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The Pirate Bay Moves to .SE Domain To Prevent Domain Seizure (torrentfreak.com)
257 points by dazbradbury on Feb 1, 2012 | hide | past | favorite | 81 comments



It appears that thepiratebay.org points to a server that then handles redirection. Question: Why hasn't the .org URL already been seized at the DNS level? DiG output below:

  ; <<>> DiG 9.3.2 <<>> @localhost thepiratebay.org A
  ; (2 servers found)
  ;; global options:  printcmd
  ;; Got answer:
  ;; ->>HEADER<<- opcode: QUERY, status: NOERROR, id: 5372
  ;; flags: qr rd ra; QUERY: 1, ANSWER: 1, AUTHORITY: 0, ADDITIONAL: 0

  ;; QUESTION SECTION:
 ;thepiratebay.org.		IN	A

  ;; ANSWER SECTION:
 thepiratebay.org.	3587	IN	A	194.71.107.15

  ;; Query time: 0 msec
 ;; SERVER: 127.0.0.1#53(127.0.0.1)
 ;; WHEN: Wed Feb  1 15:37:02 2012
 ;; MSG SIZE  rcvd: 50</code>


Probably because it's a lot harder to seize a site in another country which isn't technically breaking any laws.. It's different from say, megaupload in that no infringing content resides on their servers.

It's only going to get harder once TBP stops hosting even torrent files and moves to magnet links entirely. Once that happens, the site basically goes viral, since any random can just spider the whole site for magnet links and host a mirror.


And Google's Cache will contain the full information of the site itself. Think about that.


No doubt a court order will soon be sent to Google so that they can no longer index or cache TPB.


They're already getting the government to demand essentially that:

https://torrentfreak.com/copyright-industry-calls-for-broad-...


Honest question, as I don't use TPB: haven't they hosted magnet links for a long time? What's stopped people from doing that already?


They have, but their plans are to stop hosting even .torrent files. They don't actually even run a tracker anymore.

It's a lot harder to censor 64 characters of alphanumeric text than files.


Do you know the ease or possibility of scraping all the magnet links and creating a sort of Pirate bay on a flash drive? Because if so, they really live up to their motto.


I wonder, why they didn't move to a .is domain, since Iceland claims to be a safe data haven.


That law is pretty new and quite untested.


Link please? I wasn't aware Iceland has passed anything that might put it in the position of a data haven, but then I don't follow Icelandic :-)



Supposing one law or another was passed giving the US govt the power to block offending domains, if push came to shove couldn't the US government ultimately block any domain anywhere via control over the .NET TLD of ROOT-SERVERS.NET and GTLD-SERVERS.NET? e.g. punish/block any nameserver allowing thepiratebay.se to resolve to it's real IP


The way I understand it, who controls the root servers can take down .se as a whole, but not individual .se domains.

If the US would take down .se as a whole, big diplomatic issues would arise immediately, with the end result of either removing root server control from the US or a split of the domain system (between the US and an opposing global entity). But even then, as long as people inside Sweden have their computer pointed up to their ISP dns server which in turn has it pointed to the .se dns server, turning off .se in the root server would not stop swedish people from using swedish sites without any interruption.


They can easily, legally block things in the USA for USA ISPs.

They risk sparking a diplomatic incident if they were to try to take down a .ccTLD domain. Non-USA based root servers would not have to abide by USA rules, and in fact, local websites might get court injunctions to force ISPs to continue to resolve example.xx into what ever was there before. This means whether a domain resolves depends on what DNS servers you talk to.

What your describing might fragment the DNS system into multiple different ones.


This isn't about blocking domains, this is about the DHS or FBI seizing the domain, which they can only do with TLDs whose registrar is located in the US (.com, .net, .org, .us, amongst others)


It's not the registrar but the registry (Verisign) they go to. Lots of people switched from GoDaddy to Gandi last month, a French registrar, but that won't help against this .. problem.


Sorry, my bad. I'm not that familiar with the specific terminology, so I tend to confuse some things. A better formulation would have been "TLDs which are based in the US".


Yes, people forget that after each .tld there is a dot. news.ycombinator.com. is the real deal.


All of the mentioned services only work if the government does not fiddle with your ISP to block certain IPs/HOSTs/DNS Servers etc. Since our way into the net is controlled by local companies who have to comply to local laws, theres always a way to prevent people from using certain services.


