Difference between revisions of "Intellectual property" - New World Encyclopedia

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'''Currently working on''' —[[User:Jennifer Tanabe|Jennifer Tanabe]] ([[User talk:Jennifer Tanabe|talk]]) 14:57, 23 November 2019 (UTC)
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{{Intellectual property}}
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{{About|the legal concept|the 2006 film|Intellectual Property (film)}}
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{{short description|Notion of ownership of ideas and processes}}
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{{Intellectual property}}
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[[File:Nike, McDonald’s copyright infringing sandals in China.jpg|thumb|right|230px|Intellectual property laws such as trademark laws forbid the sale of infringing goods like these "McDnoald's"{{sic}} and "NKIE" [''sic''] sandals.]]
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'''Intellectual property''' ('''IP''') is a category of [[property]] that includes intangible creations of the human intellect.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.wipo.int/publications/en/details.jsp?id=4080|title=Understanding Industrial Property|publisher=World Intellectual Property Organization|access-date=2018-12-06}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.europarl.europa.eu/factsheets/en/sheet/36/intellectual-industrial-and-commercial-property|title=Intellectual, industrial and commercial property {{!}} Fact Sheets on the European Union|publisher=European Parliament|access-date=2018-12-06}}</ref> There are many types of intellectual property, and some countries recognize more than others.<ref>{{Cite web |url=https://www.wto.org/english/tratop_e/trips_e/intel1_e.htm |title=What are intellectual property rights? |website=World Trade Organization |publisher=World Trade Organization |access-date=2016-05-23}}</ref><ref>"Intellectual property", ''Black's Law Dictionary'', 10th ed. (2014).</ref><ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.wipo.int/edocs/pubdocs/en/wipo_pub_909_2016.pdf|title=Understanding Copyright and Related Rights|publisher=World Intellectual Property Organization|page=4|access-date=2018-12-06}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.wipo.int/publications/en/details.jsp?id=4528|title=What is Intellectual Property?|publisher=World Intellectual Property Organization (WIPO)|access-date=2020-10-23}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.wipo.int/edocs/pubdocs/en/wipo_pub_895_2016.pdf|title=Understanding Industrial Property|publisher=World Intellectual Property Organization (WIPO)|access-date=2018-12-07}}</ref> The most well-known types are [[copyright]]s, [[patent]]s, [[trademark]]s, and [[trade secret]]s. The modern concept of intellectual property developed in England in the 17th and 18th centuries. The term "intellectual property" began to be used in the 19th century, though it was not until the late 20th century that intellectual property became commonplace in the majority of the world's legal systems.<ref name="Lemley 2005">"property as a common descriptor of the field probably traces to the foundation of the [[World Intellectual Property Organization]] (WIPO) by the United Nations." in [[Mark A. Lemley]], [http://www.utexas.edu/law/journals/tlr/abstracts/83/83Lemley.pdf ''Property, Intellectual Property, and Free Riding''] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090226035349/http://www.utexas.edu/law/journals/tlr/abstracts/83/83Lemley.pdf |date=2009-02-26 }}, Texas Law Review, 2005, Vol. 83:1031, page 1033, footnote 4.</ref>
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The main purpose of intellectual property law is to encourage the creation of a wide variety of intellectual goods.{{sfnp|Goldstein|Reese|2008|p=17}} To achieve this, the law gives people and businesses property rights to the information and intellectual goods they create, usually for a limited period of time. This gives economic incentive for their creation, because it allows people to profit from the information and intellectual goods they create.{{sfnp|Goldstein|Reese|2008|p=17}} These economic incentives are expected to stimulate innovation and contribute to the technological progress of countries, which depends on the extent of protection granted to innovators.<ref>Rod Falvey and Neil Foster (2006): “The Role of Intellectual Property Rights in Technology Transfer and Economic Growth”: Theory and Evidence, In cooperation with Olga Memedovic UNITED NATIONS INDUSTRIAL DEVELOPMENT ORGANIZATION (UNIDO),  available: https://www.unido.org/sites/default/files/2009-04/Role_of_intellectual_property_rights_in_technology_transfer_and_economic_growth_0.pdf</ref>
  
{{Intellectual property}}
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The [[Intangible property|intangible]] nature of intellectual property presents difficulties when compared with traditional property like land or goods.  Unlike traditional property, intellectual property is "indivisible", since an unlimited number of people can "consume" an intellectual good without it being depleted.  Additionally, investments in intellectual goods suffer from problems of appropriation: a landowner can surround their land with a robust fence and hire armed guards to protect it, but a producer of information or literature can usually do very little to stop their first buyer from replicating it and selling it at a lower price. Balancing rights so that they are strong enough to encourage the creation of intellectual goods but not so strong that they prevent the goods' wide use is the primary focus of modern intellectual property law.{{sfnp|Goldstein|Reese|2008|pp=18–19}}
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==History==
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{{Main|History of copyright law|History of patent law}}
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[[File:Statute of anne.jpg|thumb|The [[Statute of Anne]] came into force in 1710]]
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The [[Statute of Monopolies]] (1624) and the British [[Statute of Anne]] (1710) are seen as the origins of [[patent law]] and [[copyright]] respectively,<ref>{{cite book|last=Brad|first=Sherman|url=https://www.google.com/books?id=u2aMRA-eF1gC&dq=statute+of+anne+copyright&lr=&as_brr=3&source=gbs_navlinks_s|title=The making of modern intellectual property law: the British experience, 1760–1911|author2=Lionel Bently|publisher=Cambridge University Press|year=1999|isbn=978-0-521-56363-5|location=|page=207|url-status=dead}}</ref> firmly establishing the concept of intellectual property.
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"Literary property" was the term predominantly used in the British legal debates of the 1760s and 1770s over the extent to which authors and publishers of works also had rights deriving from the common law of property (''[[Millar v Taylor]]'' (1769), ''[[Hinton v Donaldson]]'' (1773), ''[[Donaldson v Becket]]'' (1774). The first known use of the term ''intellectual property'' dates to this time, when a piece published in the ''[[Monthly Review (London)|Monthly Review]]'' in 1769 used the phrase.<ref>{{OED | intellectual property }} (Citing ''Monthly Review'', [https://books.google.com/books?id=cMsvAAAAYAAJ&pg=PA290#v=onepage&q&f=false vol. 41. p. 290] (1769): "What a niggard this Doctor is of his own, and how profuse he is of other people's intellectual property.")</ref> The first clear example of modern usage goes back as early as 1808, when it was used as a heading title in a collection of essays.<ref>{{OED | intellectual property }} (Citing ''Medical Repository Of Original Essays And Intelligence'', [https://books.google.com/books?id=Ij9JAAAAYAAJ&pg=PA303 vol. 11. p. 303] (1808): "New-England Association in favour of Inventors and Discoverers, and particularly for the Protection of intellectual Property.")</ref>
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The German equivalent was used with the founding of the [[North German Confederation]] whose [[constitution]] granted legislative power over the protection of intellectual property (''Schutz des geistigen Eigentums'') to the confederation.<ref>[https://web.archive.org/web/20040706175038/http://www.verfassungen.de/de/de67-18/verfassung67-i.htm 'Article 4 No. 6 of the Constitution of 1867 (German)'] Hastings Law Journal, Vol. 52, p. 1255, 2001</ref> When the administrative secretariats established by the [[Paris Convention for the Protection of Industrial Property|Paris Convention]] (1883) and the [[Berne Convention for the Protection of Literary and Artistic Works|Berne Convention]] (1886) merged in 1893, they located in Berne, and also adopted the term intellectual property in their new combined title, the [[United International Bureaux for the Protection of Intellectual Property]].
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The organization subsequently relocated to Geneva in 1960 and was succeeded in 1967 with the establishment of the [[World Intellectual Property Organization]] (WIPO) by [[Convention Establishing the World Intellectual Property Organization|treaty]] as an agency of the [[United Nations]]. According to legal scholar [[Mark Lemley]], it was only at this point that the term really began to be used in the United States (which had not been a party to the Berne Convention),<ref name="Lemley 2005" /> and it did not enter popular usage there until passage of the [[Bayh-Dole Act]] in 1980.<ref>Mark A. Lemley, [https://ssrn.com/abstract=582602 "Property, Intellectual Property, and Free Riding"] (Abstract); see Table 1: 4–5.</ref>
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<blockquote>"The history of patents does not begin with inventions, but rather with royal grants by [[Queen Elizabeth I]] (1558–1603) for monopoly privileges. Approximately 200 years after the end of Elizabeth's reign, however, a patent represents a legal [[right]] obtained by an inventor providing for exclusive control over the production and sale of his mechanical or scientific invention. demonstrating the evolution of patents from royal prerogative to common-law doctrine."<ref>Mossoff, A. [https://ssrn.com/abstract=863925 'Rethinking the Development of Patents: An Intellectual History, 1550–1800,'] Hastings Law Journal, Vol. 52, p. 1255, 2001</ref></blockquote>
  
The term '''intellectual property''' denotes intangible expressions of the human mind, creative works such as writing, music, art, inventions, techniques and the like as well as trademarks and even names. Laws governing their use are informed by an analogy to physical chattels, despite the obvious fact that copying an intellectual artifact does not "take it away" from its creator. Nonetheless, laws typically accord them the same legal status as physical possessions such as land or chattels: like possessions, they can be bought, sold, hoarded, given away and even hijacked.  
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The term can be found used in an October 1845 [[Massachusetts Circuit Court]] ruling in the patent case ''Davoll et al. v. Brown.'', in which Justice Charles L. Woodbury wrote that "only in this way can we protect intellectual property, the labors of the mind, productions and interests are as much a man's own...as the wheat he cultivates, or the flocks he rears."<ref>''1 Woodb. & M. 53, 3 West.L.J. 151, 7 F.Cas. 197, No. 3662, 2 Robb.Pat.Cas. 303, Merw.Pat.Inv. 414''</ref> The statement that "discoveries are..property" goes back earlier. Section 1 of the [[French law of 1791]] stated, "All new discoveries are the property of the author; to assure the inventor the property and temporary enjoyment of his discovery, there shall be delivered to him a patent for five, ten or fifteen years."<ref>{{cite web|title=Patent Archives – Ladas & Parry LLP|url=http://www.ladas.com/Patents/USPatentHistory.html|last=|first=|date=|website=Ladas & Parry|publisher=Ladas.com|url-status=dead|archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20130115040700/http://www.ladas.com/Patents/USPatentHistory.html|archivedate=2013-01-15|accessdate=2015-08-17|df=}}</ref> In Europe, [[France|French]] author A. Nion mentioned ''propriété intellectuelle'' in his ''Droits civils des auteurs, artistes et inventeurs'', published in 1846.
  
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Until recently, the purpose of intellectual property law was to give as little protection as possible in order to encourage [[innovation]]. Historically, therefore, they were granted only when they were necessary to encourage invention, limited in time and scope.<ref name="Mark A. Lemley">{{cite web|title=Property, Intellectual Property, and Free Riding|url=http://heinonline.org/HOL/Page?handle=hein.journals/tlr83&div=30&g_sent=1&collection=journals|author=Mark A. Lemley|date=|website=Heinonline|publisher=Heinonline.org|url-status=live|archive-url=|archive-date=|accessdate=2015-08-17}}</ref> This is mainly as a result of knowledge being traditionally viewed as a public good, in order to allow its extensive dissemination and improvement thereof.<ref>The Economist; (October 20th 2005): “The Liquidity of Innovation”; How the new market for intellectual property is changing the technology industry, available; https://www.economist.com/node/5015365</ref>
  
==Advantanges and disadvantages==
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The concept's origins can potentially be traced back further. [[Jewish law]] includes several considerations whose effects are similar to those of modern intellectual property laws, though the notion of intellectual creations as property does not seem to exist – notably the principle of Hasagat Ge'vul (unfair encroachment) was used to justify limited-term publisher (but not author) copyright in the 16th century.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.jlaw.com/Articles/copyright1.html |title=Jewish Law – Articles ("Jewish Law and Copyright") |publisher=Jlaw.com |accessdate=2015-08-17}}</ref> In 500 B.C.E., the government of the Greek state of [[Sybaris]] offered one year's patent "to all who should discover any new refinement in luxury".<ref>Charles Anthon, A Classical Dictionary: Containing an Account of the Principal Proper Names Mentioned in Ancient Authors, and Intended to Elucidate All the Important Points Connected with the Geography, History, Biography, Mythology, and Fine Arts of the Greek and Romans. Together with an Account of Coins, Weights, and Measures, with Tabular Values of the Same 1273 (Harper & Brothers 1841). See also "The first patent law was enacted in Sybaris, a city in the South of Italy, before the Roman domination; The law was mentioned by Atheneus, an ancient writer..." in Takenaka, Toshiko (2013). Intellectual Property in Common Law and Civil Law. Edward Elgar Publishing. p. 419. (chapter by Mario Franzosi).</ref>
  
The concept of intellectual property (IP) provides both advantages and disadvantages, and has evolved considerably since its genesis.
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According to Jean-Frédéric Morin, "the global intellectual property regime is currently in the midst of a paradigm shift".<ref>{{cite web|last=Morin|first= Jean-Frédéric|title= Paradigm shift in the global IP regime: The agency of academics, Review of International Political Economy, vol 21-2, 2014, p.275 |url=http://www.chaire-epi.ulaval.ca/sites/chaire-epi.ulaval.ca/files/publications/morin_2014_paradigm_shift_agency_of_academics.pdf}}</ref> Indeed, up until the early 2000s the global IP regime used to be dominated by high standards of protection characteristic of IP laws from Europe or the United States, with a vision that uniform application of these standards over every country and to several fields with little consideration over social, cultural or environmental values or of the national level of economic development. Morin argues that "the emerging discourse of the global IP regime advocates for greater policy flexibility and greater access to knowledge, especially for developing countries." Indeed, with the Development Agenda adopted by WIPO in 2007, a set of 45 recommendations to adjust WIPO's activities to the specific needs of developing countries and aim to reduce distortions especially on issues such as patients’ access to medicines, Internet users’ access to information, farmers’ access to seeds, programmers’ access to source codes or students’ access to scientific articles.<ref>{{cite web|last=Morin|first= Jean-Frédéric|title= Paradigm shift in the global IP regime: The agency of academics, Review of International Political Economy, vol 21-2, 2014, p.275 |url=http://www.chaire-epi.ulaval.ca/sites/chaire-epi.ulaval.ca/files/publications/morin_2014_paradigm_shift_agency_of_academics.pdf}}</ref> However, this paradigm shift has not yet manifested itself in concrete legal reforms at the international level.<ref>{{cite web|last=Morin|first= Jean-Frédéric|title= Paradigm shift in the global IP regime: The agency of academics, Review of International Political Economy, vol 21-2, 2014, p.275 |url=http://www.chaire-epi.ulaval.ca/sites/chaire-epi.ulaval.ca/files/publications/morin_2014_paradigm_shift_agency_of_academics.pdf}}</ref>
  
Initially, laws on [[copyright]], [[patent]]s, [[trademark]]s and trade secrets were originally created to encourage individual contribution to the public good by providing incentives for the creation and development of new ideas. (Trademarks are protected chiefly to avoid confusion between one producer or merchant, and another, so consumers can be sure of getting the "genuine article".) These laws, which came to full fruition during the [[Industrial Revolution]], allowed creative persons a temporary period of monopoly power over the use of their intellectual works. In some cases, a monopoly on a process of other idea would be granted to an individual as a politcal favor, as when a king's favorite was rewarded.
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Similarly, it is based on these background that the Trade-Related Aspects of Intellectual Property Rights (TRIPS) agreement requires members of the WTO to set minimum standards of legal protection, but its objective to have a “one-fits-all” protection law on Intellectual Property has been viewed with controversies regarding differences in the development level of countries.<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Roisah|first=Kholis|date=2017-12-26|title=Understanding Trade-Related Aspects of Intellectual Property Rights Agreement: From Hard and Soft Law Perspective|journal=Hasanuddin Law Review|volume=3|issue=3|pages=277–289|doi=10.20956/halrev.v3i3.1153|issn=2442-9899|doi-access=free}}</ref> Despite the controversy, the agreement has extensively incorporated intellectual property rights into the global trading system for the first time in 1995, and has prevailed as the most comprehensive agreement reached by the world.<ref>WTO (2013): Intellectual Property; Responding to least developed countries’ special needs in intellectual property; https://www.wto.org/english/tratop_e/trips_e/ldc_e.htm</ref>
  
Creators (or their licensees) profited from this monopoly power by using a process or producing copies of a work, for which others would pay them money.  
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==Rights==
The investment and sacrifice of developing an idea into a useful form was rewarded, much as a farmer or husbandmen would reap the fruits of his labor.  
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Intellectual property rights include [[patent]]s, [[copyright]], [[industrial design right]]s, [[trademark]]s, [[plant variety rights]], [[trade dress]], [[geographical indications]],<ref>[http://www.wipo.int/wipolex/en/treaties/text.jsp?file_id=288514 Article 1(2) of the Paris Convention]: "The protection of industrial property has as its object patents, utility models, industrial designs, trademarks, service marks, trade names, indications of source or appellations of origin, and the repression of unfair competition."</ref> and in some jurisdictions [[trade secret]]s. There are also more specialized or derived varieties of ''[[sui generis]]'' exclusive rights, such as circuit design rights (called [[mask work]] rights in the US), [[supplementary protection certificate]]s for pharmaceutical products (after expiry of a patent protecting them), and [[database rights]] (in [[EC law|European law]]). The term "industrial property" is sometimes used to refer to a large subset of intellectual property rights including patents, trademarks, industrial designs, utility models, service marks, trade names, and geographical indications.<ref>{{cite web|title=Paris Convention for the Protection of Industrial Property|url=http://www.wipo.int/treaties/en/ip/paris/index.html|last=|first=|date=|website=Wipo|publisher=WIPO|url-status=dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140711050507/http://www.wipo.int/treaties/en/ip/paris/index.html|archive-date=11 July 2014|accessdate=25 September 2018}}</ref>
  
In a time when literary, artistic and scientific endeavors were time-consuming and often costly, the effect of granting a tempororay monopoly to creators benefitted both the general public and the individual creator. As time went by, the purpose and intent of these laws evolved. Public benefit was downplayed, and the "rights" of creators were aggrandized. Even the rights themselves were treated as a sort of "property" which could be rented, assigned or sold. The individual songwriter or author in nearly all cases would sign a contract giving the copyright to a publisher, in return for receiving royalties amounting to perhaps 10% of the price of each copy - often even lower.  
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===Patents===
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{{Main|Patent}}
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A [[patent]] is a form of right granted by the government to an inventor or their successor-in-title, giving the owner the right to exclude others from making, using, selling, offering to sell, and importing an [[invention]] for a limited period of time, in exchange for the public disclosure of the invention. An invention is a solution to a specific technological problem, which may be a product or a process and generally has to fulfill three main requirements: it has to be [[novelty (patent)|new]], [[inventive step and non-obviousness|not obvious]] and there needs to be an [[industrial applicability]].<ref name="WIPO Handbook Ch 2">[http://www.wipo.int/export/sites/www/about-ip/en/iprm/pdf/ch2.pdf WIPO Intellectual Property Handbook: Policy, Law and Use. Chapter 2: Fields of Intellectual Property Protection] WIPO 2008</ref>{{rp|17}} To enrich the body of knowledge and stimulate innovation, it is an obligation for patent owners to disclose valuable information about their inventions to the public.<ref name="wipo.int">WIPO (2008); “What is Intellectual Property” Handbook: WIPO Publication No. 450(E) {{Listed Invalid ISBN|978-92-805-1555-0}}, available: http://www.wipo.int/edocs/pubdocs/en/intproperty/450/wipo_pub_450.pdf</ref>
  
