Kinsella On Liberty
Stephan Kinsella
Austro-Anarchist Libertarian Legal Theory
Episodes
Mentioned books
Feb 3, 2021 • 0sec
KOL316 | Discussion with Peter Schiff about Patent, Copyright, and Bitcoin
Kinsella on Liberty Podcast, Episode 316.
At the prodding of Peter Schiff's son, who, unlike his dad, is anarchist, pro-bitcoin, and opposed to intellectual property, I had a discussion with Peter about IP. Didn't fully succeed in converting him to the anti-IP cause, but made a bit of headway. We also talked a bit about bitcoin, and the Saipan and Puerto Rico tax breaks available to Americans. It begins a bit abruptly, since we were chatting initially before I had started on the IP topic and we began talking about bitcoin, and it didn't seem like it was going to quickly end, so I hit record and we talked about bitcoin before getting around to IP and a few other topics like defamation, Saipan, etc.
Additional resources:
Kinsella, Intellectual Property and Libertarianism“
———, “Legal Scholars: Thumbs Down on Patent and Copyright” (Oct. 23, 2012)
———, “The Overwhelming Empirical Case Against Patent and Copyright” (Oct. 23, 2012)
Boldrin & Levine, Against Intellectual Monopoly
Boldrin and Levine: The Case Against Patents
The Effects of Patent and Copyright on Hollywood Movies
Feb 1, 2021 • 1h 16min
KOL315 | The Rollo and Slappy Show: The Gamestop Short Squeeze
Kinsella on Liberty Podcast, Episode 315.
This is my appearance on the Rollo & Slappy Show Episode 236 – The Libertarian Analysis of the GameStop Short Squeeze and Fallout with Silent Cal, JW Weatherman, and Stephan Kinsella.
"There have been plenty of hot takes on what went down with the GameStop short squeeze by Wall Street Bets traders from Reddit and the fallout following the actions of Robinhood. It can get pretty technical, so we brought three guests, Silent Cal, JW Weatherman, and Stephan Kinsella, on to the show to unpack what happened and how we might analyze it from a libertarian perspective."
We talked about bitcoin after recording stopped, JW and I trying to sell Silent Cal on it.
Items mentioned
Silent Cal’s Twitter thread
Episode 177 – Stocks, Dumb Money, and Bitcoin
Yeticold.com
Follow the guests
Silent Cal
JW Weatherman
Stephan Kinsella
Jan 27, 2021 • 1h 14min
KOL314 | Patents vs. Bitcoin: The Bitcoin Standard Podcast (Saifedean Ammous)
Kinsella on Liberty Podcast, Episode 314.
This is Episode 28 of The Bitcoin Standard Podcast, in which Jed Grant and I guest-lectured on the topic of intellectual property and bitcoin, for the course “Principles of Economics II, conducted by Dr. Saifedean Ammous, author of The Bitcoin Standard, for The Bitcoin Standard Academy (Jan. 21, 2021). Jed is Founder of the Open Crypto Alliance, for which I serve on the Advisory Board.
The video is here and Youtube below.
[fvplayer id="2"]
Jan 18, 2021 • 36min
KOL313 | Voluntaryist Haven – Q&A
Kinsella on Liberty Podcast, Episode 313.
This is my appearance on Voluntaryist Haven, fielding various questions from Zane Mooneyhan and others, about argumentation ethics and other matters.
Jan 15, 2021 • 5min
KOL312 | Libertarianism in Brief: Response to Anarchy Rising
Kinsella on Liberty Podcast, Episode 312.
Back in 2013, Michael Shanklin posted a Youtube video, Anarchy Rising: Part 2, and asked other libertarian anarchists to send in a short video response on why they are a voluntaryist or libertarian. I believe he was going to use the submitted videos in some kind of montage. He never did the montage AFAIK and he made his video private for some reason—a habit annoyingly common among libertarians: they publish some articles or other content for years, and then later they take it down or demand that the publisher take it down, when they are applying for a job or something (sometimes later, they change their mind and pester the poor publisher again and ask him to "put them back up"). Yeah. You're so important. Whatever.
Anyway, I did a video response while taking a walk one morning. It's only 5 minutes but provides a brief summary of how I view libertarianism. I had forgotten about it but just received a recent comment by one Steven Barendregt: "7 years later and I think this video is still the best BRIEF explanation of libertarianism that I've ever seen. Truly underrated video." So I decided to add it to my podcast feed here in case anyone else finds it of interest. Enjoy.
