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Catalaxia: Against Intellectual Property (Formal Proof)

From Catalaxia: Against Intellectual Property (Formal Proof) catalaxia Substack, (nov 12, 2025)

Purpose of the Formal Argument

I propose to question the justification of intellectual property based on a formal reasoning that establishes concepts of “good”, “use”, “authority”, “property” and “abundance”, among others. The formal system is structured by means of definitions and axioms that, together and with some premises, attempt to demonstrate solidly (solid deductive argument) that the assignment of exclusive property rights (especially in the context of abstracted ideas or properties) leads to contradictions when considering goods that are abundant (i.e., susceptible of being used simultaneously by different agents). [continue reading…]

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Wang, Review of Against Intellectual Property

Sebastian Wang, “Review of Against Intellectual Property by N. Stephan Kinsella,” Libertarian Alliance [UK] Blog (March 25, 2025).

Kinsella, Stephan. The Problem with Intellectual Property. Papinian Press Occasional Paper, No. 2. Houston, Texas: Papinian Press, May 15, 2025 (v.1.1). 30pp. ISBN Ebook 979-8-9890306-8-2. Available online at C4SIF. Published under Creative Commons Zero (CC0).

Stephan Kinsella’s The Problem with Intellectual Property (2025) is a concise but thorough demolition of the case for patents and copyrights. It draws upon the author’s decades of scholarship and advocacy to set out with clarity why intellectual property (IP) is not property at all, but a state-created distortion of genuine ownership. In doing so, it strengthens a long tradition of Austrian and libertarian criticism of monopoly privileges. [continue reading…]

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The Academic Publishing Paywall Copyright Subsidized Racket

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I’ve complained over the years that many libertarian scholars and writers—often academics and intellectuals who publish scholarly books and journal articles—make the mistake of publishing with commercial or, worse, academic publishing houses that paywall their work. They spend all this effort to develop theory and spread the word of liberty, but then don’t even bother to try to make it easily accessible online. In my view they should put up a free PDF at the very least, and either negotiate permission with the publisher or journal or select a journal that publishes online for free, like the Journal of Libertarian Studies, Quarterly Journal of Austrian Economics, Reason Papers, The Independent Review, or various open access journals (there are many of these; see this Grok summary). Unfortunately, other journals in our space, shamefully, are paywalled and closed, e.g. the Review of Austrian Economics and Journal of Ayn Rand Studies. The RAE used to be open when published by the Mises Institute, but when Rothbard died in 1995, the Mises Institute switched the QJAE and turned the RAE over to the Hayekians at George Mason or something who then moved to a closed, paywalled model. [continue reading…]

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Nintendo Patent Challenges in Palworld Dispute

I received this email so asked Grok to help me. What Grok thinks I might want to write:

The USPTO director and Japan’s patent office just rejected Nintendo’s claims to own “throw ball to catch monster” and “manual/auto battle” — citing games from 2002–2017. This isn’t justice — it’s the patent system admitting it failed, only after a tiny studio spent millions defending itself. If basic gameplay can be patented, innovation is dead. Abolish IP before it abolishes creativity.

On Sun, Nov 9, 2025 at 10:51 AM __ wrote:
HUGE blow to Nintendo: head of U.S. patent office takes RARE step to order reexamination of “summon subcharacter and let it fight in 1 of 2 modes” patent – games fray
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Albert Esplugas Boter, “The Monopoly of Ideas: Against Intellectual Property,” Libertarian Alliance (UK) (9 Nov. 2025)

The Monopoly of Ideas: Against Intellectual Property

Libertarian Alliance (UK)

9 Nov. 2025

by Albert Esplugas Boter
Translated by Juan I. Núñez

This article was originally published in liberalismo.org, on July 11th, 2005, and a revised version was later featured on Procesos de mercado: revista europea de economía política, N°. 1, 2006 (pp 47-104).

“[T]he attempt to generate profit opportunities by legislatively limiting access to certain ideal goods, and therefore to mimic the market processes governing the allocation of tangible goods, contains a fatal contradiction: It violates the rights to tangible goods, the very rights that provide the legal foundations with which markets begin.” [continue reading…]

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Wang, Intellectual Property: Natural Right or State Privilege?

Excellent new article: Sebastian Wang, “Intellectual Property: Natural Right or State Privilege?“,   Libertarian Alliance (UK) (27 October, 2025)

Related:

Re: “Gordon (1993) argues that the chain of title for intellectual property is cleaner than for tangible property”:

[continue reading…]

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Juan I. Núñez, “Counterfeit Property: The Ethics and Contradictions of Intellectual Property,” Libertarian Alliance (UK) (29 October, 2025):

Intellectual property (IP) law is a near-universal feature of the modern world. Through international bodies like the World Intellectual Property Organization (WIPO) and treaties such as the Paris Convention, a global enforcement regime has steadily been constructed since the late 19th century up until today. Such is the perceived importance and reach of IP that even nations nominally opposed to private property, like the former Soviet Union, have historically ratified and participated in this system, serving as a testament to IP’s uniquely resilient status.[1]

Few concepts in the modern world are as overlooked, and as unquestioned, as intellectual property. It has become a sacred cow, protected by the cultural assumption that owning an idea is ethically indistinguishable from owning a house. And while the origins of this belief are complex, its hold on the public imagination is undeniable. It is not merely a law, but an intuition, deeply ingrained by the sheer inertia of its existence.

