FreeComputerBooks.com
Links to Free Computer, Mathematics, Technical Books all over the World
|
|
- Title: Against Intellectual Property
- Author(s) Stephan N Kinsella
- Publisher: Ludwig von Mises Institute (2008)
- Paperback: 71 pages
- eBook: PDF and EPub
- Language: English
- ISBN-10: 1933550325
- ISBN-13: 978-1933550329
- Share This:
Read it and prepare to change your mind.
This monograph is justifiably considered a modern classic. It is by Stephan Kinsella who caused a worldwide rethinking among libertarians of the very basis of intellectual property. Mises had warned against patents, and Rothbard did too. But Kinsella goes much further to argue that the very existence of patents are contrary to a free market, and adds in here copyrights and trademarks too.
They all use the state to create artificial scarcities of non-scarce goods and employ coercion in a way that is contrary to property rights and the freedom of contract.
Many people who read this essay for the first time were unprepared for the rigor of his argument, which takes time to settle in simply because it seems so shocking at first. But Kinsella makes his case with powerful logic and examples that are overwhelming in their persuasive power.
The relevance in a digital age can't be overstated. The state works with monopolistic private producers to inhibit innovation and stop the progress of technology, while using coercion against possible competitors and against consumers. Even U.S. foreign policy is profoundly affected by widespread confusions over what is legitimate and merely asserted as property.
What Kinsella is calling for instead of this cartelizing system is nothing more or less than a pure free market, which he argues would not generate anything resembling what we call intellectual property today. IP, he argues, is really a state-enforce legal convention, not an extension of real ownership.
Few essays written in the last decades have caused so much fundamental rethinking. It is essential that libertarians get this issue right, and understand the arguments on all sides. Kinsella's piece here is masterful in making a case against IP that turns out to be more rigorous and thorough than any written on the left, right, or anything in between.
About the Authors- N/A
-
Create or Perish: The Case for Inventions and Patents
This book explores the history of private and public rights in scientific discoveries and applied engineering, leading to the development of worldwide patent systems. The classes of invention protectable under the patent laws will be examined.
-
Producing Open Source Software: Run a Free Software Project
This is a book about the human side of open source development. It describes how successful projects operate, the expectations of users and developers, and the culture of free software.
-
Perspectives on Free and Open Source Software (Joseph Feller)
The book analyzes a number of key topics: the motivation behind FOSS - why highly skilled software developers devote large amounts of time to the creation of "free" products and services; the objective, empirically grounded evaluation of software, etc.
-
Getting Started with Open Source Development (Rachna Kapur)
This book gets you started into the fascinating world of open source software development. Using the exercises and case studies provided, you will get good hands-on experience to contribute to and start open source projects.
-
O'Reilly® Open Sources 2.0: The Continuing Evolution
This book is a collection of insightful and thought-provoking essays from today's technology leaders that continues painting the evolutionary picture that developed in the 1999 book Open Sources: Voices from the Revolution.
-
O'Reilly® Understanding Open Source and Free Software Licensing
It helps you make sense of the different options available to you. This concise guide focuses on annotated licenses, offering an in-depth explanation of how they compare and interoperate, and how license choices affect project possibilities.
-
Creative Commons: A User Guide (Simone Aliprandi)
This book is an operational manual which guides creators step by step in the world of Creative Commons licenses, the most famous and popular licenses for free distribution of intellectual products.
:
|
|