• @aidan
      link
      English
      151 year ago

      Some people argue that intellectual property law is not free market capitalism, and is instead a regulation that benefits big business. I’m one of those people

      • Cethin
        link
        fedilink
        English
        91 year ago

        While I’d agree in essence, in practice I don’t. They’re an offshoot of capitalism. The goal of capitalism is profit, and if you can create barriers to competition, that protects your profit. IP law is something created out of capitalism as a barrier. If it isn’t the government doing it, it’d be goons hired by those in power. They exist because of capitalism, not from something external to it. If the system were focused on doing good or creating utility, IP law wouldn’t be required.

      • @[email protected]
        link
        fedilink
        English
        7
        edit-2
        1 year ago

        Free market and capitalism are mutually exclusive as in the theoretical model that is the free market, with perfectly rational actors and information, a capitalist class cannot exist, they’d quickly get competed down to size.

        Unregulated markets and capitalism, now that’s a lovechild, as without regulation real-world markets quickly turn into monopolistic shark-tanks instead of free markets, actors not being rational, information not being perfect and all. The role of regulation, indeed the state, is to correct for that factor and make the real-world market approximate the free market.

        (This view of the world brought to you by ordoliberalism, the only sane liberal economic theory there ever was or probably will be – because they actually managed to side with the free market, and not capitalism, as the rest of them).

    • @Aux
      link
      English
      -171 year ago

      And regulations restrict both.

      • Flying Squid
        link
        English
        -11 year ago

        Cars should be able to pollute as much as the manufacturers want because innovation is all!