By the mid to late 20th century, when publishing became cheaper and the expansion of the middle class gave so many people sufficient leisure time to be creative, it was time for an overhaul of the incentives that these laws provided. Instead of reforms designed to enhance the incentives for creativity, provisions came into being which focussed on enriching publishers and manufacturers and the focus shifted from stimulating creativity to guaranteeing private profit.
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===Copyright===
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{{Main|Copyright}}
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A [[copyright]] gives the creator of an original work [[exclusive right]]s to it, usually for a limited time. Copyright may apply to a wide range of creative, intellectual, or artistic forms, or "works".<ref name="Intellectual Property and Information Wealth: Copyright and related rights">{{cite book |url=https://www.google.com/books?id=tgK9BzcF5WgC&dq=statute+of+anne+copyright&lr=&as_brr=3&source=gbs_navlinks_s |title=Intellectual Property and Information Wealth: Copyright and related rights |page=346 |author=Peter K, Yu |isbn=978-0-275-98883-8 |year=2007 |publisher=Greenwood Publishing Group}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.wipo.int/freepublications/en/intproperty/909/wipo_pub_909.pdf|title=Understanding Copyright and Related Rights|author=World Intellectual Property Organisation|date=|website=|publisher=WIPO|page=8|archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20120606013942/http://www.wipo.int/freepublications/en/intproperty/909/wipo_pub_909.pdf|archivedate=2012-06-06|url-status=dead|accessdate=2008-08-01|df=}}</ref> Copyright does not cover ideas and information themselves, only the form or manner in which they are expressed.<ref name="Art and copyright">{{cite book |url=https://www.google.com/books?id=h-XBqKIryaQC&dq=idea-expression+dichotomy&lr=&as_brr=3&source=gbs_navlinks_s |title=Art and copyright |pages=48–49 |author=Simon, Stokes |isbn=978-1-84113-225-9 |year=2001 |publisher=Hart Publishing}}</ref>
  
A Supreme Court decision - not a law in Congress - made patent law apply to computer software, thus enshrining the "right" of large software development houses to maintain decades-long monopolies on entire fields of software such as desktop publishing, spreadsheets and operating systems.
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===Industrial design rights===
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{{Main|Industrial design right}}
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An [[industrial design right]] (sometimes called "design right" or ''design patent'') protects the visual design of objects that are not purely utilitarian. An industrial design consists of the creation of a shape, configuration or composition of pattern or color, or combination of pattern and color in three-dimensional form containing aesthetic value. An industrial design can be a two- or three-dimensional pattern used to produce a product, industrial commodity or handicraft. Generally speaking, it is what makes a product look appealing, and as such, it increases the commercial value of goods.<ref name="wipo.int"/>
  
Even the terminology reflected this shift. Companies which developed software became known as "manufacturers" and their products became known as "intellectual property. Those who gave away or received copies of software - instead of paying for it - were branded "pirates". The piracy metaphor condemns a substantial proportion of the software user community as the moral equivalent of hijackers, murderers and thieves, for nothing is more common than for users to let friends or acquaintances share an installation disk or downloaded game.  
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===Plant varieties===
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{{Main|Plant breeders' rights}}
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[[Plant breeders' rights]] or plant variety rights are the rights to commercially use a new variety of a plant. The variety must amongst others be novel and distinct and for registration the evaluation of propagating material of the variety is considered.
  
Nothing is actually taken away from the companies selling and distributing "intellectual property" when copies are shared, so "theft" is not really an apt metaphor. Yet by equating intangibles to physical things, publishers and distributors have made helping one's neighbor a crime.
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===Trademarks===
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{{Main|Trademark}}
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A [[trademark]] is a recognizable [[sign (semiotics)|sign]], [[design]] or [[expression (language)|expression]] which distinguishes [[Good (economics)|products]] or [[Service (economics)|services]] of a particular trader from similar products or services of other traders.<ref>{{cite web|title=Trademark, Patent, or Copyright?|url=http://www.uspto.gov/trademarks/basics/definitions.jsp|last=|first=|date=13 December 2015|work=[[United States Patent and Trademark Office]]|publisher=[[Department of Commerce]]|url-status=dead|access-date=23 November 2015|archive-date=13 December 2012|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20121213072252/http://www.uspto.gov/trademarks/basics/definitions.jsp}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.ipo.gov.uk/types/tm/t-about/t-whatis.htm |quote=A trade mark is a sign which can distinguish your goods and services from those of your competitors (you may refer to your trade mark as your "brand"). |access-date=22 December 2012 |title=What is a trade mark (or brand)? |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120703105213/http://www.ipo.gov.uk/types/tm/t-about/t-whatis.htm |archive-date=3 July 2012 |work=[[Intellectual Property Office (United Kingdom)|Intellectual Property Office]]}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.patentamt.de/english/trade_marks/index.html |quote=Trade marks identify the goods and services of particular traders |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20141129082624/http://www.patentamt.de/english/trade_marks/index.html |archive-date=29 November 2014 |date=28 November 2014 |access-date=28 March 2019 |work=[[Deutsches Patent- und Markenamt]] |title=Trade Marks}}</ref>
  
Indeed, the monopoly rights of mental products has come to be seen as an entitlement. The music publishing industry would be be greatly affected by any change in the laws against copying, now that digital reproduction has become effortless.
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===Trade dress===
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{{Main|Trade dress}}
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[[Trade dress]] is a legal term of art that generally refers to characteristics of the visual and aesthetic appearance of a product or its packaging (or even the design of a building) that signify the source of the product to consumers.<ref>{{cite book |first1=Robert P. |last1=Merges |first2=Peter S. |last2=Menell |first3=Mark A. |last3=Lemley |title=Intellectual Property in the New Technological Age |edition=4th rev. |year=2007 |location=New York |publisher=Wolters Kluwer |isbn=978-0-7355-6989-8 |page=29}}</ref>
  
==History==
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===Trade secrets===
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{{Main|Trade secret}}
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A [[trade secret]] is a [[formula]], practice, process, [[design]], instrument, [[pattern]], or compilation of [[information]] which is not generally known or reasonably ascertainable, by which a [[business]] can obtain an economic advantage over competitors and customers. There is no formal government protection granted; each business must take measures to guard its own trade secrets (e.g., Formula of its soft drinks is a trade secret for Coca-Cola.)
  
There have been several reasons behind the granting of exclusive licenses for intellectual creations. In royal countries, it was often to grant a boon to a king's favourite. There has also been some sentiment about the unfairness of allowing, say, a penniless writer to be exploited by unscrupulous publishers who would copy a poem or essay after its initial printing without giving any reward to the writer. Several 19th century authors saw their works taken advantage of in this way, notably Edgar Allen Poe. The United States Constitution accords Congress the power to "promote the progress of science and the useful arts by granting exclusive rights to authors and inventors for limited times".
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==Motivation and justification==
(with some positive advantages to the public, since often these grants were prerequisites before a merchant would undertake production).  
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The main purpose of intellectual property law is to encourage the creation of a wide variety of intellectual goods for consumers.{{sfnp|Goldstein|Reese|2008|p=17}} To achieve this, the law gives people and businesses property rights to the information and intellectual goods they create, usually for a limited period of time. Because they can then profit from them, this gives economic incentive for their creation.{{sfnp|Goldstein|Reese|2008|p=17}} The intangible nature of intellectual property presents difficulties when compared with traditional property like land or goods. Unlike traditional property, intellectual property is indivisible – an unlimited number of people can "consume" an intellectual good without it being depleted. Additionally, investments in intellectual goods suffer from problems of appropriation – while a landowner can surround their land with a robust fence and hire armed guards to protect it, a producer of information or an intellectual good can usually do very little to stop their first buyer from replicating it and selling it at a lower price. Balancing rights so that they are strong enough to encourage the creation of information and intellectual goods but not so strong that they prevent their wide use is the primary focus of modern intellectual property law.{{sfnp|Goldstein|Reese|2008|pp=18–19}}
  
The use of the term "intellectual property" is often predicated on considerations such as the "[[free rider problem]]" or rationalized by problematizing the fact that owners of computers have the ability to produce and distribute perfect copies of digital works.  Proponents of the term tend to address exclusive rights policy by valorizing the incentives afforded to authors and inventors in granting them a right to exact a fee from those who wish to manufacture their inventions or publish their expressive works. The analyses associated with the term tend to overlook or even to attempt to defeat the fact, noted by Thomas Jefferson when he took part in wording the exclusive rights clause, that published information is intrinsically free and that in fact this is the whole point of exclusive rights to publish, to provide information to the public.
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By exchanging limited exclusive rights for disclosure of inventions and creative works, society and the patentee/copyright owner mutually benefit, and an incentive is created for inventors and authors to create and disclose their work. Some commentators have noted that the objective of intellectual property legislators and those who support its implementation appears to be "absolute protection". "If some intellectual property is desirable because it encourages innovation, they reason, more is better. The thinking is that creators will not have sufficient incentive to invent unless they are legally entitled to capture the full social value of their inventions".<ref name="Mark A. Lemley" /> This absolute protection or full value view treats intellectual property as another type of "real" property, typically adopting its law and rhetoric. Other recent developments in intellectual property law, such as the [[Leahy–Smith America Invents Act|America Invents Act]], stress international harmonization. Recently there has also been much debate over the desirability of using intellectual property rights to protect cultural heritage, including intangible ones, as well as over risks of [[commodification]] derived from this possibility.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Farah |first1=Paolo Davide |last2=Tremolada |first2=Riccardo |title=Desirability of Commodification of Intangible Cultural Heritage: The Unsatisfying Role of Intellectual Property Rights |journal=Transnational Dispute Management |date=March 15, 2014 |volume=11 |issue=2 |ssrn=2472339 }}</ref> The issue still remains open in legal scholarship.
  
By an economic analysis, the incentives granted for patent rights have sometimes served the public benefit purpose (and promoted innovation) by ensuring that someone who devoted, say, ten years of penury while struggling to develop vulcanized rubber or a workable steamship, could recoup her or his investment of time and energy. Using monopoly power, the inventor could exact a fee from those who wanted to make copies of his or her invention. Set it too high, and others would simply try to make a competing invention, but set it low enough and one could make a good living from the fees.
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===Financial incentive===
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These exclusive rights allow owners of intellectual property to benefit from the property they have created, providing a financial incentive for the creation of an investment in intellectual property, and, in case of patents, pay associated [[research and development]] costs.<ref name="MonoProf">{{cite web | url=http://www.uclan.ac.uk/schools/school_of_health/research_projects/files/health_innova_IPR_reform_report.pdf | title=Prudential Reasons for IPR Reform. A Report for Innova-P2 | publisher=[[Centre for Applied Philosophy and Public Ethics|CAPPE]], [[University of Melbourne]] | date=May 2009 | accessdate=July 17, 2019 | author=Doris Schroeder and [[Peter Singer]] | archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20110927130955/http://www.uclan.ac.uk/schools/school_of_health/research_projects/files/health_innova_IPR_reform_report.pdf | archivedate=September 27, 2011 |url-status=dead}}</ref> In the United States Article I Section 8 Clause 8 of the Constitution, commonly called the Patent and Copyright Clause, reads; "The Congress shall have power 'To promote the progress of science and useful arts, by securing for limited times to authors and inventors the exclusive right to their respective writings and discoveries.'"<ref>{{cite web|title=Copyright & Fair Use|url=http://fairuse.stanford.edu/law/us-constitution/|website=Stanford University Libraries|accessdate=26 June 2017|date=2013-04-09}}</ref> ”Some commentators, such as [[David K. Levine|David Levine]] and [[Michele Boldrin]], dispute this justification.<ref name='R000000'>{{cite book |last=Levine |first=David |authorlink=David K. Levine |author2=Michele Boldrin |author2link=Michele Boldrin |title=Against intellectual monopoly |publisher=Cambridge University Press |date=2008-09-07 |location= |url=http://www.dklevine.com/papers/imbookfinalall.pdf |doi= |id= |isbn=978-0-521-87928-6}}</ref>
  
In latter years, the public benefit idea has been downplayed in favor of the idea that the primary purpose of exclusive rights is to benefit the rightsholder, even to the detriment of society at large; and this development has attracted some opponents.
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In 2013 the [[United States Patent & Trademark Office]] approximated that the worth of intellectual property to the [[U.S. economy]] is more than US $5 trillion and creates employment for an estimated 18 million American people. The value of intellectual property is considered similarly high in other developed nations, such as those in the European Union.<ref>{{cite web |title=Why Chemotherapy That Costs $70,000 in the U.S. Costs $2,500 in India |url=https://www.theatlantic.com/health/archive/2013/04/why-chemotherapy-that-costs-70-000-in-the-us-costs-2-500-in-india/274847/ |work=[[The Atlantic]] |publisher=The Atlantic Monthly Group |accessdate=18 April 2013 |last=Bollyky |first=Thomas |date=10 April 2013}}</ref> In the UK, IP has become a recognised asset class for use in [[Pension led funding|pension-led funding]] and other types of business finance. However, in 2013, the [[UK Intellectual Property Office]] stated: "There are millions of intangible business assets whose value is either not being leveraged at all, or only being leveraged inadvertently".<ref>{{cite book|last=Brassell, King|first=Martin, Kelvin|url=http://www.ipo.gov.uk/ipresearch-bankingip.pdf|title=Banking on IP?|publisher=The Intellectual Property Office|year=2013|isbn=978-1-908908-86-5|location=Newport, Wales|page=15|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20131114113720/http://www.ipo.gov.uk/ipresearch-bankingip.pdf|archive-date=14 November 2013}}</ref>
  
In some fields, patent law has had an unintended consequence: treating abstract rules and mental products like concrete ones has stifled innovation in those fields, rather than aiding it.  
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===Economic growth===
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The WIPO treaty and several related international agreements underline that the protection of intellectual property rights is essential to maintaining economic growth. The ''WIPO Intellectual Property Handbook'' gives two reasons for intellectual property laws:
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<blockquote>One is to give statutory expression to the moral and economic rights of creators in their creations and the rights of the public in access to those creations. The second is to promote, as a deliberate act of Government policy, creativity and the dissemination and application of its results and to encourage fair trading which would contribute to economic and social development.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.wipo.int/export/sites/www/about-ip/en/iprm/pdf/ch1.pdf |page=3 |title=The Concept of Intellectual Property |access-date=28 March 2019 |work=[[WIPO]]}}</ref></blockquote>
  
The four main types of non-physical things considered by this point of view are copyrights, patents, trademarks and trade secrets. Common types of intellectual property rights include conflicting areas of law:
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The [[Anti-Counterfeiting Trade Agreement]] (ACTA) states that "effective enforcement of intellectual property rights is critical to sustaining economic growth across all industries and globally".<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.international.gc.ca/trade-agreements-accords-commerciaux/assets/pdfs/acta-crc_apr15-2011_eng.pdf |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120507132516/http://www.international.gc.ca/trade-agreements-accords-commerciaux/assets/pdfs/acta-crc_apr15-2011_eng.pdf |archive-date=May 7, 2012 |access-date=28 March 2019 |title=Anti-Counterfeiting Trade Agreement |pages=24 |work=[[Foreign Affairs and International Trade Canada]]}}</ref>
*[[Copyright]]s, which give the holder some exclusive rights to control some reproduction of works of authorship, such as books and music, for a certain period of time.
 
*[[Patent]]s give the holder an [[exclusive right]] to prevent third parties from commercially exploiting an invention for a certain period, typically 20 years from the filing date of a patent application.
 
*[[Trademark]]s are distinctive names, phrases or marks used to identify products to consumers.
 
*[[Trade secret]]s, where a company keeps information secret, perhaps by enforcing a contract under which those given access to information are not permitted to disclose it to others.
 
  
These rights, conferred by law, can be given, sold, rented (called "[[licensing]]") and, in some countries, even [[mortgage]]d, in much the same way as physical [[property]] (especially [[real property]]). However, the rights have limitations, including term limits and other considerations (such as intersections with fundamental rights and the codified provisions for [[fair use]] for copyrighted works). Some analogize these considerations to public [[easement]]s, since they grant the public certain rights which are considered essential.
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Economists estimate that two-thirds of the value of large businesses in the United States can be traced to intangible assets.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.sonecon.com/docs/studies/0807_thevalueofip.pdf |title=Economic Effects of Intellectual Property-Intensive Manufacturing in the United States |first1=Robert J. |last1=Shapiro |first2=Nam D. |last2=Pham |work=Sonecon.com |access-date=17 August 2015 |date=July 2007 |first3=Alan S. |last3=Blinder |pages=29 |publisher=[[World Growth]]}}</ref> "IP-intensive industries" are estimated to generate 72 percent more [[value added]] (price minus material cost) per employee than "non-IP-intensive industries".<ref name="Shapiro-Pham">{{cite web |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080216195041/http://www.the-value-of-ip.org/ |title=Economic Effects of Intellectual Property-Intensive Manufacturing in the United States |first1=Robert |last1=Shapiro |first2=Nam |last2=Pham |date=July 2007 |access-date=28 March 2019 |archive-date=16 February 2008 |url=http://www.the-value-of-ip.org/ |first3=Alan S. |last3=Blinder |work=the-value-of-ip.org}}</ref>{{Dubious|date=July 2009}}<!--does advertising count as "value"—>
  
It is important to understand that authors and inventors exercise specific rights, and the "property" referred to in "intellectual property" is the rights, not the intellectual work. A patent can be bought and sold, but the invention that it covers is not owned at all. This is one of many reasons that some believe the term ''intellectual property'' to be misleading. Some use the term "intellectual monopoly" instead, because such so-called "intellectual property" is actually a government-granted monopoly on certain types of action. Others object to this usage, because this still encourages a [[natural rights]] notion rather than a recognition that the rights are purely statutory, and it only characterizes the "property" rather than eliminates the property presupposition.  Others object to the negative connotation of the term "[[monopoly]]" and cite the wide availability of [[substitute good]]s. Still others prefer not to use a generic term, because of differences in the nature of copyright, patent and trademark law, and try to be specific about which they are talking about, or the term "exclusive rights", which reflects the U.S. Constitutional language.
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A joint research project of the [[WIPO]] and the [[United Nations University]] measuring the impact of IP systems on six Asian countries found "a positive correlation between the strengthening of the IP system and subsequent economic growth."<ref name="WIPO: Economic Impact">{{cite web |url=http://www.wipo.int/portal/en/news/2007/article_0032.html |title=Measuring the Economic Impact of IP Systems |work=[[WIPO]] |date=19 September 2007 |access-date=28 March 2019 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170521064049/http://www.wipo.int/portal/en/news/2007/article_0032.html |archive-date=21 May 2017}}</ref>
  
==Legal status==
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===Morality===
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According to Article 27 of the [[Universal Declaration of Human Rights]], "everyone has the right to the protection of the moral and material interests resulting from any scientific, literary or artistic production of which he is the author".<ref>{{cite web |publisher=United Nations |title=The Universal Declaration of Human Rights |url=https://www.un.org/en/documents/udhr/index.shtml |accessdate=October 25, 2011}}</ref> Although the relationship between intellectual property and [[human rights]] is a complex one,<ref>{{cite web |author=WIPO – The World Intellectual Property Organization |title=Human Rights and Intellectual Property: An Overview |url=http://www.wipo.int/tk/en/hr/ |accessdate=October 25, 2011 |url-status=dead |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20111022125749/http://www.wipo.int/tk/en/hr/ |archivedate=October 22, 2011 |df= }}</ref> there are moral arguments for intellectual property.
  
