Please, you're trying to say that every derivitive work produced is illegal? ...and here I thought I was talking to someone that had at least a grip on reality... |
Technically yes, unless the copyright holder gives them explicit permission, or unless they can somehow outlawyer their lawyers under Fair Use. Isn't that how it works? Heck, even LucasArts go after people try to make Star Wars mods in their games.
Hardly. That would mean anyone who wanted to sell it could. The Music Industry has a hammer-lock on production and distribution. The copyrights you are slurring now are the only thing keeping corporations from competing with you, selling your own work.
So, you'd have individuals vs. megalithic corporations. Just like now, only you would have taken away the only tool individuals have to protect themselves FROM megalithic corporations. |
P2P? Without copyright and thus, copyright laws, they can no longer go after people distributing it. And when it's completely legal, I don't think people will have any qualms downloading it.
...and don't give me that downloads crap. At the height of Napster popularity, it barely effected music sales. |
Not a valid example. That's in a copyright world, we're talking about a non-copyright world. And in the copyright world, it can be argued that P2P actually increases awareness of a product for people who are willing to spend money.
You talk like someone who's never paid for a server. How do you suppose you are going to pay for the millions of people downloading your 5 meg song, hotshot? Donations? Hardy har. Go talk to all the people who rely on them now, WITH exculsive rights to distribute. Bittorrent won't cut it, either. |
Millions of people are distributing stuff perfectly fine on P2P with their home connections. I think you should tell them and their connections that what they're doing is physically impossible. If something I make is really that popular, there will be copies of it distributed in other places. And if it's not that popular, then bandwidth isn't that big of an issue.
So, in the end this is just about you wanting a crack at other people's works whether they want you to or not. Nice. People already have the right to give things away. You just want to force them to under the ignorant perspecive that somehow corporations would suffer.
You'd be the first one bitching if Microsoft came along and started selling your supposed work. The only thing protecting you from it are the rights you are trying to undermine. |
It's called a difference in ideology. And not really, or you'd have MS selling Firefox and every other freeware product out there. In this copyrighted world, they can't do that. In a non-copyright world, no one would bother paying them for it.
Oh, and really, if the only way you can argue is to make caustic comments and baseless assertions, that shows that you really don't HAVE an argument.