score:5, Insightful)

      by belmolis ( 702863 ) <billposerNO@SPAMalum.mit.edu> on Sunday October 16, 2005 @08:34PM (#13806262) Homepage

      I think that to see lots of organizations and individuals taking public positions like this and making sure that their government representatives are aware of it. So long as outfits like the RIAA are able to give the impression that they represent the "content creators" and that the only people who have problems with the way "IP" law has developed are people too cheap to pay for their entertainment and long-hair hippie programmers, they'll stay in the driver's seat. It's important for prominent scientists, engineers, inventors, film-makers, authors, musicians and the like, in short, the real creators and innovators, to make it clear that they regard the current IP regime as intolerable.

    • Re:Fatalism (Score:5, Insightful)

      by QuantumG ( 50515 ) <qg@biodome.org> on Sunday October 16, 2005 @08:52PM (#13806345) Homepage Journal
      Peaceful protest no longer works. Violent protest no longer works. A military coup won't work. So what's left? Campaign contributions. The only way to influence politics is with money. Therefore the people who influence politics to get money are the ones who will be able to influence politics the most with money. No, the only way to get out of the copyright mess we are in now is to educate the public. At present they still have the right to choose to use works that are freely licensed over works that are not. When the public stops paying the copyright cartel their political influence will fade and then maybe we'll have a brief chance to get rid of these crazy laws.
      • Re:Fatalism (Score:5, Funny)

        by TheGavster ( 774657 ) on Sunday October 16, 2005 @09:13PM (#13806424) Homepage
        I wonder how frequently I would need to mail $100 bills with "Repeal the DMCA" on them to my congresspersons before they would do something ...
        • Re:Fatalism (Score:2, Funny)

          by Anonymous Coward
          I don't know, but we can find out how long it takes to repeal the DMCA by mailing me $100 bills on a continual basis!
        • Re:Fatalism (Score:3, Interesting)

          by Anonymous Coward
          "I wonder how frequently I would need to mail $100 bills with "Repeal the DMCA" on them to my congresspersons before they would do something ..."

          Hmmm that is an interesting idea, a campaign to put on $1,5,10,20,100 dollar bills "Repeal the DMCA" then simply spend them. Have the person's head say it as a speech balloon, if enough people do it it can make headlines.

          Probably illegal I'd guess in the United States, to deface money?

          Nice little protest.
      • Re:Fatalism (Score:5, Insightful)

        by waferhead ( 557795 ) <waferhead&yahoo,com> on Sunday October 16, 2005 @10:15PM (#13806637)
        Or ban the ability for "no-persons" (AKA Corporations) to contribute at ALL. In ANY way.
        That would put their "influence" back to the traditional bribery and graft scenario ;-)

        No vote? NO SAY.
      • Re:Fatalism (Score:4, Insightful)

        by bzipitidoo ( 647217 ) <bzipitidoo@yahoo.com> on Monday October 17, 2005 @12:39AM (#13807200) Journal
        Don't need to be so active about the politicing, though that can help. Vote with your choices and your feet. Don't buy RIAA music. Ignore the restrictions and do what you need to do. These intellectual property regimes are "on the wrong side of history". They'll eventually lose. Sure, I'd like to see it happen faster, perhaps by having a King John of England Magna Carta day. Would be sweet to drag the RIAA and MPAA and other relevant organizations kicking and screaming to sign an "Info Carta", but I doubt these organizations will ever gain enough power to enforce their extreme views and thereby provoke a major backlash. 100 or 200 years from now current restrictions will look as ridiculous as the early restraints placed on the Gutenburg press. England had a Printer's Guild that took it upon itself to decide what training was necessary (long and costly of course), who could be a printer, and what could be printed. And, naturally, they abused this power with artificial barriers (took a lot of approval and bureacracy and perhaps a little palm grease too to publish something) and ever higher prices. Doesn't that Printer's Guild sound like the RIAA/MPAA's most fervent dreams?

