I’ve found many interesting subjects regarding Intellectual Property, especially this debate inside the libertarian community, with Austrian economists’ and anarcho-capitalists postures being the ones I’m the most curious about. This is where I found your articles and your contact information.
Before, while doing some personal investigation about ways to achieve more liquidity from copyrights and their use as assets I found out that decentralization through the use of blockchain and DLTs in creative works markets and the participation of artists and authors in such tends to provide more efficiency and effectiveness for this purpose, of artists and authors getting paid for their works, I’m also a musician so that’s why I was trying to learn about this subject. [continue reading…]
Nothing today, likely nothing since we tamed fire, is genuinely new: Culture, like science and technology, grows by accretion, each new creator building on the works of those who came before.
Judge Alex Kozinski, in White v. Samsung Elecs. Am. Inc., 989 F.2d 1512, 1513 (9th Cir. 1993) (Kozinski, J., dissenting from denial of rehearing en banc)
I published Legal Foundations of a Free Society (Houston, Texas: Papinian Press, 2023) last September, in hardcover, soft cover, and Kindle formats. A free pdf was released at the time of publication as well and the book was published under at CC0 (no rights reserved) license. Read more >>
The purpose of property rights is to reduce conflict in the use of scarce means by assigning owners based on objective and just criteria, namely original appropriation (ownership, property) and contractual title transfer (contract), plus ancillary rules for tort (rectification).1[continue reading…]
In a recent Federalist Society lecture series on Roman Law, Richard Epstein in one lecture (see below) discusses how the famous Roman jurist Gaius treats the concept of theft.
Now he doubles down. In a recent article for the Cobden Centre, “This Little-Known Section of the Constitution Made America the World’s #1 SuperPower,” where he rightly points out the advantages of free trade in the American “common market” stemming from language in the US Constitution, he unfortunately adds this unnecessary comment to the end: [continue reading…]
The Pantone company built a business by standardizing the way designers and companies communicate about color. But one artist is challenging their color monopoly. [continue reading…]
As recent scholarship on the history of invention has shown, the eighteenth- and nineteenth-century inventor was proposed as a plausible new hero of the industrial revolution. But the inventor has also been characterized as a creature of accident—of risk, poverty, madness, and premature death. By the 1820s, inventors were not only heroes of industry; they became its victims as well—“poor inventors” who suffered under poverty and oppression to bring forth the works of the mind. The case of the poor inventor was introduced and championed by advocates of inventive workers from the 1820s until the 1840s; the figure came to stand emblematically for working-class interests at large. By 1850, however, the ideological and rhetorical construct of the poor inventor was appropriated by a liberal, mostly middle-class lobby to affect the first reform of patent law in modern British history.
As Michael commented to me, “It’s about the figure of the “poor inventor” and how it was mobilized to effect patent law “reform.” Note that my piece isn’t about IP per se. It focuses on the rhetoric used to maintain it as against the abolitionists of the period in Britain.”
Too bad he was not the Libertarian Party’s nominee this year. He would have been the first Presidential candidate in history, to my knowledge, including previous LP candidates, to oppose IP. The current nominee, Chase Oliver, seems to have some good instinctual skepticism of IP but unfortunately no coherent or principled stand against it (see my tweet re same).
The Center for the Study of Innovative Freedom (C4SIF) is dedicated to building public awareness of the manner in which so-called “intellectual property” (IP) laws and policies impede innovation, creativity, communication, learning, knowledge, emulation, and information sharing. We are for property rights, free markets, competition, commerce, cooperation, and the voluntary sharing of knowledge, and oppose IP laws, which systematically impede or hamper innovation. IP law should be completely and immediately abolished.
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