this post was submitted on 26 Jul 2023
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Best. Of. Cory Doctorow’s essays (with sh*t i had no idea about)

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[–] [email protected] 18 points 1 year ago (1 children)

There's a lot of BS in there, but here's my takeaway:

IP law protects large organizations and limits competition

For example, if I want to make an arcade cabinet, I need to get permission from all of the rights holders of each game, even if those games aren't available for sale today. If copyright expired after a reasonable time (say, 5-10 years), I could make competitive products.

Another example is that if I buy a movie, I cannot legally buy tools to break the encryption to make a backup. So if my disk breaks, I'm SOL and need to buy another. So I do not truly own the thing I bought.

Or for the example of cars, if I buy a car today that has hardware for heating my seats, I cannot use those seat warmers unless I pay to unlock them. I cannot do that because the company owns the IP for the system to enable it and I have to pay to access that closed system. If they didn't have such strong protections, I could buy cracked software to break whatever stupid encryption they have.

And so on. I think the comparison with feudalism is silly (this is different, though if you squint it's related), but I see that as largely SEO and rage-baiting.

The real argument is useful, and here's my takeaway:

  • we should fight for the right to repair, but realize it's a distraction from the real fight we should be having, rich is:
  • we should fight to fix IP laws to encourage more competition in the marketplace; if there's enough competition, companies will need to make better products instead of just suing competition into the ground