Difference between revisions of "Intellectual property"
From Organic Design wiki
Infomaniac (talk | contribs) m (apply which/that rules, misc clarifications) |
m ({{glossary}}) |
||
(One intermediate revision by the same user not shown) | |||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
+ | {{glossary}} | ||
The phrase "intellectual property" is considered by many to be useless word vaguely referring to patents, copyright and/or trademarks, which all have very different bodies of law applied to them. However, we purposefully choose to use the phrase to encompass them all because we believe that they all share a single important aspect in common that is putting an artificial limitation onto the propagation of knowledge. | The phrase "intellectual property" is considered by many to be useless word vaguely referring to patents, copyright and/or trademarks, which all have very different bodies of law applied to them. However, we purposefully choose to use the phrase to encompass them all because we believe that they all share a single important aspect in common that is putting an artificial limitation onto the propagation of knowledge. | ||
This is the diametrically opposite problem of [[Currency|usury and passive income]], because it attempts to limit and fragment the domain of ideas and creativity, which is inherently infinite and unlimited. | This is the diametrically opposite problem of [[Currency|usury and passive income]], because it attempts to limit and fragment the domain of ideas and creativity, which is inherently infinite and unlimited. | ||
+ | |||
+ | == Related News == | ||
+ | *[http://blogs.computerworld.com/16736/oracle_vs_google_over_java_in_android_is_only_the_start Oracle vs Google over Java in Android] | ||
== See also == | == See also == | ||
Line 8: | Line 12: | ||
*[[Why software should not have owners]] | *[[Why software should not have owners]] | ||
*[[Digital Rights Management]] | *[[Digital Rights Management]] | ||
− | + | [[Category:Philosophy]] |
Latest revision as of 23:47, 27 September 2010
The phrase "intellectual property" is considered by many to be useless word vaguely referring to patents, copyright and/or trademarks, which all have very different bodies of law applied to them. However, we purposefully choose to use the phrase to encompass them all because we believe that they all share a single important aspect in common that is putting an artificial limitation onto the propagation of knowledge.
This is the diametrically opposite problem of usury and passive income, because it attempts to limit and fragment the domain of ideas and creativity, which is inherently infinite and unlimited.