Saturday, September 20, 2014

No Copyright? Tell it to Tatiana

Tatiana Moroz is a wonderfully talented singer-songwriter, lover of liberty, and member here at liberty.me. A few months ago I engaged her on the issue of copyright.

I asked Tatiana if it was OK that I downloaded her songs, put my own name on as writer, and then licensed them for use on a TV show so that I could collect the license fees and performance royalties for myself.

Tatiana was reluctant to take a position on copyright, with me anyway, and I get it. I think she feels really conflicted. On the one hand, she instinctively understands that her songs are just that – HER songs. On the other hand, she’s been told that copyright is somehow “illegitimate”, imposing a “negative servitude” on others, and a “violation” of the property rights of others.

My discussion style is highly confrontational, which doesn’t make me a lot of friends around here. Such is my choice, and it might have at least something to do with your willingness to endorse the abolition of my property rights over my songs.

But what about Tatiana? She is a sweetheart with a golden voice and wonderful words. So tell her. Call out Tatiana Moroz, by name, and explain to her PERSONALLY why she doesn’t own her songs, and why I should be allowed to put my name on them as author, and do anything I want with them.


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  1. Matt Gilliland September 16, 2014, 9:43 pm Reply
    “I asked Tatiana if it was OK that I downloaded her songs, put my own name on as writer, and then licensed them for use on a TV show so that I could collect the license fees and performance royalties for myself.”
    Way to butcher that strawman.
    • Avatar of Alexander Baker
      Alexander Baker September 16, 2014, 10:17 pm Reply
      @ Matt – How is this a strawman argument? Please explain Matt.
      Plagiarism is copyright infringement. Without a property right in a pattern of information, then there’s nothing wrong with plagiarism.
      A slightly different question is this:
      Why can’t I just take Tatiana’s music, use it in my TV show without Tatiana’s permission, and without crediting her?
      • Avatar of Matt Gilliland
        Matt Gilliland September 16, 2014, 10:24 pm Reply
        “Plagiarism is copyright infringement. Without a property right in a pattern of information, then there’s nothing wrong with plagiarism.”
        It pains me that you somehow typed this without thinking about the fact that it’s fraud.
        “Why can’t I just take Tatiana’s music, use it in my TV show without Tatiana’s permission, and without crediting her?”
        I don’t have a problem with that qua libertarianism. I would dislike it personally because I place a value on giving credit to people, but as someone who has had their graphic design work used quite a bit without credit (and who has made money on that freely-released work anyway, in spite of your doomsaying to the contrary), I don’t think it should be illegal because it doesn’t violate property rights.
        • Avatar of Alexander Baker
          Alexander Baker September 16, 2014, 10:39 pm Reply
          Hi Matt – With all due respect, I know exactly what fraud is, and you obviously do not.
          Fraud requires 3 elements – deception, reliance, and damages. Without showing damage to property, there is no fraud. As I pointed out to Dave, “lying” is only wrong when used to deprive another of property. No property – no fraud.
          You might want to know that I’m a 3rd year law student, and I’ve passed the California FYLSE, widely considered to be the toughest law exam in the U.S.
          • Avatar of Matt Gilliland
            Matt Gilliland September 16, 2014, 11:03 pm
            With all due respect, 3L, I have my J.D., which means I also know that having taken the FYLSE indicates that you either couldn’t get into an ABA-accredited law school, or you failed out at an accredited school. It is most certainly NOT considered among the profession to be the toughest law exam in the US — it merely has the lowest passage rate (because, as pointed out above, those taking it are not exactly top of the barrel). Congrats on passing it, but you can’t even spot fraud in your own hypo, so you may very well find the *actual* bar exam to be troublesome. Please check your unjustified pretension at the door.
            In your hypothetical, you put your name on the songs *and licensed them for use*. That’s fraud against the licensee, because without knowledge of the original authorship, the licensee cannot effectively consent.
            Damages in fraud don’t have to be to a property right; if as a result of your hypothetical fraud, reputation damages to the parent company were suffered because some people don’t like being lied to about authorship, this would suffice for the damages element, even though one does not own reputation, because the licensee is in a worse state than would have been the case if the representations made had been non-fraudulent.
          • Avatar of Alexander Baker
            Alexander Baker September 16, 2014, 11:25 pm
