Yes, copyright law doesn't benefit people who don't make money off copyrightable things? I don't see how this makes copyright a detriment TO those people. If it helps Bob get paid, but doesn't help Alice get paid, why would getting rid of it help Alice? Why is it okay to hurt the people who ARE helped by it, just because some other people aren't?
If Bob is on minimum wage, and Alice makes $20 an hour, getting rid of minimum wage doesn't help Alice, and it CERTAINLY doesn't help Bob; because chances are he's working for that low because there are NO OTHER OPTIONS. The company he works for wouldn't have to change anything, because Bob has nowhere else to go. They can gleefully pay him 50 cents an hour and rest assured that he won't leave, because he literally CAN'T.
And don't start saying something about fixing the underlying issue; you can claim it's not necessary in a world of Universal Basic Income until you're blue in the face, it doesn't change the fact that
we do not live in that world, and
until we do, getting rid of it would help NO ONE.
The extortion you had to deal with was made possible solely because of copyright, there are provenance and attestation technologies usable to prevent impersonation of an author & prove authorship
Setting aside the fact that they DID actually change some names, thus making some kind of blockchain-esque horseshit useless (yet again); if copyright did NOT exist, they would have still stolen my labor, AND gotten away with it completely scot-free!
Earlier, you said, "Any retelling that isn't verbatim copying is new material by definition," meaning that you think what happened to me
should be allowed. In your definition of new material, by changing a couple names, actually they DID write an entirely new 80k word novel; they were just heavily influenced by some other chump's novel, but that's culture, baby! And after all, "To participate in culture is to accept that the fruit of one's labor shared are thence part of culture,"
right? So the artistic labor I put into writing my novel doesn't deserve compensation,
right? Or maybe you think it deserves some small compensation, but no more than the bare minimum, and I should be ashamed for asking at all.
You can't treat books, songs, paintings, etc., the same as you can treat commodities, because they take more time and effort to create and can be copied relatively easily; that's why copyright law is necessary, not why it's NOT necessary. Most art takes an insane amount of time and effort to create compared to basically all commodities. A novel or an album is less like a glass or a table, and more like a smartphone or a surgical robot; something that would take an immense amount of expertise, know-how, skill of manufacturing, perseverance, prototyping, lateral thinking, and time, even for a whole team of people, LET ALONE a single person! Writers and musicians and painters are artisans, people who dedicate a huge portion of their limited time on Earth to become masters of their craft, to enrich their cultures, to express rich human emotions so that other people can
feel their feelings. And you think they should just be content to starve? Simply because the result of their labor can easily be copied? Because the system which lets them do so is distasteful to you?
A physical object, i.e. a wrench, can only be in one place at a time, can only be used by so many people, so someone who makes wrenches for a living doesn't need to worry about someone else invalidating their business model by pressing Ctrl+C Ctrl+V; they still have to compete on quality and cost, and huge corporations still have an unfair advantage, but at least the companies can't literally steal the wrenches after they've been made for essentially zero cost and sell them for so cheap that they become the only gig in town. Art needs additional laws to protect it BECAUSE it's so easily copied, because without copyright protection it CAN be literally stolen after it's made for essentially zero cost and resold for a pittance, and companies WILL do so even if it only makes them a tiny profit.
They would be relegated to obvious bootleg resellers. Some would buy from them anyway, many would instead want to buy from you to support the artist.
I KNOW this isn't true! and I can DEFINITIVELY prove it! Because YOU have argued that copying is not a bad thing. YOU are arguing that copyright law shouldn't exist, that, "The very notion of needing to ask permission to retell a story...is just utterly bizarre." "Copying isn't Theft," remember that song in those videos you posted? I KNOW people wouldn't seek out the original artist, because YOU are already arguing that they shouldn't, that all works are already a shared part of our collective culture, and thus deserve no compensation. Many people RIGHT NOW don't want to support the artist. Some people are even arguing that art doesn't deserve payment of any kind, and that copying something is a moral good, actually. If copyright didn't exist, it would be completely legal, so even MORE people would do it.
