I am dubious as to the usefulness of copyright laws in a currencyless economy...
Quick! If you hurry you might still catch the joke you missed!
I am dubious as to the usefulness of copyright laws in a currencyless economy...
I was doing it a favor.Quick! If you hurry you might still catch the joke you missed!
That would still be a copyright violation. It's kind of in the name of the law.Large corporations have lobbied Starfleet and the Federation for so long about intellectual property that future computers can no longer make copies without deleting the originals.
I am dubious as to the usefulness of copyright laws in a currencyless economy...
"Author, Author" shows us that copyright law (or intellectual property at least) is still in existence across the 24th Century Federation. And now extends to holograms. Great.
Sherlock Holmes, in general, is already in the public domain in the US. The last Conan Doyle story (Shoscombe Old Place) will be in the public domain in 2022. You can read more on the Conan Doyle/Sherlock Holmes copyright fiasco here - although that's all written by one of the parties involved, the Arthur Conan Doyle Literary Estate.
Neither of the disputed inheritors of the Sherlock Holmes copyright are in any way related or descended from Conan Doyle. They all purchased the rights to the Holmes copyright decades ago, because that's apparently a thing that exists.
It may have been a storage issue, in-universe, as they seem to have to always be forced to "transfer" his program rather than copy it to a new location.
It certainly shouldn't be an issue of CPU power, since Voyager's main computer could easily run dozens or hundreds of holographic simulations of people on the holodeck itself (I'm thinking of the episode(s) where the Hirogen have converted Voyager into a training base).
I'm sure the actual real-world answer is that the plot required it, and the writers were computer-illiterate. Even still, perhaps there was some sort of unique "metadata" within his program that was the essence of his sentience, that was not able to be duplicated... his programmatical "soul" if you will.
yesDidn't Living Witness establish there was a back-up of the EMH?
Well, I guess we have to consider that when these episodes were written, computers were using floppy disks. And those old floppers held a very limited amount of data, so, the writers were stuck in this mindset.
I noted for awhile that even though he was a likable and funny hologram, the Doctor
shows how lubricious he can be, what for me, isn't a very enviable quality, especially when he goes too far, what he did often in S4 (Scorpion - Part Two : cf Seven's catsuit); Message in a Bottle : when the Doctor boasts to have had sexual relations in front of EMH Mark II), S5 (Blink of an Eye : when he is sent in mission and cannot refrain from making a kid to a met woman -> ok, he is supposed to have spent something like 2 years in 2 sec far from Voyager but come one). and later in S6/7 when he tries to use the relationship mentor/student to get Seven in his arms and/or paints her nude body....
I was surprised to see that nobody, especially Janeway, reacting to make that the know obsession stop.
You seem to have a lot of sexuality hangups. One thing though.. I do not think it's possible for a hologram to "make a kid" with a "met" woman.
I noted for awhile that even though he was a likable and funny hologram, the Doctor
shows how lubricious he can be, what for me, isn't a very enviable quality, especially when he goes too far, what he did often in S4 (Scorpion - Part Two : cf Seven's catsuit); Message in a Bottle : when the Doctor boasts to have had sexual relations in front of EMH Mark II), S5 (Blink of an Eye : when he is sent in mission and cannot refrain from making a kid to a met woman -> ok, he is supposed to have spent something like 2 years in 2 sec far from Voyager but come one). and later in S6/7 when he tries to use the relationship mentor/student to get Seven in his arms and/or paints her nude body....
I was surprised to see that nobody, especially Janeway, reacting to make that the know obsession stop.
-> in fact, I feel that although the Capitain Janeway refused to recognize him as an "indiividual" hologram (=sentient) in first seasons, she let him acquire his individuality (like Seven), in offering him a lot of liberties - maybe too much (not surprising that he always asked for more: requesting to be ECH; resigning from his doctor"s role to become an opera singer -> would he suddenly have forgotten why he was put into service at the beginning?!) - at the point that the Doctor crossed often the red line (playing an author of holo novels and offending his friends in passing or better, holding a detailed narrative of the decision-making taken by Janeway, which he estimated to be errors) without assuming the blame for his actions. Of course he saved lives on board but he also committed errors of judgment which put in danger the vessel and the crew.
Btw, Picardo was excellent in this role but alas, his character wasn't so nice.
.
The only observation to be made on the Doctor is that he made Voyager a Trek series worth watching(along with 7 of 9)
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