        More important is to open the minds of those whom these organizations have successfully brainwashed into thinking copying = theft. Once an overly moralistic friend of mine called me up and opened the conversation with a patronizing "Have you been pirating again?" No, he was not joking. So I cut loose on him. I told him how I *bought* OS/2 version 3, thinking it came with networking capability same as Windows. Didn't occur to me that OS/2 might not have networking included, so I didn't check on that. After I opened the box, thereby making it unreturnable, I found an EULA saying, among other things, that I wasn't allowed to use it on more than 1 computer, and a note in the back of the manuals saying networking was not included and I'd have to pay twice as much again for that feature. I also pointed out that it wouldn't cost IBM one penny in extra materials if I put OS/2 on a 2nd computer-- no 2nd copy of the manuals, disks, and so on needed, and so I didn't see why I should have to pay full price to be allowed to put it on a 2nd computer. And also, why shouldn't be just as logical to think that this restriction to one meant one user/many computers, not one computer/many users? I bought a pig in a poke, and got burned. He conceded I had some points and ended by saying my morals were my business.

        • Things are getting worse, not better, and they have always been doing so. As for your rant about OS/2, copyright doesn't make sense, it's not supposed to, they can put any restrictions they want on you and if you don't follow it you are breaking the law. Not that this has anything to do with morals and that's what you should have told your patronising friend.
          • Re:Fatalism (Score:3, Insightful)

            by bzipitidoo ( 647217 )
            they can put any restrictions they want on you and if you don't follow it you are breaking the law.

            This is the sort of brainwashing I'm talking about. No, they can't put any restrictions they want in the agreement and expect it to hold up in court. They're hoping users will be impressed by the authoritative tone and just roll over. They can argue about what constitutes, for example, Fair Use. Or they can try to say users must waive their Fair Use rights, but they can't enforce that. They can even lob

    • Optimism (Score:5, Insightful)

      by NickFortune ( 613926 ) on Sunday October 16, 2005 @09:00PM (#13806374) Homepage Journal
      How many millions of smart (don't prove me wrong) people read this? We're a force of Nature on the Internet, capable of manually DDoSing servers into a meltdown.

      But our power can be more usefully applied as a grassroots political force than by merely DDOSing all and sundry in an ineffective attempt to change policy. That tactic just gives the opposition a ready ad hominem attack with which to dismiss us, no matter how just our cause or how rational our arguments. As with SCO, every web site outage for the next six months suddenly becomes the work of lawless commie pirate hackers who want to selfishly stop people making music and... well, everyone looses interest, expect maybe to pass tough new laws further restricting free speech online.

      Not that I'm saying that was your suggestion, but I'd hate for someone to misread it that way. I'm sure you understand.

      Let's turn that power to doing good -- statistically, at least one person here is bound to have a good idea.

      I think the good idea is the charter from TFA. This is a tremendously valuable contribution to the debate. For one thing, the Royal Society have considerable prestige. It's a lot harder to laugh them off than it is slashdot. The diversity of the authors helps in this regard as well.

      For another the charter gives us a good talking point - something to campaign for. So you can contact your local lawmaker type and ask what he'd doing to bring about compliance with the Adelphi Charter. We can use it as a justification to ask whether the public good has been considered in respect to a specific IP ruling, and as further support for the abolition of software and business methods and software patents.

      This doesn't give us any new techniques for getting the attention of government - but then we don't really need any - the old ones still work. What this gives us a lot of new, high quality ammo. My bright idea would be to suggest that we use it.

    • Re:Fatalism (Score:5, Insightful)

      by Jerry Coffin ( 824726 ) on Sunday October 16, 2005 @09:49PM (#13806563)

      Will current posters please instead offer suggestions for how to get the Government to pay attention instead of whining?

      Sure. Start by coming up with a really solid reason the government officials should believe what you believe, and finish by making sure the governemnt officials know there are a lot of people who agree with you. As a bonus, make it apparent that most (if not all) of those people are (at least potential) voters.

      It really is that simple in most cases. The problem so far has been that nearly every argument against (for one example) patents applying to software has been exceptionally weak.

      You have to be prepared to deal with issues like why expressing a particular piece of logic in C or Ada doesn't deserve patent protection, while expressing the same logic in Verilog or VHDL, which look identical to a non-programmer should deserve that protection. Likewise, why a device that fits the description in a patent claim should not be protected if the implementation happens to be (even in part) carried out with an embedded processor with embedded code, even though it's not at all apparent to the outside world that there's any software involved at all.

      Along with that, you're going to have to define your terms so the distinction you're trying to make is sensible to somebody who neither knows nor wants to learn the details of the issue at hand.

