Stone Wrote:
Sorry, I don't agree that getting a patent, and thus "promot[ing] the Progress of Science" is morally wrong, UNLESS it's done knowing there is no legitimate right under the law.
Come on. Congress is directed by the Constitution to create some exclusive rights in order to "promote the Progress of Science." Surely you don't think that whatever scheme they come up with necessarily does that.
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Please explain the last part to me. I agree with you that enforcement of a patent that is clearly invalid should be disrespected, but we do live under the law where patents are presumed to be valid, and there's a high burden to invalidate a patent (and please do not misread this that I believe that every patent that is granted should have been granted). But I don't understand wht you mean by "used harmfully." One can certainly misuse a patent by enforcing it when there isn't a colorable case of infringement, or if it's clearly invalid. Is that what you mean? Are you suggesting that if I have a genome invention, I shouldn't get it patented? That's against the whole reasoning behind the patent laws.
I believe that the patent system fails at several points: 1) many things are legally patentable even though they shouldn't be, including (for now) isolated genes (because they are not inventions) and software (because algorithms are math/ideas); 2) an overwhelming number of patents are granted that shouldn't be, because the review process is antiquated and insufficiently thorough; and 3) the law, in its presumptions and remedies, favors patentees too strongly.
In other words, the fact that a patent is granted is a poor indicator of its legal validity, the fact that a patent is legally valid is not any indicator of its social utility, and nonetheless the law favors patentees and makes it difficult to defend against all of these shitty patents. As for the "whole reasoning behind the patent laws," it has very little to do with how the system works, and may have been mostly wrong to begin with.
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And here, where a guy developed his own work --comedic bits-- and from what I understand, a guy blatantly copied them, he should be pissed and feel violated. His property was effectively stolen.
No, property is effectively stolen when one person takes it and the other doesn't have it anymore. If anything was taken here, it was some indefinite portion of a joke's future marginal value. It's hardly the same thing.