Week 1 Flashcards

1
Q

What are some of the overriding concepts for IP? (6)

A
  • everyday life
  • everyone implicated
  • economic concerns
  • law and power
  • play, our work, our health care
  • fairness, justice, ethics
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2
Q

What are the 4 elements of the broader social context of IP?

A
  • increasing ‘propertisation’ of cultural commons- e.g. things we can’t even imagine being property, organs
  • strengthened regimes for rights owners- extending ownership rights of things
  • digital technology- increased availability of of film through cheap and fast distribution, creating probs for rights owners
  • “scramble”- resulting scramble, everyone trying to figure it out
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3
Q

What are the three types of property?

A
  1. real- existing
  2. personal- things i own, a dog
  3. intellectual- outcome of human creation
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4
Q

What is intellectual property?

A

the nonphysical property- manifestation of your ideas- work or invention that is a result of creativity

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5
Q

Why is IP harder to justify than other types of property?

A

bc it is non-exclusive- JK Rowling can’t walk up to you and steal your copy of Harry Potter, bc it is your personal property. But she does have copyright

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6
Q

What are the three justifications for Intellectual Property?

A
  1. labour theory
  2. personality (sovereignty) theory
  3. Utilitarian (Economic) Theory (Incentive Model)
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7
Q

Discuss the labour theory

A
  • John Locke

- converts goods into property through the application of human labour

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8
Q

How do you apply labour theory to IP?

A
  • the production of ideas requires a persons labour
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9
Q

Discuss exclusivity as a critique of the labour theory

A

many things are made based on other things around them- how do we therefore say that something is original/unique?

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10
Q

Discuss absence of labour as a critique of the labour theory

A

sometimes labour is very minimal or non-existent, e.g. a machine made it. Thus, it cannot always be about labour.

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11
Q

Discuss the personality (sovereignty) theory

A
  • owning property is a good mechanism for self-actualisation- we become recognised by other people, achieve dignity and achieve personal expression
  • these objects become infused with our personality “a piece of us”
  • property = embodied personality (mostly for creative things)
  • it is not morally correct to sell this “essence” of yourself. You shouldn’t make your personality into something that can be given away
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12
Q

What are two critiques of personality?

A
  • where is personality, how do you quantify/identify it. Subjective
  • common property/joint-ownership. Who should own a film when hundreds of people worked on it?
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13
Q

Discuss the incentive model?

A
  • economic justification
  • if we give people money for this, they will do what they do, and society will improve as people will have incentive to create new things
  • maximises social value
  • tied to social utilitarian theory
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14
Q

Discuss the incentive model as a paradox

A

-exclusive rights to produce more sharing, the more we try to protect rights and keep it exclusive, the more sharing that will exist

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15
Q

What are some critiques of the incentive model?

A
  • above paradox
  • is getting something back really the primary motivation- will people not just do things for the sake of it, or for other reasons?
  • many other ways to compensate people for their work- other than give them rights
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