By In Politics

Is illegally downloading music, etc. really stealing?

This is a fascinating piece by Stuart Green, who concludes:

So what are the lessons in all this? For starters, we should stop trying to shoehorn the 21st-century problem of illegal downloading into a moral and legal regime that was developed with a pre- or mid-20th-century economy in mind. Second, we should recognize that the criminal law is least effective — and least legitimate — when it is at odds with widely held moral intuitions.

Illegal downloading is, of course, a real problem. People who work hard to produce creative works are entitled to enjoy legal protection to reap the benefits of their labors. And if others want to enjoy those creative works, it’s reasonable to make them pay for the privilege. But framing illegal downloading as a form of stealing doesn’t, and probably never will, work. We would do better to consider a range of legal concepts that fit the problem more appropriately: concepts like unauthorized use, trespass, conversion and misappropriation.

This is not merely a question of nomenclature. The label we apply to criminal acts matters crucially in terms of how we conceive of and stigmatize them. What we choose to call a given type of crime ultimately determines how it’s formulated and classified and, perhaps most important, how it will be punished. Treating different forms of property deprivation as different crimes may seem untidy, but that is the nature of criminal law.

For related work:

Stephen Kinsella’s Against Intellectual Property and John Frame’s Copyright’s and Copying.<>games for boysраскрутка магазин поисковое продвижение а

3 Responses to Is illegally downloading music, etc. really stealing?

  1. […] would like to pursue this topic more thoroughly, but here is an introduction on how to view illegal downloading in this age. Rate this: Share […]

  2. […] would like to pursue this topic more thoroughly, but here is a perspectivea on how to view illegal downloading in this age. There is also an article by Christian Ethicist, […]

  3. Where is the link to the original piece?

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