Exclusive rights are generally divided into two categories: those that grant [[exclusive rights]] only on copying/reproduction of the item or act protected (e.g. [[copyright]]) and those that grant a right to prevent others from doing something. The difference between these is that a copyright would prevent someone from copying the design of something, but could not stop them from making that design if they had no knowledge of the original held by the copyright holder. Patents and trade marks on the other hand, can be used to prevent that second person from making the same design even if they had never heard of or seen the claimed "property". Those rights must be applied for or registered and are more expensive to enforce.
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The arguments that justify intellectual property fall into three major categories. Personality theorists believe intellectual property is an extension of an individual. Utilitarians believe that intellectual property stimulates social progress and pushes people to further innovation. Lockeans argue that intellectual property is justified based on deservedness and hard work.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://plato.stanford.edu/entries/intellectual-property/|title=Intellectual Property|last=Moore|first=Adam|year=2014|website=Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy|publisher=Metaphysics Research Lab, Stanford University}}</ref>
  
There are also more specialized varieties of so-called [[sui generis]] exclusive rights, such as circuit design rights (called [[mask work]] rights in USA law, protected under the [[Integrated Circuit Topography Act]] in Canadian law, and in [[EC Law|European Community Law]] by Directive 87/54/EEC of 16 December 1986 on the legal protection of topographies of semiconductor products), [[plant breeders' rights]], [[plant variety rights]], [[industrial design rights]], [[supplementary protection certificates]] for pharmaceutical products and [[database rights]] (in European law).
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Various moral justifications for private property can be used to argue in favor of the morality of intellectual property, such as:
  
==Ramifications of exclusive rights==
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# ''Natural Rights/Justice Argument'': this argument is based on Locke's idea that a person has a natural right over the labour and products which are produced by their body. Appropriating these products is viewed as unjust. Although Locke had never explicitly stated that natural right applied to products of the mind,<ref>Ronald V. Bettig. "Critical Perspectives on the History and Philosophy of Copyright" in Copyrighting Culture: The Political Economy of Intellectual Property, by Ronald V. Bettig. (Boulder, CO: Westview Press, 1996), 19–20</ref> it is possible to apply his argument to intellectual property rights, in which it would be unjust for people to misuse another's ideas.<ref>Richard T. De George, "14. Intellectual Property Rights," in The Oxford Handbook of Business Ethics, by George G. Brenkert and Tom L. Beauchamp, vol. 1, 1st ed. (Oxford, England: Oxford University Press, n.d.), 415–416.</ref> Locke's argument for intellectual property is based upon the idea that laborers have the right to control that which they create. They argue that we own our bodies which are the laborers, this right of ownership extends to what we create. Thus, intellectual property ensures this right when it comes to production.
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# ''Utilitarian-Pragmatic Argument'': according to this rationale, a society that protects private property is more effective and prosperous than societies that do not. Innovation and invention in 19th century America has been attributed to the development of the [[patent]] system.<ref>Richard T. De George, "14. Intellectual Property Rights," in The Oxford Handbook of Business Ethics, by George G. Brenkert and Tom L. Beauchamp, vol. 1, 1st ed. (Oxford, England: Oxford University Press, n.d.), 416.</ref> By providing innovators with "durable and tangible return on their investment of time, labor, and other resources", intellectual property rights seek to maximize social utility.<ref name="Spinello 2007">{{cite journal |last=Spinello |first=Richard A. |title=Intellectual property rights |journal=Library Hi Tech |date=January 2007 |volume=25 |issue=1 |pages=12–22 |doi=10.1108/07378830710735821}}<!--|accessdate=November 3, 2011—></ref> The presumption is that they promote public welfare by encouraging the "creation, production, and distribution of intellectual works".<ref name="Spinello 2007" /> Utilitarians argue that without intellectual property there would be a lack of incentive to produce new ideas. Systems of protection such as Intellectual property optimize social utility.
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# ''"Personality" Argument'': this argument is based on a quote from [[Hegel]]: "Every man has the right to turn his will upon a thing or make the thing an object of his will, that is to say, to set aside the mere thing and recreate it as his own".<ref>Richard T. De George, "14. Intellectual Property Rights," in The Oxford Handbook of Business Ethics, by George G. Brenkert and Tom L. Beauchamp, vol. 1, 1st ed. (Oxford, England: Oxford University Press, n.d.), 417.</ref> European intellectual property law is shaped by this notion that ideas are an "extension of oneself and of one's personality".<ref>Richard T. De George, "14. Intellectual Property Rights," in The Oxford Handbook of Business Ethics, by George G. Brenkert and Tom L. Beauchamp, vol. 1, 1st ed. (Oxford, England: Oxford University Press, n.d.), 418.</ref> Personality theorists argue that by being a creator of something one is inherently at risk and vulnerable for having their ideas and designs stolen and/or altered. Intellectual property protects these moral claims that have to do with personality.
  
Exclusive rights may be analyzed in terms of their subject matter, the actions they regulate in respect of the subject matter, the duration of particular rights, and the limitations on these rights. Exclusive rights policies are conventionally categorized according to subject matter: inventions, artistic expression, secrets, semiconductor designs, and so on.
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[[Lysander Spooner]] (1855) argues "that a man has a natural and absolute right—and if a natural and absolute, then necessarily a perpetual, right—of property, in the ideas, of which he is the discoverer or creator; that his right of property, in ideas, is intrinsically the same as, and stands on identically the same grounds with, his right of property in material things; that no distinction, of principle, exists between the two cases".<ref>The Law of Intellectual Property, Part 1 Chapter 1 Section 9 – Lysander Spooner</ref>
  
Generally, the action regulated by exclusive rights is unauthorized reproduction.  However, as indicated above, some rights go beyond this to grant a full suite of exclusive rights on a particular idea or product. Generally, it is true to say that exclusive rights grant the holder the ability to stop others doing something (i.e. a negative right), but not necessarily a right to do it themselves (i.e. a positive right).  For example, the holder of a patent on a pharmaceutical product may be able to prevent others selling it, but (in most countries) cannot sell it themselves without a separate license from a regulatory authority.
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Writer [[Ayn Rand]] argued in her book ''[[Capitalism: The Unknown Ideal]]'' that the protection of intellectual property is essentially a moral issue. The belief is that the human mind itself is the source of wealth and survival and that all property at its base is intellectual property. To violate intellectual property is therefore no different morally than violating other property rights which compromises the very processes of survival and therefore constitutes an immoral act.<ref>{{cite book |ref=harv |last=Rand |first=Ayn |authorlink=Ayn Rand |title=Capitalism: The Unknown Ideal |url=https://archive.org/details/capitalismunknow00rand |url-access=registration |location=New York |publisher=Signet |year=1967 |origyear=1966 |edition=paperback 2nd}}</ref>
  
Most exclusive rights are nothing more than the right to sue an infringer, which has the effect that people will approach the rightsholder for permission to perform the acts to which the rightsholder has exclusive right.  The granting of this permission is termed licensing, and exclusive rights licenses stipulate the extent of the licensee's ability to perform the acts the rightsholder may control.  Other kinds of licenses attempt to establish additional conditions beyond the acts the rightsholder may control, and these licenses are governed by general contract principles.  In many jurisdictions the law places limits on what restrictions the licensor (the person granting the licence) can impose.  In the [[European Union]], for example, [[competition law]] has a strong influence on how licences are granted by large companies.
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==Infringement, misappropriation, and enforcement==
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{{Main|Intellectual property infringement}}
  
Copyright licenses grant permission to do something. They are not contracts, since contracts require mutual consent.  A patent license is a declaration not to do some things, under certain conditions.  Exclusive rights policies in certain countries provide for certain activities which do not require any license, such as reproduction of small amounts of texts, sometimes termed [[fair use]].  Many countries' legal systems afford compulsory licenses for particular activities, especially in the area of [[patent]] law.
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Violation of intellectual property rights, called "infringement" with respect to patents, copyright, and trademarks, and "misappropriation" with respect to trade secrets, may be a breach of civil law or criminal law, depending on the type of intellectual property involved, jurisdiction, and the nature of the action.
  
Most exclusive rights are awarded by a government for a limited period of time.  Economic theory typically suggests that a free market with no exclusive rights will lead to too little production of intellectual works relative to an [[pareto efficiency|efficient]] outcome.  Thus by increasing rewards for authors, inventors and other producers of intellectual works, overall efficiency might be improved. On the other hand, "intellectual property" law could in some circumstances lead to increased [[transaction costs]] that outweigh these gains (see [[Coase's Penguin]]).  Another consideration is that restricting the free reuse of information and ideas will also have costs, where the use of the best available technique for a given task or the creation of a new derived work is prevented.
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As of 2011 trade in counterfeit copyrighted and trademarked works was a $600 billion industry worldwide and accounted for 5–7% of global trade.<ref name="Bitton">Miriam Bitton (2012) [https://web.archive.org/web/20121010073552/http://www.law.northwestern.edu/jclc/backissues/v102/n1/1021_67.Bitton.pdf Rethinking the Anti-Counterfeiting Trade Agreement's Criminal Copyright Enforcement Measures] The Journal of Criminal Law & Criminology 102(1):67–117</ref>
  
==Europe and America==
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===Patent infringement===
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{{Main|Patent infringement|}}
  
===History of the individual rights===
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Patent infringement typically is caused by using or selling a patented invention without permission from the patent holder. The scope of the patented invention or the extent of protection<ref>{{EPC Article|69}}</ref> is defined in the [[claim (patent)|claims]] of the granted patent. There is [[safe harbor (law)|safe harbor]] in many jurisdictions to use a patented invention for research. This safe harbor does not exist in the US unless the research is done for purely philosophical purposes, or in order to gather data in order to prepare an application for regulatory approval of a drug.<ref>Pradip K. Sahu and Shannon Mrksich, Ph.D. [https://web.archive.org/web/20130207023621/http://www.brinkshofer.com/resource_center/85-the-hatch-waxman-act-research-exempt-from-patent-infringement The Hatch-Waxman Act: When Is Research Exempt from Patent Infringement?] ABA-IPL Newsletter 22(4) Summer 2004</ref> In general, patent infringement cases are handled under civil law (e.g., in the United States) but several jurisdictions incorporate infringement in criminal law also (for example, Argentina, China, France, Japan, Russia, South Korea).<ref>Matthew L. Cutler (2008) [http://blog.hdp.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/08/60549706_1.PDF International Patent Litigation Survey: A Survey of the Characteristics of Patent Litigation in 17 International Jurisdictions] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130922062127/http://blog.hdp.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/08/60549706_1.PDF |date=2013-09-22 }}</ref>
  
The [[Patent#Early_history_of_patents|early history of patents]] dates from the 15th century in England and Venice.
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===Copyright infringement===
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{{Main|Copyright infringement}}
  
Copyright was not invented until after the advent of the printing press and wider public literacy. In [[England]] the King was concerned by the unfair copying of books and used the [[royal prerogative]] to pass the Licensing Act 1662 which established a register of licensed books and required a copy to be deposited with the Stationers Company. The [[Statute of Anne]] was the first real act of copyright, and gave the author rights for a fixed period. Internationally, the [[Berne Convention]] in the late 1800s set out the scope of copyright protection and is still in force to this day.
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Copyright infringement is reproducing, distributing, displaying or performing a [[Copyright law#Scope|work]], or to make [[derivative work]]s, without permission from the copyright holder, which is typically a publisher or other business representing or assigned by the work's creator. It is often called "piracy".<ref name="Panethiere_p2">{{cite web|title=The Persistence of Piracy: The Consequences for Creativity, for Culture, and for Sustainable Development|url=http://portal.unesco.org/culture/en/files/28696/11513329261panethiere_en.pdf/panethiere_en.pdf|last=Panethiere|first=Darrell|date=July–September 2005|website=portal.unesco|publisher=UNESCO e-Copyright Bulletin|page=2|url-status=dead|archiveurl=https://wayback.archive-it.org/all/20080816063513/http://portal.unesco.org/culture/en/files/28696/11513329261panethiere_en.pdf/panethiere_en.pdf|archivedate=2008-08-16|access-date=|df=}}</ref> While copyright is created the instant a work is fixed, generally the copyright holder can only get money damages if the owner registers the copyright.{{citation needed|date=July 2015}} Enforcement of copyright is generally the responsibility of the copyright holder.<ref name=Xuan_p211>{{cite book |last=Correa |first=Carlos Maria |author2=Li, Xuan |title=Intellectual property enforcement: international perspectives |publisher=Edward Elgar Publishing |year=2009 |page=211 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=bN3o1uwpKF4C&q=copyright+infringement+international+acta |isbn=978-1-84844-663-2}}</ref> The [[Anti-Counterfeiting Trade Agreement|ACTA trade agreement]], signed in May 2011 by the United States, Japan, Switzerland, and the EU, and which has not entered into force, requires that its parties add criminal penalties, including incarceration and fines, for copyright and trademark infringement, and obligated the parties to actively police for infringement.<ref name=Bitton /><ref name=Musa>Irina D. Manta Spring 2011 [http://jolt.law.harvard.edu/articles/pdf/v24/24HarvJLTech469.pdf The Puzzle of Criminal Sanctions for Intellectual Property Infringement] Harvard Journal of Law & Technology 24(2):469–518</ref> There are [[limitations and exceptions to copyright]], allowing limited use of copyrighted works, which does not constitute infringement. Examples of such doctrines are the [[fair use]] and [[fair dealing]] doctrine.
  
Design rights started in England in 1787 with the Designing & Printing of Linen Act and have expanded from there.
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===Trademark infringement===
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{{Main|Trademark infringement}}
  
===History of the term===
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Trademark infringement occurs when one party uses a trademark that is identical or [[confusing similarity|confusingly similar]] to a trademark owned by another party, in relation to products or services which are identical or similar to the products or services of the other party. In many countries, a trademark receives protection without registration, but registering a trademark provides legal advantages for enforcement. Infringement can be addressed by civil litigation and, in several jurisdictions, under criminal law.<ref name=Bitton /><ref name=Musa />
  
The term ''intellectual property'' appears to have originated in Europe during the 19th century.  [[France|French]] author A. Nion mentions "''propriété intellectuelle''" in his ''Droits civils des auteurs, artistes et inventeurs'', published in 1846, and there may well have been earlier uses of the term.
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===Trade secret misappropriation===
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{{Main|Trade secret#Misappropriation}}
  
In 1847, a U.S. circuit court defined intellectual property as
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Trade secret misappropriation is different from violations of other intellectual property laws, since by definition trade secrets are secret, while patents and registered copyrights and trademarks are publicly available. In the United States, trade secrets are protected under state law, and states have nearly universally adopted the [[Uniform Trade Secrets Act]]. The United States also has federal law in the form of the [[Economic Espionage Act of 1996]] ({{usc|18|1831|1839}}), which makes the theft or misappropriation of a trade secret a federal crime. This law contains two provisions criminalizing two sorts of activity. The first, {{uscsub|18|1831|a}}, criminalizes the theft of trade secrets to benefit foreign powers. The second, {{usc|18|1832}}, criminalizes their theft for commercial or economic purposes. (The statutory penalties are different for the two offenses.) In [[Commonwealth of Nations|Commonwealth]] [[common law]] jurisdictions, confidentiality and trade secrets are regarded as an [[Equity (law)|equitable]] right rather than a [[property]] right but penalties for theft are roughly the same as in the United States.{{citation needed|date=July 2015}}
"the labors of the mind, productions and interests as much a man's own...as the wheat he cultivates." Woodbury & Minot, ''Rep. Cases Circuit Court of U.S.'', I. 56.
 
  
Worldwide, however, use of the term was uncommon until its use in the [[Geneva, Switzerland|Geneva]]-based [[World Intellectual Property Organization]] (WIPO), which was established in 1967.
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==Criticisms==
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{{further|Criticism of patents|Opposition to copyright}}
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[[File:Pro piracy demonstration.jpg|thumb|Demonstration in [[Sweden]] in support of [[file sharing]], 2006.]]
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[[File:GlamCamp NY Kippelboy nina Paley (2).JPG|thumb|"Copying is not theft!" badge with a character resembling [[Mickey Mouse]] in reference to the in popular culture rationale behind the [[Sonny Bono Copyright Term Extension Act]] of 1998]]
  
With the [[French Revolution]], which followed the [[American Revolution]], there was controversy over the nature of copyright and patent protections in Europe; those who supported unlimited copyrights frequently used the term ''property'' to advance that agenda, while others who supported a more limited system sometimes used the term ''[[intellectual rights]]'' (''droits intellectuels'').
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===The term "intellectual property"===
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Criticism of the term ''intellectual property'' ranges from discussing its vagueness and abstract overreach to direct contention to the semantic validity of using words like ''property'' and ''rights'' in fashions that contradict practice and law. Many detractors think this term specially serves the doctrinal agenda of parties opposing reform in the public interest or otherwise abusing related legislations; and that it disallows intelligent discussion about specific and often unrelated aspects of copyright, patents, trademarks, etc.<ref>{{cite web|title=If Intellectual Property Is Neither Intellectual, Nor Property, What Is It?|url=https://www.techdirt.com/articles/20080306/003240458/if-intellectual-property-is-neither-intellectual-property-what-is-it.shtml|author1=Mike Masnick|authorlink1=Mike Masnick|date=6 March 2008|website=techdirt.com|publisher=[[Techdirt]]|url-status=live|accessdate=17 August 2014}}</ref>
  
The system currently used by much of the Western world is more in line with the second view, with limited copyrights that eventually expire.  However, the French Civil Code notion of "moral rights" has connotations similar to natural rights that are inconsistent with the American tradition.
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[[Free Software Foundation]] founder [[Richard Stallman]] argues that, although the term ''intellectual property'' is in wide use, it should be rejected altogether, because it "systematically distorts and confuses these issues, and its use was and is promoted by those who gain from this confusion". He claims that the term "operates as a catch-all to lump together disparate laws [which] originated separately, evolved differently, cover different activities, have different rules, and raise different public policy issues" and that it creates a "bias" by confusing these monopolies with ownership of limited physical things, likening them to "property rights".<ref name="mirage">{{cite web|title=Did You Say 'Intellectual Property'? It's a Seductive Mirage|url=https://www.gnu.org/philosophy/not-ipr.xhtml|author=Richard M. Stallman|date=|website=gnu|publisher=Free Software Foundation, Inc.|url-status=live|archive-url=|archive-date=|accessdate=2008-03-28}}</ref> Stallman advocates referring to copyrights, patents and trademarks in the singular and warns against abstracting disparate laws into a collective term. He argues that "to avoid spreading unnecessary bias and confusion, it is best to adopt a firm policy not to speak or even think in terms of 'intellectual property'."<ref name="words-to-avoid">{{cite web|title=Words to Avoid (or Use with Care) Because They Are Loaded or Confusing|url=https://www.gnu.org/philosophy/words-to-avoid.en.html#IntellectualProperty|author=Richard M. Stallman|date=|website=gnu|publisher=The GNU Project|url-status=live|archive-url=|archive-date=|accessdate=2016-12-01}}</ref>
  
==Critique==
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Similarly, economists [[Michele Boldrin|Boldrin]] and [[David K. Levine|Levine]] prefer to use the term "intellectual monopoly" as a more appropriate and clear definition of the concept, which they argue, is very dissimilar from property rights.<ref>Boldrin, Michele, and David K. Levine. [http://levine.sscnet.ucla.edu/general/intellectual/against.htm Against intellectual monopoly] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20171206094352/http://levine.sscnet.ucla.edu/general/intellectual/against.htm |date=2017-12-06 }}. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2008.</ref> They further argued that “stronger patents do little or nothing to encourage innovation”, mainly explained by its tendency to create market monopolies, thereby restricting further innovations and technology transfer.<ref>Michele Boldrin and David K. Levine (2009): “Intellectual Property Rights and Economic Growth in the Long-Run”; A model Discovery, available; http://levine.sscnet.ucla.edu/papers/aea_pp09.pdf {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170809070301/http://levine.sscnet.ucla.edu/papers/aea_pp09.pdf |date=2017-08-09 }}</ref>
  
