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IP Queries from “Jim Cox”: On the IP Controversy

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In July 2010 I received the attached Word file via a service I used to use, YouSendIt. I just came across it in a search on my computer. I was unable to find the author, though I suspected it was Jim Cox (maybe this guy?), author of The Concise Guide To Economics. I never responded since I didn’t know who to respond to. As I told friends:

I just got a YouSendit file with a word document with this in it. Bizarre. No cover note, no email. It’s 34k so why send it by yxousend it? some people are so effing stupid. why does he think he can demand I answer his 11 qustions? fuck. And see his dumb demand in question #1; so tedious; everyone demands this, they want a guarantee. Your failed business model is not my problem.

[continue reading…]

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Against Intellectual Property Analysis Engine

See the site below based on Against Intellectual Property: Against Intellectual Property: A Stephan Kinsella Analysis: “Exploring how patent monopolies distort markets, stifle innovation, and violate genuine property rights through interactive economic modeling.”

Not sure how to describe it or what it is.

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Mansfield: Patents and Innovation: An Empirical Study

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I have often pointed out that are are no good arguments for IP. They are all absurd.1 This includes principled/deontological/natural rights/”creationist” arguments for IP2 and empirical/consequentalist/utilitarian arguments. [continue reading…]

  1. There are No Good Arguments for Intellectual Property”; “Absurd Arguments for IP”; USPTO/Commerce Dept. Distortions: “IP Contributes $5 Trillion and 40 Million Jobs to Economy”. []
  2. KOL037 | Locke’s Big Mistake: How the Labor Theory of Property Ruined Political TheorySuccinct Criticism of Utilitarianism and Libertarian CreationismLibertarian CreationismLibertarian and Lockean Creationism: Creation As a Source of Wealth, not Property Rights; Hayek’s “Fund of Experience”; the Distinction Between Scarce Means and Knowledge as Guides to Action. []
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Sabhlok: The case for two-year patents and copyright

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From Sanjeev Sabhlok:

[continue reading…]

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IP Answer Man: Intangible Disputes and Coordination

[Aug. 9, 2025]

Dear Mr. Kinsella,

I have been touching up on some of the anti-IP arguments that have been raised by libertarian theorists and you alike.

Specifically, I think the argument goes like this. [continue reading…]

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“IP as a Force for Good”: The Banality of Evil

Adapted from a Twitter post:

[continue reading…]

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Anti-IP Bible (Notebook LM)

@witheredsummer has fed a bunch of my and others’ anti-IP writing into Google’s Notebook LM to create an AI to answer IP questions: the Anti-IP Bible. Here’s one example:

 

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Objectivism and the Patent Bargain

The IP clause in the US Constitution authorizes Congress to enact patent law by authorizing it “to promote the Progress of . . . useful Arts, by securing for limited Times to . . . Inventors the exclusive Right to their . . . Discoveries.” The Patent Act does this by the so-called “patent bargain“:

The disclosure requirement lies at the heart and origin of patent law. An inventor, or the inventor’s assignee, is granted a monopoly for a given period of time in exchange for the inventor disclosing to the public how to make or practice their invention. If a patent fails to contain such information, then the bargain is violated, and the patent is unenforceable or can be revoked.

In other words, to get the state to issue you a roughly 17-year monopoly privilege, or patent, you have to publicly disclose your invention in the patent disclosure document instead of keeping it secret in the form of a trade secret. This way, once your patent expires, the invention is in the public domain and others who were prevented from competing with you and using this information during the term of the patent are now free to use it.1

Now it is true that Rand found a way to justify patents being limited in time in her essay “Patents and Copyrights.” (Ironically, or perhaps not, the version of this essay previously online has been removed, with this BS excuse: “Per our agreement with publishers, to make room for other Ayn Rand non-fiction content, this essay has been temporarily removed, but will return in due course.” Shades of Galambos!)2 However, she did view patent rights as property rights to which the inventor is entitled. As she wrote, “The government does not “grant” a patent or copyright, in the sense of a gift, privilege, or favor; the government merely secures it—i.e., the government certifies the origination of an idea and protects its owner’s exclusive right of use and disposal.” So it occurs to me that a principled Randian who also knows something about how patent law works—most of them do not and do not even know the difference between the different types of IP that they mindlessly support3 —would take umbrage at the patent disclosure requirement (and would thus be happy at how it has been watered down to remove penalties for failing to disclose the best mode).4

In other words, if an inventor is entitled to a 17-year patent on his invention, why should he be forced to publicly disclose the details of the invention? Why can’t he just submit it to the PTO, have it examined, but have the disclosure kept secret, as it is now possible to do if the applicant certifies it will not be filed in a foreign country that requires publication? (See Grok summary.) It is true that the inventor can request non-publication but this is only if he gives up the right to file in other countries. Why should he be forced to give up this right? Ideally, shouldn’t every country grant patents to inventors without requiring them to publish it?

In fact, ideally, we would have a one-world government, right?5— and thus only one patent system, thus saving inventors the headache and cost of filing in dozens of other countries, which can cost hundreds of thousands of dollars per patent. (See Grok estimate.) Another benefit of one-world government: cheaper IP acquisition and enforcement costs! You only have to file one copyright or patent infringement lawsuit against your competitors! Yaayy!

But seriously, why don’t Randians whine about the patent disclosure requirement as the price they have to pay to get the patent that they deserve? Why don’t they oppose the patent bargain? I think none of them really even understand IP law, and their ideas on IP are so jumbled and confused they don’t even realize why they should oppose it.

