Evolution optimized the human brain to cope effectively with ownership of a 
physical object bigger than a pea and no larger than a barn. Ancestral humans 
did not own land, for instance. 

Until recently, people didn't own many abstractions. Maybe a stock certificate 
or the deed to a house. Our evolved moral intuitions do not clearly address 
ownership of an abstraction.

Now, most people own abstractions. To own an ebook, an Mp3 or a software 
license is to own an abstraction. The human brain is not prepared to deal with 
that. The human brain was promoted to its level of incompetence when 
agriculture was invented and people started living in cities.

In the 21st century, all possible answers to complex questions of intellectual 
property will be unsatisfactory and contentious. I need to get used to that. 
Others may suit themselves.

Just my opinion.

Cheers,

Tim


On Oct 11, 2012, at 10:50 PM, Peter Haworth wrote:

> That's not copyright, that's patent, different thing although just as weird!
> 
> One problem with copyright laws is that, as with a lot of laws, they are
> different in every country.


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