Yair
Community Supporter
It may shock you, but I don't think the US Constitution is the authrotiy on moral rights.Storm Raven said:You mean rights like copyrights, which are enshrined by the Constitution?
Perhaps it has to do with me not being an American.
BTW, I fully agree the US Constitution is the authority on legal rights, and I have no dispute over the legalities of the matter.... well, except for some foggy OGL declarations issues.
I hold this truth to be self-evident, that free speech is a human right, was always a human right [even before copyright laws were instituted], and will always be a human right.The problem with your analysis is that without copyright, you don't have the initial product to copy in many cases, so you wouldn't have the "free speech" to copy them.
I can't argue about that, if you don't accept this premise than we must part ways. It's... an axiom.
I am not a lawyer. However, I find the seperation of ideas from their expression artificial. Ideas are not abstract things, they must be expressed to have meaning and they have the meaning expressed.Also, given your statement concerning "future possible ideas" I don't think you understand copyright (or IP laws in general) at all. Copyright protects a certain expression of an idea once it has been fixed in a perceivable form. Until you actually fix it in that form, you don't own it, and you don't own any other ideas.
This is somewhat tangential; my point is that the right of free speech (and other rights) tramples your rights to crutail my actions for your personal gain whether as an individual or as the state. Such laws are a "dictatoroship of the majority", rather than "liberal democracy".
I would like to add that I am not at all in favor of people downloading and using pdfs instead of buying books. I just think it's their right. There is a difference between what you may do and what you should do, and I think such piracy falls in this border. This has nothing to do with copyrights, it has to do with serving as a patron to things you like and their makers.
I think piracy as a means of browsing, which is how I use it, is perfectly fine [duh, I wouldn't be doing it otherwise].