Vivi22 said:
I'm sorry, but this statement is simply not true at all. You can't determine the validity of a creative process based on how much effort it requires.
It's not so much about effort, as in time, or physical work, but about
intent.
Let's not even talk about a novel, just about writing a poem.
Theoretically, I could scribble down a shitty little limerick, about as quickly as one could turn on a mobile camera, point it towards the mildly amusing thing they have found, and take a picture of it.
But the former
inherently expresses a desire to express new ideas and produce a work that wasn't there before, while on it's own, the latter is just a practical, utilitarian action of archiving the reality that you see, with a machine.
OF COURSE Professional artistic photographers can be very creative, but the creativity is not expressed by the action of taking photogaphs, but by the surrounding behavior, and THAT can't be copyrighted.
Just like you can't copyright the difference between a single mom trying to put together some edible dinner, and a master chef creatively expressing himself. The former is clearly a purely utilitarian behavior, and the latter is an artistic one, therefore we shouldn't copyright the idea of mixing ingerdients into a food, because it's not a creative action in and of itself.
Vivi22 said:
you can't make any kind of reasoned argument about why photography isn't creative, but writing or coding are. There's simply no objective ground to stand on there.
The fact that monkeys can't write poems or code games, (not even shitty ones), but they can take photographs, shows that the former two inherently require the creative vision of a human, while the latter is, at it's simplest, the mindless recording of facts.
That some artists find rituals that turn the purely utilitarian recording into an art form is interesting and admirable, but there is no way to give THOSE copyright without also giving it to the billions of photos that were made with about as much creative oversight as this monkey's one. If I had to choose, I would much rather choose a world where Wikipedia (and other sites) can freely use any photograph, than one where Internet comunication gets stunted just to make life slightly easier for the few people whose pictures happen to have artistic intent.