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Title: Copywrongs Author: Samuel Edward Konkin III Date: July 1, 1986 Language: en Topics: intellectual property Source: https://www.sek3.net/copywrongs.html Notes: The Voluntaryist Editor: Carl Watner July 1986 / Whole # 20 Pages 4-5
Having done every step of production in the publishing industry, both
for myself and others, I have one irrefutable empirical conclusion about
the economic effect of copyrights on prices and wages: nada. Zero.
Nihil. So negligible youâd need a geiger counter to measure it.
Before I move on to exactly what copyrights do have an impact on, one
may be interested as to why the praxeological negligibility of this
tariff. The answer is found in the peculiar nature of publishing. There
are big publishers and small publishers and very, very few in between.
For the Big Boys, royalties are a fraction of one percent of
multi-million press runs. They lose more money from bureaucratic
interstices and round-off error. The small publishers are largely
counter-economic and usually survive on donated material or break-in
writing; let the new writers worry about copyrighting and reselling.
Furthermore, there are a very few cases of legal action in the magazine
world because of this disparity. The little âzines have no hope beating
a rip-off and shrug it off after a perfunctory threat; the Biggies
rattle their corporate-lawyer sabres and nearly anyone above ground
quietly bows.
Book publishing is a small part of total publishing and there are some
middle-range publishers who do worry about the total cost picture in
marginal publishing cases. But now there are two kinds of writers: Big
Names and everyone else. Everyone Else is seldom reprinted; copyrights
have nothing to do with first printings (economically). Big Names rake
it inâbut they also make a lot from ever-higher bids for their next
contract. And the lowered risk of not selling out a reprint of a Big
Name who has already sold out a print run more than compensates paying
the writing the extra fee.
So Big Names writers would lose something substantial if the copyright
privilege ceased enforcement. But Big Name writers are an even smaller
percentage of writers than Big Name Actors are of actors. If they all
vanished tomorrow, no one would notice (except their friends, one
hopes). Still, one may reasonably wonder if the star systemâs incentive
can be done away with without the whole pyramid collapsing. If any
economic argument remains for copyrights, itâs incentive.
Crap. As Don Marquis put in the words of Archy the Cockroach, âCreative
expression is the need of my soul.â And Archy banged his head on
typewriter key after typewriter key all night long to turn out his
columnsâwhich Marquis cashed in. Writing as a medium of expression will
continue as long as someone has a burning need to express. And if all
they have to express is a need for second payments and associated
residuals, weâre all better off for not reading it.
But, alas, the instant elimination of copyrights would have negligible
effect on the star system. While it would cut into the lifelong gravy
train of stellar scribes, it would have no effect, on their biggest
source of income: the contract for their next book (or script, play or
even magazine article or short story). That is where the money is.
âYouâre only as good as your last pieceââbut you collect for that on
your next sale. Market decisions are made on anticipated sales. Sounds
like straight von Mises, right? (Another great writer who profited
little from copyrightingâbut others are currently raking it in from
Ludwigâs privileged corpseâer, corpus.)
The point of all this vulgar praxeology is not just to clear the way for
the moral question. The market (praise be) is telling us something.
After all, both market human action and morality arise from the same
Natural Law.
In fact, let us clear out some more deadwood and red herrings before we
face the Great Moral Issue. First, if you abolish copyrights, would
great authors starve? Nope, in fact, the market might open a trifle for
new blood.
Would writers write if they did not get paid? Who says they wouldnât?
There is no link between payment for writing and copyrights. Royalties
roll in (or, much more often, trickle in) long after the next work is
sold and the one after is in progress.
Is not a producer entitled to the fruit of his labour? Sure, thatâs why
writers are paid. But if I make a copy of a shoe or a table or a
fireplace log (with my little copied axe), does the cobbler or
wood-worker or woodchopper collect a royalty?
A. J. Galambos, bless his anarchoheart, attempted to take copyrights and
patents to their logical conclusion. Every time we break a stick, Ug The
First should collect a royalty. Ideas are property, he says; madness and
chaos result.