There is something called "darknet" which apparently runs as part of the freenet. I have heard about and read a few articles. This may be the way forward.


Well well, there seems to be an issue with their SSL certificate. It still says .org even if you try to access .se domain. - fail.


SSL certificates take time to authorize/generate, depending on the issuing CA.


Anyone else noticing non-response from the site? I'm supposing it's temporary, as usual...


Is there any way to make a website that has no central location, that lives on hard drives and internet connections of citizens and self replicates and adapts when the government wants it to just disappear?

A free internet is going to need a "deploy website to the hive" tool. Something that would force the FBI to have to raid computers in 50 different nations.

I'd like to see a message: "this site has been DNS blocked in your region, please download this program to seed this website for others over an encrypted subnet".


I believe the Freedombox project would help in situations like this, though wouldn't solve it entirely, and that situations like this would help gain support for such projects.

From http://freedomboxfoundation.org and http://freedomboxfoundation.org/learn

What is FreedomBox?

    Email and telecommunications that protects privacy and resists eavesdropping

    A publishing platform that resists oppression and censorship.

    An organizing tool for democratic activists in hostile regimes.

    An emergency communication network in times of crisis.

If you live near New York City, there will be a hack-fest February 18, 19, 20.


Wow. Freedombox is exactly what im looking for. You could put a secondary dns system on it which can't be fiddled with by ISP's and oppressive governments. My freedom box could reach out to nearby freedom boxes to find the quickest route in, around and through oppressive firewalls through encrypted tunnels and what not. Where do I buy?


My understanding is that they are non-existent, and people are still arguing over the design and implementation details.

But if you've got the skills, you can help. You know what it's supposed to do. Chances are, whoever stops bickering and builds one first wins. I'm going to see if I can get my local hackerspace to help me experiment and build at least some sort of prototype.


From the FAQ 5th question, it's not sold yet. But hopefully coming soon. http://freedomboxfoundation.org/faq/index.en.html


As far as I understand it, Freenet is exactly that. Participants offer a part of their harddrive as storage for the network, and content is distributed in an encrypted manner. Websites and other services can be (and are) build on top of this network.


Right now there is not a lot of incentive for the "average" user to install Tor, Freenet or any other de-centralized to make such a network popular commonplace.

But if pirated bay or other popular torrent sites started telling people that for direct downloads they can use this ONE particular software and assuming the software is easy to use (as compared to the fake Usenet software scams) a ton of people would download and install such software in a jiffy and when enough people do it (for whatever their reason be - free internet, file sharing, etc) we get a free internet developing side-by-side which the govt. can't seize.

The software is free and anonymous (unlike Napster, Limewire which can be shutdown) and is easy to use for the avg. user. So while sharing files like uTorrent could be the main feature, it will also give options to add a local DNS resolver (that does not depend on the root servers), and a custom web server (to host mirrors of sites). I'm sure millions of people are running uTorrent but just imagine if those same people were running this software instead of it!


The other question is how well some of those tools would scale if everyone were using them.


If it is a peer to peer network I believe it would get more robust as more people join in. Plus, if a ton of people are using it then it would reduce the bandwidth and load of each node if I understand correctly.


That is completely dependent on whether or not each person is consuming more than they are providing.


Unlike with most torrent programs, Tor by default sets up as a client but not as an exit node.

I don't know that I'd want to be an exit node for Tor, given some of the things that people use Tor for.


You can be a node without necessarily being an exit node.


I am in the Netherlands. As it so happens, the pirate bay actually told me a few days ago to install Tor or a private VPN, because my ISP would supposedly block them soon.


So, we should be secretly supporting SOPA?


Would you care to elaborate how this would support SOPA?


The more they crack down, the more "darknets" become popular, the pirates win and my newsfeed gets clogged with something else.


There is the freenet project (https://freenetproject.org/) which is a distributed data store.


You mean, there's a freenet project, until it gains massive traction, and the US government starts blocking its ways of getting donations from people.


It's free open source code. Donations help, but the FBI tell^H^H^H^H politely asking the payment companies to stop processing for them isn't going to stop anything. People will work on it for the love of the project.


