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Ask HN: Do you think Intellectual Property laws do more good or harm?

7 pointsby bkmeneguelloabout 5 years ago
Millions of people suffer because medical equipments and medicine are protected by these laws, there is no point in thread an individual liberty to protect an abstract concept like an idea or invention.

9 comments

WheelsAtLargeabout 5 years ago
I&#x27;m one that believes that patents are an important part of society. One of the reasons the U.S. has had so many technological advancements is that people are able to profit from their ideas. Right now many people are trying to come up with the next million-dollar idea. Most will be trivial without much impact, even if they make a million dollars, but a few will change everything or a combination of them will change everything. Yes, protecting ideas may sometimes seem like they are hurting people but keep in mind that in most cases the idea would have never been had there not been protection for ideas.<p>The problem comes when people start to game the system and use their influence to get an advantage over others. The problems we see are mostly related to the way the rules have been set. So it&#x27;s a matter of tweaking the rules rather than getting rid of the system.<p>So, no, I don&#x27;t think Intellectual Property laws do more harm than good.
DoreenMicheleabout 5 years ago
We need some mechanism by which to encourage people with good ideas to make those ideas available to the world rather than keeping it to themselves. Intellectual Property laws are our current mechanism for rewarding such behavior and thereby encouraging people to add value to the system.<p>Maybe they aren&#x27;t optimal. Maybe there&#x27;s a better solution.<p>But doing away with them without first coming up with a superior method for making sure those ideas get shared at all is a great way to strangle the supply of better ideas and new inventions. Counting on people to give that stuff away for free out of the goodness of their hearts so everyone else can benefit while the brilliance of the originator gets treated abusively like slave labor is an excellent way for the world to cut its own throat.<p>Brilliant people can choose to turn their brilliance towards a &quot;Fuck you, got mine!&quot; personal policy if the world wishes to habitually and by policy fuck them over. Encouraging them to behave that way is an excellent way to actively foster a dystopian future.
bediger4000about 5 years ago
Way more harm than good. &quot;Intellectual property&quot; locks up ideas, which hinders human progress. That might be tolerable if the monopoly so granted was short. But it&#x27;s not, it&#x27;s what, life+70 years or something? And it never gets shorter - we only increase copyright term.<p>The legal setup around copyrights and patents is also indicative of &quot;bad&quot;. We can no longer inspect some item and decide whether or not it&#x27;s copyrighted, for example. We have decided that the default is &quot;assume copyright&quot;. You basically have to have a trial to decide whether some use is OK under one of the exceptions to copyright. This limits educational and critical use, and this, in practice, limits free speech.
CyberFonicabout 5 years ago
The original intent of patents was to provide the inventor a window of opportunity to profit from their invention. Unfortunately corporations are gaming the system and have weaponized patents. The basic problem is that whilst you can get a patent granted for tens of thousands, large corporations wilfully infringe upon patents because it costs millions to defend them and the typical inventor does not have the resources to defend.<p>As with most things the IP laws have resulted in perverse incentives benefitting those who can afford to spend the shareholders&#x27; money in their quest to protect their monopolies. The little guy gets screwed, yet again.
zzo38computerabout 5 years ago
I think they are more harmful than good (although in the past it might have been more neutral, although I am still against copyright&#x2F;patent laws in general). I think patents and copyright should be abolished (although trademarks might be useful, although I don&#x27;t know if the trademark laws should be altered a bit maybe). Stuff I write myself I make it to be public domain because I don&#x27;t like copyright. Copyright&#x2F;patents don&#x27;t promote inventions; they tend to hinder it instead, I think.
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buboardabout 5 years ago
Patents are one way for the state to select who will become rich and who won&#x27;t. There is little justification for &quot;intellectual property&quot; in a free market.
badrabbitabout 5 years ago
In the US you mean? The problem is much more endemic in that you need money to hire a good lawyer to fight against someone with money, be it patent,civil or criminal law
notlukeskyabout 5 years ago
There is a historical argument against software patents. And one can be made for shorter durations for hardware ones now.
erkkenabout 5 years ago
I think In 99% of the cases, the costs, work and effort by far outweighs possible benefits.