Conversation:
Notices
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I prefer "Intangible property" to "Imaginary property". A story or painting is real enough, independently of the physical book or canvas. !copyright
- Joshua Judson Rosen likes this.
- Joshua Judson Rosen repeated this.
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"Imaginary Property" tries/fails to poke fun at `imagining that ideas are property'—it's trying to paint the propriety itself, not the thing being appropriated, as imaginary.
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I do like that "Intangible Property" drops the pretense that Hollywood movies are in any way intellectual ☺