      At least in the US, you also have to deal with the fact that patents on inventions are enshrined in the constitution, so you'll have to figure out whether you want to revise the constitution itself, or only the patent laws that are written under that constitution. Again, when/if you do that, you'll have to make your decisions and arguments sensible to relatively average Joes on the street, not just to other programmers.

      In the end, laws need to make clear-cut distinctions between what is allowed and what isn't. The reasons for those distinctions generally need to be seen not only by specialists, but by by the public at large, as meaningful and sensible. If that is not the case, even if a law is passed, changed, etc., it will almost certainly be ignored anyway.

      So far, what I've seen indicates that the major problem with software patents isn't that they're allowed -- it's that for a long time they were NOT allowed. The problem here is that the patent offices of the world tend to treat previous patents (and applications) as their primary source of information about existing art. Since (for a long time) patents on software weren't allowed, nobody applied for them, so the patent office lacks a base of knowledge about what's really new and what's not.

      Another factor tends to apply to patents in general, not just software patents -- I think there's a general belief that the tendency should be to assume something is not not patentable, and require the applicant to prove that it is original. At least in the US, the law more or less reverses that though, saying the patent shall be issued unless the patent office can prove that it's not patentable.

      There are some other details along with that (e.g. the standard of evidence for getting a patent issued is much lower than for proving it's invalid) but it seems to me that when you get down to it, the problems we see are far less with software patents in general than with the way they've been implemented, that has led to the patent offices of the world believing, in essence, that any example of having an IQ higher than the average dog qualifies as novel and brilliant.

      At least in my opinion, this is where the real changes need to take place. As it happens, along with making more sense, at least to me, these are also changes that are likely to be much easier to make. Most lawmakers are also lawyers, and doing something like adjusting the standard of evidence one step higher in a particular area is something with which they're quite comfortable. My guess is that they're likely to see s

      • Re:Fatalism (Score:3, Interesting)

        by Bogtha ( 906264 )

        Start by coming up with a really solid reason the government officials should believe what you believe, and finish by making sure the governemnt officials know there are a lot of people who agree with you.

        Isn't that the wrong way around? Shouldn't the politicians have given a really solid reason why we should obey their law and finish by making sure there are a lot of people who agree with them? And don't you think such laws are automatically invalid until such rationale has been given? Perhaps in

      • Re:Fatalism (Score:5, Interesting)

        by Wolfbone ( 668810 ) on Monday October 17, 2005 @08:36AM (#13808393)
        "It really is that simple in most cases. The problem so far has been that nearly every argument against (for one example) patents applying to software has been exceptionally weak."

        You are shifting the burden of proof and rather distorting the facts: You may only ever have seen exceptionally weak arguments, but that is not because only exceptionally weak arguments have ever been deployed - quite the converse is true*. The problem so far has instead been that no argument with even a semblance of strength for introducing software patents has ever been produced. And however weak you think any argument against the expansion of patentable subject matter is, it automatically wins unless you have a strong argument in favour of that expansion. But the expansion has occurred anyway of course, and in the face of strong arguments and strong opposition from industry and academia. That many companies, academics and individuals had to make such arguments at all illustrates the appalling state of recent policy making in this area (if you can call it policy making). Any credible economist will tell you that patent scope expansion without prior empirical and sound theoretical justification is verboten. Too bad - the damage is done and in the US it seems the fight's effectively over now, but the rest of what I want to say is appropriately Eurocentric anyway.

        *
        http://researchoninnovation.org/online.htm [researchoninnovation.org]
        http://www.si.umich.edu/~kahin/mip.html [umich.edu]
        http://swpat.ffii.org/archive/mirror/impact/index. en.html [ffii.org]
        http://philsalin.com/patents.html [philsalin.com]
        http://lpf.ai.mit.edu/Patents/knuth-to-pto.txt [mit.edu]
        http://www.spectrum.ieee.org/jul05/1557 [ieee.org]
        http://www.dailytimes.com.pk/default.asp?page=stor y_16-8-2005_pg5_12 [dailytimes.com.pk]
        http://swpat.ffii.org/archive/quotes/index.en.html [ffii.org]

        "You have to be prepared to deal with issues like why expressing a particular piece of logic in C or Ada doesn't deserve patent protection, while expressing the same logic in Verilog or VHDL, which look identical to a non-programmer should deserve that protection."

        That is definitely not an issue. One does not ask whether or not some invention deserves a patent, but whether or not it is patentable subject matter at all and your example is a poor one because if the claims of a patent are directed to the expressions of logic, then they are software patent claims.

