-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- Hash: SHA512 On 11/05/16 11:20, Tyler Romeo wrote: > The free software movement is concerned with end-user freedoms for > *software*, hence the name of the movement. To be specific, > quoting from [0], "Freedom means having control over your own life. > If you use a program to carry out activities in your life, your > freedom depends on your having control over the program." Yes, that is a myopic flaw in this whole free software movement thing.
> That said, the free culture movement, and its associated > principles, are substantially separate from the free software > movement. An individual can fully believe in the rights of an > end-user to have control over the software that affects their life, > while still believing that artists and creators should have control > over how others use their artistic creations (to a given extent). > Artwork is not code, and does not exert a control over your > everyday processes. > > That said, I wholly agree with al3xu5. While I do believe in some > aspects of the free culture movement, specifically that copyright > is too restrictive in its current form and the viewers should have > some rights, I do not believe that viewers should be able to > commercially derive and re-use any non-software copyrighted work > they receive a copy of. The original purpose of copyright was to > protect the commercial interests of artists, and I believe *some* > form of that protection is still appropriate. You are using language in which artists are deities, and have some inherent "rights" that need "protection". I don't subscribe to that world view, nor do I agree that freedoms for our cultural heritage isn't as important as free software (although you personally go even further and say that copy"right" should "protect" the "commercial interests" of artists). For what it's worth, your whole notion of how artists should be prevented from reusing things is unreasonable nonsense. What if someone had patented a C note and said that "I recorded this note first, so you cannot include it in your music"? That's essentially what's happening in the computer industry at the moment, but luckily music pre-dates patents. (To take an example of a bigger work that's just a plain retelling of something that already existed -- look to about half of everything that Disney ever made. They are constantly lobbying to ensure nobody else can benefit from the same stories they benefited from, all in the name of their "intellectual property rights" as "creators".) And what happens when someone *does* say "I recorded this chord progression first, so you cannot use it in your music", like The Hollies told Radiohead (for a song that The Hollies ironically were just covering)? Nothing. The Radiohead song is still a treasured hit. It's 2016. Good luck making something (in *any* artistic field) that's not derivative. Information wants to be free. Culture does too. - -- Alexander [email protected] https://secure.plaimi.net/~alexander -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- Version: GnuPG v2 iQIcBAEBCgAGBQJXMv6FAAoJENQqWdRUGk8B/90P/iNSyachaU82TzcI+2R6LeFg tJgHBia/7gZcxNiOYrdSFnlETMx60LA++H/z2TV7KIGMN31fokPUf4U4zLu4Y6UK HBZO7wYSmFGyvIXo5YeRMQxuCuY8yFL4b7K3EMc1H+RxOrZb7q8p8UzG9GZsmvl3 N8WA8av8NDBIicQyt8RNFqpaysUhdQCQNE1wPmSVOUXMnN6X/PTep8qksZA2UAnX Lj5x8Qo5oi0JOWGE8hgL64mYTWmjVG5l1u3fsiU4R8ba2sq948jI7yD5JXJq9Tq+ ARVO7z55Ll5jcDcm6qKdrBnQ2VxyIxcaxErK1eD1r2jjZ9OCLBdWDTpPM2CQOH1K Pg8cf053WxKYCLcEWwBXir7ejDaRWND96hGk8k1Ozss6LhXG89v/RfBsb8lP2i2F tHWeMp/603yamD1E86jjvAkd617ICTnSU2av9BRthUB1HiQzYctwEPvN4LI77yNd Ujbx4L3d2qohPLRUgAJjNHJ4qOpn5zb/mk/alhQtBtza8h9L8Gfqy/jSilrJJ7Zn OlHGOlYbib5FxxeWza4P7PvMV+ESTY2t6sVwjKcXdzj8coPqgDAtiotIHsTC+HRi BcVGiRMf9bUrdCyzCm9lHowyh8pOjbUdLCmeWLygwXuG0FyJLxliQkP/DoXWiwtI 6Sd3UCz/Cqj/6XDVM4Js =0ac8 -----END PGP SIGNATURE-----