Yeah, but they can still make it illegal to work on such projects (like they had crypto algorithms illegal to distribute outside the us), imprison the programmers if they insist, close down the project site, etc.


Of all the things it's possible to clamp down on from a legal standpoint, writing code is probably impossible. Such is the way of the internet, routing around the censorship damage :)



In fact, this shouldn't be too difficult to build. I don't know much about Freenet, but I do know that if we can use bittorrent to share files using P2P, the same can presumably be done with websites. The most immediate problem that comes to mind is that, while the files being shared over P2P stay fairly constant, a website is more dynamic and gets updated a lot. I presume this could be solved by a PGP-like web of trust.

I'm sure there are plenty of other difficulties to deal with I and other can think of if I spend some more time thinking about it, but I think this would actually be a pretty neat thing to build. The great thing about this would be that the more likely something is to be censored right now, the less likely it is to be censored on something like this - more people would visit/download such things, thus creating extra nodes for other people to visit/download from.

EDIT: I just thought there would be an issue of privacy here that needs to be solved first. For example, if you can track the IP addresses of the people you're downloading your 'website updates' from, and you're visiting explicit sites, it becomes easy to tell whom of your friends are viewing those. ;) The easiest solution is to let people decide for themselves which sites to share, of course, but I wonder if this would mean many sites would be excluded, or whether the effects of this would be minimal.


> Is there any way to make a website that has no central location, that lives on hard drives and internet connections of citizens and self replicates and adapts when the government wants it to just disappear?

Maybe not completely as "decentralized" as your request, but take a look at I2P:

http://www.i2p2.de/


Yes, we need a technical solution to these attacks on the internet freedoms. It's about time we ignored the laws and made the stupid laws irrelevant.



That's really not how CCN works. CCN is basically a content-based IP that affords easy caching for routing providers. Servers would still exist in their same general form.


Well, VJ brings specifically the example of data that is routed to another continent on board of a leaving aircraft.

He stresses that the storage of every node in the network becomes a part of the network. It would really make censorship difficult -- any node can serve up any piece of data that happens to be stored on it.


It's not technically every node. Edge nodes wouldn't have much weight aside from their own content. ISP routing nodes would indeed have breadcrumbs, but there's no requirement that ISPs implement storage caching -- it's only in their financial best interest to implement it instead of network scaling.

To a certain extent, yes, CCN has a distributed content nature, but that's not really what it's about. Mostly it's about routing.


You might be able to have something like that if Van Jacobsens vision here, http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=-6972678839686672840 , gets realized.


I think the search functionality could even be integrated back into Bittorrent clients, back to a system close to what eDonkey2k was in the good old days.


You can use the bitcoin block chain as a reliable way to store information (append-only).

Was wondering why this isn't being advertised as the killer app of the service.


Not information in general, just transactions.

Currently only small text messages are being embedded in the block chain. It wouldn't scale to larger files.


Would it be enough for a magnet url and a short description? The Pirate Bay is moving away from hosting torrent files anyway.


Yes, that would fit easily. Here's an example of the text data that you can find in the block chain by running the "strings" command: http://pastebin.com/ZqqFEqkc


Phantom might be a good place to look:

http://code.google.com/p/phantom/


Isn't that pretty much what Tor is?


Tor does not distribute sites. You can have hidden services, but they're still hosted at one server (or, at most the sites that have the private key), which are hard to trace but can be taken down when found.

I think gp is talking about something more like a content-addressable distributed filesystem. TAHOE/LAFS (https://tahoe-lafs.org/) comes to mind.


I2P has Tahoe-LAFS support.



Permit me to address a few things in a way that is contrary, maybe, to the common HN reader's sentiments. I'd like a serious discussion of said matters rather than knee-jerk reactions.

1) "It's not stealing, because you only take a copy". We're playing with words here. First, the point is not the common definition of the word, it's what a court deems "stealing". Second, even in everyday life, we say things like "he stole the exam answers" or "He stole the recipe" (when in fact he only read them).

2) "The losses are imaginary, because not everybody would have bought the stuff he pirated". Sure, the estimations of the losses are imaginary. All estimations are imaginary --by the very definition. You can argue about the accuracy of the estimations, but not of the need of an estimation (even if you put that estimated loss to zero).

