Moadib, he is right you are talking utter rubbish. Copyright has absolutely nothing to do with "the good of the public". A quick google would have told you that.
Blackstar, this is not about right or wrong - neither you nor he has grasped the point I am making. I'll try again!
- We are talking about different things here. You are arguing about copyright law - let's be clear, I AGREE with you. That is what the law says. What I am talking about is WHY the law says that. Where did the law come from, and why?
For the law to exist, society must agree that despite a photo being infinitely reproducible, the creator should receive a payment each time - it's not a natural law like gravity, it is merely a social agreement.
Let's say I am looking at a beautiful sea view. You come up, and I try to charge you for looking at it. Society would never agree to that. Why, because *I* am not relevant to the view. If I am not paid, the view will continue to exist.
However, if that view were a photo, and I the photographer, if I were not paid then my compunction to create and to share would be eroded. THEREFORE society agrees that I should be compensated for my work, and copyright exists. The purpose of copyright is for the good of society at large, not for the individual.
It works for the individual, and I agree with you that it protects the creator, but that is not the origin.
- Secondly, the main point I was responding to was about the comparison of "stealing" a photo as being the same as someone stealing a car. As I mentioned, it is not at all the same, since you in no way deny the owner the use of the photo in the same way as you would by stealing the car.
A more appropriate comparison would be if I were somehow able to clone your car and drive of with a copy - clearly that would impact you....not at all. However, if you were the owner of a car factory, and made your money from making cars, well, you wouldn't be too happy about that.
What would happen in that case? Unless the car factory owner had very powerful friends, you would (should) find that he gets no copyright help at all. Why? Because he is no longer necessary for the development of the car, because we can now copy them at will.
Photography is different, since society recognises the benefit of the eye of the photographer, and we all benefit from that. In the case of "stealing" a car by cloning it, there should be no copyright, since the greater benefit to society is by allowing the copying.