mkmfpwfan Wrote:Sigo,I think of it like this. I bought my house off of a developer. When I signed the contract and forwarded the money to said developer,his intrest in the property was rendered finished. At this point I could sell the house to whomever I want. The people who bought from me can sell it whenever they want as well. The developer and I have no rights to the property at this point.I imagine it works simuliar with books----mark
The concept is very close except, in the case of the house, the architect that originally designed the plans for the house (and still holds the copyright on the plans) is the one who you should focus on, not the developer.
As you (and FPW) say, the house (book) is owned by you when you bought it. The house (book) can be sold and bought many times but the architect (FPW) only gets paid the first time...but he WAS paid, that first time.
The analogy of the house (book) to the e-copy is that, when you're selling your house, you no longer have the house...you didn't make a copy of the house (book) and sell that (or give it away).
Theoretically, you could make an exact copy of the house (a backup, if you will) and still not owe the architect any money...you already bought the plans once.
So, you now have two copies of the same house. No problem.
HOWEVER, IF YOU SELL or give one copy of the house (book) to someone else...someone who never paid the architect for the plans, then you have breached the right of that architect (FPW) to be paid by every person who owns a house (book) built with his plans.
Back to FPW's books. A book is bought. It can be sold again or given away WITH NO COPYRIGHT INFRINGEMENT, at all. If this was not the case then second-hand bookstores and libraries would all be illegal.
A person can even backup their own copy.
However, the minute someone either sells a copy (or gives one away) then the receiver NOW has the item without paying FPW one cent for the item.
That's copyright infringement.
Or, as Ken says, theft of intellectual property.
-Wapitikev