3D Printers vs. Patents
Ok...so lets look 50 years ahead or even further into the future: What happens when everyone has the ability to produce what ever one needs, wants or can just dream up? How will we attain the resources to print these things...how will we earn the value needed to attain property to live on.
I do see a time, far off into our future, if we in fact survive that long, where we can create or print the resources we need to print what we need...but even 100 or 1000 years from now this idea might very well still be science fiction.
So how to we solve the basic problem? Do we trade the process, designs or schematics for the resources we need?
Sure, we can recycle much of what we have to create new things, even food, but at some point, we'll need more materials.
I do see a time, far off into our future, if we in fact survive that long, where we can create or print the resources we need to print what we need...but even 100 or 1000 years from now this idea might very well still be science fiction.
So how to we solve the basic problem? Do we trade the process, designs or schematics for the resources we need?
Sure, we can recycle much of what we have to create new things, even food, but at some point, we'll need more materials.
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Having the capability to create things (let us assume the Star Trek 'replicator' level of capability of printers that Temaklos specifies) does not magically endow 95% of humanity with the imagination or inclination to create their own products. What you 'sell' is your ability to imagine a product that other people would like - like selling a book: The book contains letters and words that are in the common domain, but it has proprietary plots and characters that are copyrighted.
Anyone can stroll up to a replicator and say, "Tea. Earl Grey. Hot." but if you want the unit to reproduce a new gourmet dish, you buy the right to that recipe from the chef who created it. Similarly, you can order your shipsuit for free, but if you like the latest fashion that the actress wore on the Holovid, you buy the design from the studio.
What 3D printers add to physical society is what we are currently experiencing with information technology and news: the dissolution of gatekeepers. It used to be that the news you heard/saw/read was filtered through a few major 'gates' - now we have people posting their videos directly on the Net and there is nothing that social censors can do to stop them.
I am looking forward to an increase in the sophistication of 3D printers that allows me to be free from the fetters of 'what people in Paris tell me I am supposed to want'. I can do a much better job imagining my world than they can. And if other people like my ideas, I will be glad to sell them to those people.
Jan
Most of the economy doesn't have anything to do with manufacturing, its probably 10% at best domestically, its not ever going to be more than 10 or 20% of the economy. Most of the population makes its living in the service sector.
Energy resources are abundant, and entropy as an existential concern will be unimportant for beyond the life of our sun.
They talk about printing Meat...well I am not so confident that they understand or even care about everything that is in a piece of meat including the good bacteria. That's where my idea of using frequencies comes in. Record the frequency of the best, most pure and natural piece of meat cooked to perfection.
Not even sure that is possible but it's interesting to think about.
I really don't see everything moving to individual printing because mass manufacturing is so efficient and there just isn't a huge need for customized everything in our lives. Right now, the printers inexpensive enough for anyone to own are limited to printing knick-knacks out of plastic. They're great for role-playing games and hobbies, but they don't have the strength needed for many applications. And it isn't like these things can design the circuits necessary for many appliances and such either.
I'm not really worried about this in the next 50 years barring a massive breakthrough in the affordability and availability of large-format printers which can accept a wide variety of input materials - including metals. That's still a long ways away.
So what's an inventor to do? Well, I'll tell you what I found objectionable about Star Trek. Those people had no currency. And replicators--from the 3D printer size to the big industrial-sized replicators that produced building materials and such--could literally produce anything on command, even by rearranging matter, energy, and any and all pure substances and mixtures.
I concluded that all inventors worked for the state--be it the United Nations on Earth, its equivalent on another world, or the Federation as a whole. The best inventors worked for Star Fleet and got the best laboratories, the best staff, the best equipment, the best commissaries, the best everything. The inventor working out of his garage? Nothing. No one said a word.
How would you solve the basic problem? Only one way. The inventor would have to sell his idea outright to whatever authority, or whatever company, programmed replicators worldwide. A big, fat lump sum would place that invention into the public domain. Permanently.
And resources? Well, in that looked-for universe, very few things would be non-replicable. The form of platinum, or "latinum," that remained liquid at room temperature would be one. This formed the basis of the Ferengi economy. Which in fact was a travesty of capitalism.
But I have an idea that the end of the franchise left the Federation in bad shape. Just bad enough for a revolution to take place. After fighting the longest, costliest, and bloodiest war in its history, surely the Federation would stagger under a mountain of debt--hidden debt, given the lack of currency, but debt is still debt. Whereas frontier societies would be free and clear--and might even want to get away from replicators, for health reasons. Sooner or later the Federation would impose Townshend-like Acts on its colonies in some of the new frontier areas. And that would eventually provoke repeats of the Boston Tea Party and the Battle of Lexington and Concord. And if the Federation still disrespected its inventors as I saw it doing (by watching literally every Star Trek episode of every show that aired), those inventors might join the rebel side. Then watch out!
When resources are considered scarce, it's a matter of inadequate transformative technology. In spite of all the worry about overpopulation, the planet still has resources more than adequate for billions more humans at a high standard of living, so long as we can continue to improve our ability to manage those resources.
It certainly makes sense to acquire more resources for expansion off planet, and there is no lack of resources to serve that purpose. Asteroids present trillions of tons of new material, and any inhabitable planetary surface (Moon, Mars, so far) has its own vast resource bounty.
If we are not careful...we might be "transhumanized" out of existence, machined into oblivion. Many a sciencefaction has been written about this danger.
Is that clearer?
That would certainly take the wind right out of my sails...