The Rust Belt 's Techdirt Comments

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  • RIAA Spent $90 Million In Lobbying The US In The Past Decade

    The Rust Belt ( profile ), 07 Jan, 2011 @ 02:15am

    Re: Someone please help me understand this!!!!

    @How is Lobbying different from Bribery?

    The first is a legalized version of the later :-)

  • Ebook Publishers Never Learned: DRM & Ridiculous Prices

    The Rust Belt ( profile ), 12 Oct, 2010 @ 02:03am

    Bought Kindle, not Buying ebooks on Amazon

    I bought a Kindle and I love the device. However I am not buying anything that is DRMed to be read using it. It is just against my personal notion of what a book is.

  • Denying The Public Domain Has A Very Real Cost

    The Rust Belt ( profile ), 12 Oct, 2010 @ 01:54am

    Re:

    Could you provide any reason to think that what is available in the public domain is, on average, worth less than what is copyrighted?

  • Why Aren't We Creating A National Digital Library?

    The Rust Belt ( profile ), 12 Oct, 2010 @ 12:37am

    We have such library

    It is called p2p networks. It is distributed, free and voluntary. Not always legal, though :-)

  • Why Imitation Gets A Bad Rap… And Why Companies Need To Be More Serious About Copying

    The Rust Belt ( profile ), 10 Oct, 2010 @ 08:50am

    Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Do You Want Inventions To See The Light Of Day?

    @ I contributed something of value, namely a great deal of information about the realities of inventing as a business.

    No, you did not. Opinions, assumptions and generalizations are not "information". You had your chance for a quality discussion but you decided to waste it from the very beginning. Good bye, Mr. Riley.

  • Why Imitation Gets A Bad Rap… And Why Companies Need To Be More Serious About Copying

    The Rust Belt ( profile ), 10 Oct, 2010 @ 01:19am

    Re: Re: Re: Do You Want Inventions To See The Light Of Day?

    @ Technological progress would occur at a much slower rate.

    This is only an assumption.

    Mr. Riley, I will not waste my time on answering you anymore since there is nothing to learn from what you write and one risks being offended at the same time. Maybe you are right, maybe you are wrong but what is obvious is that you are unable to contribute something of value here.

  • Why Imitation Gets A Bad Rap… And Why Companies Need To Be More Serious About Copying

    The Rust Belt ( profile ), 09 Oct, 2010 @ 11:26pm

    Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Leapfroging

    @ No, the patent system does not take anything because without it most people will not invest in producing or teaching the invention.

    [citation needed] indeed.

    @ In order for inventors to have the freedom to invent they need income from their inventions. Otherwise they end up wage slaves.

    Income is income. Not being a "wage slave" is earned by delivering to the market something it values, not by keeping others from doing so by suing them.

    @ The beauty of our patent system is it allows inventors to become independent.

    By bankrupting them because they happened to be unable to pay fees to license patents necessary for their own inventions or by being sued after they successfully market a product by a corporate patent troll with a patent granted for an obvious "invention", waiting for others to become efficient and then ready to get exploited?

  • Why Imitation Gets A Bad Rap… And Why Companies Need To Be More Serious About Copying

    The Rust Belt ( profile ), 09 Oct, 2010 @ 05:22pm

    Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Leapfroging

    @ It is always interesting how people twist history

    I encourage you to provide your own version and counter cc's claims.


    @ Even if this was true the term of patents is short enough that it really does not matter in the big picture.

    15-20 years is enough for whole industries to rise or fall so what you say is simply not true. Conversely, if the term of patents do not matter "in the big picture", no harm could be done by slashing them drastically, right? "In the big picture", at least, whatever you mean by just another generalization lacking specifics.

  • Why Imitation Gets A Bad Rap… And Why Companies Need To Be More Serious About Copying

    The Rust Belt ( profile ), 09 Oct, 2010 @ 04:36pm

    Re: Animals Copying

    @ Inventors publish because the government promises benefits in exchange for publishing.

    Historically and factually this is not even close to the truth.

    @ And when we follow the social code and seek redress in court the crooks then conduct massive propaganda campaigns demonizing us as "trolls" even as they are losing in court.

    Yeah, poor little inventors like Eolas or Microsoft. Or Oracle, which just happens to be suing based on patents they simply bought as part of their competitor, Sun. It is worth noting that Sun's intention was not to enforce the same patents in this way.

    Save your tales for yourself, I do not think anybody is buying the story of lone inventor vs. evil multinationals. Today's US patent law is a tool for blocking competition and for grabbing whole bundles of elementary ideas just in case. It is a dog eat dog system, benefiting only the most aggressive ones, not the ones who actually try to offer better value to their respective markets. A tool for strategic warfare between big players, exchanging hits with legal versions of nuclear weaponry.

    BTW, do you have any evidence of this "massive propaganda campaigns"? Could you identify their sources? Not that I have any hope left of reading anything specific from you. Just asking.