The normal opinion of most non-artists is that art has no material value, and, "Actually artists are just ARROGANT for expecting money for something they should be doing for free; they should just make art because they love art, not because they think people might like it enough to pay for it," conveniently forgetting that art is also a job people use to feed themselves.
Because those other situations are mostly a result of the current unaddressed problem, not independent problems.
And how does removing copyright law fix that unaddressed problem? If it's as you say and copyright law is a symptom of the problem and not the actual problem, treating the symptom instead of the cause doesn't ACTUALLY help; it's the same kind of spinning your wheels that legislators do to pretend they're helping.
And if the prior problem mentioned was addressed, then kicking copyright to the curb would cause none of these issues you suggest would happen
Yeah, sure, if Universal Basic Income existed, then I wouldn't have needed copyright law to not starve to death.
Except—and you might be surprised to learn this—
it does not currently exist. Telling someone, "I know we're removing the lifeline that you use to feed your family based purely on
ideological distaste, but don't worry! Some day in the future it will have become retroactively unnecessary! Doesn't that make you feel better now?" is completely backwards. You want to help people by making it even harder to survive in the "system which is already hard to survive"??
Do you seriously think, after what happened to me, I just brushed my hands together and thought, "Well, glad that's over! Thank you, legal system, I feel represented and made whole! This is how things should be!" and completely stopped thinking about it? Because that's honestly insulting. After going through that soul-churning process (and again, if you haven't actually been through it, you seriously have no idea what the fuck you're talking about), of course I thought about it! Because I realized that I had taken for granted, "You own what you create, and no one can take it from you without your permission," when obviously it wasn't so simple in practice.
I have spent YEARS thinking about it. Analyzing what happened, why it happened, what they did, what
I did, what they COULD'VE done, and what
I could have done. I've thought about it socially and economically; philosophically and pragmatically; I've considered the artist's perspective and the publisher's perspective and the lawyer's perspective and the legislature's perspective. I've read laws, "thinktank" nonsense, and more court filings than you could DREAM of. I have stared into the abyss of the American legal system and pissed in its mouth.
Everything you've brought up, I have already thought of. Days of pacing, nights of staring at the ceiling, entire weekends' worth of long showers—if there's a stereotypical place for navel-gazing, I've probably been there, thinking about it.
So believe me when I say, I understand where you're coming from. It's tempting to imagine that if we just threw out all the current systems and started from scratch, then we could build them from the ground up to be TRULY egalitarian. But the very fact that you and I—two smart and, dare I say, devilishly handsome individuals—can come to two opposite conclusions which both sound reasonable, is proof that the "burn it all down" mentality wouldn't end with a shiny new utopia; it would just leave ash and embers.
And about those "provenance and attestation" technologies: trust me, I get the temptation to use technology to solve all of these problems more cleanly and efficiently; I get it, I truly do! It seems so obvious, why would anyone argue against it? Well I'll tell you why I'm arguing against it, why this seemingly brilliant idea is actually shortsighted and STUPID:
We exist in a world where corporations already exert incredible influence over our lives, and are immensely more powerful than individual people could ever hope to be; more powerful than giant GROUPS of individual people could ever hope to be. Some corporations are already so powerful, so technologically mighty, that they are beyond the reach of
the IRS.
Making more of our daily lives reliant on technology would all but seal our fate as eternal corporate slaves; it would make Shadowrun and Cyberpunk look like JOKES. You are advocating for giving a few corporations the keys to the kingdom, giving them free reign to trample us all without even needing to ATTEMPT to PRETEND like they're not.
You write software for a living, yes? Presumably at a software company? When you start saying things like, "We can just use cryptographically mature methods to decouple the need to safeguard Art from pesky, out-of-date legal requirements; technology evolves much faster than legislation, after all," you begin to sound like the doublespeaking CEOs of massive tech companies already trying to completely control our lives. The kind of person I'm sure you're familiar with, who spends hour long meetings pretending to gather consensus while shooting down ideas that aren't theirs just so no one can say, "I knew this was a bad idea." Don't let them infect your mind with their techno-optimism; some problems CANNOT be solved by technology alone. Heard of Youtube DMCA takedowns bypassing fair use? THAT needs more laws, better laws, not more technology.