===Controversy over term===
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On the assumption that intellectual property rights are actual rights, Stallman says that this claim does not live to the historical intentions behind these laws, which in the case of copyright served as a censorship system, and later on, a regulatory model for the printing press that may have benefited authors incidentally, but never interfered with the freedom of average readers.<ref>{{Cite web |url=http://web.mit.edu/comm-forum/forums/copyright.html |title=copyright and globalization in the age of computer networks |date=19 April 2001 |accessdate=21 October 2015 |website=mit.edu |last=Stallman |first=Richard |authorlink=Richard Stallman |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20150302072256/http://web.mit.edu/comm-forum/forums/copyright.html |archivedate=2 March 2015}}</ref> Still referring to copyright, he cites legal literature such as the United States Constitution and [[case law]] to demonstrate that the law is meant to be an optional and experimental bargain to temporarily trade property rights and free speech for public, not private, benefits in the form of increased artistic production and knowledge. He mentions that "if copyright were a natural right nothing could justify terminating this right after a certain period of time".<ref>{{Cite web|title=Misinterpreting Copyright|url=https://www.gnu.org/philosophy/misinterpreting-copyright.html|last=Stallman|first=Richard|authorlink=Richard Stallman|date=|website=gnu.org|url-status=live|accessdate=21 October 2015}}</ref>
  
In [[civil law (legal system)|civil law]] jurisdictions, intellectual property has often been referred to as [[intellectual rights]], traditionally a somewhat broader concept that has included [[moral rights]] and other personal protections that cannot be bought or sold. Use of the term ''intellectual rights'' has declined since the early 1980's, as use of the term ''intellectual property'' has increased.
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Law professor, writer and political activist [[Lawrence Lessig]], along with many other [[copyleft]] and free software activists, has criticized the implied analogy with physical property (like land or an automobile). They argue such an analogy fails because physical property is generally rivalrous while intellectual works are non-rivalrous (that is, if one makes a copy of a work, the enjoyment of the copy does not prevent enjoyment of the original).<ref name="lessigperpetual" /><ref>{{cite news |title="Intellectual property" is a silly euphemism |last=Doctorow |first=Cory |authorlink=Cory Doctorow |newspaper=[[The Guardian]] |url=https://www.theguardian.com/technology/2008/feb/21/intellectual.property |date=2008-02-21 |accessdate=2008-02-23}}</ref> Other arguments along these lines claim that unlike the situation with tangible property, there is [[artificial scarcity|no natural scarcity]] of a particular idea or information: once it exists at all, it can be re-used and duplicated indefinitely without such re-use diminishing the original. [[Stephan Kinsella]] has objected to ''intellectual property'' on the grounds that the word "property" implies scarcity, which may not be applicable to ideas.<ref>Stephan Kinsella (2001) [https://cdn.mises.org/15_2_1.pdf Against Intellectual Property] Journal of Libertarian Studies 15(2):1–53</ref>
  
An alternate term '''monopolies on information''' has emerged among those who argue against the "property" or "intellect" or "rights" assumptions, notably [[Richard Stallman]] - ''see below''.
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Entrepreneur and politician [[Rickard Falkvinge]] and [[Hacker (programmer subculture)|hacker]] [[Alexandre Oliva]] have independently compared George Orwell's fictional dialect [[Newspeak]] to the terminology used by intellectual property supporters as a linguistic weapon to shape public opinion regarding copyright debate and [[Digital Rights Management|DRM]].<ref>{{cite web|title=Language Matters: Framing The Copyright Monopoly So We Can Keep Our Liberties|url=http://torrentfreak.com/language-matters-framing-the-copyright-monopoly-so-we-can-keep-our-liberties-130714/|author1=Rick Falkvinge|authorlink1=Rick Falkvinge|date=14 July 2013|website=torrentfreak.com|url-status=dead|accessdate=17 August 2014|archive-date=4 June 2014|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140604193406/http://torrentfreak.com/language-matters-framing-the-copyright-monopoly-so-we-can-keep-our-liberties-130714/}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |author1=Alexandre Oliva |authorlink1=Alexandre Oliva |title=1984+30: GNU speech to defeat e-newspeak |url=http://www.fsfla.org/~lxoliva/fsfla/1984+30.en.pdf |accessdate=17 August 2014 }}</ref>
  
Another issue is that, if intellectual property exists, there must be a parallel concept of [[intellectual capital]] - [[capital (economics)]] being the property that permits more property to be created. This is a controversial notion that economists have no clear agreement on, so one refers to the "intellectual capital debate" rather than thinking of it as an actual [[capital asset]].  ''See more in the'' economic view ''section below, and the term [[instructional capital]] that avoids the controversy but applies only to [[patent]]s and non-fiction [[copyright]], so is not a full substitute.''
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====Alternative terms====
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In [[civil law (legal system)|civil law]] jurisdictions, intellectual property has often been referred to as [[intellectual rights]], traditionally a somewhat broader concept that has included [[Moral rights (copyright law)|moral rights]] and other personal protections that cannot be bought or sold. Use of the term ''intellectual rights'' has declined since the early 1980s, as use of the term ''intellectual property'' has increased.
  
Trademarks, trade secrets, regional declaration do not have a time limit while copyrights and patents are of limited time (patents: 20 years).
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Alternative terms ''monopolies on information'' and ''intellectual monopoly'' have emerged among those who argue against the "property" or "intellect" or "rights" assumptions, notably [[Richard Stallman]]. The [[backronym]]s ''intellectual protectionism'' and ''intellectual poverty'',<ref>Stephan Kinsella for Ludwig von Mises Institute blog, January 6, 2011. [https://web.archive.org/web/20120709151150/http://archive.mises.org/15240/intellectual-poverty/ Intellectual Poverty]</ref> whose initials are also ''IP'', have found supporters as well, especially among those who have used the backronym ''[[Opposition to digital rights management|digital restrictions management]]''.<ref>[http://drm.info/ Official drm.info site] run by the Free Software Foundation Europe (FSFE)</ref><ref>{{cite web|title=What is DRM?|url=http://www.defectivebydesign.org/what_is_drm_digital_restrictions_management|last=|first=|date=|website=defectivebydesign|publisher=Defective by Design|url-status=live|archive-url=|archive-date=|accessdate=2015-08-17}}</ref>
  
===Arguments against the term===
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The argument that an intellectual property right should (in the interests of better balancing of relevant private and public interests) be termed an ''intellectual monopoly privilege'' (IMP) has been advanced by several academics including Birgitte Andersen<ref>Birgitte Andersen. "'Intellectual Property Right' Or 'Intellectual Monopoly Privilege: Which One Should Patent Analysts Focus On?" CONFERENCIA INTERNACIONAL SOBRE SISTEMAS DE INOVAÇÃO E ESTRATÉGIAS DE DESENVOLVIMENTO PARA O TERCEIRO MILÊNIO. Nov 2003</ref> and [[Thomas Alured Faunce]].<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Martin |first1=G |last2=Sorenson |first2=C |last3=Faunce |first3=TA |year=2007 |title=Balancing intellectual monopoly privileges and the need for essential medicines |journal=Globalization and Health |volume=3 |page=4 |doi=10.1186/1744-8603-3-4 |quote=Balancing the need to protect the intellectual property rights (IPRs) (which the third author considers are more accurately described as intellectual monopoly privileges (IMPs)) of pharmaceutical companies, with the need to ensure access to essential medicines in developing countries is one of the most pressing challenges facing international policy makers today. |pmid=17565684 |pmc=1904211}}</ref>
  
The term ''intellectual property'' is often explained as being problematic by some because the rights conferred by exclusive rights laws are in some ways more limited than the legal rights associated with property interests in physical goods ([[chattel]]) or land ([[real property]]).  The presence of the word ''property'' in the term can be seen as favoring the position of proponents of the expansion of exclusive rights in intellectual products, who may thereby more readily draw on the rhetoric of property itself to remove the many natural and legal restrictions on exclusive rights which would be inappropriate if applied to physical goods. For instance, most nations grant copyrights for only limited terms. Additionally, the term is sometimes misunderstood to imply ownership of the copies themselves, or even the information contained in those copies. This would severely differ from physical property laws, which rarely restrict the sale or modification of physical copies of a work (something which many copyright laws do restrict).
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===Objections to overbroad intellectual property laws===
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[[File:Definition of Free Cultural Works logo notext.svg|thumb|The [[free culture movement]] champions the production of [[Free content|content]] [[Information wants to be free|that bears little or no restrictions]].]]
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Some critics of intellectual property, such as those in the [[free culture movement]], point at intellectual monopolies as harming health (in the case of [[pharmaceutical patent]]s), preventing progress, and benefiting concentrated interests to the detriment of the masses,<ref>Birgitte Andersen. [http://redesist.ie.ufrj.br/globelics/pdfs/GLOBELICS_0050_Andersen.pdf 'Intellectual Property Right' Or 'Intellectual Monopoly Privilege': Which One Should Patent Analysts Focus On?]  Conferência Internacional Sobre Sistemas De Inovação E Estratégias De Desenvolvimento Para O Terceiro Milênio. Nov. 2003</ref><ref>{{cite journal |last1=Martin |first1=G |last2=Sorenson |first2=C |last3=Faunce |first3=TA |year=2007 |title=Editorial: Balancing the need to protect the intellectual property rights (IPRs) |journal=Globalization and Health |volume=3 |page=4|doi=10.1186/1744-8603-3-4 |pmid=17565684 |pmc=1904211 }}</ref><ref>On patents – {{cite web|title=Protecting Freedom In The Patent System: The Public Patent Foundation's Mission and Activities|url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=d0chez_Jf5A|author=Daniel B. Ravicher|date=August 6, 2008|website=YouTube|url-status=live|archive-url=|archive-date=|access-date=}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|title=Authors@Google: Joseph Stiglitz – Making Globalization Work.|url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UzhD7KVs-R4#t=16m05s|last=Stiglitz|first=Joseph|author-link=Joseph Stiglitz|date=October 13, 2006|website=YouTube|url-status=live|archive-url=|archive-date=|access-date=}}</ref> and argue that the public interest is harmed by ever-expansive monopolies in the form of [[copyright extension]]s, [[software patents]], and [[business method patents]]. More recently scientists and engineers are expressing concern that [[patent thickets]] are undermining technological development even in high-tech fields like [[nanotechnology]].<ref>[https://arstechnica.com/science/2012/11/stallmans-got-company-researcher-wants-nanotech-patent-moratorium/ Stallman's got company: Researcher wants nanotech patent moratorium] – Ars Technica</ref><ref>[https://www.wired.co.uk/news/archive/2012-11/23/professor-seeks-nanotech-patent-moratorium Freeze on nanotechnology patents proposed to help grow the sector] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140302113908/http://www.wired.co.uk/news/archive/2012-11/23/professor-seeks-nanotech-patent-moratorium |date=2014-03-02 }}- Wired UK 11-23-2012</ref>
  
A common argument against the term ''intellectual property'' is that information is fundamentally different from physical property in that a "stolen" idea or copy does not affect the original possession (see the [[tragedy of the commons]]).  Another, more specific objection to the term, held by [[Richard Stallman]], is that the term is  ''[http://www.gnu.org/philosophy/words-to-avoid.html#IntellectualProperty confusing]''. Stallman argues that the term implies a non-existent similarity between [[copyright]]s, [[patent]]s, [[trademark]]s, and other forms of exclusive rights which makes clear thinking and discussion about various forms difficult.[http://www.gnu.org/philosophy/not-ipr.xhtml]  Furthermore, most legal systems, including that of the [[United States]], hold that exclusive rights are a government grant, rather than a fundamental right held by citizens.
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Petra Moser has asserted that historical analysis suggests that intellectual property laws may harm innovation:
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<blockquote>Overall, the weight of the existing historical evidence suggests that patent policies, which grant strong intellectual property rights to early generations of inventors, may discourage innovation. On the contrary, policies that encourage the diffusion of ideas and modify patent laws to facilitate entry and encourage competition may be an effective mechanism to encourage innovation.<ref>Moser, Petra. 2013. "Patents and Innovation: Evidence from Economic History." Journal of Economic Perspectives, 27(1): 23–44.</ref></blockquote>
  
Though it is convenient for direct incentive beneficiaries to regard exclusive rights as akin to "[[legal property|property]]", items covered by exclusive rights are, by definition, not physical objects "ownable" in the traditional sense.
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In support of that argument, [[Jörg Baten]], Nicola Bianchi and Petra Moser<ref>{{cite journal|last1=Baten|first1=Jörg|last2=Bianchi|first2=Nicola|last3=Moser|first3=Petra|title=Compulsory licensing and innovation–Historical evidence from German patents after WWI|journal=Journal of Development Economics|year=2017|volume=126|pages=231–242|doi=10.1016/j.jdeveco.2017.01.002|doi-access=free}}</ref> find historical evidence that especially compulsory licensing – which allows governments to license patents without the consent of patent-owners – encouraged invention in Germany in the early 20th century by increasing the threat of competition in fields with low pre-existing levels of competition.
  
Stephan Kinsella, in his ''Journal of Libertarian Studies'' article "Against Intellectual Property" details his objection to [[Intellectual Property]] on the grounds that the term "property" implies scarcity, which may not be applicable to ideas.
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[[Peter Drahos]] notes, "Property rights confer authority over resources. When authority is granted to the few over resources on which many depend, the few gain power over the goals of the many. This has consequences for both political and economic freedoms with in a society."<ref>Peter Drahos and John Braithwaite. [http://www.anu.edu.au/fellows/pdrahos/books/Information%20Feudalism.pdf Information Feudalism: Who Owns the Knowledge Economy?], Earthscan 2002</ref>{{rp|13}}
  
Others point out that the law itself treats these rights differently than those involving physical property. To give three examples from US law, [[copyright infringement]] is not punishable by laws against [[theft]] or [[trespass]], but rather by an entirely different set of laws with different penalties. [[patent infringement|Patent infringement]] is not a criminal offense although it may subject the infringer to civil liability.  Willfully possessing stolen physical goods is a criminal offense while mere possessing of goods which infringe on copyright is not.  Furthermore, in the United States physical property laws are generally part of state law, while copyright law is in the main measure federal.
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The [[World Intellectual Property Organization]] (WIPO) recognizes that conflicts may exist between the respect for and implementation of current intellectual property systems and other human rights.<ref>{{cite web|title=Human Rights and Intellectual Property: An Overview|url=http://www.wipo.int/tk/en/hr/|author=WIPO – World Intellectual Property Organization|date=|website=wipo|url-status=dead|archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20111022125749/http://www.wipo.int/tk/en/hr/|archivedate=October 22, 2011|accessdate=October 25, 2011|df=}}</ref> In 2001 the UN [[Committee on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights]] issued a document called "Human rights and intellectual property" that argued that intellectual property tends to be governed by economic goals when it should be viewed primarily as a social product; in order to serve human well-being, intellectual property systems must respect and conform to human rights laws. According to the Committee, when systems fail to do so they risk infringing upon the human right to food and health, and to cultural participation and scientific benefits.<ref>Staff, UN Committee on Economic Social and Cultural Rights. Geneva, November 12–30, 2001. [http://www2.ohchr.org/english/bodies/cescr/docs/statements/E.C.12.2001.15HRIntel-property.pdf Human rights and intellectual property]</ref><ref>{{cite journal |last=Chapman |first=Audrey R. |title=The Human Rights Implications of Intellectual Property Protection |journal=Journal of International Economic Law |date=December 2002 |volume=5 |issue=4 |pages=861–882 |doi=10.1093/jiel/5.4.861 |url=http://jiel.oxfordjournals.org/content/5/4/861.short |accessdate=February 9, 2013}}</ref> In 2004 the General Assembly of WIPO adopted ''The Geneva Declaration on the Future of the World Intellectual Property Organization'' which argues that WIPO should "focus more on the needs of developing countries, and to view IP as one of many tools for development—not as an end in itself".<ref>[http://www.cptech.org/ip/wipo/genevadeclaration.html ''The Geneva Declaration on the Future of the World Intellectual Property Organization'']</ref>
  
Some proponents of the term argue that the law is simply recognising the reality of a situation. In some jurisdictions a lease of land (e.g. a flat or apartment) is regarded as intangible property in the same way that copyright is.  In these cases too the law accepts that the property cannot be stolen - if someone moves into the flat and prevents you from living there they are not regarded as 'thieves of the lease' but as '[[squatter|squatters]]' and the law provides different remedies. [[Identity theft]] is another example of the adaptation of physical property laws to intangible items, though that term itself is seen as problematic by some.
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Ethical problems are most pertinent when socially valuable goods like life-saving medicines are given IP protection. While the application of IP rights can allow companies to charge higher than the marginal cost of production in order to recoup the costs of research and development, the price may exclude from the market anyone who cannot afford the cost of the product, in this case a life-saving drug.<ref name=Sonderholm>{{Cite journal | doi=10.1111/j.1747-9991.2010.00358.x|title = Ethical Issues Surrounding Intellectual Property Rights| journal=Philosophy Compass| volume=5| issue=12| pages=1107–1115|year = 2010|last1 = Sonderholm|first1 = Jorn}}</ref> "An IPR driven regime is therefore not a regime that is conductive to the investment of R&D of products that are socially valuable to predominately poor populations".<ref name=Sonderholm />{{rp|1108–9}}
  
==Trends==
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[[Libertarian]]s have [[Libertarian perspectives on intellectual property|differing views on intellectual property]].{{Citation needed|date=August 2018}} [[Stephan Kinsella]], an [[anarcho-capitalist]] on the [[right-libertarian|right-wing of libertarianism]],<ref>Stephan Kinsella, [https://web.archive.org/web/20180415041048/https://www.lewrockwell.com/2004/01/stephan-kinsella/what-it-means-to-be-an-anarcho-capitalist/ "What It Means To Be an Anarcho-Capitalist"], "LewRockwell.com", published 2004-01-20, archived 2018-04-15. Retrieved 2018-08-04</ref> [[criticism of intellectual property|argues against intellectual property]] because allowing property rights in ideas and information creates [[artificial scarcity]] and infringes on the right to own tangible property. Kinsella uses the following scenario to argue this point:
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<blockquote>[I]magine the time when men lived in caves. One bright guy&mdash;let's call him Galt-Magnon&mdash;decides to build a log cabin on an open field, near his crops. To be sure, this is a good idea, and others notice it. They naturally imitate Galt-Magnon, and they start building their own cabins. But the first man to invent a house, according to IP advocates, would have a right to prevent others from building houses on their own land, with their own logs, or to charge them a fee if they do build houses. It is plain that the innovator in these examples becomes a partial owner of the tangible property (e.g., land and logs) of others, due not to first occupation and use of that property (for it is already owned), but due to his coming up with an idea. Clearly, this rule flies in the face of the first-user homesteading rule, arbitrarily and groundlessly overriding the very homesteading rule that is at the foundation of all property rights.<ref>[https://web.archive.org/web/20080730030236/https://mises.org/books/against.pdf N. Stephan Kinsella, ''Against Intellectual property''] (2008), p. 44.</ref></blockquote>
  
Recently the general trend in exclusive rights law has been expansion: to cover new types of subject matter such as databases, to regulate new categories of activity in respect of the subject matter already protected, to increase the duration of individual rights, and to remove restrictions and limitations on these rights.
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[[Thomas Jefferson]] once said in a letter to Isaac McPherson on August 13, 1813:
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<blockquote>"If nature has made any one thing less susceptible than all others of exclusive property, it is the action of the thinking power called an idea, which an individual may exclusively possess as long as he keeps it to himself; but the moment it is divulged, it forces itself into the possession of every one, and the receiver cannot dispossess himself of it. Its peculiar character, too, is that no one possesses the less, because every other possesses the whole of it. He who receives an idea from me, receives instruction himself without lessening mine; as he who lights his [[candle|taper]] at mine, receives light without darkening me."<ref>[http://press-pubs.uchicago.edu/founders/documents/a1_8_8s12.html Thomas Jefferson, ''Letter to Isaac McPherson''] (August 13, 1813)</ref></blockquote>
  
