[0] http://www.independent.co.uk/arts-entertainment/music/featur...
I understand the sentiment but..why. Why is it necessary. Art and science advanced on its own long before copyright enforcement of any kind.
True there are things that are particularly benefited from copyright. But they do so at the expense of something else. It diverts labor to things that later require law enforcement to protect.
Yes, science and art will progress, but if there is no economy attached, then they will be dominated by people who don't have to make a living. Unless we fund the whole thing publicly. That would work, but in other contexts we believe the market is more efficient.
But that, of course, is no longer true. The advent of technologies to capture and distribute art has led to new forms of art, and with that an amazing situation where people have unparalleled access to the works of genius. However, those new forms also have a drawback: they can be easily copied and distributed without compensating the originator. So in order to keep being able to support filmmakers and novelists and musicians we need to shield them from this. Otherwise, they will stop making their works.
Who is going to spend 5 years writing a novel if they can only sell one copy?
Hopefully no-one. Apparently there is no value to that novel unless resources are spent protecting it.
We see today things that in a non-copyright world would not exist. But we dont see the things that would exist instead ,so its hard to know.