  1. For more on the disclosure requirement and the patent bargain, see Mark Lemley: The Very Basis Of Our Patent System… Is A Myth; America Invents Act provides patent marking relief (this is not good); Defensive Patent Publishing; Mike Masnick, Why Do Patents Tend To Cause More Harm Than Good?; Masnick, Can We Get Rid Of The Disclosure Myth For Patents? []
  2.  “Around this time I met the Galambosian.” []
  3. See comments about Orbaugh in KOL458 | Patent and Copyright versus Innovation, Competition, and Property Rights (APEE Guatemala 2025). []
  4. As noted in America Invents Act provides patent marking relief (this is not good), the disclosure requirement has already been watered down by virtually eliminating the best mode defense: if the patentee fails to disclose the best mode, the patent cannot be invalidated or the failure used as a defense by a victim of a patent extortion lawsuit. []
  5. Rand, Objectivism, and One-World Government; Objectivism, Bidinotto, and Anarchy []
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I’ve discussed before the error of libertarian or Lockean “creationism” that underlies one of the main arguments for intellectual property. See: [continue reading…]

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Below is an except from Stop Regulating Games, A Withered Remnant, by @witheredsummer:

The Real Problem: Intellectual Property

Multiple times I hinted at this before, but finally, we got here. Intellectual property is, simply put, the root of all these problems. I am not here to explain the philosophical problems of intellectual property, for that you should read Stephan Kinsella’s Against Intellectual Property, and, if you’d like to learn more about the real-world impact of intellectual property, you could read my essay, Ideas Are Free: A Case Against Intellectual Property. [continue reading…]

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From X:

Dear Mr Kinsella,

Thank you for your work in libertarianism. I have several questions for you, and I hope you have the time to check them out.

1. In your opinion, in an ideal libertarian world without state-enforced IP, how would we deal with piracy of content (movies, sports livestreams, music, etc.). Would it be purely resolved contractually? If a lot of information and entertainment is spread through code and radio waves, does that mean it cannot be ‘property’ because two people can use a radio wave or line of code without infringing on each other? What am I missing here?

[continue reading…]

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I’ve pointed out before how too many allegedly free market groups are pro-patent (and pro-IP in general).1 And many were pro-vaccine and pro-lockdowns,2 and of course many are not only pro-pharmaceuticals but outright shills for Big Pharma. Their support for patents is one reason many supposed free market advocates even oppose free trade in drugs and drug reimportation:3 it would undercut the monopoly prices Big Pharma is able to charge US consumers of drugs—the price is inflated not only because of unnecessary, artificial FDA costs, and because of US pharmaceutical patents, but also because FDA regulation and import controls restrict the importation of cheaper but identical drugs sold abroad for lower prices (due to local price controls or price discrimination).4 The Federalist Society,5 Cato, Independent Institute, and others, are all disappointing on IP. Independent Institute senior fellow William Shughart, for example,6 has embarrassingly argued: [continue reading…]

  1. Intellectual Property and Think Tank Corruption. []
  2. Tucker, Why Elite Libertarians Failed so Miserably on COVIDWhat Kind of Libertarian Are You? (collecting various Cato pro-vaccine/covid lockdown views). Even my old friend Walter Block went awol on this issue, as did many others. See A Tour Through Walter Block’s Oeuvre. []
  3. Cato Tugs Stray Back Onto Reservation (archive); Cato on Drug Reimportation; Cato Tugs Stray Back Onto the Reservation; and Other Posts; Jude Blanchette’s The Reimportation ControversyProtectionist Cato?Drug Patents and Welfare; see also Epstein and Patents and Richard Epstein on “The Structural Unity of Real and Intellectual Property”; The Structural Unity of Real and Intellectual Property; Tabarrok and Murphy: Why Are US Drug Prices So High?KOL469 | Haman Nature Hn 149: Tabarrok on Patents, Price Controls, and Drug Reimportation. []
  4. Copyright has also impeded the ability to use imports to engage in international arbitrage in the case of text books, at least until Kirtsaeng v. John Wiley & Sons, Inc. (2013) clarified matters. []
  5. More defenses of IP by the Federalist Society; James Stern: Is Intellectual Property Actually Property? [Federalist Society No. 86 LECTURE]; Anti-IP Material Needed in the IP Section of the Federalist Society’s “Conservative & Libertarian Legal Scholarship: Annotated Bibliography”; Federalist Society Asks: What’s the Right Amount of Censorship?; Federalist Society Panel: Undermining or Preserving Property Rights? The New Administrative Patents. Though they have featured me on occasion, to their credit. Federalist Society IP Debate (Ohio State)KOL253 | Berkeley Law Federalist Society: A Libertarian’s Case Against Intellectual Property; KOL235 | Intellectual Property: A First Principles Debate (Federalist Society POLICYbrief). []
  6. In “Ideas Need Protection: Abolishing Intellectual-property Patents Would Hurt Innovation: A Middle Ground Is Needed” (archive). []
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Murphy, “(Minor) Criticisms of Kinsella” (2005)

From the Mises Blog years ago: Robert P. Murphy, “(Minor) Criticisms of Kinsella,” 5/05/2005: and my reply in the comments section. Archived comments below.

For an Austrian II class we read Kinsella’s famous “Against Intellectual Property.” I generally found it to be every bit worth the hype, but naturally I can’t help but offer a few criticisms. I do so here on this blog because I don’t know of a more appropriate forum: [continue reading…]

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