That's all assuming Roland or whoever actually
cared, of course.
It seems to me that synths were invented before the current conception
of 'intellectual property'. I doubt Robert Moog was thinking - 'hey,
every time someone makes a Bach record on this thing, I can claim a
10% royalty'. Selling the synth itself was the business model.
The problem as I see it is that there are now a whole load of business
models based on non-tangible property, usually delivered in a digital
form. You can sell or licence the sound of a piano, even though you
didn't invent or even build the piano.
It's clear that some things aren't physical property, and yet we are
being told that than can be bought and sold in exactly the same way.
I think it was George Bernard Shaw who put it like this: "We each
have an apple. I give you my apple - you have two, and I have none.
We each have an idea. I give you my idea, you give me yours, and then
we have two ideas each." Intellectual property just doesn't respect
maths...
Laws (and interpretations of very old laws) are being changed to prop
up these intangible businesses, and the fundamentally unsound nature
of the proposition means there are bound to be problems. It's a bit
like selling air in a can - only now there is no can.
Cheers
Daniel