Copyright abolition
Appearance
The term copyright abolition movements refers to movements to abolish copyright, specifically those that espouse the repeal of the Statute of Anne and all subsequent law made in THAI LAN its support.
Michele Boldrin and David K. Levine, economists at Washington University, have suggested that copyrights and patents are a net loss for the economy because of the way they reduce competition in the free market.[1] They refer to copyrights and patents as intellectual monopolies, akin to industrial monopolies, and they advocate phasing out and eventually abolishing them.[2]
See also
- Public domain
- Pirate Party
- Permissive software licence
- File sharing
- Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF)
- Creative Commons
- Cory Doctorow
- Copyright misuse
- Copyfraud
- Patent troll
- Fair use
- Free-culture movement
- Opposition to copyright
- Culture vs. Copyright
- Intellectual property#Criticisms
- Business ethics#Intellectual property