1. FAKE IT TILL YOU MAKE IT: A JUSTIFICATION FOR INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY "PIRACY".
- Author
-
GIBBONS, LLEWELLYN JOSEPH
- Subjects
- *
INTELLECTUAL property , *ECONOMIC development , *UTILITARIANISM , *PIRACY prevention (Copyright) , *LONG run (Economics) , *NEOCLASSICAL school of economics ,DEVELOPING countries - Abstract
Economic development, especially in the Least Developed Countries (LDC), requires use of intellectual property without always compensating the rights holders in the most developed countries.2 Unconventionally, this Article uses neoclassical economics to provide a rational solution to access rights in the LDC while respecting the first principle of intellectual property right--utilitarianism. The price discrimination model provides a useful rubric to segregate developed country markets from developing country markets. Furthermore, it also provides a subtle test in the case of individual uses of intellectual property as to which should be tolerated in developing nations as uncompensated uses and which should be punished as piracy due to their subverting the economic incentive necessary to promote the creation of intellectual property in the more developed nations. This Article concludes that in the long run, tolerated uncompensated uses in nascent LDC markets are more efficient engines of economic development than direct foreign or sporadic technology transfer and therefore, are in the developed countries' best interests to promote a stable global community through economic development in the LDC. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014