Property is a concept extracted from nature by conceptual man to
designate the distribution of scarce goodsâthe entire material
worldâamong avaricious, competing egos. If I have an idea, you may have
the same idea and it takes nothing from me. Use yours as you will and I
do the same.
Ideas, to use the âau courantâ language of computer programmers, are the
programmes; property is the data. Or, to use another current cliche,
ideas are the maps and cartography, and property is the territory. The
difference compares well to the differences between sex and talking
about sex.
Would not ideas be repressed without the incentive (provided by
copyrights)? âAu contraireâ the biggest problem with ideas is the
delivery system. How do we get them to those marketeers who can
distribute them?
My ideas are pieces of what passes for my soul (or, if you prefer, ego).
Therefore, everytime someone adopts one of them, a little piece of me
has infected them. And for this I get paid, too! On top of all that, I
should be paid and paid and paid as they get staler and staler?
If copyrights are such a drag, why and how did they evolve? Not by the
market process. Like all privileges, they were grants of the king. The
idea did notâcould notâarise until Gutenbergâs printing press and it
coincided with the rise of royal divinity, and soon after, the onslaught
of mercantilism.
So who benefits from this privilege? There is an economic impact I
failed to mention earlier. It is, in Bastiatâs phrasing, the unseen.
Copyright is a Big publisherâs method, under cover of protecting
artists, of restraint of trade. Yes, weâre talking monopoly.
For when the Corporation tosses its bone to the struggling writer, and
an occasional steak to the pampered tenth of a percent, it receives an
enforceable legal monopoly on the editing, typesetting, printing,
packaging, marketing (including advertising) and sometimes even local
distribution of that book or magazine. (In magazines, it also has an
exclusivity in layout vs other articles and illustrations and published
advertisements.) Howâs that for vertical integration and restraint of
trade?
And so the system perpetuates, give or take a few counter-economic
outlaws and some enterprising Taiwanese with good smuggling connections.
Because copyrights permeate all mass media, Copyright is the Rip-off
That Dare Not Mention Its Name. The rot corrupting our entire
communications market is so entrenched it will survive nothing short of
abolition of the State and its enforcement of Copyright. Because the
losers, small-name writers and all readers, lose so little each, we are
contentâit seemsâto be nickel-and-dime plundered. Why worry about
mosquito bites when we have the vampire gouges of income taxes and
automobile tariffs?
Now for the central moral question: what first woke me up to the problem
that was the innocent viewer scenario. Consider the following careful
contractual construction.
Author Big and Publisher Bigger have contracts not to reveal a word of
whatâs in some publication. Everyone on the staff, every person in the
step of production is contracted not to reveal a word. All the
distributors are covered and the advertising quotes only a minimal
amount of words. Every reader is, like Death Records in Phantom of the
Paradise, under contract, too; that is, every reader who purchases the
book or âzine and thus interacts with someone who is under
contractâinteracts in a voluntary trade and voluntary agreement.
No, I am not worried about the simultaneous creator; although an obvious
victim, he or she is rare, given sufficient complexity in the work under
questions. (However, some recent copyright decisions and the fact that
the Dolly Parton case even got as far as a serious trialâmeans the
corruption is spreading.)
One day you and I walk into a roomâinvited but without even mention of a
contractâand the publication lies open on a table. Photons leap from the
pages to our eyes and our hapless brain processes the information.
Utterly innocent, having committed no volitional act, we are copyright
violators. We have unintentionally embarked on a life of privacy.
And God or the Market help us if we now try to act on the ideas now in
our mind or to reveal this unintended guilty secret in any way. The
State shall strike usâsave only if Author Big and Publisher Bigger
decide in their tyrannous mercy that we are too small and not worth the
trouble.
For if we use the ideas or repeat or reprint them, even as part of our
own larger creationâbang! There goes the monopoly. And so each and every
innocent viewer must be suppressed.
By the Market? Hardly. The entire contractual agreement falls like a
house of cards when the innocent gets his or her forbidden view. No,
copyright has nothing to do with creativity, incentive, just desserts,
fruits of labour or any other element of the moral, free market.
It is a creature of the State, the Vampireâs little bat. And, as far as
Iâm concerned, the word should be copywrong.