oranger said:
When I said the bit about the ages of man being just fine without copyright, I meant that before now, once you made something it was yours until you sold it.
Yes. And before now, when you sold something you were always dealing with physical, tangible items,
not digital ones. There are differences between the two, which was my entire point. Copying a physical item is different from copying a file. One is much easier, and thus much more prolific. If copying physical items was as easy as copying files then perhaps we would not have gotten along without copyrights for so long.
The more I think on it, the more I swing to the idea that maybe copyright is more than just edging out the craftsman, it is legal anti-creativity.
How is it stifling creativity to say that you may not make copies of someone else's work without their consent? I copied your words twice in this post--was hitting "quote" a creative act on my part? How about "copy/paste"? Copying a file requires no creativity--the creativity was all done by the person who originally made the file, aka the copyright holder.
Now, I'll admit that a copyright which is too broad, or applied too liberally, can indeed stifle creativity. But this is a problem with specific copyrights, not the concept of copyrighting in general.