Also, the fact that "not everybody would have bought the stuff he pirated" bypasses two things:

a) some people WOULD have bought the stuff, because they want it, if it wasn't available for them in pirated form. Those are actual money lost (I have downloaded for free lots of things that I would have bought if they weren't available because I just had to have them. Surely, other people have too. How many, is the topic of the aforementioned estimation).

b) those that would never in any case had paid for the item, do not represent "actual lost money". But they have violated the wish of the content creator/distributor regarding the (paid) use of his product. This can also be punishable by law, and fined, and in many legal systems, it is.

This "respect of the will" of the copyright owner, is like GPL etc works. If you want GPL respected, you also want copyright respected, even if the owner is not using a permissive license. Because the court doesn't upheld GPL for it's permissiveness, but because of it being a copyright license.

3) "The creator gets nothing anyway, it's all the big media". This doesn't matter. For one, people still pirate things that are sold by their creators directly. People have pirated even the Radiohead "pay what you want" album.

Second, if the creator sold the rights to some "big media" company, that's his choice (or mistake) to make. That doesn't mean you have the right to grab a copy of his work as you see fit.

Third, for a lot of the content the creator is the big media company. People pirate like crazy BS teen-pop idols and hollywood blockbuster movies, which represent like 1% creative talent and 99% big media bucks for effects, marketing and production.

4) "Their business model is broken, they should find something else to make money" - Actually their business model is not broken. They make and sell something people want. The only broken part is that people copy it for free and give it around illegally. If I get me some GPL code, and make a closed source black box extended program out of it without giving back my source, just because I can, would people say that the "GPL model is broken"?

5) "People only pirate because the prices are absurdly high / the buying process is inconvenient" - Well, companies can set their prices to whatever they want for their own stuff, and they can make the buying process as convoluted as they want. That's not an argument in favor or copyright infringement, as much as high prices for Ferraris is not an argument in favor of stealing them, and the difficulty of attaining a university degree is not an argument for printing a fake in our printer.

6) "They can make it up on concerts" - Directors and shrink-wrapped software programmers don't give many concerts.

And even for musicians, a lot of musicians don't like giving concerts. Not everyone is like your local bar band or Rolling Stones. Especially in modern kinds of music, from electronica to ambient, there are lots of people that don't like playing concerts that much or feel that that is not their artistic medium (even the Beatles stopped playing concerts after '65). They still deserve some money for the use of their work.

Even for artists that DO play concerts, a gig used to be mostly a loss leader for album sales. The only people making big money from concerts are mainly established artists with a managerial team, everything organized, big following and sold out venues and bands with a largish cult following (think Phish, Pearl Jam, etc). That doesn't bode well for artists that still used to make a decent living selling around 50.000-100.000 albums a year. Some artists also have actual integrity and don't want to be seen dead selling "merchandise". Not everything is "rock'n'roll".

7) "What's the proof of piracy's harm? Record company profits are at a high this year" - How is this contradictory? One can have record profits and still be ripped off. The sets of "people buying record company stuff" (profits) VS the number of "people that WOULD have bought record company stuff but they download it illegally" (actual lost money due to piracy) are not the same set.

Those are some arguments.

My personal opinion?

1) Software patents must go. Especially trivial. A patent period of 5 years of actual use of the patent in production seems ok for everything else.

2) Copyright must be restricted. 20-30 years at max.

3) Illegal downloading should remain illegal. Not everything should be available for free against the owner's wish. "Metallica" releases and "The managing secrets of Attila the Hun" books are not an undeniable right for everybody, there are just stuff for sale. There are lots of copyleft software, music and books, one can use.


1. The so called "illegal downloads" aren't illegal. It's the uploads that are illegal. Hence the downloads can't "remain" illegal.

2. The courts do not deem copyright infringement to be "theft". They deem it to be "copyright infringement".

3. A productive balance of interests between creators and consumers is probably more intricate than "all rights go to producers, no matter how convoluted they want to make the lives of consumers" or "all rights go to consumers". The reason why producers are given imaginary property rights is to facilitate development of useful arts (it says so right there in the American constitution), not because those rights are "holy" like right a right to live.


Thanks for your response. Now, on to some points:

1. The so called "illegal downloads" aren't illegal. It's the uploads that are illegal. Hence the downloads can't "remain" illegal.