            @Matt – I don’t want to get in a pissing match with a JD who works for a website and never passed any bar exam. You’re way over my pay grade.
            If I license Tatiana’s song to a TV show, with my name, yes I deceived them. Perhaps they relied upon my deception, if my name somehow encouraged them to buy. Perhaps not, if their decision was based solely on the music. In either case, they are not damaged.
            They paid for a song, I delivered a song. Right Mr. Esquire?
          • Avatar of Matt Gilliland
            Matt Gilliland September 16, 2014, 11:34 pm
            @alexander
            You’re right, you shouldn’t get into a pissing match with me on this, because you obviously don’t know what you’re talking about.
            If you offer a song written by you and deliver a song written by you, then consent was ineffective, and even if there weren’t damages, the contract would be voidable at the option of the licensee. I already explained how there would quite easily be damages as a proximate result of the fraud, since damages in such a claim don’t have to be to a property right. They can be any harm or loss that puts one in a worse position after than before, even if a property right is not affected. If the TV show lost even just Tatiana as a viewer, that would be damages sufficient to meet the element.
          • Avatar of Alexander Baker
            Alexander Baker September 17, 2014, 12:22 am
            @ Matt – there several things to parse out here, most importantly that you are ignoring the proper plaintiff, i.e. victim – Tatiana.
            1. All legal rights are property rights, all legal wrongs are property wrongs. This is the libertarian view. I’m quite aware that there are any number of statist “laws” that purport to find “rights” and “wrongs” unrelated to property. They are all bogus.
            If you wish to allow tort action against a defendant when the plaintiff has suffered no property injury, then this completely defeats the anti-IP theory you’re trying to defend. You copy my song, so I sue you for defamation, or negligent infliction of emotional distress, or something else.
            Right? The whole point of Kinsellism is to DISALLOW legal action against copiers, by REMOVING the property right that makes legal action possible. If a property injury was unnecessary for a tort action, as you suggest, then Kinsella’s thesis is moot.
            2. You assert that lying about authorship would somehow render consent to license ineffective, but you don’t explain how or why. Not every detail is automatically relevant. Whose name appears as author MIGHT make a difference to the licensee, but it might not. Even if it does, it could cut either way.
            You’re correct that a reduction in audience size would be the licensee’s damages, AND THAT IS A PROPERTY DAMAGE, because the licensee can trace audience size to ad revenue. Absent this connection to licensee’s bottom line, the licensee is not damaged.
            3. And, suppose using my name INCREASES the audience share enjoyed by the licensee. The licensee is certainly not damaged in that case. OK? Me and the licensee are both happy. Why would the licensee sue me?
            4. What about Tatiana? Tatiana is the proper plaintiff here, in my view. But my view absolutely requires a property right over the pattern of information known as her song. Absent copyright, I certainly didn’t didn’t defraud Tatiana, because I didn’t make any representations to Tatiana at all. Absent a property right in her song, what are Tatiana’s damages?
          • Avatar of Matt Gilliland
            Matt Gilliland September 17, 2014, 1:05 am
            “most importantly that you are ignoring the proper plaintiff, i.e. victim – Tatiana. ”
            No, I’m not ignoring her. She just hasn’t had her property rights violated. Sorry.
            “All legal rights are property rights”
            Yes.
            “all legal wrongs are property wrongs”
            Sorry, but no. Damages don’t have to be direct damages to property, as I’ll show using your example in a moment.
            “If you wish to allow tort action against a defendant when the plaintiff has suffered no property injury, then this completely defeats the anti-IP theory you’re trying to defend.”
            Incorrect once again. Because the consent is not valid since the contracted-for song by you is not delivered, there is a functional theft of the license price. Other losses derive from that property violation. Damages must derive from a property violation, but not all damages have to themselves be property violations.
            “You assert that lying about authorship would somehow render consent to license ineffective, but you don’t explain how or why. Not every detail is automatically relevant. Whose name appears as author MIGHT make a difference to the licensee, but it might not. Even if it does, it could cut either way.”
            Res ipsa. Why would you claim authorship if it didn’t matter? OF COURSE authorship claims matter, even if they don’t have anything to do with property rights. There’s definitely a value to presenting works licensed directly from creators, because even without IP, people still care about authorship. I also mentioned that, at best, it’s voidable if not void. There’s a claim there whether the licensee chooses to make it or not.
