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Intellectual property: an unnecessary evil

Intellectual property rights can hinder technological and cultural advance by stifling creativity and immitation

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Mike Finn-Kelcey / Reuters / File
British author JK Rowling poses with a copy of her book "Harry Potter and the Half Blood Prince" at Edinburgh Castle in Scotland, July 15, 2005. Each new book sells enough in its first day to keep the author "in style," writes guest blogger Jock Coats. If there were no intellectual property laws, would Rowling still have written the Harry Potter series?

Intellectual property rights 鈥 better thought of as intellectual monopoly rights 鈥 are an unnecessary evil. They are unnecessary because all their stated, utilitarian aims can be achieved by other means. They are an evil because granting artificial rights to non-property restricts everyone else鈥檚 property rights. They are more likely to be used to stifle the creativity, innovation, and emulation that underpins technological and cultural advance; and they concentrate wealth and power in the hands of privileged non-creators more interested in milking selected others鈥 efforts.

Dignifying them with the phrase 鈥渋ntellectual property鈥 is a contemporary conceit to conceal crude market interference through state granted privilege with the flimsiest gossamer of respectability. The primary origins of patents lie in maintaining the state鈥檚 coffers, and of copyright in state censorship of ideas.

Property rights arise from a desire to prevent conflict over scare resources. Ideas, patterns, recipes and processes are non-scarce. Intellectual monopoly laws impose different time periods and restrictions. From time to time legislators arbitrarily decide to protect previously unprotected categories of invention. Even legislators then don鈥檛 regard them as genuine property, ownable in perpetuity by the first owner and their heirs until they chose to dispose of it.

However, many claim that, without intellectual monopoly, those with innovative and creative minds would not use those faculties, insufficiently rewarded for their creativity. This is by no means self-evident. If...

  • from Americans without copyright
  • Musicians could feed themselves before Edison
  • Plant breeding could
  • Software got written before the
  • Most of the 2009 made most of their income from live performances, not recordings
  • Harry Potter novels to keep J K Rowling in style

...why do we think they need state protection now? The plain truth is that because of the grip of the small number of media giants who control the production, marketing and distribution of their favoured artists, many more undiscovered artists subsist on live gigs in local venues. And because of the modish patent trolls who have no intention of ever exploiting their patents, many innovators never even know someone else 鈥渙wns鈥 an idea until the writ arrives end up broken.

19th century libertarians ranked Intellectual Monopoly as state created privilege that impoverishes the majority. We should heed them: they are still destructive, unnecessary, statist and evil.

Further reading:

鈥檚 鈥溾 at the Mises Institute (and an of it by me)

Stephan鈥檚 thinktank, the 鈥溾 (C4SIF)

鈥溾 by and David Levine and the supporting website 鈥溾

鈥nd if you are minded to do a bit more study on Intellectual Property from a libertarian perspective, though Stephan Kinsella鈥檚 Mises Academy course 鈥溾 is coming to the end of its current run, you might keep an eye out for it running again.

April 26th is "World Intellectual Property Day". Jock Coats blogs at .

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