Originally posted by Duckwing6:
wow i guess record lables were mightily pissed as the first TAPE-Recorders came up too .. c'mmon guys it's just another evolutional step for the marketing duedes (some call it E-commerce -> Sp?)
Wrong Duck. To make a tape you had to acquire the original first. Napster by-passed the important first step.
If Napster wins this, it will be a dark day for anyone who has or will use copyrights to protect intellectual property.
Example; I freely post information targeted at helping those who need it. I use 25+ years of intellectual acquirement to provide that information. I do it freely and do not charge for it.
But, if someone takes my information and posts it to a WEB site, for instance another ISP would love to be able to use what information I give to this community daily (well, i try
),.....I would like to know I could call that ISP and ask them to pull that information off thier site because they are using it without my explicit permission.
Should another ISP benefit from my work? Only if I give them permission to do so.
If Napster wins, I lose the chance to protect my intellectual property. This could lead to me not willing to be so sharing of the years of work I have put into knowing all this information.
How about closer to home. Say you come up with an idea that will lead to you living a really comfortable life, and, by the very course of implementing it, you have to show it to some investors so you can get the funding.
Well, if copyright goes away, they could take your idea, implement it, and you would have a very difficult time, if not impossible time, protecting your intellectual property.
The ramifications of this case are far reaching and wide ranging. Napster needs to lose, or we all lose.
------------------
Roy "Skuzzy" Neese
President, AppLink Corp.
http://www.applink.netskuzzy@applink.net