On Fri, 23 Jul 1999, Peter D. Junger <junger[_at_]samsara.law.cwru.edu> wrote:
>
> Limiting my remarks to software, I agree that getting rid of coyright
> for computer programs would reduce investment (and return on investment)
> drastically, and that, in consequence, Microsoft would no longer present
> an anti-trust problem. On the other hand, considering the successs of
> the free/open software movements, it is my opinion that there would be
> no appreciable reduction in the quantity [except for a drastic reduction
> in the number of incompatible programs arising from efforts at product
> differentiation] of programs and that the quality of programs would be
> greatly improved.
>
> Notice that RedHat in its efforts to turn a five billion dollar business
> into a five hundred million dollar business is investing considerable
> money in supporting programmers who are creating free/open software.
>
> It isn't the copyright regime that is encouraging those efforts.
>
> And it wasn't the copyright regime that was responsible for the creation
> of Linux, Apache, Sendmail (and Qmail), Bind, TCP/IP, C, Unix, Perl,
> Python, or the World Wide Web.
Of course there is an alternative to individual copyright ownership in the ancient practice of patronage. Whoever is rich enough to keep an author can own his/her works -- and decide to give them away.
Is it not good to have options that serve a diversity of talents and life styles?
Albert Henderson
Editor, PUBLISHING RESEARCH QUARTERLY
<70244.1532[_at_]compuserve.com>
Received on Tue Jul 27 1999 - 11:59:27 GMT
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