Comment by userbinator
Comment by userbinator 16 hours ago
You can infinitely "steal" digital data. That's where the analogy breaks down.
Imaginary property is imaginary.
Comment by userbinator 16 hours ago
You can infinitely "steal" digital data. That's where the analogy breaks down.
Imaginary property is imaginary.
You’re correct, it is not copyright. It comes closer to me asking to use your computer to check my bank account and then emailing myself all your identify documents.
Stealing physical property deprives its original owner of it. The same can't be said of IP.
So what? That at most means they’re slightly different flavors of the abstraction we call “property”.
And owning property — even physical property — entails having the right to prevent other people from using it, even in ways that don’t deprive you of it. You can’t drive my car without permission, even if you bring it back in perfect condition and I wasn’t planning on using it that day.
> Imaginary property is imaginary
Property, a social construct, is always imaginary. The ship on IP, from insider trading laws to copyright, has sailed. If the only argument against a potential crime is IP isn’t real, the person is probably wrong.