Another effect of this trend is an increase in the term of the government-granted rights, and an expansion of the definition of "author" to include corporations as the legitimate creators and owners of works. The concept of [[work for hire]] has had the effect of treating a corporation or business owner as the legal author of works created by people while employed.  
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In 2005 the [[Royal Society for the encouragement of Arts, Manufactures & Commerce|RSA]] launched the [[Adelphi Charter]], aimed at creating an international policy statement to frame how governments should make balanced intellectual property law.<ref>Boyle, James (14 October 2005). [http://education.guardian.co.uk/higher/comment/story/0,,1591467,00.html Protecting the public domain]. ''The Guardian''.</ref>
  
Another trend is to increase the number and type of what is claimed as "intellectual property".  This has resulted in increasingly broad patents and trademarks: for instance, [[Microsoft]] attempting to trademark the phrase, "Where do you want to go today?".  Trademarks in [[EU]] and [[United States of America|US]] law can now encompass smells (e.g. of cut grass for tennis balls), shapes (e.g. of a soft drinks bottle), colors (e.g. red for fizzy drinks), words (e.g. COCA-COLA) and sounds (Intel has [http://tarr.uspto.gov/servlet/tarr?regser=serial&entry=75332744 registered a five-note melody with the USPTO]). The granting of patents for life forms, [[computer software|software]] algorithms and business models stretches the initial concept of giving the inventor limited rights to exclude the use of his invention. 
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Another aspect of current U.S. Intellectual Property legislation is its focus on individual and joint works; thus, copyright protection can only be obtained in 'original' works of authorship.<ref>{{cite journal|first=Philip |last=Bennet|title=Native Americans and Intellectual Property: the Necessity of Implementing Collective Ideals into Current United States Intellectual Property Laws|year= 2009 |ssrn=1498783}}</ref>
  
Some argue that these expansions harm an essential "bargain" driven between public and copyright holders: as most "new" ideas borrow from other ideas, it is thought that too many "intellectual property" laws will lead to a reduction of the overall creative output of a society. The expansion of exclusive rights is also alleged to have led to the emergence of organizations whose business model is to frivolously sue other companies.
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Intellectual property law has been criticized as not recognizing new forms of art such as the [[remix culture]], whose participants often commit what technically constitutes violations of such laws, creation works such as [[Anime music video|anime music videos]] and others, or are otherwise subject to unnecessary burdens and limitations which prevent them from fully expressing themselves.<ref name="JemielniakPrzegalinska20202">{{cite book|author1=Dariusz Jemielniak|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=yLDMDwAAQBAJ|title=Collaborative Society|author2=Aleksandra Przegalinska|date=18 February 2020|publisher=MIT Press|isbn=978-0-262-35645-9}}</ref>{{Rp|70}}<ref>{{Cite journal|last1=Fiesler|first1=Casey|last2=Feuston|first2=Jessica L.|last3=Bruckman|first3=Amy S.|date=2015-02-28|title=Understanding Copyright Law in Online Creative Communities|url=https://doi.org/10.1145/2675133.2675234|journal=Proceedings of the 18th ACM Conference on Computer Supported Cooperative Work & Social Computing|series=CSCW '15|location=Vancouver, BC, Canada|publisher=Association for Computing Machinery|pages=116–129|doi=10.1145/2675133.2675234|isbn=978-1-4503-2922-4|s2cid=28669082}}</ref><ref>{{Cite journal|last=Freund|first=Katharina|date=2016-08-01|title="Fair use is legal use": Copyright negotiations and strategies in the fan-vidding community|url=https://doi.org/10.1177/1461444814555952|journal=New Media & Society|language=en|volume=18|issue=7|pages=1347–1363|doi=10.1177/1461444814555952|s2cid=11258627|issn=1461-4448}}</ref><ref>{{Cite journal|last=Allen|first=Peter James|date=2008-08-24|title=Rip, mix, burn … sue … ad infinitum: The effects of deterrence vs voluntary cooperation on non-commercial online copyright infringing behaviour|url=https://journals.uic.edu/ojs/index.php/fm/article/view/2073|journal=First Monday|language=en|doi=10.5210/fm.v13i9.2073|issn=1396-0466}}</ref>
  
The electronic age has seen an increase in the attempt to use software-based [[digital rights management]] tools to restrict the copying and use of digitally based works.  This can have the effect of limiting [[fair use]] provisions of copyright law and even make the [[first-sale doctrine]] (known in [[EU]] law as 'exhaustion of rights') moot. This would allow, in essence, the creation of a book which would disintegrate after one reading. As individuals have proven adept at circumventing such measures in the past, many copyright holders have also successfully lobbied for laws such as the [[Digital Millennium Copyright Act]], which uses criminal law to prevent any circumvention of software used to enforce digital "rights management" systems. Equivalent provisions, to prevent circumvention of copyright protection have existed in EU for some time, and are being expanded in, for example, Article 6 and 7 the Copyright Directive. Other examples are Article 7 of the Software Directive of 1991 (91/250/EEC), and the Conditional Access Directive of 1998 (98/84/EEC).
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===Objections to the expansion in nature and scope of intellectual property laws===
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[[File:Tom Bell's graph showing extension of U.S. copyright term over time.svg|thumb|Expansion of U.S. copyright law (Assuming authors create their works by age 35 and live for seventy years)]]
  
At the same time, the growth of the [[Internet]], and particularly distributed search engines like [[Kazaa]] and [[Gnutella]], represents a challenge for exclusive rights policy.  The [[Recording Industry Association of America]], in particular, has been on the front lines of the fight against what it terms "piracy". The industry has had victories against some services, including a highly publicized case against the file-sharing company [[Napster]], and some people have been prosecuted for sharing files in violation of copyright. However, the increasingly decentralized nature of such networks makes legal action against distributed search engines more problematic.
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Other criticism of intellectual property law concerns the expansion of intellectual property, both in duration and in scope.
  
==Non-government systems to protect intellectual products==
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In addition, as scientific knowledge has expanded and allowed new industries to arise in fields such as biotechnology and nanotechnology, originators of technology have sought IP protection for the new technologies. Patents have been granted for living organisms,<ref>Council for Responsible Genetics, "[https://web.archive.org/web/20111002092235/http://www.actionbioscience.org/genomics/crg.html DNA Patents Create Monopolies on Living Organisms]". Retrieved 2008.12.18.</ref> and in the United States, [[Plant breeders' rights|certain living organisms]] have been patentable for over a century.<ref>Plant Patents [https://web.archive.org/web/19990220172601/http://www.uspto.gov/web/offices/pac/plant/ USPTO.gov]</ref>
  
The notion of protecting intellectual works is much older than copyright or patent law.  There have long existed socially-enforced systems for protecting intellectual works.  These include the ancient scholarly taboo against [[plagiarism]], along with other informal systems such as the [[code of non-infringement]], used by [[clown]]s to recognise each clown's exclusive rights to their unique style of makeup, costume and persona. In the case of [['The Code']] of the clowns, the universality of the custom lends credence to the clown's belief that this protection is 'stronger' than that provided by trademark and copyright law. Regardless of this, some clowns do trademark, copyright or patent "clown material", perhaps as protection from infringement by those outside the clown community.
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The increase in terms of protection is particularly seen in relation to copyright, which has recently been the subject of serial extensions [[Sonny Bono Copyright Term Extension Act|in the United States]] and [[Directive on harmonising the term of copyright protection|in Europe]].<ref name="lessigperpetual">{{cite web|title=Against perpetual copyright|url=http://wiki.lessig.org/index.php/Against_perpetual_copyright|last=|first=|date=|website=wiki.lessig.org|url-status=dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20091103224919/http://wiki.lessig.org/index.php/Against_perpetual_copyright|archive-date=2009-11-03|access-date=}}</ref><ref>''E.g.'', the U.S. [[Copyright Term Extension Act]], Pub.L. 105–298.</ref><ref>Mark Helprin, Op-ed: [https://www.nytimes.com/2007/05/20/opinion/20helprin.html A Great Idea Lives Forever. Shouldn't Its Copyright?] ''The New York Times'', May 20, 2007.</ref><ref>''[[Eldred v. Ashcroft]]'' [https://www.law.cornell.edu/supct/html/01-618.ZS.html Eldred v. Ashcroft, 537 U. S. 186 (2003)]</ref><ref name="td_confused">{{cite web|title=Arguing For Infinite Copyright... Using Copied Ideas And A Near Total Misunderstanding Of Property|url=http://www.techdirt.com/articles/20070521/015928.shtml|last=Masnick|first=Mike|date=May 21, 2007|website=techdirt|publisher=[[techdirt]]|url-status=dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090907142130/http://www.techdirt.com/articles/20070521/015928.shtml|archive-date=September 7, 2009|access-date=}}</ref> With no need for registration or copyright notices, this is thought to have led to an increase in [[orphan works]] (copyrighted works for which the copyright owner cannot be contacted), a problem that has been noticed and addressed by governmental bodies around the world.<ref>Library of Congress Copyright Office [http://www.copyright.gov/fedreg/2012/77fr64555.pdf Docket No. 2012–12 Orphan Works and Mass Digitization] Federal Register, Vol. 77, No. 204. Monday, October 22, 2012. Notices. PP 64555–64561; see p 64555 first column for international efforts and 3rd column for description of the problem.</ref>
  
On a more modern topic, "intellectual property" law has been brought to bear on [[DNS|domain names]] where trademark holders (in particular) have objected to third parties registering domain names which they believe should be theirs. The domain name registries, many of whom are not governmental organisations, have had to find a solution to this and therefore have dispute resolution systems which operate in parallel with national laws. The majority of the generic top level domain names (.com, .net etc.) use the [[ICANN]] model known as the [[Uniform Dispute Resolution Policy]] (UDRP). Other registries, such as the .uk registry [[Nominet UK]] have their own different systems.  For example, Nominet's sytem is called the Dispute Resolution Service.
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Also with respect to copyright, the American film industry helped to change the social construct of intellectual property via its trade organization, the [[Motion Picture Association of America]]. In amicus briefs in important cases, in lobbying before Congress, and in its statements to the public, the MPAA has advocated strong protection of intellectual-property rights. In framing its presentations, the association has claimed that people are entitled to the property that is produced by their labor. Additionally Congress's awareness of the position of the United States as the world's largest producer of films has made it convenient to expand the conception of intellectual property.<ref>Dennis Wharton, "MPAA's Rebel With Cause Fights for Copyright Coin," Variety (August 3, 1992), Vol. 348, No. 2, p. 18.</ref> These doctrinal reforms have further strengthened the industry, lending the MPAA even more power and authority.<ref>William W. Fisher III, [http://cyber.law.harvard.edu/property99/history.html The Growth of Intellectual Property:A History of the Ownership of Ideas in the United States] Eigentumskulturen im Vergleich (Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht, 1999)</ref>
  
== Economic view ==
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The growth of the [[Internet]], and particularly distributed search engines like [[Kazaa]] and [[Gnutella]], have represented a challenge for copyright policy. The [[Recording Industry Association of America]], in particular, has been on the front lines of the fight against [[copyright infringement]], which the industry calls "piracy". The industry has had victories against some services, including a highly publicized case against the file-sharing company [[Napster]], and some people have been prosecuted for sharing files in violation of copyright. The electronic age has seen an increase in the attempt to use software-based [[digital rights management]] tools to restrict the copying and use of digitally based works. Laws such as the [[Digital Millennium Copyright Act]] have been enacted that use criminal law to prevent any circumvention of software used to enforce digital rights management systems. Equivalent provisions, to prevent circumvention of copyright protection have existed in EU for some time, and are being expanded in, for example, Article 6 and 7 the [[Information Society Directive|Copyright Directive]]. Other examples are Article 7 of the Software Directive of 1991 (91/250/EEC), and the [[Conditional Access Directive]] of 1998 (98/84/EEC). This can hinder legal uses, affecting [[public domain]] works, [[limitations and exceptions to copyright]], or uses allowed by the copyright holder. Some [[copyleft]] licenses, like [[GNU GPL 3]], are designed to counter that.<ref>{{cite web|title=A Quick Guide to GPLv3|url=https://www.gnu.org/licenses/quick-guide-gplv3.en.html|last=Smith|first=Brett|date=2007–2010|website=gnu|publisher=[[Free Software Foundation]]|url-status=live|archive-url=|archive-date=|accessdate=2013-02-15}}</ref> Laws may permit circumvention under specific conditions like when it is necessary to achieve interoperability with the circumventor's program, or for [[accessibility]] reasons; however, distribution of circumvention tools or instructions may be illegal.
  
Exclusive rights such as copyrights and patents give the holder an exclusive right to sell, or license rights. As such, the holder is the only seller in the market for that particular item, and the holder is often described as having a monopoly for this reason.
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In the context of trademarks, this expansion has been driven by international efforts to harmonise the definition of "trademark", as exemplified by the [[TRIPS Agreement|Agreement on Trade-Related Aspects of Intellectual Property Rights]] ratified in 1994, which formalized regulations for IP rights that had been handled by common law, or not at all, in member states. Pursuant to TRIPs, any [[sign (semiotics)|sign]] which is "capable of distinguishing" the products or services of one business from the products or services of another business is capable of constituting a trademark.<ref>Katherine Beckman and Christa Pletcher (2009) [http://ipjournal.law.wfu.edu/files/2010/10/article.10.215.pdf Expanding Global Trademark Regulation] Wake Forest Intellectual Property Law Journal 10(2): 215–239</ref>
  
However, it may be the case that there are other items of "intellectual property" that are close substitutes. For example, the holder of publishing rights for a book may be competing with various other authors to get a book published.  In such cases, economists may find that another [[market form]], such as [[oligopoly]] or [[monopolistic competition]] better describes the workings of the markets for expressive works and inventions. This is one reason to prefer the term ''exclusive rights'' rather than ''monopoly rights''.
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===Use in corporate tax avoidance===
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{{see also|Corporate tax haven}}
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{{quote box
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|quote = Make no mistake: the headline [tax] rate is not what triggers tax evasion and aggressive tax planning.  That comes from schemes that facilitate profit shifting.
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|source=[[Pierre Moscovici]]<br>European Commissioner for Tax<br>''Financial Times'', 11 March 2018<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.ft.com/content/2b356956-17fc-11e8-9376-4a6390addb44|title=Multinationals pay lower taxes than a decade ago|work=Financial Times|date=11 March 2018}}</ref>
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}}
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|quote = "It is hard to imagine any business, under the current [Irish] IP regime, which could not generate substantial intangible assets under Irish GAAP that would be eligible for relief under [the Irish] capital allowances [for intangible assets scheme]." "This puts the attractive 2.5% Irish IP-tax rate within reach of almost any global business that relocates to Ireland."
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|salign=left
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|source=KPMG, "Intellectual Property Tax", 4 December 2017<ref>{{Cite web|title=Intellectual Property Tax|url=https://www.kpmgpublications.ie/publication/intellectual-property-tax/|publisher=KPMG|date=4 December 2017}}</ref>
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}}
  
The case for "intellectual property" in economic theory notes certain substantial differences from the case for tangible property. Consumption of tangible property is rivalrous. For example, if one person eats an apple, no other person can eat it; if one person uses a plot of land to build a home, that plot is unavailable for use by others. Without the right to exclude others from tangible resources, a [[tragedy of the commons]] can resultThe subjects of exclusive rights do not share this feature. For example, an indefinite number of copies can be made of a copyrighted book without interfering with the use of the book by owners of other copies. A rationale for "intellectual property" therefore rests on incentive effects. This case asserts that without a subsidy that is afforded by exclusive rights, there is no direct financial incentive to create new inventions or works of authorship. However, as [[Wikipedia]] and [[Free software]] demonstrate, works of authorship are written without direct financial incentives. Moreover, many important works were created before copyright was invented. One might argue that much more invention occurred after patents came into existence; however, one could also argue that patents were brought into law as the power and influence of industrial interests grew.
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Intellectual property has become a core tool in corporate tax planning and tax avoidance.<ref name="fordam">{{cite web|title=Intellectual Property and Tax Avoidance in Ireland|url=http://www.fordhamiplj.org/2016/08/30/ip-tax-avoidance-ireland/|last=|first=|date=30 August 2016|website=fordhamiplj|publisher=Fordham Intellectual Property, Media & Entertainment Law Journal|url-status=dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190502112434/http://www.fordhamiplj.org/2016/08/30/ip-tax-avoidance-ireland/|archive-date=2 May 2019|access-date=}}</ref><ref name="ucla">Intellectual property (IP) has become the leading tax-avoidance vehicle.{{cite web|title=Intellectual Property Law Solutions to Tax Avoidance|url=https://www.uclalawreview.org/pdf/62-1-1.pdf|last=|first=|year=2015|website=uclalawreview|publisher=UCLA Law Review|url-status=dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150316232500/http://www.uclalawreview.org/pdf/62-1-1.pdf|archive-date=2015-03-16|access-date=}}</ref><ref name="lux">{{cite journal|url=https://www.economist.com/business/2015/08/27/patently-problematic|title=Patently problematic|journal=The Economist|date=August 2015}}</ref> IP is a key component of the leading multinational tax avoidance [[base erosion and profit shifting]] (BEPS) tools,<ref name="tilburg">{{cite web | url=http://arno.uvt.nl/show.cgi?fid=143915| title=Intellectual Property Tax Planning in the light of Base Erosion and Profit Shifting | publisher=University of Tilburg | date=June 2017}}</ref><ref name="zew">{{cite web|url=http://ftp.zew.de/pub/zew-docs/dp/dp13078.pdf|title=Profit Shifting and "Aggressive" Tax Planning by Multinational Firms |publisher=Centre for European Economic Research (ZEW)|page=3|date=October 2013}}</ref> which the OECD estimates costs $100–240 billion in lost annual tax revenues,<ref name="BEPS Background"/> and includes:
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{{ordered list|type=lower-roman
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|Using IP [[royalty payment]] schemes to profit shift income from higher-tax locations to lower-tax locations (such as the Facebook 2012 [[double Irish]] and the Microsoft 2015 [[double Irish arrangement#Replacement by single malt|single malt]] BEPS tax schemes);<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.ft.com/content/ca64f938-5dc0-11e3-95bd-00144feabdc0|title='Double Irish' limits Facebook's tax bill to €1.9m in Ireland|work=Financial Times|date=5 December 2013}}</ref><ref>{{Cite journal|title = Multinationals replacing 'Double Irish' with new tax avoidance scheme|url = https://www.rte.ie/news/business/2017/1114/919979-multinationals-using-new-arrangement-to-reduce-tax-bill/|publisher = Raidió Teilifís Éireann|date = 14 November 2017}}</ref>
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|Using IP royalty payment schemes to overcome EU [[withholding tax]] protections (such as the circa 2007 Google [[dutch sandwich]] BEPS tax scheme);<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2018-01-02/google-s-dutch-sandwich-shielded-16-billion-euros-from-tax | title=Google's 'Dutch Sandwich' Shielded 16 Billion Euros From Tax| publisher=Bloomberg| date=2 January 2018}}</ref>
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|Using advanced IP GAAP accounting to create [[intangible asset]]s which can be expensed against taxation in certain IP-beneficial regimes (such as the Apple 2015 Irish [[double Irish arrangement#Backstop of capital allowances|capital allowances for intangible assets]] BEPS tax scheme);<ref>{{cite web|url=http://economic-incentives.blogspot.ie/2018/01/what-apple-did-next.html|title=What Apple did next|publisher=Seamus Coffey, University College Cork|date=24 January 2014}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.cfr.org/blog/tax-avoidance-and-irish-balance-payments|title=Tax Avoidance and the Irish Balance of Payments|publisher=Council on Foreign Relations|date=25 April 2018}}</ref>
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|Using advanced IP GAAP accounting to maximize the effect of corporate relocations to low-tax regimes (used by Accenture in their 2009 U.S. corporate [[tax inversion]] to Ireland).<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.irishexaminer.com/business/firm-gets-tax-relief-on-7bn-rights-211760.html|title=Accenture gets tax relief on $7bn of IP rights: Accenture| work=Irish Examiner|date=24 January 2012}}</ref>
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}}
  
Some hold that the three most common instruments provide "exclusive rights to use" different things: [[copyright]] covers original expressive works, [[patent]] covers solutions or ideas, and [[trademark]] covers means to uniquely identify a producer or other source of reputation.
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In 2017–2018, both the U.S. and the EU Commission simultaneously decided to depart from the [[Base erosion and profit shifting (OECD project)|OECD BEPS Project]] timetable, which was set up in 2013 to combat IP BEPS tax tools like the above,<ref name="BEPS Background">{{cite web|title=BEPS Project Background Brief|url=http://www.oecd.org/tax/beps/background-brief-inclusive-framework-for-beps-implementation.pdf|publisher=OECD|date=January 2017}}</ref> and launch their own anti-IP BEPS tax regimes:
This view asserts that the three instruments have different histories, different intent, and allow three different kinds of incentives.
 
