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Date Posted: 21:25:30 03/26/04 Fri
Author: James Wigington
Subject: Re: Myths about Copyright
In reply to: Scott Bradford 's message, "Re: Myths about Copyright" on 19:03:09 03/25/04 Thu

I think people would still create. The egyptians created the Pyriamids without a copyright. And for many people, fame is just important as fortune. Records, the persuit of excellence, those are not monetary driven. Even atheletes, as selfish as they seen, desire to be viewed as the best, and money does not measure that.
In marketing, the highest honor you can achieve is when your product becomes equal to the brand, such as kleenex or pampers. I think people will still create to win grammies, awards, nobel peace prizes, have thier work published, hear thier music on the radio, see themselves perform on TV, etc.


reading through the myths, I found two of them (which
>are loosely related) quite interesting --
>
>"Intellectual property is an ancient principle" and
>"Without intellectual property, no one will produce
>original work."
>
>I didn't realize that the earliest intellectual
>property laws were in 1623. I had always figured that
>the concept and laws related to it were much older.
>
>The explanation of the second myth I reference said,
>"Given that intellectual property law made its debut
>in 1623, we may correctly consider any work produced
>before this time to dispell the myth. Man created for
>millenia before the advent of intellectual property;
>he will create for many more millenia after it is
>abandoned."
>
>That raises the question -- how would things be
>different today if we simply got rid of intellectual
>property law (copyright, patents, trademark, etc.)?
>Do you think that people would still create? Would
>companies still be able to market their products
>successfully without being able to protect their name
>and symbols, or even their product itself?
>
>Something to think about ...

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  • Re: Myths about Copyright -- Elaine Williams, 10:40:15 03/29/04 Mon
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