Reason on IP Protection and Creativity
rnturn writes "A long but interesting article over at Reasononline discusses a paper written by a pair of economists and published by the Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis (!) and the reactions to it of several other economists. A snippet from the article: 'Moreover, U.S. court decisions in the 1980s that strengthened patent protection for software led to less innovation. "Far from unleashing a flurry of new innovative activity," Maskin and Bessen write, "these stronger property rights ushered in a period of stagnant, if not declining, R&D among those industries and firms that patented most."' Not exactly news to most readers but it appears that their paper is making waves in economic circles."
Indeed, we need more IP Address protection... er... wait-a-minute...
Wow. They should patent that "not anything new" idea, just like everybody else, nowadays ;-).
--sex
Very popular slashdot journal for adul
"A long but interesting article"
;)
Ah, the true readership culture of Slashdot shows itself.
The coolest voice ever.
IP protection does NOT work, abstinence is the solution.
Be cool, Don't do it!
Now you may hate the entire country of France, but they have a saying, "Der er biler paa striben i aften" which could be transferred to the Simpson quote "Take an existing product and put a clock in it".
Of course innovation requires that you won't get ripped of when you come up with a great idea, but at the same time what good is it if no one can use it. Would the WWW have accelerated so fast if you were to pay license fees for every application using HTML codes? I think not. It's a fine balance that you have to maintain. To little and too much protection is evil.
some one with a Nobel Prize calls it an eye opener?
See, I told you they would listen to Reason.
If I have been able to see further than others, it is because I bought a pair of binoculars.
It is amazing, /. has been saying this for years, but some one with a Nobel Prize calls it an eye opener?
:D
This supprises you? It should be pretty obvious that slashdot posts aren't exactly written by Nobel prize winners. Heck, half the time I wonder if they've even been awarded highschool diplomas.
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- - You can't take something off the Internet! That's like trying to take pee out of a swimming pool.