            “You’re correct that a reduction in audience size would be the licensee’s damages, AND THAT IS A PROPERTY DAMAGE, because the licensee can trace audience size to ad revenue. Absent this connection to licensee’s bottom line, the licensee is not damaged. ”
            One does not have a right to revenue or audience. Come on.
            “And, suppose using my name INCREASES the audience share enjoyed by the licensee. The licensee is certainly not damaged in that case. OK? Me and the licensee are both happy. Why would the licensee sue me?”
            If the licensee doesn’t want to sue you, I’m fine with that. That’s obviously their option.
            “What about Tatiana? Tatiana is the proper plaintiff here, in my view. But my view absolutely requires a property right over the pattern of information known as her song. Absent copyright, I certainly didn’t didn’t defraud Tatiana, because I didn’t make any representations to Tatiana at all. Absent a property right in her song, what are Tatiana’s damages?”
            She has none. Sorry. I know that grinds your gears.
          • Avatar of Alexander Baker
            Alexander Baker September 17, 2014, 1:32 am
            Matt, this is painful. First you claim that tort actions need not be founded on property violations. But then you say copyright enforcement is illegitimate, because no property right was violated.
            Well, which is it? Do tort actions require property damage, or not?
            You keep saying that if the plaintiff is “in a worse position”, that will suffice to show damages. That’s a crass equivocation. When we speak of being “in a worse position”, that MEANS PROPERTY DAMAGE.
            And for crying out loud, are you really going to hang your JD hat on this: “One does not have a right to revenue or audience.” Matt, YOU are the one who offered a reduced audience as a showing of damages, remember? That was your case counselor, not mine, LOL.
            I simply connected the dots of proximate causation from the audience reduction, to loss of ad revenue, to lost profits.
          • Avatar of Matt Gilliland
            Matt Gilliland September 17, 2014, 1:42 am
            I agree that this is painful.
            I did not claim that tort actions did not require the violation of a property right. In fact, you’ll notice that I explicitly said that the damages must result from a property violation. This does not mean that the damages themselves are property violations — in fact, many and possibly most damages aren’t.
            “Matt, YOU are the one who offered a reduced audience as a showing of damages, remember? That was your case counselor, not mine, LOL. ”
            Yes, and it’s completely consistent with what I’ve said. A reduction in audience is a damage that derives from the violation of a property right (the fraud) but is not itself the violation of a property right. It’s almost as if you aren’t reading my responses. Allow me the liberty of quoting myself, since you missed it the first go-around: “Because the consent is not valid since the contracted-for song by you is not delivered, there is a functional theft of the license price. Other losses derive from that property violation. Damages must derive from a property violation, but not all damages have to themselves be property violations.”
  2. Avatar of Chip Marce
    Chip Marce September 16, 2014, 9:57 pm Reply
    Heh, heh.
    That said, i think there is a happy medium to be found. I don’t see the point of patents; in essence they reward the first person to run to the patent office. Copyrights? Hmmm. More of a grey area there. I do not agree with copyrights that last more than say a generation.
    • Avatar of Alexander Baker
      Alexander Baker September 16, 2014, 10:21 pm Reply
      @ Chip – The application of my theory shows no property right in a “method” (i.e. patent), but does find one in a finished intangible work (i.e. copyright).
      If there is a property right, it should be forever. If you think copyright should expire, it seems you don’t find a property right at all.
  3. Avatar of Dave Burns
    Dave Burns September 16, 2014, 10:18 pm Reply
    Lying about authorship is a separate issue from who owns the copyright, or whether the copyright system is legitimate.
    • Avatar of Alexander Baker
      Alexander Baker September 16, 2014, 10:27 pm Reply
      @ Dave – All legal rights are property rights, and all legal wrongs are property violations.
      Thus “Lying” is only illegal when used to deprive another person of property. “Fraud”, for example requires 3 elements – deception, reliance, damages. If the plaintiff cannot show damage (to property) there is no fraud.
      Lying can even be virtuous, as with lying to a robber who demands to know where the jewels are hidden.
      “Lying about authorship” has a name. It’s called “plagiarism”. Absent copyright, what does Tatiana do about plagiarism? And what does she do about any form of copyright infringement, like simply using her music on a TV show?
      • Avatar of Dave Burns