I'm not sure I follow. If the uploads are illegal, how are the downloads not so? Isn't it something analogous of "possession of stolen goods"? Or, to avoid the word "stealing", like directly benefiting from an illegal activity? The downloaders also violate the copyright of the content owner.

2. The courts do not deem copyright infringement to be "theft". They deem it to be "copyright infringement".

The term "intellectual property theft" is also used in court (even more so in other countries). And in the US Legal Code, copyright infringement laws fall under the "stolen property" category: http://www.law.cornell.edu/uscode/html/uscode18/usc_sup_01_1...

Specifically, "§ 2319. Criminal infringement of a copyright" is a subcategory of: "CHAPTER 113—STOLEN PROPERTY".

FBI also uses it: http://www.fbi.gov/about-us/investigate/cyber/ipr/ipr

This might also be relevant: "In Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer v. Grokster, Justice Breyer, joined by Justices Stevens and O’Connor, said, “deliberate unlawful copying is no less an unlawful taking of property than garden-variety theft.”

The Supreme Court has been comfortable referring to copyright infringement as theft on other occasions.

Lower courts and Congress have also used “theft” to describe copyright infringement on various occasions."


>The term "intellectual property theft" is also used in court (even more so in other countries). And in the US Legal Code, copyright infringement laws fall under the "stolen property" category: http://www.law.cornell.edu/uscode/html/uscode18/usc_sup_01_1....

You say "category and FBI" I say the only thing that matters is Dowling V. United States, which says unambiguously that they are separate and distinct crimes.


Is it the "only thing that matters" though? For one, the Supreme Court is known to reverse it's own rulings, from time to time. Second, the phrasing in this case ruling is far from "unambiguous". For example, it says:

"interference with copyright does not easily equate with theft, conversion, or fraud."

Does not easily? How is this unambiguous? "Does NOT" would indeed be unambiguous, "does not easily" leaves the door open. And later on, they say:

"Infringement implicates a more complex set of property interests than does run-of-the-mill theft, conversion, or fraud.".

Why the "run-of-the-mill" qualifier? Are they implying it could still be theft, just not the "run-of-the-mill" kind? IANAL, but calling "Dowling V. United States" unambiguous is stretching it. And I doubt it's the "only thing that matters". (Especially since outside the US it does not matter at all).


A wall of text a thousand words long... and not one of them has anything to do with The Pirate Bay moving domains to avoid seizure.


It is 964 words long to be exact. And all of them have to do with what the Pirate Bay did and does, and with common threads that arise in the discussion of such matters.

That said, if you prefer discussion confined in tidy little boxes, feel free to skip it.


"tidy little boxes"!? What you're waffling on about is an argument spread all over the web that's been had time and time and time again, even just here on HN. You're spoiling for a fight that's already been had far too many times, but are apparently too lazy to bother trying to link it to the article in question.

The irony is that you're arguing in the same little box that's been a battleground so many times before and not trying to incorporate the new event.

It's also not a matter of 'just skipping it', because it's a wall-of-text that's also flamebait - it's quite possible for half the thread to be taken up with the same rehashed arguments that have nothing to do with the article at hand.


If you want to understand, you have to start by doing one thing: stop taking copyright for granted, and imagine it as not a fixture of reality, not like a basic law of physics -- because it isn't.

Copyright is a law we have made, and those who reject it see it as bad and unjustified. From a principled position it is basically immoral, and from a pragmatic position it is unproven by evidence.

From the anti position, all the notions of 'stealing', 'losses', 'will of the creator' no longer exist -- they are entirely dependent on accepting the copyright concept. If there is no copyright, there is no stealing, losses, or primacy of creator's will.

If a law is not justified and well-founded we really ought not to have it. Is that not important?


That's a fair point. I suppose it relates to why people follow laws in general: is it because all laws we've adopted are good? Is it because laws, by virtue of being a law, are good? Is it because we are afraid of being punished for violating the law? These are major legal and political science debates (e.g. H.L.A Hart, Ronald Dworkin, etc.).

Anyhow, point being, although the law may be unjust, punishment for disobeying the law is not either unexpected or unfair. So while we can bemoan that people are punished for violating copyright law, that doesn't mean that they weren't justly punished by a government enforcing the law.