        "Likewise, why a device that fits the description in a patent claim should not be protected if the implementation happens to be (even in part) carried out with an embedded processor with embedded code, even though it's not at all apparent to the outside world that there's any software involved at all."

        The distinction between hardware and software is not useful and is not at all relevant to the question of whether a patent claim is a software patent claim or not. One way to discover how the distinction between software patent and non-software patent is determined (and it is not always easy) is to read the way it is expressed by Judge Peter Prescott QC in his recent CFPH decision [bailii.org], in which he carefully and fully interprets the EPC Article 52 exclusions. Unfortunately, Prescott's interpretation seems to me to leave a lot of room for claiming things such as image enhancement techniques derived from purely mathematical considerations, but at least compression algorithms and data manipulation and data st

  • so software patents are wrong?
  • What to do (Score:2, Interesting)

    The answer is obvious when you consider the Slashdot effect, that we can overload servers with traffic just by browsing to them. We should conduct a campaign of letter writings, followed by Slashdot attacks on government servers until our demands are acknowledged. The same thing can be organized at local levels for practically any political cause (and overloadable resource) through the net.

    Our weapons for freedom can be our webbrowsers, because most of us are too untrained, too cowardly or too afraid of t
    • Our weapons for freedom can be our webbrowsers, because most of us are too untrained, too cowardly or too afraid of the very real jail sentence that awaits to pick up a gun and revolt.

      That's interesting to note. It's not that people are too untrained, cowardly or afraid. It's that times are a lot different now then the 1800s. Back then, a few guys with guns could make a difference. Now, unless you have a sizable army a few guys with guns can't even step out of their house.

      The new form of revolting
  • by timmarhy ( 659436 ) on Sunday October 16, 2005 @08:26PM (#13806237)
    and naturally they shall be completely ignored. if these policies were adopted you would see a swing back to how capitalism really should be. all about servicing the people and using demand for services to drive innovation and competition.
  • by bloodstar ( 866306 ) <blood_star AT yahoo DOT com> on Sunday October 16, 2005 @08:26PM (#13806238) Journal
    Quite a few people on /. feel that IP copyright and Patent protections are out of line, so support groups like this that actually take the time to make some noise about things. When magazines like Economist pick up on these issues, I hope that it indicates there is some traction in the public eye for the reversal of some of these insane copyright laws.

    I think our lawmakers are bought and sold by big corporations, but perhaps, just perhaps, enough of them can be shamed into doing the right thing. And that's to remember that the goal of government is to serve the public interest, not the person with the most money.

    Maybe it won't happen, but at least it's worth the try. Because I can promise you it will never happen if we don't *start* trying.

    • But, but persons with the most money are part of the public too !!
    • I think that it's a good thing that the more mainstream-oriented press is reporting on these issues - from personal experience, I can say that most people have a fundamentally flawed idea of what patents are about.

      I had a conversation about it with my parents recently, and I was rather shocked to find out that they thought that the ONLY purpose of a patent was to give an inventor the ability to milk the market for as much money as possible (that's not the way they phrased it, of course, but what they said i
  • How sad (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Bogtha ( 906264 ) on Sunday October 16, 2005 @08:29PM (#13806246)

    The charter lays out a "public-interest test" for policymakers to use before changing intellectual property laws: an automatic presumption against expanding rights, placing the burden of proof on those who seek this

    I've always thought that it's mind-bogglingly moronic to have anything but this. Surely laws of any nature should be passed only if there's evidence that it is necessary for the public good? And seemingly no law that's been passed in association with copyrights since I've been alive has had this.

    I asked this question in the AWOL Sid Meier interview, but I'll ask it again: which software company would find it infeasible to continue if software copyright terms were limited to fourteen years? Fourteen years ago, Atari and Amiga were mainstream systems. Fourteen years ago, the WWW was being invented. Fourteen years ago, Windows 3.1 didn't exist. Are there seriously people out there that argue Microsoft depends upon copyright protection for Windows 3.0 today?

