- #36
russ_watters
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TheStatutoryApe - you've previously rejected the concept of "intellectual property" altogether, right? So any discussion of how it fits into the framework for rights in general is kinda moot - you're simply rejecting the concept out of hand and not dealing with the reality/history of how it is treated.
The reality is that "intellectual property" is property like any other: your house, your car, your land, your ipod -- your patent. All property. The primary difference with intellectual property is that it has an expiration date. But whether you agree that intellectual property should work this way, that doesn't have any bearing on the fact that intellectual property does work this way. This isn't an opinion to be argued, it is a historical fact.
The reality is that "intellectual property" is property like any other: your house, your car, your land, your ipod -- your patent. All property. The primary difference with intellectual property is that it has an expiration date. But whether you agree that intellectual property should work this way, that doesn't have any bearing on the fact that intellectual property does work this way. This isn't an opinion to be argued, it is a historical fact.