Posted December 14, 2011
StingingVelvet: When copyright was first envisioned it was meant to last a limited amount of time so the author/artist would be rewarded, then the art would be owned by society.
I should know to avoid forum debates... just had my first crash while posting in like 10 years... :D The above quote is where the topic gets interesting for me.
I could oppose any such socialization of goods/products/creations from a purely moral stand.
The individual's property rights (another form of human rights) should have primacy over society's entitlements.
It;s rarely said explicitly that regardless of our opinion on the current copyright system, the rise of digital media has shifted the balance of power (here comes the might again) away from the author.
An extreme example to make my point: Let's say I create a videogame but decide not to publish because I think it's crap and am ashamed I ever created it. But a "friend" of mine copies it and releases to the net. Some people call it a masterpiece and continue to distribute it even while I ask everyone to just destroy it.
First, this scenario is only realistic in the digital era. Sure hypothetically it could happen with a manuscript, or with a blueprint for a machine, etc... but it would be much easier to enforce my right over the item I created if the digital angle did not exist.
More crucially, your position is that the distribution of this videogame is a moral right, due to some social benefit, regardless of author's (owner's) intent. Where is the author's benefit in this scenario? I guess you can argue fame, but let's say I get so disgusted with the whole thing I never write a line of code ever again. Did society really benefit?
Bottom line for me: the great majority of justifications to overcome human rights (and property rights - including copyright - are rights of humans, not of rocks) actually carry long term disincentives. They are a perfect example of short term thinking and good intentions leading one astray.
GOG attitude of respect for the owners of copyright: kudos.
Abandonware: at most a grey area. Very often completely corrupted by arbitrary lines in the sand like saying "It's on sale in second hand market, but the price is too high so let's share. Cos we can."