Copying Your Competition Is Good for the Economy, Experts Say - East Idaho News
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Copying Your Competition Is Good for the Economy, Experts Say

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Getty 082712 iPhoneGalaxy?  SQUARESPACE CACHEVERSION=1347455499026SeongJoon Cho/Bloomberg via Getty Images(NEW YORK) — When a competitor copies somebody else’s product, is that a good thing or bad thing?

Very, very bad, said a federal grand jury in Apple vs. Samsung.  It found Samsung owed Apple damages in excess of $1 billion for, among other things, making phones and tablets whose features and rounded corners aped too closely those of Apple’s.

The court’s decision, said David Hsu, professor of management at Wharton, will have the effect of strengthening the branch of patent law that protects design (as compared to functionality).

“There seems to be,” he told a Wharton interviewer, “a broadening of the protection of design elements.”

That’s exactly the wrong direction the law should be heading, say the co-authors of a new book.

In The Knockoff Economy: How Imitation Sparks Innovation, Kal Raustiala and Christopher Sprigman argue copying is the wellspring of innovation.  And more innovation, they say, is what the U.S. has to have in order to keep competitive in the world economy.

“Copying has unappreciated upsides, as well as the downside we’re all familiar with,” Raustiala, a professor of law at UCLA, tells ABC News.

People’s view of the lone inventor is wrong, the authors argue.  Edison’s light bulb may have contained a vacuum, but it was not created in one: Edison drew on the work of rival inventors who had created other bulbs.  By tweaking theirs, he arrived at his — and immortal success.

“It’s freedom to copy,” says Raustiala, “that enables incremental innovation.”

He and Sprigman, a research professor at the University of Virginia School of Law, believe that to restrict the freedom to copy any further than it already is restricted under U.S. law, would be an economic error.

“It’s not that we’re against copyright or patent,” says Raustiala. “It’s that we don’t think more is better.”

Raustiala allows as how an individual creator may sometimes suffer harm by having his work knocked off, but that the upside is an industry where innovation thrives.

“It’s a public policy issue,” he says. “We do not need to create more protections. The issue ought to be: How do we get more innovation?”

Copyright 2012 ABC News Radio

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