US Supreme Court rules for Google over Oracle
US Supreme Court rules for Google over Oracle
Posted Apr 7, 2021 0:16 UTC (Wed) by bauermann (subscriber, #37575)In reply to: US Supreme Court rules for Google over Oracle by pebolle
Parent article: US Supreme Court rules for Google over Oracle
Some people would put property in that category, though that is controversial. In any case, the fact that one concept is thousands of years old and another is a few centuries years old is IMHO relevant.
In any case, I just brought this up because conflating property with copyright is a strategy that has been used to argue for stronger copyright protections without bringing up the necessary discussion about the benefit such change should bring to society. Therefore it's important to be aware that it's an analogy with important flaws.
Posted Apr 7, 2021 14:49 UTC (Wed)
by nim-nim (subscriber, #34454)
[Link] (5 responses)
Some states have been more honest about this all by claiming everything belonged to them and was just temporarily granted to inhabitants (most recently, the Soviets, but that is still the case for some kinds of “property” in some parts of the world, with foreign investors treating such grants as “property” because they effectively behave exactly the same way).
“Natural rights property” is another fiction invented by people that want to convince states they do not owe any taxes. It only works on very corrupt administrations.
Posted Apr 7, 2021 15:35 UTC (Wed)
by Wol (subscriber, #4433)
[Link] (3 responses)
The Doomsday book, for example (1086).
(Spelt that way because, for the Saxon landowners it recorded, it WAS doomsday.)
Cheers,
Posted Apr 7, 2021 16:27 UTC (Wed)
by micka (subscriber, #38720)
[Link]
Posted Apr 28, 2021 16:13 UTC (Wed)
by nix (subscriber, #2304)
[Link] (1 responses)
Well, it was spelt "Domesday", but that meant the same thing. Wikipedia says (and my undergrad-level profs also told me) that this is from OE and Norse "doom" meaning "law, judgement". The implication is that this was a book of unalterable law: this suggests that the book was considered ancient uncontradictable canon of sorts, and unsurprisingly this term is first found centuries after the book itself was composed, in the 13th century. The books' compilers didn't call them that at all! The survey the books record was semi-informally known simply as the Great Survey (the first of a number of Great Surveys in English history), and the record as any of a number of things, most commonly simply as (in Latin) the "enrolling". i.e. it was named practically, for what it was, an enrolling of properties and households, not metaphorically.
The meaning "doom" as in "disaster" is many centuries newer. The OED says that while "doomsday" in the meaning of "the day of judgement" is ancient, the related expansion of the term "doom" is much newer: 16th--17th century, and so, probably, is the implication that doomsday is in any way disastrous. (I have seen older uses of "doom" to mean "disaster" than the OED cites, which I should probably pass on if I can track them down again, but there's only about 50 years in it, certainly not centuries.)
Posted Apr 28, 2021 22:29 UTC (Wed)
by Wol (subscriber, #4433)
[Link]
Cheers,
Posted Apr 28, 2021 15:57 UTC (Wed)
by nix (subscriber, #2304)
[Link]
The opposite ("allodial title") is *extremely* rare these days and generally grandfathered in where possible at all with no way to place anything new under that title, most likely because almost all modern states want the right not only to tax property but also to go and do things on what you consider your property in some rare circumstances (putting out fires, arresting criminals etc).
US Supreme Court rules for Google over Oracle
US Supreme Court rules for Google over Oracle
Wol
US Supreme Court rules for Google over Oracle
US Supreme Court rules for Google over Oracle
US Supreme Court rules for Google over Oracle
Wol
US Supreme Court rules for Google over Oracle