Arguments for intellectual property typically spring from three philosophical wells. First are the utilitarians, who argue that IP is a necessary legal construct to incentivize innovation and the creation of art. Second is the Hegelian defense, which justifies IP through the metaphysical claim that a creator’s will is objectively embodied in their ideas—IP as a moral necessity. Finally, and most central to our discussion, is the Lockean or natural rights tradition, which contends that creators have a just property right in their work as an extension of their person.

Read more>>

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King Sithis: Why We Should Abolish Intellectual Property

Script:

Hey guys Sithis here in this video i’m going to explain Why I believe we should Abolish intellectual property. The dictionary definition for Intellectual property is a work or invention that is the result of creativity, such as a manuscript or a design, to which one has rights and for which one may apply for a patent, copyright, trademark, etc. In other words it is When the state grants a monopoly privilege over an idea Allowing the restriction of others to copy that idea Using their own private property.  [continue reading…]

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Hoppe on Reisman and Rothbard on Intellectual Property

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As I’ve noted previously,1 Hans-Hermann Hoppe fully agrees with me that intellectual property law is completely unjust. In fact he was already solid on this as early as 1988, well before I was—I didn’t adopt my current views until I started looking into the issue around 1993 when I decided to become a patent attorney—(( My first publications on IP include Letter on Intellectual Property RightsIOS Journal 5, no. 2 (June 1995), pp. 12-13; “Is Intellectual Property Legitimate?“, Pennsylvania Bar Association Intellectual Property Newsletter 1 (Winter 1998): 3; republished in the Federalist Society’s Intellectual Property Practice Group Newsletter, vol. 3, Issue 3 (Winter 2000); and In Defense of Napster and Against the Second Homesteading Rule, September 4, 2000, LewRockwell.com. )) when he appeared on a panel discussion with Hoppe, Rothbard, David Gordon, and Leland Yeager. In that discussion, there was the following exchange: [continue reading…]

  1. Hoppe on Intellectual Property. []
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Martin Kulldorff, “The Rise and Fall of Scientific Journals and a Way Forward,” Brownstone Journal (Oct. 14, 2025)

Scientific journals have had enormous positive impact on the development of science, but in some ways, they are now hampering rather than enhancing open scientific discourse. After reviewing the history and current problems with journals, a new academic publishing model is proposed. It embraces open access and open rigorous peer review, it rewards reviewers for their important work with honoraria and public acknowledgement, and it allows scientists to publish their research in a timely and efficient manner without wasting valuable scientists’ time and resources. [continue reading…]

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Nobel Laureate Joel Mokyr on Innovation and Patent Law

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I noticed several people today tweeting about Joel Mokyr and his distinction between prescriptive and propositional knowledge. [continue reading…]

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Intellectual Property in Outer Space

Most people do not understand that IP law is domestic only, which is why it is nonsensical to say that China is “stealing” western “IP”.1 Most countries have IP protection, primarily because of Western, primarily US, IP imperialism and bullying, mostly at the behest of Big Pharma (patents) and Hollywood and the music industry/RIAA (copyright) which have forced other countries to adopt American-style IP, to their detriment.2 But any country that chooses not to have IP rights and does not protect inventions and and artistic works does not violate others’ property rights, any more than insecure property rights in North Korea violates property rights in Texas. (IP supporters do not understand that this is a difference between real property rights and fake IP rights, since if your property right in material resources in a given jurisdiction are secure–in your home, in your body, in your car–then what other people do in some lawless regime simply cannot violate your property rights; yet they somehow think “China” can “steal” Western property rights by failing to enforce them locally. This alone shows that IP rights are not “similar to” real property rights. But let this pass.)3 [continue reading…]

  1. The China Stealing IP Myth; Stop calling patent and copyright “property”; stop calling copying “theft”; Copying, Patent Infringement, Copyright Infringement are not “Theft”, Stealing, Piracy, Plagiarism, Knocking Off, Ripping Off. []
  2. The Mountain of IP Legislation. []
  3.  The Structural Unity of Real and Intellectual Property. []
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The Patent Holocaust

From Recent tweets:

[continue reading…]

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Reisman on Patents, Competition, and Declining Prices

For my friend George Reisman, I have hosted his Program of Self-Education in the Economic Theory and Political Philosophy of Capitalism lectures as well as his Pepperdine lectures on my site and youtube until he can get his old site Capitalism.net refurbished. He’s Objectivist so is in favor of IP (see Capitalism, excerpts below). Naturally, we disagree on this issue; see Trademark Ain’t So Hot Either…; Trademark and Fraud; Discussion with George Reisman; Trademark and Fraud; also The Problem with “Fraud”: Fraud, Threat, and Contract Breach as Types of Aggression). From Macro Lecture 14A Inflation I  [mp3]:

He states:

the consequence of that is that Capital will move from the low profit lines into the high profit lines that expands production in those lines in order to find buyers for the additional goods what has to happen to prices play come down when costs fall unless it’s a patented process or a secret technology in fairly short order prices are going to come down to correspondwith the lower costs and so if we had a wage rates broadly falling that would reduce costs and prices would decline commensurately when you have improvements in the productivity of Labor prices also decline and perhaps the most dramatic example in our own experience is the prices of a megabyte or a gigabyte of a hard drive space or of ram what’s happened to these things over the last 20 years prices diminish tremendously  …

[continue reading…]

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