Yet, the [[WIPO]], the interest body which introduced the term treats this like a dogma:
 
  
:"'''Intellectual property''' refers to creations of the mind: inventions, literary and artistic works, and symbols, names, images, and designs used in commerce." (Source: [http://www.wipo.org/about-ip/en/ WIPO])
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* U.S. [[Tax Cuts and Jobs Act of 2017]], which has several anti-IP BEPS abuse tax regimes, including GILTI tax and the BEAT tax regimes.<ref>{{Cite web|title = A Hybrid Approach: The Treatment of Foreign Profits under the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act|url=https://taxfoundation.org/treatment-foreign-profits-tax-cuts-jobs-act/|publisher=Tax Foundation|date = 3 May 2018}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.irishtimes.com/business/economy/trump-s-us-tax-reform-a-significant-challenge-for-ireland-1.3310866|title=Trump's US tax reform a significant challenge for Ireland|work=The Irish Times|date=30 November 2017}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.irishtimes.com/business/donald-trump-singles-out-ireland-in-tax-speech-1.3310149?mode=sample&auth-failed=1&pw-origin=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.irishtimes.com%2Fbusiness%2Fdonald-trump-singles-out-ireland-in-tax-speech-1.3310149|title=Donald Trump singles out Ireland in tax speech|work=The Irish Times|date=29 November 2017}}</ref>
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* EU Commission 2018 Digital Services Tax, which is less advanced than the U.S. TCJA, but does seek to override IP BEPS tools via a quasi-VAT.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.irishtimes.com/business/economy/why-ireland-faces-a-fight-on-the-corporate-tax-front-1.3426080|title=Why Ireland faces a fight on the corporate tax front|work=The Irish Times|date=14 March 2018}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.independent.ie/business/irish/eu-digital-levy-could-hit-tech-fdi-and-tax-revenue-here-36725944.html|title=EU digital levy could hit tech FDI and tax revenue here|work=Irish Independent|date=21 March 2018}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.thejournal.ie/eu-digital-tax-ireland-2-2-3918628-Mar2018/|title=What the EU's new taxes on the tech giants mean – and how they would hurt Ireland|publisher=thejournal.ie|date=24 March 2018}}</ref>
  
Some critics of the term say that this assertion is [[propaganda]] for a property view of these laws, and suggest terms such as [[individual capital]], [[instructional capital]] and [[social capital]] over the term "[[intellectual capital]]," which has an ambiguous status, even among believers in [[neoclassical economics]].
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The departure of the U.S. and EU Commission from the OECD BEPS Project process, is attributed to frustrations with the rise in IP as a key BEPS tax tool, creating intangible assets, which are then turned into royalty payment BEPS schemes (double Irish), and/or [[capital allowance]] BEPS schemes (capital allowances for intangibles).  In contrast, the OECD has spent years developing and advocating intellectual property as a legal and a GAAP accounting concept.<ref name="un1">{{cite web|url=https://www.taxjustice.net/2017/09/11/new-un-tax-handbook-sets-lower-income-countries-oecd-beps/|title=New UN tax handbook: Lower-income countries vs OECD BEPS failure|publisher=Tax Justice Network| date=11 September 2017}}</ref>
  
The status of "IP" is disputed in [[India]], [[China]] and other [[developing nation]]s. The United States and the United Kingdom are the only two nations who consistently receive net balance of payments benefits from "IP". These nations are the chief promulgators of "intellectual property" systems.
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The EU Commission's [[EU illegal State aid case against Apple in Ireland|€13 billion fine]] of Apple's pre-2015 double Irish IP BEPS tax scheme, is the largest corporate tax fine in history.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://time.com/4472500/apple-eu-irish-tax-bill/|title=Apple vs. the E.U. Is the Biggest Tax Battle in History|last=Foroohar|first=Rana|date=30 August 2016|website=Time|access-date=14 November 2016}}</ref>
  
A more recent notion, proposing to extend exclusive rights to databases, has been introduced by the EU in 1996.  This is the idea of protecting the information contained in a database against re-utilisation and extraction of substantial parts.  This would be an additional right predicated on a substantial investment, that would exist alongside the copyright in the database structure. This notion was opposed by the United States Supreme Court in 1991 in the Feist Publication finding, which said that exclusive rights cannot cover the factual elements of any copyrighted work, that copyright does not derive from the effort expended in the production of the work, and that in the case of a collection of information, only the originality that may be found in the selection and arrangement of the information is governed by copyright. This case holds that the purpose of exclusive rights policy is to provide information to the public, and this consideration takes priority over concerns such as investment. A study has found that the introduction of
 
exclusive rights to databases in the EU did not do any good to the economy.
 
  
The direct incentive beneficiaries of exclusive rights have an interest in expanding their rights and benefits.  Many pool their resources to form organizations that attempt this such as the Business Software Alliance (BSA), which purports to represent the interests of the commercial software industry while the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA) represents the interests of the commercial music publishing industry.  As policy expands in accordance with the notion of "intellectual property", in the interests of those who benefit directly from its economic incentives, it tends to reduce the rights of its primary beneficiaries, the general public.
 
  
Under the notion of "intellectual property" the public is increasingly prevented by law from benefiting from the use of published information without complying with the conditions of the rightsholder.  The cost for this to the public is not easy to quantify.  The cost is distributed widely and unequally based on the need for the product.  Ironically the direct incentive beneficiary organizations are a good source for these data. The BSA reports a study that claims "while $80 billion in software was installed on computers worldwide last year, only $51 billion was legally purchased" (Source:[http://www.bsa.org/globalstudy/ BSA]) The BSA says "software pirates" avoided a cost of $29 billion while the rest that obey the policy and do not purchase or make use of the work bear a real and substantial [[opportunity cost]] that is yet uncounted. However, it's questionable if Microsoft would lower their price if it would earn $10 billion more on licensing from countries like Russia, Thailand, India and China where most of this "piracy" happens.
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== Notes ==
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<references/>
  
But Microsoft is dumping its selling price on competition from [[GNU/Linux]], for example with government clients. Because of this competition, Microsoft will also be forced to release an update to [[Internet Explorer]] to the public for its current product which it originally planned to release with its next operating system.
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=== References ===
  
===Valuation of intellectual property===
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* Arai, Hisamitsu. "Intellectual Property Policies for the Twenty-First Century: The Japanese Experience in Wealth Creation", WIPO Publication Number 834 (E). 2000. [https://archive.today/20121212232107/http://www.wipo.int/freepublications/en/intproperty/834/index.html wipo.int]
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* Bettig, R. V. (1996). Critical Perspectives on the History and Philosophy of Copyright. In R. V. Bettig, Copyrighting Culture: The Political Economy of Intellectual Property. (pp.&nbsp;9–32). Boulder, CO: Westview Press.
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* Boldrin, Michele and David K. Levine. "Against Intellectual Monopoly", 2008. [http://www.dklevine.com/papers/imbookfinalall.pdf dkleving.com]
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* Hahn, Robert W., ''Intellectual Property Rights in Frontier Industries: Software and Biotechnology'', AEI Press, March 2005.
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* Branstetter, Lee, Raymond Fishman and C. Fritz Foley. "Do Stronger Intellectual Property Rights Increase International Technology Transfer? Empirical Evidence from US Firm-Level Data". NBER Working Paper 11516. July 2005. [https://web.archive.org/web/20081122150353/http://weblog.ipcentral.info/IPRs%20%26%20Tech%20Trans.pdf weblog.ipcentral.info]
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* Connell, Shaun. "Intellectual Ownership". October 2007. [https://web.archive.org/web/20071221052053/http://rebirthoffreedom.org/freedom/property/intellectual-ownership/ rebithofffreedom.org]
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* De George, Richard T. "14. Intellectual Property Rights." In ''The Oxford Handbook of Business Ethics'', by George G. Brenkert and Tom L. Beauchamp, 1:408–439. 1st ed. Oxford, England: Oxford University Press, n.d.
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* Farah, Paolo and Cima, Elena. "China's Participation in the World Trade Organization: Trade in Goods, Services, Intellectual Property Rights and Transparency Issues" in Aurelio Lopez-Tarruella Martinez (ed.), {{lang|es|El comercio con China. Oportunidades empresariales, incertidumbres jurídicas}}, Tirant lo Blanch, Valencia (Spain) 2010, pp.&nbsp;85–121. {{ISBN|978-84-8456-981-7}}. Available at [https://ssrn.com/abstract=1527992 SSRN.com]
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* Farah, Paolo Davide, Tremolada Riccardo, Desirability of Commodification of Intangible Cultural Heritage: The Unsatisfying Role of IPRs, in TRANSNATIONAL DISPUTE MANAGEMENT, Special Issues "The New Frontiers of Cultural Law: Intangible Heritage Disputes", Volume 11, Issue 2, March 2014, {{ISSN|1875-4120}} Available at [https://ssrn.com/abstract=2472339 SSRN.com]
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* Farah, Paolo Davide, Tremolada Riccardo, Intellectual Property Rights, Human Rights and Intangible Cultural Heritage, Journal of Intellectual Property Law, Issue 2, Part I, June 2014, {{ISSN|0035-614X}}, Giuffre, pp.&nbsp;21–47. Available at [https://ssrn.com/abstract=2472388 SSRN.com]
 +
* {{cite book | first1 = Paul | last1 = Goldstein | first2 = R. Anthony | last2 = Reese | title = Copyright, Patent, Trademark and Related State Doctrines: Cases and Materials on the Law of Intellectual Property | year = 2008 | edition = 6th | location = New York | publisher = Foundation Press | isbn = 978-1-59941-139-2 | ref = harv }}
 +
* [[Andrew Gowers|Gowers, Andrew]]. "Gowers Review of Intellectual Property". Her Majesty's Treasury, November 2006. [https://web.archive.org/web/20090407093401/http://www.hm-treasury.gov.uk/d/pbr06_gowers_report_755.pdf hm-treasury.gov.uk] {{ISBN|978-0-11-840483-9}}.
 +
* Greenhalgh, C. & Rogers M., (2010). ''Innovation, Intellectual Property, and Economic Growth.'' New Jersey: Princeton University Press.
 +
* [[Stephan Kinsella|Kinsella, Stephan]]. "Against Intellectual Property". ''Journal of Libertarian Studies'' 15.2 (Spring 2001): 1–53. [https://www.mises.org/journals/jls/15_2/15_2_1.pdf mises.org]
 +
* Lai, Edwin. "The Economics of Intellectual Property Protection in the Global Economy". Princeton University. April 2001. [http://www.dklevine.com/archive/refs4122247000000000481.pdf dklevine.com]
 +
* Lee, Richmond K. ''[http://www.philstar.com/business/320465/scope-and-interplay-ip-rights Scope and Interplay of IP Rights]'' Accralaw offices.
 +
* [[Lawrence Lessig|Lessig, Lawrence]]. "Free Culture: How Big Media Uses Technology and the Law to Lock Down Culture and Control Creativity". New York: Penguin Press, 2004. [http://www.free-culture.cc/freeculture.pdf free-culture.cc].
 +
* Lindberg, Van. ''Intellectual Property and Open Source: A Practical Guide to Protecting Code''. O'Reilly Books, 2008. {{ISBN|0-596-51796-3}} | {{ISBN|978-0-596-51796-0}}
 +
* Maskus, Keith E. "Intellectual Property Rights and Economic Development". ''Case Western Reserve Journal of International Law'', Vol. 32, 471. [https://web.archive.org/web/20081223230716/http://www.law.case.edu/student_life/ journals/jil/32-3/maskusarticle.pdf law.case.edu]
 +
* Mazzone, Jason. "[https://ssrn.com/abstract=787244 Copyfraud]". Brooklyn Law School, Legal Studies Paper No. 40. ''New York University Law Review'' 81 (2006): 1027. (Abstract.)
 +
* Miller, Arthur Raphael, and Michael H. Davis. ''Intellectual Property: Patents, Trademarks, and Copyright''. 3rd ed. New York: West/Wadsworth, 2000. {{ISBN|0-314-23519-1}}.
 +
* Moore, Adam, [http://plato.stanford.edu/archives/sum2011/entries/intellectual-property "Intellectual Property"], The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy (Summer 2011 Edition), Edward N. Zalta (ed.),
 +
* [http://www.chaire-epi.ulaval.ca/sites/chaire-epi.ulaval.ca/files/publications/morin_2014_paradigm_shift_agency_of_academics.pdf Morin, Jean-Frédéric, Paradigm Shift in the Global IP Regime: The Agency of Academics, Review of International Political Economy, vol. 21(2), 2014, pp. 275–309.] 
 +
* Mossoff, A. [https://ssrn.com/abstract=787244 'Rethinking the Development of Patents: An Intellectual History, 1550–1800,'] Hastings Law Journal, Vol. 52, p.&nbsp;1255, 2001
 +
* Rozanski, Felix. "Developing Countries and Pharmaceutical Intellectual Property Rights: Myths and Reality" [http://arquivo.pt/wayback/20091009142207/http://www.stockholm-network.org/downloads/publications/Developing_Countries_and_Intellectual_Property_Rights_Myth_and_Reality_6.pdf stockholm-network.org]
 +
* Perelman, Michael. ''Steal This Idea: Intellectual Property and The Corporate Confiscation of Creativity''. Palgrave Macmillan, 2004.
 +
* Rand, Ayn. "Patents and Copyrights" in Ayn Rand, ed. 'Capitalism: The Unknown Ideal,' New York: New American Library, 1966, pp.&nbsp;126–128
 +
* Reisman, George. 'Capitalism: A Complete & Integrated Understanding of the Nature & Value of Human Economic Life,' Ottawa, Illinois: 1996, pp.&nbsp;388–389
 +
* Schechter, Roger E., and John R. Thomas. ''Intellectual Property: The Law of Copyrights, Patents and Trademarks''. New York: West/Wadsworth, 2003, {{ISBN|0-314-06599-7}}.
 +
* Schneider, Patricia H. "International Trade, Economic Growth and Intellectual Property Rights: A Panel Data Study of Developed and Developing Countries". July 2004. [https://web.archive.org/web/20090226035349/http://www.mtholyoke.edu/~pschneid/images/Schneider_JDEJuly2004.pdf mtholyoke.edu]
 +
* Shapiro, Robert and Nam Pham. "Economic Effects of Intellectual Property-Intensive Manufacturing in the United States". July 2007. [https://web.archive.org/web/20080216195041/http://www.the-value-of-ip.org/ the-value-of.ip.org]. Retrieved 2008-04-09.
 +
* Spooner, Lysander.  "The Law of Intellectual Property; or An Essay on the Right of Authors and Inventors to a Perpetual Property in their Ideas". Boston: Bela Marsh, 1855.
 +
* [[Siva Vaidhyanathan|Vaidhyanathan, Siva]]. ''The Anarchist in the Library: How the Clash Between Freedom and Control Is Hacking the Real World and Crashing the System''. New York: Basic Books, 2004.
 +
* {{cite book |author=Burk, Dan L. |author2=Mark A. Lemley |name-list-style=amp |title=The Patent Crisis and How the Courts Can Solve It |publisher=University of Chicago Press |year=2009 |pages= |isbn=978-0-226-08061-1}}
  
Little argument over intellectual property (IP) would occur if it did not have a value for the owner. The principle of valuing IP is to determine the future income associated with its ownership ([[Special:Booksources/0471362816|Smith&Parr: ''Valuation of Intellectual Property and Intangible Assets'', 3rd Edition, Wiley 2000]]). Note that the value of IP is independent of its cost.  The creation of a musical composition, invention, valuable software may have cost little, and can generate a very high income. Profit margins from IP are typically much higher than profit margins from manufacturing of tangible goods.
 
  
Determination of future income requires estimating the income due to the IP in each of all future years over its life; i.e., the amount sold and the net income per unit after routine sales costs are deducted. If the IP is used internally, then the savings due to owning it can be similarly estimated. The risk that intellectual property becomes obsolete is high, and reduces the current value. Without risk, future income is discounted by using a stable [[discount rate]], in the U.S. by using the Federal [[Treasury Note]] rate for the period. Risks include unexpected competition, unauthorized copying, patent breaches or invalidation, and loss of trade secrets. With such risks, discount rates increase, based on the expected [[Beta coefficient]]. With high discount rates, sales that occur far in the future have little effect, simplifying the determination of the net current value of the included IP.
 
  
When the items being valued contain multiple IP components then the proportion and life of each component must be determined. That case exists in the small, as for [[software]] that receives updates throughout the future, and in the large, for [[company (law)|companies]] that vend many products. [[Shareholder]]s of public companies in effect estimate the aggregate IP of a company, providing a [[market capitalization]] through the price they are willing to pay for shares, which is in effect the sum of the [[book value]] and the IP owned by the company.
 
  
[[U.S.-generally accepted accounting principles]] (GAAP) do not allow the listing on corporate books of IP, making it hard for investors to be rational about share prices. IP is generated mainly through research, development, and advertising (IP generating expenses or IGE), making it hard to assess the effectiveness of IGE. Companies participating in the [[knowledge economy]] typically have a [[market capitalization]] which is a large factor greater than their [[book value]], the sum of their tangible assets and cash. Only when a company has been purchased will the purchased IP briefly appear on the books as [[goodwill]].
 
