GasBandit
Staff member
A printing press is a tangible asset. Until you can destroy an intellectual property in a fire or lose it in an earthquake (not to mention subject it to the same inheritance tax), I don't think it can be held to the same rhetorical standard.Doesn't someone who owns a printing press have other property? Why should their business assets be excluded? Should an apple orchard be forfeit and the farmer's heirs be unable to profit from the fruit, just because most people's jobs don't involve a significant investment in capital?
Ah, I misinterpreted what you said then. Intellectual property is definitely a misnomer, as it isn't truly a property, it's a right or a license. IP theft doesn't actually remove the original, and it isn't something like a printing press that actually enables creation. It's just an agreement society makes to only let one person (or company) profit from an idea for a specific amount of time. A radio frequency isn't hereditary, either.You're mixing arguments here. Saying that copyright should be a flat seven years is tremendously different than saying that copyright should stop at death. If you want to argue that copyright should not be connected to the lifespan of the creator at all, you're going to have to stop arguing that copyright reverts to public domain upon the death of the author.
It's interesting to see the dividing lines in this argument - how the STEM types of the forum line up on one side and the Authors/Cartoonists line up on the other.
"Of course they shouldn't, why should they?"
"Of course they should, why shouldn't they?"