
On Thu, 5 Feb 1998, Dr.Dimitri Vulis KOTM wrote:
Jim Choate <ravage@ssz.com> writes:
Forwarded message:
Date: Thu, 5 Feb 1998 08:23:58 -0800 (PST) From: mark@unicorn.com Subject: Re: the best justice money can buy --Lessig
Of course there's a free-market remedy for Microsoft; eliminate copyright. anyone can copy Microsoft software for free, it would be forced to compete on real benefits rather than installed base.
If there were no copyright nobody would have any reason to market software or much else for that matter. I would predict that much of the technology
[SNIP]
Software development seems to be thriving in countries that aren't very keen on enforcing copyright laws - do you care to explain why?
Would you care to explain where? There's a big difference between a "flourishing" market for custom, in-house-only software (especially in a language that is not high on the list for US developers), and a commercial software market consisting of widely distributed applications. The in-house stuff doesn't need copyright protection; it's never allowed out, and even if it were, what are the odds it could be used by others without access to source code? Custom software is more a matter of selling a service than a "product", and it's a lot harder to "bootleg" services. What software products can you come up with that have the same level of market penetration as those engineered in the US or Canada? How many of those are from nations that do not honor copyright?
Free markets monopolize.
Hmm... There's no copyright on perfumes. There are market leaders in perfumes, but no monopoly; hardly even an olygopoly.
That's because the primary product is the image built by advertising, not the scent which is often fairly accurately duplicated (not that I'd know - my favorite scent is hallertau). One of my professors defined advertising as "creating demand for that which is inherently worthless."