1) although the law may be unjust

2) that doesn't mean that they weren't justly punished

Didn't you equivocate on "justice" there?

If "justly" only means "legally", the second quote is right. There's a reason why the Department of Law-interpretation-and-enforcement is called "Department of Justice" instead. Lawyers love to think that they're administering justice and not simply a piece of legislation. But we should not fall for this linguistic trick and equivocate justice with what is legal.

Political philosophers often use the word "justice" or "fairness" to refer to some moral ideal that is above existing laws, and which we can appeal to in evaluating existing and proposed laws. There are disagreements about the content of this ideal, of course, but none of that makes the concept of justice less authoritative than positive law. On this definition, the first quote would stand, but the second quote wouldn't make much sense.

There's also a sizable literature on civil disobedience, whereby citizens are morally permitted -- or even required -- to disregard laws that they believe are grossly unfair or unjust (provided that certain other conditions are met). IIRC Dworkin wrote an article or two on this topic, and so did Rawls.


Sure--I don't disagree with you. I'm not suggesting that people shouldn't engage in civil disobedience, in fact, I personally think that people should engage in civil disobedience as often as they feel morally compelled to.

In my last statement (and setting aside the word "just"), I was putting forward the legal positivist (i.e. HLA Hart) viewpoint that laws are valid by virtue of being law (without getting into what "law" is and so on). Accepting that copyright law is therefore a valid law on this level, I don't find its enforcement invalid. This is separate from whether I find the law sensible, or morally reprehensible, or whatever--and, depending on my views on that issue, I might want to disobey it and be justified in doing so. But, even if I think the law is completely insane, that's not saying that I would think of it as some artificial concept that I might completely ignore and then be shocked at being prosecuting for violating it, as a I read a previous post to suggest. By rebelling against it I am tacitly acknowledging that the law is what it is, and I should be prepared to accept the punishments.

Apologies if I am being opaque, it's obviously a minor point that has no real bearing on how people actually act.


Oh, I see. I agree. I wouldn't be surprised that a government tried to enforce positive law, the same way I wouldn't be surprised if the Mafia trashed your store because you failed to pay for protection. Just because the powers that be are wrong doesn't mean that their threats are any less real. To disagree would be naive.

It's also great to meet someone who knows that legal positivism is not incompatible with the existence of valid but unjust laws. Seen too many first-time philosophy of law students who don't seem to understand this!


If you want to understand you have to start by doing one thing: stop taking copyright for granted, and imagine it as not a fixture of reality, not like a basic law of physics -- because it isn't.

Copyright is a law we have made, and those who reject it see it as bad and unjustified.

Who said it isn't "a law we have made"?

I surely did not. I would also drop the patronizing "If you want to understand" start.

I know fully well that copyright is not a physical law.

Access to free copies of things someone else created and sells is not a physical law either. It's something some people want.

I (and the law) happen to find the rights of the creators regarding the distribution and sale of their creation, to be more fundamental than the rights of people merely wanting to have those creations.

And, what I set up to do above is not prove that the copyright law is just or correct as it is, but that some arguments against it (those I examine) don't hold much water.

From a principled position it is basically immoral, and from a pragmatic position it is unproven by evidence

It's a law. It cannot be "unproved by evidence", because it does not make an observation to prove or disprove, but declares how some things are to work. Even a totally arbitrary law, like: "Every person wearing red should be jailed" cannot be "unproved by evidence".

As for the "basically immoral" you make it sound like a statement of fact. It is not. Lots of people, including legislators, don't see it as immoral.

If a law is not justified and well-founded we really ought not to have it. Is that not important?

Of course. But it must be proved that it's not justified. I don't see many arguments in your comment. You write, for example:

From the anti position, all the notions of 'stealing', 'losses', 'will of the creator' no longer exist -- they are entirely dependent on accepting the copyright concept. If there is no copyright, there is no stealing, losses, or primacy of creator's will.

The same holds true for everything, even for murder. All the notions of murder being bad and illegal depend on the acceptance of the "life is a right" concept. Which is a societal concept, no much concern in raw nature about killing and eating other animals or even your own species.


> Access to free copies of things someone else created and sells is not a physical law either.