  • Why Imitation Gets A Bad Rap… And Why Companies Need To Be More Serious About Copying

    The Rust Belt ( profile ), 09 Oct, 2010 @ 01:57pm

    Re: Do You Want Inventions To See The Light Of Day?

    @ No one makes you or anyone else license. You do not have to use the invention if you don't like the price.

    It is the other way around. No one makes you or anyone else "invent". If you cannot find profitable market for your product, there are people who will.

    @ If you want the invention to see the light of day you have to compensate the inventor.

    For profitable delivery, not for inventing per se. Unmarketable invention is quite useless.

  • Why Imitation Gets A Bad Rap… And Why Companies Need To Be More Serious About Copying

    The Rust Belt ( profile ), 09 Oct, 2010 @ 01:52pm

    Re: Re: Re: Someone has to be original.

    @ We have kept up our side of the deal

    I do not know who is this "we" you keep mentioning but if you mean patent trolls and companies suing competition for infringements on patents that should have never been granted, then I do not know what "deal" you are talking about.

    I find applying the property/theft rhetoric to nonrival goods strange but this is what we should expect after years of mistaking property rights to scarce goods and resources with monopolies granted by law. Nonetheless, I could use the same rhetoric to pillaging the space of ideas by privatizing what should have never been given an owner in the first place. That, my dear Mr. Riley, should definitely be called "stealing".

  • Why Imitation Gets A Bad Rap… And Why Companies Need To Be More Serious About Copying

    The Rust Belt ( profile ), 09 Oct, 2010 @ 12:30pm

    Re: Re: Re: Leapfrogging

    Nothing specific, again.

  • Why Imitation Gets A Bad Rap… And Why Companies Need To Be More Serious About Copying

    The Rust Belt ( profile ), 09 Oct, 2010 @ 12:05pm

    Re: Re: Re: Re: Leapfroging

    Why should I? Our culture values the ability of writing under a chosen name and it is quite easy to understand why. There is nothing "courageous" about self-promotion.

  • Why Imitation Gets A Bad Rap… And Why Companies Need To Be More Serious About Copying

    The Rust Belt ( profile ), 09 Oct, 2010 @ 11:09am

    Re: Re: Leapfroging

    "You are making a massive assertion there."

    Massive link spamming, rather.

  • Why Imitation Gets A Bad Rap… And Why Companies Need To Be More Serious About Copying

    The Rust Belt ( profile ), 09 Oct, 2010 @ 09:11am

    Re: Someone has to be original.

    @ Some copy, usually without giving attribution and that is all they can do

    Everyone does it every day. It is called "culture". Nobody works in vacuum.

    @ Others are creative. They invent new things, products, business methods, etc

    False distinction. New products and business methods are always based on knowledge accumulated earlier, not only about what works but about what doesn't work.

    Try harder next time, Mr. Riley, it takes more than feeling right to actually be right. You can start by coming up with a real argument instead of discussing straw men you yourself have set up. Add to the discussion, show that you really know what adding value is about.

  • Warner Bros. Claims That Annoying Customers With 28-Day Rental Delay Is Working

    The Rust Belt ( profile ), 08 Oct, 2010 @ 03:37am

    Re: Re:

    @ With streaming, you wait a few seconds for buffering, then you're watching it.

    No, you are not. Depending on the connection speed.

  • Warner Bros. Claims That Annoying Customers With 28-Day Rental Delay Is Working

    The Rust Belt ( profile ), 07 Oct, 2010 @ 05:29am

    But it may work, even if it is annoying.

    People are sometimes impatient so yes, they will pay more if they have to and if they want to see the show earlier. Of course there is the issue of unauthorized copies but the general premise that you don't annoy your customers is not always true.

  • COICA Censorship Bill Shelved… For Now

    The Rust Belt ( profile ), 30 Sep, 2010 @ 11:44pm

    Re:

    "This bill protects artists.

    By blocking access to the websites on which they are promoted only because somebody somewhere deemed an unrelated parts of them as being helpful to infringing activities?


    "And you don't want to lose your free music lunch."

    Well, I don't want to loose mine. And mine is perfectly legal and free at the same time. All you have are baseless accusations and lack of understanding of the problem. It's people like you who are real fear mongers.

    Child pornography is already mentioned in this thread in the most ridiculous way possible. Stealing cars, too. Now to terrorism! I am really surprised nobody's talking about terrorism.

  • COICA Censorship Bill Shelved… For Now

    The Rust Belt ( profile ), 30 Sep, 2010 @ 04:13pm

    Re:

    "Did you fools protest child porn sites being blocked too?"

    Dunno, has there been articles on TD about child pornography?

    "You're all a bunch of liars."

    Where?

    "You just want to be able to continue your taking of music and movies for free."

    Funny thing, I am downloading gigabytes of music every week. For free. Legally. Yes, I would like to continue, why?

  • RIAA Claims That If COICA Isn't Passed, Americans Are 'Put At Risk'

    The Rust Belt ( profile ), 29 Sep, 2010 @ 09:02am

    RIAA as a beacon of civilisation

    Well, if they are to determine what is civilized, I'd rather be regarded as savage.

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