  
==See also==
 
*[[Agreement on Trade-Related Aspects of Intellectual Property Rights]] (TRIPS)
 
*[[Copynorm]]
 
*[[The Disneyland Memorial Orgy|Disneyland Memorial Orgy]]
 
*[[Doha Declaration]]
 
*[[Directive on the enforcement of intellectual property rights|EU Directive on the enforcement of intellectual property rights]]
 
*[[Fair use]]
 
*[[Legal aspects of computing]]
 
*[[Intellectual capital]]
 
*[[Intellectual Freedom Movement]]
 
*[[Intellectual property education]]
 
*[[Intellectual property in the People's Republic of China]]
 
*[[Intellectual property organization]]
 
*[[Intellectual Property Owners Association]] (ipo) [http://www.ipo.org/]
 
*[[Intellectual rights]]
 
*[[International Association for the Protection of Industrial Property]] (AIPPI)
 
*[[International Federation of Intellectual Property Attorneys]] (FICPI)
 
*[[International Intellectual Property Alliance]] (IIPA)
 
*[[International Union for the Protection of New Varieties of Plants]] (UPOV)
 
*[[Parallel import]]
 
*[[Paris Convention for the Protection of Industrial Property]]
 
*[[Personal property]]
 
*[[Philosophy of copyright]]
 
*[[Real property]]
 
*[[Reverse engineering]]
 
*[[Software patent]]
 
*[[World Intellectual Property Day]] (April 26)
 
  
===Types of intellectual property===
 
*[[Copyright]]
 
*[[Geographical indication]]
 
*[[Industrial design rights]]
 
*[[Integrated circuit layout]]
 
*[[Moral rights]]
 
*[[Patent]]
 
*[[Personality rights]]
 
*[[Plant breeders' rights]]
 
*[[Trade dress]]
 
*[[Trademark]]
 
*[[Trade secret]]
 
  
==Bibliography==
 
 
*Arthur Raphael Miller, Michael H. Davis, ''Intellectual Property: Patents, Trademarks, and Copyright'', West Wadsworth; 3rd edition, 2000, ISBN 0314235191 (textbook particularly covering copyright and patent law)
 
*Arthur Raphael Miller, Michael H. Davis, ''Intellectual Property: Patents, Trademarks, and Copyright'', West Wadsworth; 3rd edition, 2000, ISBN 0314235191 (textbook particularly covering copyright and patent law)
 
*Stephan Kinsella, "Against Intellectual Property", ''Journal of Libertarian Studies'', Vol. 15, No. 1, pp. 1-53, 2001. Available in .PDF [http://www.mises.org/journals/jls/15_2/15_2_1.pdf here] (Note: though the author concludes that "[Intellectual property], at least in the form of patent and copyright, cannot be justified," the paper itself is copyrighted by its publisher.)
 
*Stephan Kinsella, "Against Intellectual Property", ''Journal of Libertarian Studies'', Vol. 15, No. 1, pp. 1-53, 2001. Available in .PDF [http://www.mises.org/journals/jls/15_2/15_2_1.pdf here] (Note: though the author concludes that "[Intellectual property], at least in the form of patent and copyright, cannot be justified," the paper itself is copyrighted by its publisher.)
Line 224: Line 282:
  
 
==External links==
 
==External links==
 +
 +
* The [[European Audiovisual Observatory]] hosts articles on [https://web.archive.org/web/20130729081345/http://www.obs.coe.int/en/legal/copyright/ copyright] legislature and covers media laws in their [http://merlin.obs.coe.int/newsletter.php/ newsletter]
 +
* [https://www.statista.com/topics/3493/media-piracy/ Internet/Media Piracy: Statistics & Facts]—Statista
 
*Articles, Papers, and Interviews
 
*Articles, Papers, and Interviews
 
** [http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=582602 Property, Intellectual Property, and Free Riding, August 2004] by Mark A. Lemley Stanford University - School of Law
 
** [http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=582602 Property, Intellectual Property, and Free Riding, August 2004] by Mark A. Lemley Stanford University - School of Law
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[[Category:Library and information science]]
 
[[Category:Library and information science]]
  
{{credits|14661637}}
+
{{credits|Intellectual_property|991124155}}

Revision as of 17:03, 1 December 2020

Scales of justice
Intellectual property law
 
Rights
Authors' rights · Intellectual property · Copyright
Database right · Indigenous intellectual property
Industrial design rights · Geographical indication
Patent · Related rights · Trademark
Trade secret · Utility model
Related topics
Fair use · Public domain
Trade name


This article is about the legal concept. For the 2006 film, see Intellectual Property (film).

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Scales of justice
Intellectual property law
 
Rights
Authors' rights · Intellectual property · Copyright
Database right · Indigenous intellectual property
Industrial design rights · Geographical indication
Patent · Related rights · Trademark
Trade secret · Utility model
Related topics
Fair use · Public domain
Trade name
File:Nike, McDonald’s copyright infringing sandals in China.jpg
Intellectual property laws such as trademark laws forbid the sale of infringing goods like these "McDnoald's" [sic] and "NKIE" [sic] sandals.

Intellectual property (IP) is a category of property that includes intangible creations of the human intellect.[1][2] There are many types of intellectual property, and some countries recognize more than others.[3][4][5][6][7] The most well-known types are copyrights, patents, trademarks, and trade secrets. The modern concept of intellectual property developed in England in the 17th and 18th centuries. The term "intellectual property" began to be used in the 19th century, though it was not until the late 20th century that intellectual property became commonplace in the majority of the world's legal systems.[8]

The main purpose of intellectual property law is to encourage the creation of a wide variety of intellectual goods.{{#invoke:Footnotes|sfn |bracket_year_left = ( |bracket_year_right = ) |template=sfnp }}{{#invoke:Check for unknown parameters|check|unknown=|preview=Page using Template:Sfnp with unknown parameter "_VALUE_"|ignoreblank=y| 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | ignore-err | loc | p | page | pages | postscript | pp | ps | ref | Ref }} To achieve this, the law gives people and businesses property rights to the information and intellectual goods they create, usually for a limited period of time. This gives economic incentive for their creation, because it allows people to profit from the information and intellectual goods they create.{{#invoke:Footnotes|sfn |bracket_year_left = ( |bracket_year_right = ) |template=sfnp }}{{#invoke:Check for unknown parameters|check|unknown=|preview=Page using Template:Sfnp with unknown parameter "_VALUE_"|ignoreblank=y| 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | ignore-err | loc | p | page | pages | postscript | pp | ps | ref | Ref }} These economic incentives are expected to stimulate innovation and contribute to the technological progress of countries, which depends on the extent of protection granted to innovators.[9]

The intangible nature of intellectual property presents difficulties when compared with traditional property like land or goods. Unlike traditional property, intellectual property is "indivisible", since an unlimited number of people can "consume" an intellectual good without it being depleted. Additionally, investments in intellectual goods suffer from problems of appropriation: a landowner can surround their land with a robust fence and hire armed guards to protect it, but a producer of information or literature can usually do very little to stop their first buyer from replicating it and selling it at a lower price. Balancing rights so that they are strong enough to encourage the creation of intellectual goods but not so strong that they prevent the goods' wide use is the primary focus of modern intellectual property law.{{#invoke:Footnotes|sfn |bracket_year_left = ( |bracket_year_right = ) |template=sfnp }}{{#invoke:Check for unknown parameters|check|unknown=|preview=Page using Template:Sfnp with unknown parameter "_VALUE_"|ignoreblank=y| 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | ignore-err | loc | p | page | pages | postscript | pp | ps | ref | Ref }}

History

The Statute of Anne came into force in 1710

The Statute of Monopolies (1624) and the British Statute of Anne (1710) are seen as the origins of patent law and copyright respectively,[10] firmly establishing the concept of intellectual property.

"Literary property" was the term predominantly used in the British legal debates of the 1760s and 1770s over the extent to which authors and publishers of works also had rights deriving from the common law of property (Millar v Taylor (1769), Hinton v Donaldson (1773), Donaldson v Becket (1774). The first known use of the term intellectual property dates to this time, when a piece published in the Monthly Review in 1769 used the phrase.[11] The first clear example of modern usage goes back as early as 1808, when it was used as a heading title in a collection of essays.[12]

The German equivalent was used with the founding of the North German Confederation whose constitution granted legislative power over the protection of intellectual property (Schutz des geistigen Eigentums) to the confederation.[13] When the administrative secretariats established by the Paris Convention (1883) and the Berne Convention (1886) merged in 1893, they located in Berne, and also adopted the term intellectual property in their new combined title, the United International Bureaux for the Protection of Intellectual Property.

The organization subsequently relocated to Geneva in 1960 and was succeeded in 1967 with the establishment of the World Intellectual Property Organization (WIPO) by treaty as an agency of the United Nations. According to legal scholar Mark Lemley, it was only at this point that the term really began to be used in the United States (which had not been a party to the Berne Convention),[8] and it did not enter popular usage there until passage of the Bayh-Dole Act in 1980.[14]

"The history of patents does not begin with inventions, but rather with royal grants by Queen Elizabeth I (1558–1603) for monopoly privileges. Approximately 200 years after the end of Elizabeth's reign, however, a patent represents a legal right obtained by an inventor providing for exclusive control over the production and sale of his mechanical or scientific invention. demonstrating the evolution of patents from royal prerogative to common-law doctrine."[15]

The term can be found used in an October 1845 Massachusetts Circuit Court ruling in the patent case Davoll et al. v. Brown., in which Justice Charles L. Woodbury wrote that "only in this way can we protect intellectual property, the labors of the mind, productions and interests are as much a man's own...as the wheat he cultivates, or the flocks he rears."[16] The statement that "discoveries are..property" goes back earlier. Section 1 of the French law of 1791 stated, "All new discoveries are the property of the author; to assure the inventor the property and temporary enjoyment of his discovery, there shall be delivered to him a patent for five, ten or fifteen years."[17] In Europe, French author A. Nion mentioned propriété intellectuelle in his Droits civils des auteurs, artistes et inventeurs, published in 1846.

Until recently, the purpose of intellectual property law was to give as little protection as possible in order to encourage innovation. Historically, therefore, they were granted only when they were necessary to encourage invention, limited in time and scope.[18] This is mainly as a result of knowledge being traditionally viewed as a public good, in order to allow its extensive dissemination and improvement thereof.[19]

The concept's origins can potentially be traced back further. Jewish law includes several considerations whose effects are similar to those of modern intellectual property laws, though the notion of intellectual creations as property does not seem to exist – notably the principle of Hasagat Ge'vul (unfair encroachment) was used to justify limited-term publisher (but not author) copyright in the 16th century.[20] In 500 B.C.E., the government of the Greek state of Sybaris offered one year's patent "to all who should discover any new refinement in luxury".[21]

According to Jean-Frédéric Morin, "the global intellectual property regime is currently in the midst of a paradigm shift".[22] Indeed, up until the early 2000s the global IP regime used to be dominated by high standards of protection characteristic of IP laws from Europe or the United States, with a vision that uniform application of these standards over every country and to several fields with little consideration over social, cultural or environmental values or of the national level of economic development. Morin argues that "the emerging discourse of the global IP regime advocates for greater policy flexibility and greater access to knowledge, especially for developing countries." Indeed, with the Development Agenda adopted by WIPO in 2007, a set of 45 recommendations to adjust WIPO's activities to the specific needs of developing countries and aim to reduce distortions especially on issues such as patients’ access to medicines, Internet users’ access to information, farmers’ access to seeds, programmers’ access to source codes or students’ access to scientific articles.[23] However, this paradigm shift has not yet manifested itself in concrete legal reforms at the international level.[24]

Similarly, it is based on these background that the Trade-Related Aspects of Intellectual Property Rights (TRIPS) agreement requires members of the WTO to set minimum standards of legal protection, but its objective to have a “one-fits-all” protection law on Intellectual Property has been viewed with controversies regarding differences in the development level of countries.[25] Despite the controversy, the agreement has extensively incorporated intellectual property rights into the global trading system for the first time in 1995, and has prevailed as the most comprehensive agreement reached by the world.[26]

Rights

Intellectual property rights include patents, copyright, industrial design rights, trademarks, plant variety rights, trade dress, geographical indications,[27] and in some jurisdictions trade secrets. There are also more specialized or derived varieties of sui generis exclusive rights, such as circuit design rights (called mask work rights in the US), supplementary protection certificates for pharmaceutical products (after expiry of a patent protecting them), and database rights (in European law). The term "industrial property" is sometimes used to refer to a large subset of intellectual property rights including patents, trademarks, industrial designs, utility models, service marks, trade names, and geographical indications.[28]

Patents

Main article: Patent

A patent is a form of right granted by the government to an inventor or their successor-in-title, giving the owner the right to exclude others from making, using, selling, offering to sell, and importing an invention for a limited period of time, in exchange for the public disclosure of the invention. An invention is a solution to a specific technological problem, which may be a product or a process and generally has to fulfill three main requirements: it has to be new, not obvious and there needs to be an industrial applicability.[29]:17 To enrich the body of knowledge and stimulate innovation, it is an obligation for patent owners to disclose valuable information about their inventions to the public.[30]

Copyright

Main article: Copyright

A copyright gives the creator of an original work exclusive rights to it, usually for a limited time. Copyright may apply to a wide range of creative, intellectual, or artistic forms, or "works".[31][32] Copyright does not cover ideas and information themselves, only the form or manner in which they are expressed.[33]

Industrial design rights

An industrial design right (sometimes called "design right" or design patent) protects the visual design of objects that are not purely utilitarian. An industrial design consists of the creation of a shape, configuration or composition of pattern or color, or combination of pattern and color in three-dimensional form containing aesthetic value. An industrial design can be a two- or three-dimensional pattern used to produce a product, industrial commodity or handicraft. Generally speaking, it is what makes a product look appealing, and as such, it increases the commercial value of goods.[30]

Plant varieties

Plant breeders' rights or plant variety rights are the rights to commercially use a new variety of a plant. The variety must amongst others be novel and distinct and for registration the evaluation of propagating material of the variety is considered.

Trademarks

A trademark is a recognizable sign, design or expression which distinguishes products or services of a particular trader from similar products or services of other traders.[34][35][36]

Trade dress

Trade dress is a legal term of art that generally refers to characteristics of the visual and aesthetic appearance of a product or its packaging (or even the design of a building) that signify the source of the product to consumers.[37]

Trade secrets

Main article: Trade secret

A trade secret is a formula, practice, process, design, instrument, pattern, or compilation of information which is not generally known or reasonably ascertainable, by which a business can obtain an economic advantage over competitors and customers. There is no formal government protection granted; each business must take measures to guard its own trade secrets (e.g., Formula of its soft drinks is a trade secret for Coca-Cola.)

Motivation and justification

The main purpose of intellectual property law is to encourage the creation of a wide variety of intellectual goods for consumers.{{#invoke:Footnotes|sfn |bracket_year_left = ( |bracket_year_right = ) |template=sfnp }}{{#invoke:Check for unknown parameters|check|unknown=|preview=Page using Template:Sfnp with unknown parameter "_VALUE_"|ignoreblank=y| 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | ignore-err | loc | p | page | pages | postscript | pp | ps | ref | Ref }} To achieve this, the law gives people and businesses property rights to the information and intellectual goods they create, usually for a limited period of time. Because they can then profit from them, this gives economic incentive for their creation.{{#invoke:Footnotes|sfn |bracket_year_left = ( |bracket_year_right = ) |template=sfnp }}{{#invoke:Check for unknown parameters|check|unknown=|preview=Page using Template:Sfnp with unknown parameter "_VALUE_"|ignoreblank=y| 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | ignore-err | loc | p | page | pages | postscript | pp | ps | ref | Ref }} The intangible nature of intellectual property presents difficulties when compared with traditional property like land or goods. Unlike traditional property, intellectual property is indivisible – an unlimited number of people can "consume" an intellectual good without it being depleted. Additionally, investments in intellectual goods suffer from problems of appropriation – while a landowner can surround their land with a robust fence and hire armed guards to protect it, a producer of information or an intellectual good can usually do very little to stop their first buyer from replicating it and selling it at a lower price. Balancing rights so that they are strong enough to encourage the creation of information and intellectual goods but not so strong that they prevent their wide use is the primary focus of modern intellectual property law.{{#invoke:Footnotes|sfn |bracket_year_left = ( |bracket_year_right = ) |template=sfnp }}{{#invoke:Check for unknown parameters|check|unknown=|preview=Page using Template:Sfnp with unknown parameter "_VALUE_"|ignoreblank=y| 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | ignore-err | loc | p | page | pages | postscript | pp | ps | ref | Ref }}

By exchanging limited exclusive rights for disclosure of inventions and creative works, society and the patentee/copyright owner mutually benefit, and an incentive is created for inventors and authors to create and disclose their work. Some commentators have noted that the objective of intellectual property legislators and those who support its implementation appears to be "absolute protection". "If some intellectual property is desirable because it encourages innovation, they reason, more is better. The thinking is that creators will not have sufficient incentive to invent unless they are legally entitled to capture the full social value of their inventions".[18] This absolute protection or full value view treats intellectual property as another type of "real" property, typically adopting its law and rhetoric. Other recent developments in intellectual property law, such as the America Invents Act, stress international harmonization. Recently there has also been much debate over the desirability of using intellectual property rights to protect cultural heritage, including intangible ones, as well as over risks of commodification derived from this possibility.[38] The issue still remains open in legal scholarship.

Financial incentive

These exclusive rights allow owners of intellectual property to benefit from the property they have created, providing a financial incentive for the creation of an investment in intellectual property, and, in case of patents, pay associated research and development costs.[39] In the United States Article I Section 8 Clause 8 of the Constitution, commonly called the Patent and Copyright Clause, reads; "The Congress shall have power 'To promote the progress of science and useful arts, by securing for limited times to authors and inventors the exclusive right to their respective writings and discoveries.'"[40] ”Some commentators, such as David Levine and Michele Boldrin, dispute this justification.[41]

In 2013 the United States Patent & Trademark Office approximated that the worth of intellectual property to the U.S. economy is more than US $5 trillion and creates employment for an estimated 18 million American people. The value of intellectual property is considered similarly high in other developed nations, such as those in the European Union.[42] In the UK, IP has become a recognised asset class for use in pension-led funding and other types of business finance. However, in 2013, the UK Intellectual Property Office stated: "There are millions of intangible business assets whose value is either not being leveraged at all, or only being leveraged inadvertently".[43]

Economic growth

The WIPO treaty and several related international agreements underline that the protection of intellectual property rights is essential to maintaining economic growth. The WIPO Intellectual Property Handbook gives two reasons for intellectual property laws:

One is to give statutory expression to the moral and economic rights of creators in their creations and the rights of the public in access to those creations. The second is to promote, as a deliberate act of Government policy, creativity and the dissemination and application of its results and to encourage fair trading which would contribute to economic and social development.[44]

The Anti-Counterfeiting Trade Agreement (ACTA) states that "effective enforcement of intellectual property rights is critical to sustaining economic growth across all industries and globally".[45]

Economists estimate that two-thirds of the value of large businesses in the United States can be traced to intangible assets.[46] "IP-intensive industries" are estimated to generate 72 percent more value added (price minus material cost) per employee than "non-IP-intensive industries".[47][dubious]

A joint research project of the WIPO and the United Nations University measuring the impact of IP systems on six Asian countries found "a positive correlation between the strengthening of the IP system and subsequent economic growth."[48]

Morality

According to Article 27 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, "everyone has the right to the protection of the moral and material interests resulting from any scientific, literary or artistic production of which he is the author".[49] Although the relationship between intellectual property and human rights is a complex one,[50] there are moral arguments for intellectual property.

The arguments that justify intellectual property fall into three major categories. Personality theorists believe intellectual property is an extension of an individual. Utilitarians believe that intellectual property stimulates social progress and pushes people to further innovation. Lockeans argue that intellectual property is justified based on deservedness and hard work.[51]

Various moral justifications for private property can be used to argue in favor of the morality of intellectual property, such as:

  1. Natural Rights/Justice Argument: this argument is based on Locke's idea that a person has a natural right over the labour and products which are produced by their body. Appropriating these products is viewed as unjust. Although Locke had never explicitly stated that natural right applied to products of the mind,[52] it is possible to apply his argument to intellectual property rights, in which it would be unjust for people to misuse another's ideas.[53] Locke's argument for intellectual property is based upon the idea that laborers have the right to control that which they create. They argue that we own our bodies which are the laborers, this right of ownership extends to what we create. Thus, intellectual property ensures this right when it comes to production.
  2. Utilitarian-Pragmatic Argument: according to this rationale, a society that protects private property is more effective and prosperous than societies that do not. Innovation and invention in 19th century America has been attributed to the development of the patent system.[54] By providing innovators with "durable and tangible return on their investment of time, labor, and other resources", intellectual property rights seek to maximize social utility.[55] The presumption is that they promote public welfare by encouraging the "creation, production, and distribution of intellectual works".[55] Utilitarians argue that without intellectual property there would be a lack of incentive to produce new ideas. Systems of protection such as Intellectual property optimize social utility.
  3. "Personality" Argument: this argument is based on a quote from Hegel: "Every man has the right to turn his will upon a thing or make the thing an object of his will, that is to say, to set aside the mere thing and recreate it as his own".[56] European intellectual property law is shaped by this notion that ideas are an "extension of oneself and of one's personality".[57] Personality theorists argue that by being a creator of something one is inherently at risk and vulnerable for having their ideas and designs stolen and/or altered. Intellectual property protects these moral claims that have to do with personality.

