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>we're clearly splitting microscopic hairs if you're going so far to call a logo a market to have "monopoly" over

Your claim that we're splitting hairs, microscopic or otherwise, is not strengthened by adding the word "clearly." If you don't like calling a trademarked logo a monopoly then I suggest you take it up with Wikipedia. Go ahead and edit at least these pages to correct their errors which tend to confuse trademarks with government-granted monopolies, something that is "clearly" a mistake according to you.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Monopoly

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Government-granted_monopoly

>Even if governments didn't exist, people find all kinds of ways to differentiate "value" from brands. The entire hobbyist collectors market works this way.

Works what way? I have no idea what you're talking about.

>Governments just make it easier for people who can hire lawyers to assert this

Without governments there wouldn't even be lawyers.

>Much easier to send out a C&D (which stops most infractions)

Who's going to listen to a "C&D" if the government is unwilling to enforce it?

Again, there would not be big corporations without patents, copyrights, trademarks, and other forms of government-granted monopolies. If you think there somehow would be, I'd love to hear it.




"there would not be big corporations without patents, copyrights, trademarks, and other forms of government-granted monopolies. If you think there somehow would be, I'd love to hear it."

You have just spent a day refusing to hear it.

It is patently ridiculous to think that money will fail to money just because of any single aspect of the environment.


>"You have just spent a day refusing to hear it.*

No, I have spent a day trying to persuade you to explain it. Now, I'm prepared to accept that you can't.




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