    • actually.... (Score:2, Interesting)

      by ecalkin ( 468811 )
      extended period copywrite protects microsoft in two ways:

      first, would be valuable code in window 3.1 that would help the people writing windows emulation write better stuff. even though it's win16, it would still help to understand where ms started and give clues to where it went.

      second, i would expect that there is a lot of source code out there (not just ms) that would have evidence of wrong doing. patent infringement would still be an issue for several more years and trad
      • WTF are you talking about? Nobody mentioned releasing source code.
        • we were talking about a 14 year copyright. if copyright expires, the source becomes available.

              it is my understanding that they only way to protect a resource from becoming public domain is to try and protect it as a trade secret (the formula for coca cola, etc).

              ms might try to keep the source under wraps, but once copywrite expires, copies are *legal*.

          • Friend, you're mistaken. Copyright applies only to published works, not unpublished ones. When copyright on a derivative, published work expires, the entity holding the copyright is under no obligation whatsoever to publish the unpublished work from which it was derived. In this case, the "derivative" work is the binary distributed by Microsoft; the unpublished work from which it was derived is the source code.

            In some cases, the source code (or parts of it) may have been published, under something like a
            • Re:actually.... (Score:3, Interesting)

              Copyright presently applies to works regardless of whether they were published or not.

              However, we can deal with the situation at hand fairly easily, so long as we're considering reforms.

              Require publication and deposit as copyright formalities (as has traditionally been the case). Expand the scope of publication to include all sorts of public release, including performance. Expand the requirements for deposit to include such supplementary information as the Copyright Office believes is reasonably necessary t
  • I challenge ... (Score:3, Interesting)

    by femto ( 459605 ) on Sunday October 16, 2005 @08:48PM (#13806333) Homepage
    every slashdotter to make 1000 copies of the Adelphi Charter and deliver them to random letterboxes in his/her neighbourhood.
    • Consider trying a pledgebank [pledgebank.com] pledge.
      • Re:I challenge ... (Score:3, Insightful)

        by femto ( 459605 )
        There's no need to. Pledgebank is for things that might be risky, but there is safety in numbers. For example "I will refuse to submit to arbitrary police searches if 100,000 other people will too".

        Putting 1000 leaflets in letterboxes is an immediate action you can do yourself right now. There is no need to get consensus or permission from anyone. Just go out and DO IT!

        • Thinking you'll be ineffective is often something stopping people from taking action. Not as much of a motivation for geeks, but feeling apart of something bigger is also a strong motivator.
    • I challenge ... every slashdotter to make 1000 copies of the Adelphi Charter and deliver them to random letterboxes in his/her neighbourhood.
      In the US this will get you thrown in jail. The US Postal (mis/dis)Service jealously guards its monopoly on putting junk in people's mailboxes.
  • ...should be the MI6 website?

    Hey, even international spies need IP...

  • by wwwrench ( 464274 ) on Sunday October 16, 2005 @09:02PM (#13806381) Homepage
    Gilberto Gil is a pretty interesting guy. A few days ago, the guardian had this pretty interesting article [guardian.co.uk] about him, which talks a bit about Brazil's stance on free software. What is going on in Brazil is pretty interesting, also in terms of patents on food. For example there was a huge outcry after a Japanese firm patented a modification of the delicious cupuaçu fruit [amazonlink.org]. The term "biopiracy" is part of popular language over there.
    • by Anonymous Coward
      From the Gilberto Gil article:

      The two worlds of Gil's music and his politics merged most closely when he announced that he would license some of his own songs for free downloading. Time Warner, which owned the licences in question, quickly announced that, actually, he would not. "That showed me how difficult the situation is," he says. "An author is not the owner anymore. He doesn't exercise his rights. His rights are exercised by someone else, and sometimes the two don't coincide."

      Mr. Gil sure is lucky

  • by Alwin Henseler ( 640539 ) on Sunday October 16, 2005 @09:08PM (#13806397)
    From the summary: "The charter calls for evidence-based policy, and a balance between rights protection and the public domain."

    Who says there needs to be a balance at all? You have 2 extremes when it comes to intellectual 'property': a) none, read: no IP protection of any kind, and b) the kind that would give **AA bosses a wet dream. You think (what is best for society as a whole) is somewhere in between? Personally, I doubt it. I seriously doubt that the whole concept of intellectual 'property' has ANY net postive effect for society as a whole. I think it's more like DRM: good for some, but mostly a net negative, overhead, 'red tape'.

