Guest Columnist

Intellectual donations

The concept of intellectual property has some drawbacks. The idea of a contract might solve these problems - or should we completely revise the way we think about creativity and ownership?

02 May 2005

Philosophers are split on the issue of intellectual property. For some, it is a metaphorical extension of physical property, like land or cars. For others, it is a government-enforced racket for extracting "rents" from powerless consumers.

As we become more dependent on the sale and distribution of ideas, attention should be directed to the question of whether "intellectual property" is the correct analogy upon which to found a legal framework.

ITWeb Premium

Get 3 months of unlimited access
No credit card. No obligation.

Already a subscriber Log in