![]() |
Against Monopolydefending the right to innovate |
Monopoly corrupts. Absolute monopoly corrupts absolutely. |
||
|
Copyright Notice: We don't think much of copyright, so you can do what you want with the content on this blog. Of course we are hungry for publicity, so we would be pleased if you avoided plagiarism and gave us credit for what we have written. We encourage you not to impose copyright restrictions on your "derivative" works, but we won't try to stop you. For the legally or statist minded, you can consider yourself subject to a Creative Commons Attribution License. |
|
Germany We previously mentioned Eckhard Höffner research showing how absence of copyright in Germany led to more rather than less output there than in England. This is being picked up by other blogs, here is a post on Kevin Smith's blog. (Thanks to Ruth Lewis for the tip) [Posted at 08/27/2010 09:19 AM by David K. Levine on Was Napster Right? Tangled over their own laws Really, this is pretty funny. [Posted at 08/25/2010 04:36 PM by David K. Levine on Was Napster Right? Der Spiegel You may recall that Eckhard Höffner has been examining the history of copyright in Germany - finding that in its absence there was an explosion of knowledge - that due to the late enforcement of copyright in Germany, Germany emerged from a poor agricultural country in 1800 to the leading science nation in 1900. The German media being more advanced than the U.S. media Der Spiegel,the preeminant German weekly news magazine with a print run of about 1 million, and one of the most widely circulated magazines in Europe has picked up the story.
Explosion of knowledge. Was the industrial rise of Germany caused, because copyright was unknown. If your German is not good you might try Google Translate. [Posted at 08/05/2010 11:17 PM by David K. Levine on Was Napster Right? What IP is really about From my spam folder:
You could be sitting on a potential gold mine! It's right under your nose, in the form of intellectual property created by you & your lab. Don't let your invention representing millions in potential revenue sit idle simply because you aren't aware IP & patent protection laws and other key aspects of moving innovations from your lab to the market.. What: Live Audio Conference When: Wednesday, August 4 at 1:00 pm EST (90 minutes) Register Now! (http://www.on2url.com/app/adtrack.asp?MerchantID=163022&AdID=505332) [Posted at 07/28/2010 11:10 AM by David K. Levine on IP as a Joke Intellectual Property Rights and Innovation: Evidence from the Human Genome NBER Working Paper #16213 by Heidi L. Williams
Abstract: This paper provides empirical evidence on how intellectual property (IP) on a given technology affects subsequent innovation. To shed light on this question, I analyze the sequencing of the human genome by the public Human Genome Project and the private firm Celera, and estimate the impact of Celera's gene-level IP on subsequent scientific research and product development outcomes. Celera's IP applied to genes sequenced first by Celera, and was removed when the public effort re-sequenced those genes. I test whether genes that ever had Celera's IP differ in subsequent innovation, as of 2009, from genes sequenced by the public effort over the same time period, a comparison group that appears balanced on ex ante gene-level observables. A complementary panel analysis traces the effects of removal of Celera's IP on within-gene flow measures of subsequent innovation. Both analyses suggest Celera's IP led to reductions in subsequent scientific research and product development outcomes on the order of 30 percent. Celera's short-term IP thus appears to have had persistent negative effects on subsequent innovation relative to a counterfactual of Celera genes having always been in the public domain. [Posted at 07/26/2010 07:41 AM by David K. Levine on Pharmaceutical Patents Comment Posting Announcement As you know we welcome comments. However the comments sidebar is getting taking over by gratuitous exchanges of insults rather than intellectual commentary on whatever side or point. I've tried not to moderate the comments beyond removing obvious spam. Heated exchanges are one thing but constant exchanges of insults are something else. I think interested readers are starting to feel discouraged by the tone of some of the comments, and some have complained. Let me start by requesting especially Lonnie, "nobody" and "none of your beeswax" to dial it back. If provoked don't respond, please try to stick to the intellectual point. If necessary we (the editors) will start removing posts that are designed to offend rather than inform. If you think another commentator is out of line, please don't respond in the comments, just let one of us know so we can take appropriate action.
Thanks, David [Posted at 07/08/2010 02:23 AM by David K. Levine on Against IM Stevens and Bilski Matt Mitchell draws our attention to
Stevens "concurring" opinion in Bilski, especially part VI. It is a pretty good summary of why patents are bad, generally. He confines his argument to business method patents, but they are easily extended in most cases. [Posted at 07/04/2010 03:45 AM by David K. Levine on Patents (General) What Public Domain? Rufus Pollock has been looking into what the public domain doesn't look like. Here is a post with details. [Posted at 07/04/2010 03:38 AM by David K. Levine on Copyright The bionic man[Posted at 06/12/2010 03:38 AM by David K. Levine on Copyright The Economics Book Festival in Trento[Posted at 06/08/2010 06:17 AM by David K. Levine on Intellectual Monopoly |
|
Most Recent Comments How to extract money for using copyrighted performances The New York Times Magazine followed up on its earlier piece about The Copyright Enforcers with at 08/29/2010 04:58 PM by John Bennett
NYTimes finds more IP news but doesn't report its consumer cost Enabling people to set up contests or awards of prizes is what I hope my Contingency Market can at 08/28/2010 10:45 AM by Crosbie Fitch
NYTimes finds more IP news but doesn't report its consumer cost A couple of things can be done to encourage phamaceutical development without creating a monopoly. at 08/28/2010 08:51 AM by John Bennett
Comment Posting Announcement Justin Levine's post has comments disabled again: Paul Allen Files Patent Lawsuits Against The at 08/28/2010 03:18 AM by Crosbie Fitch
Germany Not many comments on that article. I presume that means it has a tiny audience.
Oh well, I guess at 08/27/2010 03:22 PM by Crosbie Fitch
NYTimes finds more IP news but doesn't report its consumer cost To start with, shift the cost burden of later-stage clinical trials to the FDA and at 08/27/2010 10:23 AM by Nobody Nowhere
NYTimes finds more IP news but doesn't report its consumer cost If I may ask a very simple question.
What would you do to encourage the "invention" of new and at 08/27/2010 09:15 AM by MLS
Free textbooks If you are unable to get free textbooks but need cheap college books, I recommend visiting at 08/27/2010 07:44 AM by Jay Taylor
Comment Posting Announcement Lewis Hyde's
Justin Levine has disabled at 08/23/2010 03:25 PM by Anonymous
Music without copyright Thanks for the healthy info.
rent at 08/23/2010 12:53 PM by Sue
|