Why Accountants are Dull and Guitarists are Glamorous - The End of Intellectual Property
Adrian Bowyer
"Intellectual property is dead." Eric von Hippel, Professor of Management at the MIT Sloan School of Management, in his keynote address to the World Conference on Mass Customization and Personalization, MIT, October 2007.
Go up to a stranger in the street and ask them to give you the keys to
their car, and you will receive an abrupt and unhelpful reply. Go up to a
stranger in the street and ask them to give you their most interesting
idea, and fifteen minutes later you will be glancing at your watch and
inventing fictitious dentist's appointments.
This prompts a profound biological question: if information is such
valuable property, what is the Darwinian selective advantage in the
ubiquitous impulse to give it away?
The answer was worked out a few years ago by the evolutionary
psychologist
Geoffrey Miller. He realised that the human mind did
not just evolve as a problem-solving device, it also evolved by sexual selection
- like the peacock's tail - to waste resources in a way that cannot be
faked. Peahens admire peacocks with fancy tails, because those
peacocks are strong enough to waste the resources needed to grow the
tail and to drag it about. That peacock has good genes for strength,
growth, and endurance, and so is worth mating with.
Parts of the human mind are for wasting glucose in a way that cannot
be faked. Your brain dumps about 20% of your body's energy budget out of your
head every second of your life. You cannot pretend to paint a picture well, or pretend to
write a quatrain of iambic pentameters well -
you cannot pretend to be witty. You need to waste real glucose to
do those things, all of which have no utilitarian value.
"But hang on," you say. "If that were so, then you would expect only
men to be talented, because sexual selection works through the power of female choice selecting the best males. But everyone
except the most unreconstructed chauvinist can see that women are as
clever as men."
True, normally: it is the peacocks that have to drag around the tail and
the stags that have to hold the antlers aloft. But, to choose between them,
peahens and hinds just need good eyesight, whereas the only way
for a woman to judge if a man is clever is for her to be equally
clever herself - the transmitting device and the receiving device are
the same: their minds. That is why the most important four letters in lonely-hearts columns
are GSOH, why musicians, painters, authors, and actors (who all do
nothing actually useful, and so who waste great mental energy) are so
attractive to the opposite sex, why bank managers, engineers and
computer programmers (who don't waste their intellect, but use it for
gainful things) are considered geeky and unattractive, and why we all
want to tell people any inspired idea as soon as it comes into our head. Showing off
cleverness by frittering it away is one of the main things our brains are for.
If Alice gives Bob a material object, Alice no longer has the
object. But if Alice gives Bob an idea, Alice still retains the
idea. Information - unlike matter and energy - is not conserved.
That is why, when teenagers swap music files, they do not
instinctively feel that it is theft. Consequently there is - in reality - no copyright in recorded music
any more; every seventeen-year-old has twenty gigabytes
of illegal MP3s on their hard drive, and film and video will soon go
the same way.
The whole concept of intellectual property is only stable when copying
is difficult and legal penalties mean significant losses for those who
would copy. Make copying easy and undetectable (as computers have for
music) and the very idea of intellectual property starts to fade.
But creativity doesn't fade with it. There is now an outpouring of music
all over the whole world unmatched since that in late eighteenth
century Vienna. This is happening because the same technology that
is eliminating music copyright allows anyone to make music and to try to
find an audience for it. Most musicians don't compose because they have rationally
calculated that it is a good way to get rich, they compose because they are driven by
an inner compulsion. And an
inner compulsion is
exactly what you'd expect from an evolutionarily-selected mating
trait.
So copyright is sublimating away under the twin fires of ease-of-copying and people's desire to give their creations away rather than have them remain obscure. But what of patents? Copying an iPod is not nearly as easy as copying tunes into it.
However, 3D printing will completely replace vast swathes of conventional
manufacturing processes as it becomes less costly. And what will
really drive the cost through the floor is 3D printers that print 3D
printers, like
RepRap. Conventional manufacturing produces goods in an arithmetic
progression. But a self-copying 3D printer produces goods - and
itself - in a geometric progression. And, no matter how slow it is, any
geometric progression overtakes every arithmetic progression, no
matter how fast, eventually.
The self-copying 3D printer will be something cheap enough for individuals to own and be something they can copy for their friends. When everyone can print almost any device or machine the same will happen to the idea of patents as has happened to music copyright.
Engineering is coming home. We have private individuals building
spacecraft in sheds and winning Anousheh Ansari's X-Prize. We have
private individuals developing Farnsworth deuterium fusion reactors in
their basements. We have reached a point in history where our most
advanced technology is dirt cheap.
Self-copying 3D printers will make it an order of magnitude cheaper
again, and will finally kill the idea of
intellectual property. But - just as with computers and music - they will also expand creativity, because
people don't create things just to make money; the real reason they create things is to get
noticed by other people with whom they want to have children...
This article originally appeared in
Time Compression Technology Magazine, volume 15, issue 3, p33 in June 2007.
--
AdrianBowyer - 26 Jun 2007
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