- Oct 9, 1999
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Discussions of piracy seem to revolve around downloading music and movies. IP that is very transient in nature.
What happens when the line between media and the physical world gets blurred?
http://i.materialise.com/blog/entry/3d-printing-piracy-3d-printing-the-settlers-of-catan
When we develop the technology to create nearly unlimited physical goods, say someday we actually do invent the Star Trek replicator, are we still going to create artificial scarcity? Will we insist that people not be allowed to create their own goods even though scarcity could be a thing of the past?
Are IP owners the new "robber barons"?
http://www.publicknowledge.org/blog/3d-printing-settlers-catan-probably-not-illeg
Ever try to find parts for an old discontinued product? The manufacturer cleaned out their warehouse and threw everything out for that obsolete vacuum cleaner a decade ago, but it still works other than one tiny part. What do you do? Make your own part? Does that make you a pirate? Are you stealing their intellectual property?
What happens when the line between media and the physical world gets blurred?
http://i.materialise.com/blog/entry/3d-printing-piracy-3d-printing-the-settlers-of-catan
When we develop the technology to create nearly unlimited physical goods, say someday we actually do invent the Star Trek replicator, are we still going to create artificial scarcity? Will we insist that people not be allowed to create their own goods even though scarcity could be a thing of the past?
Are IP owners the new "robber barons"?
http://www.publicknowledge.org/blog/3d-printing-settlers-catan-probably-not-illeg
Ever try to find parts for an old discontinued product? The manufacturer cleaned out their warehouse and threw everything out for that obsolete vacuum cleaner a decade ago, but it still works other than one tiny part. What do you do? Make your own part? Does that make you a pirate? Are you stealing their intellectual property?
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