Entrepreneurial Knowledge And IP

IP Law
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Lately the issue of intellectual property has popped up to near the top of issues in libertarian circles, especially as it related to information, emulation and society. Though the emphasis appears to be on the side of the consumer (and of society), it is worth noting that whenever and wherever the state intervenes in the spread of information though IP legislation, the effect reaches entrepreneurs and managers and even venture capitalists and other investors. Entire areas of “common knowledge” can be wiped.

The mere existence of the state provides us with the most extreme example: there are no true markets–much less developed markets–for private courts and restitution companies. Sure, there is private police and mediation and arbitration but those still operate under the watchful eye of the state. Because the state has completely monopolized these “services,” there is no incentive for innovators and researchers to enter this field and offer services in a competitive environment. Thus, the result is literally a completely atrophied field of human knowledge (not counting armchair theorizers).

Prohibition gives us another perhaps less dramatic example. What sort of innovations could have been openly tested when alcohol was banned in the US? (When I mean innovation I am being very broad and want to include things beyond the actual product such as marketing campaigns, managerial developments in particular product development, distribution strategies and so on). One has to remember that prohibitions eliminate not just the actual product from the market. It also eliminates acting on the knowledge that surrounds all of the market operations of that product.

Some years ago a European friend of mine told me that because firearms are near completely banned in most places, there is no “gun culture.” When homeschooling is banned, fewer people think about homeschooling. Given enough time, most folks will probably think it normal for the state to handle education and will frown upon those who want to consider other options.

IP legislation bans certain patterns and processes from being freely used by non-authorized agents. It bans actual products, but it more explicitly bans information to be used for similar or other purposes. Like prohibition, IP legislation reduces the quality and amount of information that would have been otherwise available for other entrepreneurs to use. Indeed, imagine that you are on the floor of a stock exchange and it’s your first day. You learn that there exists a government-granted monopoly on the idea that “a forecast of drought in the midwest can increase the price of corn.” You are a commodities trader in charge of corn but it’s illegal for you to trade based on that knowledge. You look at the latest forecast and looks like a drought might hit this year. As a trader, you are now forbidden to act on that knowledge. Intellectual property legislation has a similar stifling effect on ideas and entrepreneurial knowledge. If affects end users of course, but also those in charge of providing humanity with the endless number of goods and services that we desire.

Patent law hinders building on existing efforts, forcing us to bypass the patent (thereby drawing resources otherwise available elsewhere) or to license it (adding a cost to the product or service), or finding other routes (again, incurring a cost). Like all state intervention in the market, IP legislation bans not just the proverbial wheel but also disrupts the knowledge transfer mechanisms which are essential to civilization itself.

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An Issue of Monopoly Justice

Legal System
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Vail Daily reports an interesting case:

Martin Joel Erzinger, 52, faces two misdemeanor traffic charges stemming from a July 3 incident when he allegedly hit bicyclist Dr. Steven Milo from behind then sped away, according to court documents.

Milo and his attorney, Harold Haddon, are livid about the prosecution’s decision to drop the felony charge. They filed their objection Wednesday afternoon, the day after prosecutors notified Haddon’s office by fax of their decision.

. . . Erzinger manages more than $1 billion in assets. He would have to publicly disclose any felony charge within 30 days, according to North American Securities Dealers regulations.

Milo wrote in a letter to District Attorney Mark Hurlbert that the case “has always been about responsibility, not money.”

“Mr. Erzinger struck me, fled and left me for dead on the highway,” Milo wrote. “Neither his financial prominence nor my financial situation should be factors in your prosecution of this case.”

Hurlbert said Thursday that, in part, this case is about the money.

“The money has never been a priority for them. It is for us,” Hurlbert said. “Justice in this case includes restitution and the ability to pay it.”

Some critics of libertarians claim that wealthy people could regularly “get away with murder” since they could simply pay restitution rather than be punished. This position makes the error of assuming monopoly justice, however. This case is a problem of monopoly justice, rather than of wealth. The fact that the state is the monopoly provider of justice means that the victim only has a single place to make a complaint, and if the prosecutor does not provide satisfactory service, he simply must live with being dissatisfied. There are no competitors to which he may appeal. Under a stateless system, arbitrators would have to produce rulings which tend to satisfy all parties. Without a state, a felony conviction would not automatically have the power to severely curtail a person’s ability to earn a living. Without a state, a victim would not be required to accept an “advocate” who disregarded the victim’s own wishes.

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TLS Podcast Picks: Huerta de Soto at LSE; Evans on Austrianism in Europe; Reed on Economic Education; FreeTalkLive on IP

(Austrian) Economics, Podcast Picks
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Recommended podcasts:

LSE Hayek Lecture 2010: Professor Jesús Huerta de Soto from Cobden Centre on Vimeo.


  1. For background, see Huerta de Soto at LSE: The Video!; Jesús Huerta de Soto’s LSE Hayek Lecture on Banking Reform; Jeff Tucker’s Yesterday was a Historic Day; Lew Rockwell’s LRC post Jesús Huerta de Soto in London; also see my posts Cobden Centre Radio: Steve Baker MP on Austrian Economics and Banking Reform; Freebankers Debate Baxendale Banking Reform Proposal; UK Parliament Speech Invokes Mises Institute re Honest Money and Sound Banking and UK Proposal for Banking Reform: Fractional-Reserve Banking versus Deposits and Loan

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Article: What Is To Be Done? — A Comment on Angelo Codevilla’s “Ruling Class”

Anti-Statism, Articles, Democracy, Education, History, Libertarian Theory, Non-Fiction Reviews, The Right
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In his paper “America’s Ruling Class – and the Perils of Revolution” Professor Angelo Codevilla offers an excellent analysis of the causes and forms of government encroachment into the basic traditional liberties of Americans, and a very good sketch of the reasons why big government ideology succeeded in imposing its tenets upon the country, despite overwhelming opposition by Americans. The problem America faces, according to him, is nothing less than a complete usurpation of power by an alienated elite: the ideologues of big government and the politicians that work in concert to subvert the structure of the American constitution, and to rule over the great majority of Americans against their will. Professor Codevilla paints a very grim (and very true) picture of the complete breakdown of the constitutional form of government in America, under the assault of the modern statist ideology, delivered in a bipartisan manner, and garnered with political corruption. But he fails to provide prescriptions radical enough to deal with the problem, perhaps because he too is a member of that big-government-worshiping elite.

Ivan Jankovic is a graduate student of Political Science at the University of Windsor, Canada. Originally from Serbia, he has published in the fields of Austrian economics, public choice, and classical liberal philosophy.

Read the Full Article by Ivan Jankovic

Afterwards, discuss it below.

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An Outrage By Our Neighbors To The North

Police Statism, Political Correctness, Private Crime, Racism
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CTV Edmonton reports the case of a man convicted of “inciting racial hatred” when he burned a cross on the lawn of an interracial couple. This is a clear crime, but the crime is trespass and vandalism, not “inciting racial hatred.” Criminalizing some real or imagined scheme behind his criminal actions is not only unnecessary, it sows the seeds for more and more thoughts being banned. This is little different from prosecuting a religious extremist for inciting religious fervor.  Moreover, as a friend pointed out, in this day and age, burning a cross does not even incite racial hatred. It generates huge outpourings of goodwill for the victims, and widespread condemnation of the ideology behind the criminal behavior. That reaction has far better effects on race relations than prosecutions for thought crimes.

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