Lysander Spooner (1855) argues "that a man has a natural and absolute right—and if a natural and absolute, then necessarily a perpetual, right—of property, in the ideas, of which he is the discoverer or creator; that his right of property, in ideas, is intrinsically the same as, and stands on identically the same grounds with, his right of property in material things; that no distinction, of principle, exists between the two cases".[58]

Writer Ayn Rand argued in her book Capitalism: The Unknown Ideal that the protection of intellectual property is essentially a moral issue. The belief is that the human mind itself is the source of wealth and survival and that all property at its base is intellectual property. To violate intellectual property is therefore no different morally than violating other property rights which compromises the very processes of survival and therefore constitutes an immoral act.[59]

Infringement, misappropriation, and enforcement

Violation of intellectual property rights, called "infringement" with respect to patents, copyright, and trademarks, and "misappropriation" with respect to trade secrets, may be a breach of civil law or criminal law, depending on the type of intellectual property involved, jurisdiction, and the nature of the action.

As of 2011 trade in counterfeit copyrighted and trademarked works was a $600 billion industry worldwide and accounted for 5–7% of global trade.[60]

Patent infringement

Patent infringement typically is caused by using or selling a patented invention without permission from the patent holder. The scope of the patented invention or the extent of protection[61] is defined in the claims of the granted patent. There is safe harbor in many jurisdictions to use a patented invention for research. This safe harbor does not exist in the US unless the research is done for purely philosophical purposes, or in order to gather data in order to prepare an application for regulatory approval of a drug.[62] In general, patent infringement cases are handled under civil law (e.g., in the United States) but several jurisdictions incorporate infringement in criminal law also (for example, Argentina, China, France, Japan, Russia, South Korea).[63]

Copyright infringement

Copyright infringement is reproducing, distributing, displaying or performing a work, or to make derivative works, without permission from the copyright holder, which is typically a publisher or other business representing or assigned by the work's creator. It is often called "piracy".[64] While copyright is created the instant a work is fixed, generally the copyright holder can only get money damages if the owner registers the copyright.[citation needed] Enforcement of copyright is generally the responsibility of the copyright holder.[65] The ACTA trade agreement, signed in May 2011 by the United States, Japan, Switzerland, and the EU, and which has not entered into force, requires that its parties add criminal penalties, including incarceration and fines, for copyright and trademark infringement, and obligated the parties to actively police for infringement.[60][66] There are limitations and exceptions to copyright, allowing limited use of copyrighted works, which does not constitute infringement. Examples of such doctrines are the fair use and fair dealing doctrine.

Trademark infringement

Trademark infringement occurs when one party uses a trademark that is identical or confusingly similar to a trademark owned by another party, in relation to products or services which are identical or similar to the products or services of the other party. In many countries, a trademark receives protection without registration, but registering a trademark provides legal advantages for enforcement. Infringement can be addressed by civil litigation and, in several jurisdictions, under criminal law.[60][66]

Trade secret misappropriation

Trade secret misappropriation is different from violations of other intellectual property laws, since by definition trade secrets are secret, while patents and registered copyrights and trademarks are publicly available. In the United States, trade secrets are protected under state law, and states have nearly universally adopted the Uniform Trade Secrets Act. The United States also has federal law in the form of the Economic Espionage Act of 1996 (18 U.S.C. § 1831), which makes the theft or misappropriation of a trade secret a federal crime. This law contains two provisions criminalizing two sorts of activity. The first, 18 U.S.C. § 1831(a), criminalizes the theft of trade secrets to benefit foreign powers. The second, 18 U.S.C. § 1832, criminalizes their theft for commercial or economic purposes. (The statutory penalties are different for the two offenses.) In Commonwealth common law jurisdictions, confidentiality and trade secrets are regarded as an equitable right rather than a property right but penalties for theft are roughly the same as in the United States.[citation needed]

Criticisms

Further information: Criticism of patents
File:Pro piracy demonstration.jpg
Demonstration in Sweden in support of file sharing, 2006.
File:GlamCamp NY Kippelboy nina Paley (2).JPG
"Copying is not theft!" badge with a character resembling Mickey Mouse in reference to the in popular culture rationale behind the Sonny Bono Copyright Term Extension Act of 1998

The term "intellectual property"

Criticism of the term intellectual property ranges from discussing its vagueness and abstract overreach to direct contention to the semantic validity of using words like property and rights in fashions that contradict practice and law. Many detractors think this term specially serves the doctrinal agenda of parties opposing reform in the public interest or otherwise abusing related legislations; and that it disallows intelligent discussion about specific and often unrelated aspects of copyright, patents, trademarks, etc.[67]

Free Software Foundation founder Richard Stallman argues that, although the term intellectual property is in wide use, it should be rejected altogether, because it "systematically distorts and confuses these issues, and its use was and is promoted by those who gain from this confusion". He claims that the term "operates as a catch-all to lump together disparate laws [which] originated separately, evolved differently, cover different activities, have different rules, and raise different public policy issues" and that it creates a "bias" by confusing these monopolies with ownership of limited physical things, likening them to "property rights".[68] Stallman advocates referring to copyrights, patents and trademarks in the singular and warns against abstracting disparate laws into a collective term. He argues that "to avoid spreading unnecessary bias and confusion, it is best to adopt a firm policy not to speak or even think in terms of 'intellectual property'."[69]

Similarly, economists Boldrin and Levine prefer to use the term "intellectual monopoly" as a more appropriate and clear definition of the concept, which they argue, is very dissimilar from property rights.[70] They further argued that “stronger patents do little or nothing to encourage innovation”, mainly explained by its tendency to create market monopolies, thereby restricting further innovations and technology transfer.[71]

On the assumption that intellectual property rights are actual rights, Stallman says that this claim does not live to the historical intentions behind these laws, which in the case of copyright served as a censorship system, and later on, a regulatory model for the printing press that may have benefited authors incidentally, but never interfered with the freedom of average readers.[72] Still referring to copyright, he cites legal literature such as the United States Constitution and case law to demonstrate that the law is meant to be an optional and experimental bargain to temporarily trade property rights and free speech for public, not private, benefits in the form of increased artistic production and knowledge. He mentions that "if copyright were a natural right nothing could justify terminating this right after a certain period of time".[73]

Law professor, writer and political activist Lawrence Lessig, along with many other copyleft and free software activists, has criticized the implied analogy with physical property (like land or an automobile). They argue such an analogy fails because physical property is generally rivalrous while intellectual works are non-rivalrous (that is, if one makes a copy of a work, the enjoyment of the copy does not prevent enjoyment of the original).[74][75] Other arguments along these lines claim that unlike the situation with tangible property, there is no natural scarcity of a particular idea or information: once it exists at all, it can be re-used and duplicated indefinitely without such re-use diminishing the original. Stephan Kinsella has objected to intellectual property on the grounds that the word "property" implies scarcity, which may not be applicable to ideas.[76]

Entrepreneur and politician Rickard Falkvinge and hacker Alexandre Oliva have independently compared George Orwell's fictional dialect Newspeak to the terminology used by intellectual property supporters as a linguistic weapon to shape public opinion regarding copyright debate and DRM.[77][78]

Alternative terms

In civil law jurisdictions, intellectual property has often been referred to as intellectual rights, traditionally a somewhat broader concept that has included moral rights and other personal protections that cannot be bought or sold. Use of the term intellectual rights has declined since the early 1980s, as use of the term intellectual property has increased.

Alternative terms monopolies on information and intellectual monopoly have emerged among those who argue against the "property" or "intellect" or "rights" assumptions, notably Richard Stallman. The backronyms intellectual protectionism and intellectual poverty,[79] whose initials are also IP, have found supporters as well, especially among those who have used the backronym digital restrictions management.[80][81]

The argument that an intellectual property right should (in the interests of better balancing of relevant private and public interests) be termed an intellectual monopoly privilege (IMP) has been advanced by several academics including Birgitte Andersen[82] and Thomas Alured Faunce.[83]

Objections to overbroad intellectual property laws

File:Definition of Free Cultural Works logo notext.svg
The free culture movement champions the production of content that bears little or no restrictions.

Some critics of intellectual property, such as those in the free culture movement, point at intellectual monopolies as harming health (in the case of pharmaceutical patents), preventing progress, and benefiting concentrated interests to the detriment of the masses,[84][85][86][87] and argue that the public interest is harmed by ever-expansive monopolies in the form of copyright extensions, software patents, and business method patents. More recently scientists and engineers are expressing concern that patent thickets are undermining technological development even in high-tech fields like nanotechnology.[88][89]

Petra Moser has asserted that historical analysis suggests that intellectual property laws may harm innovation:

Overall, the weight of the existing historical evidence suggests that patent policies, which grant strong intellectual property rights to early generations of inventors, may discourage innovation. On the contrary, policies that encourage the diffusion of ideas and modify patent laws to facilitate entry and encourage competition may be an effective mechanism to encourage innovation.[90]

In support of that argument, Jörg Baten, Nicola Bianchi and Petra Moser[91] find historical evidence that especially compulsory licensing – which allows governments to license patents without the consent of patent-owners – encouraged invention in Germany in the early 20th century by increasing the threat of competition in fields with low pre-existing levels of competition.

Peter Drahos notes, "Property rights confer authority over resources. When authority is granted to the few over resources on which many depend, the few gain power over the goals of the many. This has consequences for both political and economic freedoms with in a society."[92]:13

The World Intellectual Property Organization (WIPO) recognizes that conflicts may exist between the respect for and implementation of current intellectual property systems and other human rights.[93] In 2001 the UN Committee on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights issued a document called "Human rights and intellectual property" that argued that intellectual property tends to be governed by economic goals when it should be viewed primarily as a social product; in order to serve human well-being, intellectual property systems must respect and conform to human rights laws. According to the Committee, when systems fail to do so they risk infringing upon the human right to food and health, and to cultural participation and scientific benefits.[94][95] In 2004 the General Assembly of WIPO adopted The Geneva Declaration on the Future of the World Intellectual Property Organization which argues that WIPO should "focus more on the needs of developing countries, and to view IP as one of many tools for development—not as an end in itself".[96]

Ethical problems are most pertinent when socially valuable goods like life-saving medicines are given IP protection. While the application of IP rights can allow companies to charge higher than the marginal cost of production in order to recoup the costs of research and development, the price may exclude from the market anyone who cannot afford the cost of the product, in this case a life-saving drug.[97] "An IPR driven regime is therefore not a regime that is conductive to the investment of R&D of products that are socially valuable to predominately poor populations".[97]:1108–9

Libertarians have differing views on intellectual property.[citation needed] Stephan Kinsella, an anarcho-capitalist on the right-wing of libertarianism,[98] argues against intellectual property because allowing property rights in ideas and information creates artificial scarcity and infringes on the right to own tangible property. Kinsella uses the following scenario to argue this point:

[I]magine the time when men lived in caves. One bright guy—let's call him Galt-Magnon—decides to build a log cabin on an open field, near his crops. To be sure, this is a good idea, and others notice it. They naturally imitate Galt-Magnon, and they start building their own cabins. But the first man to invent a house, according to IP advocates, would have a right to prevent others from building houses on their own land, with their own logs, or to charge them a fee if they do build houses. It is plain that the innovator in these examples becomes a partial owner of the tangible property (e.g., land and logs) of others, due not to first occupation and use of that property (for it is already owned), but due to his coming up with an idea. Clearly, this rule flies in the face of the first-user homesteading rule, arbitrarily and groundlessly overriding the very homesteading rule that is at the foundation of all property rights.[99]

Thomas Jefferson once said in a letter to Isaac McPherson on August 13, 1813:

"If nature has made any one thing less susceptible than all others of exclusive property, it is the action of the thinking power called an idea, which an individual may exclusively possess as long as he keeps it to himself; but the moment it is divulged, it forces itself into the possession of every one, and the receiver cannot dispossess himself of it. Its peculiar character, too, is that no one possesses the less, because every other possesses the whole of it. He who receives an idea from me, receives instruction himself without lessening mine; as he who lights his taper at mine, receives light without darkening me."[100]

In 2005 the RSA launched the Adelphi Charter, aimed at creating an international policy statement to frame how governments should make balanced intellectual property law.[101]

Another aspect of current U.S. Intellectual Property legislation is its focus on individual and joint works; thus, copyright protection can only be obtained in 'original' works of authorship.[102]

Intellectual property law has been criticized as not recognizing new forms of art such as the remix culture, whose participants often commit what technically constitutes violations of such laws, creation works such as anime music videos and others, or are otherwise subject to unnecessary burdens and limitations which prevent them from fully expressing themselves.[103]:70 [104][105][106]

Objections to the expansion in nature and scope of intellectual property laws

File:Tom Bell's graph showing extension of U.S. copyright term over time.svg
Expansion of U.S. copyright law (Assuming authors create their works by age 35 and live for seventy years)

Other criticism of intellectual property law concerns the expansion of intellectual property, both in duration and in scope.

In addition, as scientific knowledge has expanded and allowed new industries to arise in fields such as biotechnology and nanotechnology, originators of technology have sought IP protection for the new technologies. Patents have been granted for living organisms,[107] and in the United States, certain living organisms have been patentable for over a century.[108]

The increase in terms of protection is particularly seen in relation to copyright, which has recently been the subject of serial extensions in the United States and in Europe.[74][109][110][111][112] With no need for registration or copyright notices, this is thought to have led to an increase in orphan works (copyrighted works for which the copyright owner cannot be contacted), a problem that has been noticed and addressed by governmental bodies around the world.[113]

Also with respect to copyright, the American film industry helped to change the social construct of intellectual property via its trade organization, the Motion Picture Association of America. In amicus briefs in important cases, in lobbying before Congress, and in its statements to the public, the MPAA has advocated strong protection of intellectual-property rights. In framing its presentations, the association has claimed that people are entitled to the property that is produced by their labor. Additionally Congress's awareness of the position of the United States as the world's largest producer of films has made it convenient to expand the conception of intellectual property.[114] These doctrinal reforms have further strengthened the industry, lending the MPAA even more power and authority.[115]

The growth of the Internet, and particularly distributed search engines like Kazaa and Gnutella, have represented a challenge for copyright policy. The Recording Industry Association of America, in particular, has been on the front lines of the fight against copyright infringement, which the industry calls "piracy". The industry has had victories against some services, including a highly publicized case against the file-sharing company Napster, and some people have been prosecuted for sharing files in violation of copyright. The electronic age has seen an increase in the attempt to use software-based digital rights management tools to restrict the copying and use of digitally based works. Laws such as the Digital Millennium Copyright Act have been enacted that use criminal law to prevent any circumvention of software used to enforce digital rights management systems. Equivalent provisions, to prevent circumvention of copyright protection have existed in EU for some time, and are being expanded in, for example, Article 6 and 7 the Copyright Directive. Other examples are Article 7 of the Software Directive of 1991 (91/250/EEC), and the Conditional Access Directive of 1998 (98/84/EEC). This can hinder legal uses, affecting public domain works, limitations and exceptions to copyright, or uses allowed by the copyright holder. Some copyleft licenses, like GNU GPL 3, are designed to counter that.[116] Laws may permit circumvention under specific conditions like when it is necessary to achieve interoperability with the circumventor's program, or for accessibility reasons; however, distribution of circumvention tools or instructions may be illegal.

In the context of trademarks, this expansion has been driven by international efforts to harmonise the definition of "trademark", as exemplified by the Agreement on Trade-Related Aspects of Intellectual Property Rights ratified in 1994, which formalized regulations for IP rights that had been handled by common law, or not at all, in member states. Pursuant to TRIPs, any sign which is "capable of distinguishing" the products or services of one business from the products or services of another business is capable of constituting a trademark.[117]

Use in corporate tax avoidance

Make no mistake: the headline [tax] rate is not what triggers tax evasion and aggressive tax planning. That comes from schemes that facilitate profit shifting.
—Pierre Moscovici
European Commissioner for Tax
Financial Times, 11 March 2018[118]


"It is hard to imagine any business, under the current [Irish] IP regime, which could not generate substantial intangible assets under Irish GAAP that would be eligible for relief under [the Irish] capital allowances [for intangible assets scheme]." "This puts the attractive 2.5% Irish IP-tax rate within reach of almost any global business that relocates to Ireland."
—KPMG, "Intellectual Property Tax", 4 December 2017[119]

Intellectual property has become a core tool in corporate tax planning and tax avoidance.[120][121][122] IP is a key component of the leading multinational tax avoidance base erosion and profit shifting (BEPS) tools,[123][124] which the OECD estimates costs $100–240 billion in lost annual tax revenues,[125] and includes: {{safesubst:#invoke:list|ordered}}

In 2017–2018, both the U.S. and the EU Commission simultaneously decided to depart from the OECD BEPS Project timetable, which was set up in 2013 to combat IP BEPS tax tools like the above,[125] and launch their own anti-IP BEPS tax regimes:

  • U.S. Tax Cuts and Jobs Act of 2017, which has several anti-IP BEPS abuse tax regimes, including GILTI tax and the BEAT tax regimes.[126][127][128]
  • EU Commission 2018 Digital Services Tax, which is less advanced than the U.S. TCJA, but does seek to override IP BEPS tools via a quasi-VAT.[129][130][131]

The departure of the U.S. and EU Commission from the OECD BEPS Project process, is attributed to frustrations with the rise in IP as a key BEPS tax tool, creating intangible assets, which are then turned into royalty payment BEPS schemes (double Irish), and/or capital allowance BEPS schemes (capital allowances for intangibles). In contrast, the OECD has spent years developing and advocating intellectual property as a legal and a GAAP accounting concept.[132]

The EU Commission's €13 billion fine of Apple's pre-2015 double Irish IP BEPS tax scheme, is the largest corporate tax fine in history.[133]


Notes

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References
ISBN links support NWE through referral fees

  • Arai, Hisamitsu. "Intellectual Property Policies for the Twenty-First Century: The Japanese Experience in Wealth Creation", WIPO Publication Number 834 (E). 2000. wipo.int
  • Bettig, R. V. (1996). Critical Perspectives on the History and Philosophy of Copyright. In R. V. Bettig, Copyrighting Culture: The Political Economy of Intellectual Property. (pp. 9–32). Boulder, CO: Westview Press.
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  • Arthur Raphael Miller, Michael H. Davis, Intellectual Property: Patents, Trademarks, and Copyright, West Wadsworth; 3rd edition, 2000, ISBN 0314235191 (textbook particularly covering copyright and patent law)
  • Stephan Kinsella, "Against Intellectual Property", Journal of Libertarian Studies, Vol. 15, No. 1, pp. 1-53, 2001. Available in .PDF here (Note: though the author concludes that "[Intellectual property], at least in the form of patent and copyright, cannot be justified," the paper itself is copyrighted by its publisher.)
  • Michael Perelman, Steal This Idea: Intellectual Property Rights and the Corporate Confiscation of Creativity, Palgrave Macmillan, 2002, ISBN 0312294085, (a critical discussion of some of the social, scientific and cultural impacts of recent intellectual property developments)
  • Roger E. Schechter, John R. Thomas, Intellectual Property: The Law of Copyrights, Patents and Trademarks, West Wadsworth, 2003, ISBN 0314065997 (textbook)

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