Context by Cory Doctorow
Author:Cory Doctorow
Language: eng
Format: mobi
Publisher: Tachyon Publications
Published: 2011-05-11T14:00:00+00:00
“Intellectual Property” Is a Silly Euphemism
“Intellectual property” is one of those ideologically loaded terms that can cause an argument just by being uttered. The term wasn’t in widespread use until the 1960s, when it was adopted by the World Intellectual Property Organization, a trade body that later attained exalted status as a UN agency.
WIPO’s case for using the term is easy to understand: people who’ve “had their property stolen” are a lot more sympathetic in the public imagination than “industrial entities who’ve had the contours of their regulatory monopolies violated,” the latter being the more common way of talking about infringement until the ascendancy of “intellectual property” as a term of art.
Does it matter what we call it? Property, after all, is a useful, well-understood concept in law and custom, the kind of thing that a punter can get his head around without too much thinking.
That’s entirely true—and it’s exactly why the phrase “intellectual property” is, at root, a dangerous euphemism that leads us to all sorts of faulty reasoning about knowledge. Faulty ideas about knowledge are troublesome at the best of times, but they’re deadly to any country trying to make a transition to a “knowledge economy.”
Fundamentally, the stuff we call “intellectual property” is just knowledge—ideas, words, tunes, blueprints, identifiers, secrets, databases. This stuff is similar to property in some ways: it can be valuable, and sometimes you need to invest a lot of money and labour into its development to realise that value.
Out of control
But it is also dissimilar from property in equally impor-tant ways. Most of all, it is not inherently “exclusive.” If you trespass on my flat, I can throw you out (exclude you from my home). If you steal my car, I can take it back (exclude you from my car). But once you know my song, once you read my book, once you see my movie, it leaves my control. Short of a round of electroconvulsive therapy, I can’t get you to un-know the sentences you’ve just read here.
It’s this disconnect that makes the “property” in intellectual property so troublesome. If everyone who came over to my flat physically took a piece of it away with them, it’d drive me bonkers. I’d spend all my time worrying about who crossed the threshold, I’d make them sign all kinds of invasive agreements before they got to use the loo, and so on. And as anyone who has bought a DVD and been forced to sit through an insulting, cack-handed “You wouldn’t steal a car” short film knows, this is exactly the kind of behaviour that property talk inspires when it comes to knowledge.
But there’s plenty of stuff out there that’s valuable even though it’s not property. For example, my daughter was born on February 3, 2008. She’s not my property. But she’s worth quite a lot to me. If you took her from me, the crime wouldn’t be “theft.” If you injured her, it wouldn’t be “trespass to chattels.” We have an entire vocabulary and set of legal concepts to deal with the value that a human life embodies.
Download
This site does not store any files on its server. We only index and link to content provided by other sites. Please contact the content providers to delete copyright contents if any and email us, we'll remove relevant links or contents immediately.
The Rules Do Not Apply by Ariel Levy(4500)
Bluets by Maggie Nelson(4239)
Too Much and Not the Mood by Durga Chew-Bose(4078)
Pre-Suasion: A Revolutionary Way to Influence and Persuade by Robert Cialdini(3953)
The Motorcycle Diaries by Ernesto Che Guevara(3763)
Walking by Henry David Thoreau(3667)
What If This Were Enough? by Heather Havrilesky(3183)
Schaum's Quick Guide to Writing Great Short Stories by Margaret Lucke(3169)
The Day I Stopped Drinking Milk by Sudha Murty(3095)
The Daily Stoic by Holiday Ryan & Hanselman Stephen(3083)
Why I Write by George Orwell(2754)
The Social Psychology of Inequality by Unknown(2741)
Letters From a Stoic by Seneca(2658)
A Short History of Nearly Everything by Bryson Bill(2493)
Insomniac City by Bill Hayes(2381)
Feel Free by Zadie Smith(2374)
A Burst of Light by Audre Lorde(2336)
Upstream by Mary Oliver(2259)
Behave: The Biology of Humans at Our Best and Worst by Robert M. Sapolsky(2156)
