罗马人、道路和浪漫创造者:信息时代公共财产的传统

Q2 Social Sciences Law and Contemporary Problems Pub Date : 2002-02-01 DOI:10.2139/SSRN.293142
Carol M. Rose
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引用次数: 102

摘要

哪些论点支持智力成就的公共领域?知识产权上的私有财产的论据要比有形事物上的私有财产的论据要单薄得多。因此,如果即使是有形财产也存在“公共性”的理由,那么人们就会认为,这种理由在知识产权方面会更加有力,因为在知识产权方面,私有财产的理由较弱。本文着眼于罗马法中有形财产的公共性范畴,并发现某些类型的有形财产与智力活动之间的相似性。虽然罗马的公共财产法是粗略的,但它是基于几个不同的,非常微妙的原因。有些东西是公共的,因为它们是可占有的,但还没有减少到占有(无主权);有些是因为像空气壁炉一样,它们在物理上无法私有化(res communes);有些人喜欢道路和水路,因为它们具有网络效应(res publicae);有些——也许是最有趣的——因为它们是神圣的(res divini juris)。本文认为,知识产权法有效地将表达或发明等在物理上无法个人拥有的事物(res communes)转化为可占有的财产(res nullius)。但它也认为,这一法律体系的最终目标是,随着时间的推移,知识成果能够为公众所利用(res publicae),因为思想交流容易产生积极的网络效应。文章最后指出,一些标志性的智力努力——特别是“正典”——因为准神圣的原因而公开,就像罗马法的“神圣性”范畴一样。
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Romans, Roads, and Romantic Creators: Traditions of Public Property in the Information Age
What arguments make a case for the public domain in intellectual achievements? The arguments for private property in intellectual matters are rather thinner than the corresponding arguments for private property arguments for tangible things. Hence if there is a case for "publicness" even with tangible property, one would expect that case to be doubly powerful for intellectual achievements, where the private property rationale is weaker. This paper looks to the Roman law categories of publicness for tangible property, and finds analogies between certain types of tangible properties and intellectual endeavors. Though the Roman law of public property was sketchy, it was based on several different and quite subtle sets of reasons. Some things are public because they are appropriable but have not yet been reduced to possession (res nullius); some because like the air mantel they are physically incapable of privatization (res communes); some like roads and waterways because they serve network effects (res publicae); some - perhaps most interestingly - because they are sacred (res divini juris). This paper argues that intellectual property law effectively takes matters like expressions or inventions, which are physically incapable of individual ownership (res communes) and turns them into appropriable property (res nullius). But it also argues that the ultimate goal of this body of law is that intellectual endeavors over time become available to the public (res publicae) because of the positive networking effects from the easy exchange of ideas. The article concludes by noting that some iconic intellectual endeavors - notable the "canon" - become public for quasi-sacral reasons, as in the Roman law category of res divini juris.
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来源期刊
Law and Contemporary Problems
Law and Contemporary Problems Social Sciences-Law
CiteScore
2.00
自引率
0.00%
发文量
1
期刊介绍: Law and Contemporary Problems was founded in 1933 and is the oldest journal published at Duke Law School. It is a quarterly, interdisciplinary, faculty-edited publication of Duke Law School. L&CP recognizes that many fields in the sciences, social sciences, and humanities can enhance the development and understanding of law. It is our purpose to seek out these areas of overlap and to publish balanced symposia that enlighten not just legal readers, but readers from these other disciplines as well. L&CP uses a symposium format, generally publishing one symposium per issue on a topic of contemporary concern. Authors and articles are selected to ensure that each issue collectively creates a unified presentation of the contemporary problem under consideration. L&CP hosts an annual conference at Duke Law School featuring the authors of one of the year’s four symposia.
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