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167 points thisismytest | 2 comments | | HN request time: 0.4s | source
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ixaxaar ◴[] No.42162021[source]
What a sad fucking world. I like what China does in the regard to patents. That is exactly what patents deserve.
replies(4): >>42162150 #>>42162389 #>>42163357 #>>42164305 #
levocardia ◴[] No.42162150[source]
...steal them from the Americans?
replies(6): >>42162157 #>>42162267 #>>42162535 #>>42162618 #>>42162619 #>>42163616 #
immibis ◴[] No.42162157[source]
You can't "steal" what wasn't valid property to begin with - even if the law likes to pretend it is valid property.
replies(3): >>42162170 #>>42162377 #>>42162729 #
osigurdson ◴[] No.42162170[source]
I don't think the world is a net better place with no IP or copyright laws.
replies(7): >>42162183 #>>42162188 #>>42162279 #>>42162584 #>>42162630 #>>42163487 #>>42166364 #
portaouflop ◴[] No.42162584[source]
We won’t know until we try it out.
replies(2): >>42163066 #>>42164096 #
1. sam_lowry_ ◴[] No.42163066[source]
We do, tangentially. IP laws are enforce differently across the world and across timeperiods, and the differences make for wonderful experiments.

Think of pop music expansion in the Napster era as an example.

replies(1): >>42163219 #
2. jajko ◴[] No.42163219[source]
Yet successful pop artists are drowning in money.

I have really hard time having sympathy with massively multi-millionaires like Metallica bashing people ripping their stuff.

Even in countries with stronger IP, unknown artists are struggling. So restrictions are hardly an efficient solution