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- Newsgroups: comp.sys.mac.programmer
- Path: sparky!uunet!usc!cs.utexas.edu!qt.cs.utexas.edu!news.Brown.EDU!noc.near.net!gateway!miki!boba
- From: boba@miki.pictel.com (Bob Alexander)
- Subject: Re: Stallman and friends
- Message-ID: <1993Jan11.181200.762@miki.pictel.com>
- Organization: PictureTel Corporation
- References: <1993Jan6.003222.10898@unlv.edu> <1993Jan6.134236.4897@miki.pictel.com> <MELLON.93Jan10223854@pepper.ncd.com>
- Date: Mon, 11 Jan 1993 18:12:00 GMT
- Lines: 31
-
- Ted Lemon writes:
- >Don't kid yourself. There is a need for good software out there. If
- >there were no Intellectual Property protection on software at all, a
- >software industry would still exist, and competent programmers would
- >still pull down decent salaries.
-
- There is a need for food, too. But in countries where gov't policies
- prevent farmers from making a profit, very little food gets produced.
-
- A demand for good software is not sufficient. There must also be an
- adequate economic environment. You might be right that such an
- environment does not require intellectual property rights. But I'd
- like to see some evidence.
-
- > It'd be a lot different than today's
- >software industry, but perhaps not as different as you might imagine.
- >Take a look at how Cygnus Support operates sometime...
-
- OK, that's one piece of evidence, just as some kibbutzim are evidence
- that food can be produced on a non-profit basis (*). Is it sufficient to
- turn the entire software world upside down? I don't think so.
-
- Bob Alexander boba@pictel.com
- The more the government does, the better libertarianism looks
- -----------------------------------------------------------------
- Organizations don't have opinions; people do. The above opinions
- do not reflect those of the directors, stockholders, managers, or
- other employees of PictureTel.
-
- (*) Before anyone points out that kibbutzim have their problems too, note
- that I said "*some* kibbutzim."
-