Stopping the copying of books of all things is the hardest and least possible part of that whole copyright affair, due to the protected status so-called "Internet Libraries" enjoy in some parts of the world. So regardless of whether I really think that book writers should be able to live by royalties (which I think is not the only possible model), this is the really impractical part.Simon_Jester wrote:So I don't think I'm on board with your ideas, Stas.
I might be cruel to authors, but so what? People are cruel to inventors as well, and much more so. They demand their works to be public domain. If you make a great cultural contribution, why should it be any more protected than a great invention? For the reason of non-essential nature of the contribution? But if we accept that with the rise of industrial society culture becomes an equally important sphere of public welfare, and education and culture are absolutely necessary for the advanced society, should we not treat books the same way? I would note that the destruction of copyright, for example, would make the world of scientific literature a lot more interconnected, since articles, books, experiment results could be shared without fear of copyright reprisals. And in fact, such initiatives already exist. Scientific works are written by people who get a wage from the higher education institutions or scientific institutions they're a part of, and do not rely on remunerations from sales.Simon_Jester wrote:The former model strikes me as a great cruelty to artists; the latter strikes me as impractical because it discourages people from taking the time to perfect their art.
On the other hand, the bans and witch-hunts against internet libraries are the worst type of copyright hunts, much worse than hunts against movie- or music-copies, since the latter are far less essential to educational development and cultural development than books.
Restriction of distribution is damage. Why don't you ban libraries, since they distribute a non-material right to universal access to copies, often without any fee? Also, "unprecended"? Free libraries, freely written books (put by their own authors on the net) and free education as a system of sharing scientific knowledge without access restrictions operate for quite a while. And their operation has been a massive success with hundreds of thousands if not millions of people accessing the knowledge, the literary heritage and so on and so forth.Questor wrote:Everyone seems to be taking it as gospel that copyright restrains and damages culture. I ask again, other than restricting distribution, how does it do that? If restricting distribution is the only problem, well, then we should probably agree to disagree, because I do not see ANY way to move to your system without completely restructuring society (something I know that you support). Myself, I tend to be skeptical of drastic, unprecedented, changes (although I do acknowledge that somebody has to do something first).
"Money sink"? The role of public libraries in the elimination of illiteracy and advancement of knowledge among the working class is not to be underestimated. It is these public libraries and university libraries which universities themselves rely on. Are you willing to shove the cost onto universities? Are universities and higher education itself a "money sink"? What sort of insane bullshit is that! The benefit from advanced knowledge to humanity and its industrial economy has been much greater than any spending on libraries, internet, universities or all of them together.Questor wrote:Before the internet, and more particularly digital distribution, this entire line of reasoning would have been looked at as insane. Libraries were maintained as a public service, but everyone knew that they were a money sink.
I said that blockbusters will also survive unless they tank at the box office, you can't replace a cinema trip experience with a poorly made screen copy after all. So blockbusters and arthouse films survive. "Direct to DVD" and crap which relies on DVD sales to survive will die. Is that a huge price for freedom? Pardon me, but movies which don't make enough money at the box office are either (a) arthouse (in which case losses are accepted beforehand) (b) crap (in which case they should fucking die).Questor wrote:So you think that arthouse movies should be the only ones made? Think about what site you're on.
Fewer but better? Works for me. As you know, the advent of radio and TV basically killed thousands of so-called "little theatres" which operated in villages, small towns et cetera with actors who acted too bad for a big city theatre but good enough for the unwashed peons. If the digital age kills mediocrity, it does us a service thereby.Questor wrote:I suspect that you'd have a lot fewer bands if they can't at least partially offset the costs.
My random picker tells me that quite a few of the "greatest masterpieces" were created without any intention of profit or, even if they had such an intention, they failed to gather the profits. Writes do not have any superiority over inventors - scientists, chemists, etc., if the latter have their author's right revoked in just 5 years, so shall the writers. They are no privileged caste, and neither should they ever be.Questor wrote:Yes, some of the greatest masterpieces were created with no intention of profit, but most of them weren't.
And your argument for that is... what? You accepted that arthouse and blockbusters will survive, just like self-financed bands and big concert-cashing bands, just as those writers who do not rely on royalties. Which would by the way include a vast majority of scientific authors, but will exclude, yes, a huge majority of crap entertainment artists - tons of worthless detective fiction crap and so on. Boo fucking hoo and cry me a river.Questor wrote:I don't see it that way at all, I see it as you being willing to virtually end all production of non-proven artists in order to satisfy your own pleasure.