On Fri, Mar 07, 2008 at 10:58:17AM -0800, Bruce Perens wrote: > Joshua D. Drake wrote: >> I assure you that I can find an significant majority of absurdity >> regardless of the jurisdiction. > Laws are just the structures we put together so that we can live with each > other. At least in a democracy. I'd imagine that someone who /really > /thought that a /majority /were absurd might have difficulty living with > others. That's why I made the spectrum disorder crack. But we are getting > far from the mission of this list.
Yes, but most of us don't live in a democracy. The US for example is republican (small 'r', not big 'R') form of government, where elected officials are subject to legalized bribery in the from (for example) campaign contributions from lobbyists from the Disney corporation to make sure that Micky Mouse never falls into the Public Domain. And I assure you, I find that *most* absurd; in fact, given the vast amount of lobbying that have perpetrated laws like the DMCA on us, it's more likely that not that laws regarding copyright, patents, and trade secret are more absurd that we would like. So to presumptively say that of *course* the legal forms of reassigning copyright would make sense and not be absurd seems to be hopelessly niave. It's safer to assume that anything involving intellectual property does not conform to common sense. - Ted _______________________________________________ Spi-general mailing list Spi-general@lists.spi-inc.org http://lists.spi-inc.org/listinfo/spi-general