    Now since around the same time that the concept of IP was introduced, there's been an explosion in literature, music, scientific advances etc. And proponents of IP protection like to say that's cause and result. I think that's bull, and pure coincidence. Anyone think the world would never have seen beautiful animated movies like those coming from the Disney studios, had there been 0 IP protection? Or that MP3 audio format would never have been developed?

    We'll never know, since there's no way to find out what our world would be like if IP protections hadn't existed. But I do know one thing for sure: the overhead that IP protections cause, exist. No doubt about that. Drawing up licenses costs money, enforcing them costs money, fighting over them in court costs money, destroying 100,000 counterfeit CD's is waste (of energy and production capacity), reading EULA's takes people's time. Anyone ever tried to make an estimate how big a cost to society this all adds up to?

    For me it's been clear for a while: I fundamentally don't like the concept of intellectual property (even for what I might produce myself), and simply try to ignore it as much as I can get away with. Like so many people do in practice. Oh and BTW: that doesn't mean none of my money goes to creative folks like musicians etc. It's just not IP laws that make me do that.
    • I seriously doubt that the whole concept of intellectual 'property' has ANY net postive effect for society as a whole.

      I seriously doubt we can come up with a meaningful answer to that question until we have mainstream media entering the public domain on a regular basis.

    • since there's no way to find out what our world would be like if IP protections hadn't existed.

      There sure is. There are many nations that never enacted IP laws or don't enforce them. Look at the state of the film industry in Hong Kong for example. During the mid-90's Hong Kong produced over 300 features per year and had a yearly income of more than a bilion HK dollars. In 2004 the produced only 64 features because rampant piracy prevents studios from making money on film.

      There are plenty of examples of this
  • by QuantumG ( 50515 ) <qg@biodome.org> on Sunday October 16, 2005 @09:42PM (#13806536) Homepage Journal
    Jesus, people continue to pirate receipes every day and the law does absolutely nothing about it. It only takes mediocre cooking skills to follow a receipe, which means people who would otherwise need to engage the services of professional chefs are capable of producing meals that are comparable to restaurant quality. No wonder chefs are so poor! If they had some legal protection they could continue to advance the culinary arts without giving up their livelihood. Stop home kitchens now! It's not like software is any more complex than a cooking receipe, and programmers get legal protection for their works.
    • Bravo! (Score:3, Funny)

      by KwKSilver ( 857599 )
      Brilliant. You have hit the nail squarely on the head. It would require TRM devices (Trusted Receipe Monitors, i.e. odor detectors) in every room of every house to ensure patent holders are properly compensated--even for microwave dinners. One can almost see it now, when the FLIAA (Food Liscensing Investigating Association Agency) lawyer-goon says, "Sorry, Senator Lardbottom, your daughter copied a chili dog without a liscence. That'll cost you $30,000.00."
  • by 2008 ( 900939 ) on Sunday October 16, 2005 @09:43PM (#13806538) Journal
    The Royal Society [royalsoc.ac.uk]* is an organisation that promotes UK science, The Royal Society for the encouragement of Arts, Manufactures & Commerce [rsa.org.uk] is different.

    *Yes, they should call themselves The Royal Society of Britain or something else a bit more specific to prevent confusion like this.
    • They do, they call themselves the Royal Society of Arts (, Manufactures and Commerce) or RSA. Its an accident of history that the Royal Society isn't called the Royal Society of Science but since both organisations have been going for over two hundred years I don't think things are going to change now.
  • by Turken ( 139591 ) on Sunday October 16, 2005 @09:44PM (#13806543)
    Every time I read something about IP law, whether copyrigt or patent or whatnot, I always see the same argument that if IP law were not present then the whole economy would collapse because all the content and idea producers would stop producing their wares due to lack of profitability.

    Pure BS. I can guarantee that at this point in our society the abolition of IP law would do anything BUT destroy the economy of a nation or the world. Why can I guarantee this? Because the general public has become accustomed to being content consumers. When something comes along (say, digital music) that is significantly useful or good, people will consume regardless of the "legality" of it. Hence, the widespread piracy of music and the eventual development of legal download services.

    People want their music, their movies, their medicines, and their meat. The incumbent monopolies keep saying that without DRM, broadcast flags, or patents, they would never produce the products that they do. I say that's just fine by me. Because even if the big companies halted all production in protest of the removal of IP laws, the public would still maintain its desire to consume, so at that point the market will be wide open for ANYONE to fulfill the neeed of the people and profit from it.