        Dave Burns September 17, 2014, 12:42 am Reply
        Lying is illegal when committing fraud, as in, I trick you into giving me money, and the money is property. Thus your statement is trivially true, but does not mean what you seem to imply. If you receive money intended for someone else by lying about your authorship, that is fraud, regardless of whether the song or whatever is copyrighted, or who owns the copyright, or whether or not copyright is legitimate.
        • Avatar of Alexander Baker
          Alexander Baker September 17, 2014, 1:13 am Reply
          Not so fast Mr. Burns.
          There are 3 parties in my example – Tatiana, me, and the TV producer. You want to construe plagiarism as fraud. Who is the plaintiff, and who is the defendant? Who is damaged, and who is unjustly enriched?
          • Avatar of Dave Burns
            Dave Burns September 17, 2014, 5:33 am
            Plaintiff got lied to and paid money. Defendant lied and received money.
          • Avatar of Dave Burns
            Dave Burns September 17, 2014, 5:43 am
            Defendant offered X for sale and delivered Y, lying that it was X. Sounds like fraud to me.
          • Avatar of Alexander Baker
            Alexander Baker September 17, 2014, 1:16 pm
            WHO is the plaintiff? WHO is the defendant?
          • Avatar of Dave Burns
            Dave Burns September 17, 2014, 6:38 pm
            I will leave that as an exercise for the interested reader.
          • Avatar of _ _
            _ _ September 17, 2014, 11:05 pm
            tatiana is not a party in the scenario, it is simply fraud against the tv producer
  4. Avatar of Alexander Baker
    Alexander Baker September 16, 2014, 10:29 pm Reply
    What do you say to Tatiana Moroz?
    • Avatar of Frank Marcopolos
      Frank Marcopolos September 16, 2014, 11:36 pm Reply
      I usually say. “Good morrning, ma’am,” but then again I’m kinda polite.
      Note: This is a joke. (Not guaranteed to be funny to all persons on Earth.)
  5. Avatar of David Montgomery
    David Montgomery September 17, 2014, 7:06 pm Reply
    If I were Tatiana, I would desperately hope that Lady Gaga, Beyonce, Katy f’ing Perry, Christina Aguilera, Rhianna, Pink, and Shakira all took one of my songs and falsely claimed to be the author of said song. I would further hope that each of those songs took turns going to the top of the charts. When the truth outed that I was the actual author of those songs, rather than suing them I would send them gift baskets and heartfelt letters thanking them for launching my name, reputation and career into the stratosphere.
    • Avatar of Alexander Baker
      Alexander Baker September 17, 2014, 8:00 pm Reply
      @ David Montgomery – Yours is a crystal clear example of what the Marxists call “new socialist man”. Tatiana should ignore what used to be her property rights, and work “according to her abilities” and be happy and proud to serve her community, without expecting any financial compensation.
      You are perfectly free to have this view. But let’s please call it what it is: Intellectual Communism.
      • Avatar of David Montgomery
        David Montgomery September 18, 2014, 5:07 pm Reply
        Intellectual Communism is an oxymoron.
        I’m not suggesting that falsely claiming authorship would be the right thing for those pop stars to do or that there should be a system that institutionalizes false authorship claims; only that this scenario would be a massive boon to Tatiana’s career, reputation and earnings power. Use some common sense and you’ll see why viewing this unlikely event as a nightmare rather than a boon is absurd.
        • Avatar of Alexander Baker
          Alexander Baker September 18, 2014, 5:54 pm Reply
          Getting 100,000,000 people to listen to your complaint about plagiarism is just as difficult as getting 100,000,000 people to listen to your song.
          Your assertion that Tatiana would automatically become famous because a famous singer plagiarized her song is unsupported. Famous singers become famous in large part because they are very skilled at publicity. So what if Tatiana can “prove” she really wrote Katy Perry’s latest hit? Prove it to whom? The 200 people that visit her website? Who cares?
          You’re attempting a utilitarian economic argument which suggests that Tatiana will be economically better served by surrendering her property rights than by enforcing them. This is straight out of the Communist Manifesto. Modernly, it smacks of “Zeitgeist”.
          Conversely, the “Common Sense” that I rely on is the Austrian School of Economics, and free market economics in general. Abolishing copyright is abolishing property rights in producer goods. The results of abolishing property rights in producer goods are theoretically understood, and empirically well-documented in the real world (e.g. farm produce in the Soviet Union, Bangladesh, factory production in North Korea, etc. )
          Do you see? Getting 100,000,000 people to listen to your complaint about plagiarism is just as difficult as getting 100,000,000 people to listen to your song.

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