You're missing a piece of the puzzle here, Yeti. The bulk of copyright laws (heck, all IP laws) that we have were written before consumer-level infringement was even possible. The laws were written to keep Company B from taking Company A's products, copying them wholesale, slapping their own label on it, and selling at a lower price point than A could have. The entire purpose of existing IP law (including the massive fines) is to be a suitable deterrent/punishment for bootlegging and other corporate profiteering from IP theft. In that context, it makes perfect sense for the IP holder to protect their own rights, just as it's an IP holder's responsibility to enforce their contracts through civil litigation. You don't send police out for breach of contract, you settle it in court.
The current state of affairs has evolved from IP holders being resistant to changing the way things have been done - rather than allow the laws to evolve to cope with the fact that IP infringement is far, far easier than it has ever been, and perhaps make a distinction between bootlegging and petty infringement (or casual infringement), they instead went the other way, and attempted to enforce laws designed with corporations in mind on private individuals. There's some possible headway being made, but until the lawmakers and the lobbyists who pull their strings (and the corporations who pull their strings) wrap their minds around the idea that we can possibly treat private individuals separately from how we treat corporations, we're going to see more Joel Tenenbaums and Jammie Thomas-Rassetts.
We've got two psychological principles working against the idea that people will eventually start abiding copyright law (as well as a few other factors).
First is that the punishments are already beyond what the average citizen can possibly handle. If I were hit with a judgement for $100k, I'm functionally ruined financially. Crank that up to 200k, 500k, 1m, 10m - I'm still functionally ruined, they can't ruin me harder, especially since the US abolished the idea of debtor's prison. So, while increasing the punishments might deter corporate infringement, it does nothing to deter petty infringement.
The second is that unenforced laws not only weaken obedience to that law, it weakens obedience to all laws. If people don't believe that it's likely that a law is going to be enforced at all (or erratically), it reinforces the idea that it can't possibly be enforced against them. Furthermore, a law that's on the books and only whipped out once in a while to generate example cases can result in resentment over unfair targeting, causing people to break not only that law, but other laws as well.
I believe in the general concept of IP law, but I think that it's overdue for a massive overhaul. The idea of stifling, say, 3d printing because it allows for casual patent infringement at the consumer level should be horrifying to anyone. The logical response to that, of course, is that patent law isn't intended to be used against the general public... and yet, that's already happening, thanks to the current state of patent law.
The solution to the massive broadening of copyright and patent lawsuits isn't to push these topics into criminal law. That way lies insanity.
The current state of affairs has evolved from IP holders being resistant to changing the way things have been done - rather than allow the laws to evolve to cope with the fact that IP infringement is far, far easier than it has ever been, and perhaps make a distinction between bootlegging and petty infringement (or casual infringement), they instead went the other way, and attempted to enforce laws designed with corporations in mind on private individuals. There's some possible headway being made, but until the lawmakers and the lobbyists who pull their strings (and the corporations who pull their strings) wrap their minds around the idea that we can possibly treat private individuals separately from how we treat corporations, we're going to see more Joel Tenenbaums and Jammie Thomas-Rassetts.
We've got two psychological principles working against the idea that people will eventually start abiding copyright law (as well as a few other factors).
First is that the punishments are already beyond what the average citizen can possibly handle. If I were hit with a judgement for $100k, I'm functionally ruined financially. Crank that up to 200k, 500k, 1m, 10m - I'm still functionally ruined, they can't ruin me harder, especially since the US abolished the idea of debtor's prison. So, while increasing the punishments might deter corporate infringement, it does nothing to deter petty infringement.
The second is that unenforced laws not only weaken obedience to that law, it weakens obedience to all laws. If people don't believe that it's likely that a law is going to be enforced at all (or erratically), it reinforces the idea that it can't possibly be enforced against them. Furthermore, a law that's on the books and only whipped out once in a while to generate example cases can result in resentment over unfair targeting, causing people to break not only that law, but other laws as well.
I believe in the general concept of IP law, but I think that it's overdue for a massive overhaul. The idea of stifling, say, 3d printing because it allows for casual patent infringement at the consumer level should be horrifying to anyone. The logical response to that, of course, is that patent law isn't intended to be used against the general public... and yet, that's already happening, thanks to the current state of patent law.
The solution to the massive broadening of copyright and patent lawsuits isn't to push these topics into criminal law. That way lies insanity.
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