    I'm not saying the IP laws SHOULD be abolished, just that they are seriously flawed and need some reform a 'la the article above. Also, the public's need for "stuff" is a powerful force (capable of toppling governments in the past), so it is only a matter of time before the current establishment of monopolistc laws fall as well. The sooner the change comes though, the better all will be.
    • I'm entirely in agreement with the basic premise of your post (ie, that this-thing-we-call-IP is at best a legal fiction and at worst an abomination), but your logic doesn't make very much sense.

      There's a lot of stuff that is debated in Economics, but the laws of supply and demand aren't in that category. When price for a good decreases, the quantity of goods demanded by consumers, all things being equal, will increase. Conversely, as the price of a good decreases, the willingness of a producer to supply
      • There's a lot of stuff that is debated in Economics, but the laws of supply and demand aren't in that category. When price for a good decreases, the quantity of goods demanded by consumers, all things being equal, will increase. Conversely, as the price of a good decreases, the willingness of a producer to supply that good decreases. It is these two laws, acting in concert, that act to bring the prices and quantity produced into equilibrium. It is true of all goods.

        sir, economics is a science of studying

        • Quite right, if you take "production" to mean "copying". Unfortunately, this isn't production, it is simply distribution. The actual production of content still requires labour, which is (and will remain) a scarce resource.

          I know my post was quite long, and started out with a criticism of the original poster's logic, but in actuality, I agree with the original poster in most respects, I simply don't agree with the logic he used to arrive at the points he arrived at. I think if you read the rest of my pos
      • I unfortunately reversed Say's Law in my original post. Say's Law states that supply creates demand, not that demand creates supply. The entry on wikipedia for Say's Law [wikipedia.org] describes the idea and its ramifications for the curious. I botched it entirely with the reversal.

        However, despite being embarassingly wrong on a public forum, I think that the underlying logic remains relatively intact. Consider: the existance of strong consumer demand for a product at a particular price in no way guarantees that suppl
  • More oil on the fire (Score:3, Interesting)

    by wes33 ( 698200 ) on Sunday October 16, 2005 @09:56PM (#13806581)
    An interesting article that argues for radical reform of copyright (do not let the words "intellectual property" spring from your mouth) can be found (in an unusual place I think) here [iht.com]. Maybe the tide is slackening and will begin to turn soon.
  • by TubeSteak ( 669689 ) on Sunday October 16, 2005 @10:16PM (#13806645) Journal
    The charter lays out a "public-interest test" for policymakers to use before changing intellectual property laws: an automatic presumption against expanding rights, placing the burden of proof on those who seek this, as well as requiring rigorous analysis to justify changes, along with broad public consultation.

    This is a good approach, and yet the Adelphi principles leave important questions hanging in the air. The charter declares that software, business processes, and medical therapies should not be patented, nor copyright extended to things like databases that are simply compilations of open facts. But the Adelphites have not submitted these ideas to the same kind of rigorous economic analysis that they demand from their foes.

    While I congratulate the Adelphites for keeping their manifesto below 500 words, The Economist brings up a really good point.

    Where's their proof that the ideas they're putting forward are right.

    Yes, I know, this is /. & we have a million examples of patents stifling innovation... but no legitimate analysis. Until there is a enough money behind the idea that copyright/patents are overbearing, no one is going to seriously try to prove it.

    • by idlake ( 850372 ) on Sunday October 16, 2005 @11:20PM (#13806890)
      Yes, I know, this is /. & we have a million examples of patents stifling innovation... but no legitimate analysis.

      No such analysis is needed--that's the whole point of the Adelphi principles--the burden of proof isn't symmetric.

      Patent proponents want society to give them something truly extraordinary: a 20 year monopoly on the exploitation of an idea. That demand requires justification by people who want that kind of monopoly. No counterargument is needed--if proponents can't provide a clear justification, patents should not exist.
    • Yes, that was my feeling. Good first page - now where are the following 20+ pages which justify the first page? I was expecting a solid work of scholarship, but received calorie-free advocacy.
    • Has anyone submitted "thou shalt not murder" to a rigorous economic analysis? Why not? Maybe we could show that in some circumstances murder has a net positive economic benefit. Should it then be allowed?

      A while ago in an article in the Economist they picked out the phrase

      just because it's a market-based solution doesn't mean it's a socially desirable one.

      Economics is not the be-all and end-all of everything.

