n_huffhines
What's it gonna cost?
- Joined
- Mar 11, 2009
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The notion that no IP protection will result in the best ideas winning and small triumphing over large ignores the role of capital and risk.
What?
So lack of IP does indeed stifle some because without some incentive for the early risk capital the ideas never become products.
Leaving something alone is not stifling it, it's letting it be.
Is the trade off worth it? That's the source of debate but you can't ignore the trade-off and assume the magic of the market will simply foster all this innovation.
Good question, but since it's intervention into the market place, and it costs tax-payers to regulate and enforce, it's on you to prove that IP protection creates better outcomes.
As an example, the reality is that most "inventions" aren't really patentable. They do not meet the criteria of non-obviousness (the murkiest and highest bar). Under an IP doesn't matter framework investors should still be rushing to these since they could still be first to market but investors don't rush to them primarily because the front-end capital simply doesn't merit the risk if the idea has no protection. Empirical research highly questions the "first mover" advantage of being first to market.
What empirical evidence?