Well, this is the thing, it is pretty much a physical law. Information is nonrival: it is infinitely copyable and anyone can use it without reducing access to anyone else. The effort and work to produce information is a scarcity, but once the information is expressed and public it is an abundance.

The whole of the ethics and economics hinges upon this basic physical/logical structure. This is the fundamental fact of the matter, and if it is followed through rationally, all of the normally assumed ethics of copyright unravels.

Paying people for work done to create makes sense. It makes an 'economic' structure that mirrors the basic physical constraints. And it is justified according to its 'economic' effects. You give something up, you get something in return. The individual transaction is fair and square, and the global outcome is a gain from being able to 'move' things around.

None of that much holds for paying for copies. The transaction is not fair and square, it is an unwarranted and unjust restriction of personal freedom of those using the information. And as for the global gain, it seems rather lacking grounds of actual evidence.

> The same holds true for everything, even for murder.

No, there is something of a difference. Murder is outlawed not arbitrarily, but because it is something we do not, in a very basic way, want. It has a grounding in the physical facts of what the act does, and in the physical facts of our reaction to it (as a victim). That physicality gives it an unparalleled strength as something we all agree on.

Copyright has no such physical grounding. Would murder be just as wrong if it could be done without actually killing anyone? You do the same things, but the actual effect is not there? -- perhaps imagine it as a video-game. It is a very different thing. And this is like copying: on the fundamental level it is 'stealing' without the stealing (i.e. not really stealing at all) -- because the basic relation involved is abstract.

Etc.


Well, this is the thing, it is pretty much a physical law. Information is nonrival: it is infinitely copyable and anyone can use it without reducing access to anyone else. The effort and work to produce information is a scarcity, but once the information is expressed and public it is an abundance.

The problem is that this "scarcity" (to produce information) wants to be compensated too. And it's not only "scarcity", it's also costly to produce information. The fact that you can make 1 billion copies of Adobe Photoshop for free, for example, does not mean Adobe Photoshop itself costs nothing. It costs something like several tens of millions to make in programmer's salaries. Those paying those millions should get to dictate how you pay for it, like the guy that makes a chair gets to dictate how you pay for his chair.

You seem to think that the scarcity of infomation production means nothing at all, when you say e.g.:

Paying people for work done to create makes sense. It makes an 'economic' structure that mirrors the basic physical constraints. And it is justified according to its 'economic' effects. You give something up, you get something in return.

When you buy Photoshop, it's not just bytes downloaded to your PC you get, which cost nearly nothing (= your ISP bill), you ALSO get a slice of the paid, hard, work of hundreds of people in return.

Why are we confusing technological feasibility (free copies are feasible) what what ought to be done (compensate the creator or not)?

A crazy idea to directly make the software sale more akin to a specific item sale (a chair):

The software maker sets an arbitrary total aggregate expected sale price P and a selling goal (say, X units). Anyone buying before X units are sold pays P/X. For anyone buying after it, the price falls P/X+ (and the first buyers are also given their difference back, either directly or in "store credit"). In the end, if they sell a billion copies, people get the program for say a dollar, but it's OK, because the company is compensated. Actually, this makes popular items essentially free or dirt cheap in the end. For this to work, we need a marketplace like the Mac App Store, so those transactions and record-keeping can be automated.

This restricts the artificially huge profits made by controlling the price, and puts a set price to a free copyable item, like a tangible item has, that reflects the work that went into it. It also keeps the risk of the original sale, i.e if the sell < X, they have a loss.

None of that much holds for paying for copies. The transaction is not fair and square, it is an unwarranted and unjust restriction of personal freedom of those using the information. And as for the global gain, it seems rather lacking grounds of actual evidence.

Well, the global IP industry, sales of software, music, books, magazines, etc, is on the level of trillions of dollars. It would be almost zero with totally free copying. So, at the economic level, there is some support for "global gain". And it's not like the culture would be poorer if less Metallica and Lady Gaga albums where freely torrented (yes, I'm a snob like that ;-).


> This "respect of the will" of the copyright owner, is like GPL etc works. If you want GPL respected, you also want copyright respected, even if the owner is not using a permissive license.

This is true to a point. I do not respect copyright as much as you think I should, because I do not believe it should have been extended past its initial 14-year term. As it stands now, copyrights are effectively infinite; this is a complete perversion of the original intention.




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