      (Also, the subject line is slightly misleading. The Royal Society [royalsoc.ac.uk] is the UK's equivalent

    • My common sense says that. Most people in the world comon senses says that.

      It is not enough?

      Come on, we know that killing man is not right, with or without laws or proofs. Proofs are needed only for them who are killing men. Strange fallancy, isn't it?

      But if we are pratical, ANY unnatural monopoly, however how small, is BAD for ecenomy. Sometimes it is acceptable, but sometimes...

      Just say just because some coorporations or people want _more_ money (isn't is that they don't have enough), it is not suitable t
  • by argoff ( 142580 ) on Monday October 17, 2005 @12:14AM (#13807095)
    Anyone who wants to understand false "property rights" only has to open up a history book and read about the 1850's. Just as the slave plantation system had to die for society to enter the industrial revolution, the copyright content controll systems need to die in order for society to enter the information age. And as other technologies make it easier to repliacte discoveries, patents will eventually need to die too.

    Yes, slavery. They called it a property right, they screamed there was no incentive without it, they said it was responsible for great wealth and prosperity of American business and commerce. And it was all bunk, even though it was geniuses that were saying it.

    Well the same is true with copyrights and patents. Anyone with an IQ over 20 can easially see that they are not anything like any other kind of incentive or free market property right. And most people with an IQ over 80 can see that inspite of the theory, that is is far more the exception that copyrights or patents help the small time creator than it is the rule.

    In fact copyrights and patents are not only bunk, they are often pure evil. Like how copyrights have ripped apart american culture and replaced it with hollywood and ruined the persuit of knowledge in student text book industry, or like how thousands of patnets are sat on and not used for anything but to lock out competitors. Or how disputes and lawsuits in the world court involving AIDS patents arguably caused over a million people to be dead from AIDS in Africa who wouldn't have been otherwise. And now, for copyrights, they pratically want to shut down the internet and microregulate every technology chip maker in the US. Well I say F**k em, on the internet copyrights are dead and they don't even deserve the token support they are getting.

    • Good point, but who were the "geniuses" defending slavery on economic grounds? I'm not aware of that.

    • Except that the united states started going through its industrial revolution in the late 1700s, and didn't abolish slavery until the late 1850s. Plus the whole bit where the rise of the factories just replaced legal slavery with debt slavery...

      Maybe our point is valid, I wouldn't know, but the argument that got you there is complete, as you say, "bunk". Also, your last paragraph intrigues me, and I would like to subscribe to your planet's newsletter. The perspective of a people that apparently haven't
  • They'll ignore the Royal Society the same as they ignored everyone else, both educated and slashdotter, who dared speak out against their whoring to content distributors.

  • by FlorianMueller ( 801981 ) on Monday October 17, 2005 @02:32AM (#13807543) Homepage
    About a year ago, someone talked to me about some ideas he had for campaigning against software patents in the UK. He saw my NoSoftwarePatents.com [nosoftwarepatents.com] campaign and wanted to do something like that specifically for the UK, not primarily on the Web but in political/lobbying terms. At the time, I was so pessimistic that I honestly told him I viewed the UK as a strategically lost position for us: They had those key pro-swpat MEPs (Harbour on the right wing, McCarthy on the left wing), a radically pro-swpat government, a national patent office that used tax money to promote the idea of software patents, and case law that upheld some really bad software patents (almost as bad as that of the in-house courts of the European Patent Office).

    In the meantime, there has been remarkable progress on most of those fronts. The two individuals who deserve most of the credit on the campaigning and lobbying side are Rufus Pollock and Gavin Hill of the FFII UK. Gavin is the "someone" who contacted me last year. In fact, that contact resulted from a slashdot discussion. And in parallel to the political stuff, we've now seen some really good rulings [ffii.org] by Judge Prescott of the High Court of England and Wales who has already invalidated a few software patents.

    Someone said in this thread that people should make suggestions for how to make political decision-makers more aware. Here's a suggestion:
    Vote Against Software Patents / Vote For Your Right To Program [nosoftwarepatents.com]

    We're doing this online campaign and we've already had a very good start. This is about the most important political award series in the EU, and if our camp once again demonstrates its Internet campaigning power (we're trying hard!), then this will make politicians, press and the public more aware of the software patent issue.

Beware of Programmers who carry screwdrivers. -- Leonard Brandwein

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