Previous podcast episodes with Shanklin (whom I believe has since defriended me, because I was not a radical enough lifestyle libertarian or activist or some stupid libertard serioso shit like that):
KOL 043 | Triple-V: Voluntary Virtues Vodcast, with Michael Shanklin: Bitcoin, Legal Reform, Morality of Voting, Rothbard on Copyright
KOL 025 | Triple-V: Voluntary Virtues Vodcast, with Michael Shanklin: Intellectual Property, Ron Paul vs RonPaul.Com, Aaron Swartz, Corporatism.
Other video replies to Anarchy Rising: Part 2:
Jan 12, 2021 • 1h 26min
KOL311 | Nate the Voluntaryist Livestream #194: IP, the CDA, DMCA, Argumentation Ethics, and More
Kinsella on Liberty Podcast, Episode 311.
This is my appearance on the Nate the Voluntaryist Livestream #194, from Jan. 5, 2021 (Nate's Bitchute channel). We discussed intellectual property, section 230 of the CDA and the DMCA, argumentation ethics, and Q&A from the audience.
Youtube:
https://youtu.be/nKZOQk-iqpI
Nate's streaming audio:
Jan 7, 2021 • 0sec
KOL310 | Nate the Voluntaryist Livestream #154: Argumentation Ethics, Property Rights, And More!
Kinsella on Liberty Podcast, Episode 310.
This is my appearance on the Nate the Voluntaryist Livestream #154, from Aug. 27, 2020 (his Bitchute channel). I forgot to mirror it on my stream last year, so remedying that now. Apparently, according to the show notes, we discussed "argumentation ethics, property rights, Hoppeanism, and more!"
https://www.bitchute.com/video/Fp4kpsBFo7ek/
Jan 6, 2021 • 0sec
KOL309 | Nate the Voluntaryist Livestream #81
Kinsella on Liberty Podcast, Episode 309.
This is my appearance on the Nate the Voluntaryist Livestream #81, from Jan. 7, 2020 (his Bitchute channel). I forgot to mirror it on my stream last year, so remedying that now, though I don't recall what we discussed. Surprise episode!
https://www.bitchute.com/video/Fp4kpsBFo7ek/
Dec 29, 2020 • 0sec
KOL308 | Stossel: It’s My Idea (2015)
Kinsella on Liberty Podcast, Episode 308.
This is my appearance on John Stossel’s Fox Business News show, Stossel, back on Jan. 30, 2015. I just realized I had never put it here in my podcast feed, so here it is. The full episode is streamed below (I recommend also my friend David Koepsell's segment); my audio clip is included in this podcast episode. Discussed further in KOL171 | With Albert Lu Discussing Stossel and IP.
Grok shownotes and transcript below.
From: Stossel Show on Intellectual Property
***
A few weeks ago I was invited to appear on an upcoming episode of John Stossel's Fox Business News show, Stossel. I flew to New York last Wednesday for a Thursday taping; the show will air this Friday, Jan. 30. I had a great time. Had dinner with several local libertarian friends (David Kramer, Isaac Bergmann, Evan Isaac, etc.) and my long-time friend Jack Criss, who joined me on the trip. Spent a while seeing New York, with my friend Dante Bayona as a helpful guide. New York was cold, but we still enjoyed it. (Pix from the trip below.)
The taping on Thursday went well—I was nervous but think I did okay. There were five guests altogether. The first segment was a debate between anti-IP anarchist David Koepsell and a conventional IP attorney; then a magician who was upset about people "stealing" his magic tricks; then me; then Chris Sprigman, about whom I've written before. I was a little leery that this was kind of a setup or something, but Stossel and the Fox News staff could not have been nicer or more professional. My impression is Stossel is leaning our way, as indicated in his Reason post, which quote me and Koepsell and criticizes IP (Owning Ideas—An Outdated Idea?; see also his column Owning Ideas). As far as I know this is the first time IP has been examined in such a major, national forum, and from a principled, and radical, free market perspective. Kudos to Stossel.
More on Stossel's show here. The episode airs 9pm EST this Friday night, Jan. 30, on Fox Business, and apparently re-airs on Fox News Channel Sunday night.
***
Grok summary:
Show Notes: KOL308 | Stossel: It’s My Idea! (2015) with Stephan Kinsella and Guests
Introduction to Intellectual Property and Piracy Concerns [0:01–1:00]
John Stossel opens the episode by addressing the issue of piracy, noting that The Wolf of Wall Street was the most illegally downloaded movie in 2014, highlighting Hollywood’s and musicians’ struggles with unauthorized copying. He explains that U.S. law grants creators exclusive rights to songs, books, movies, and paintings to foster innovation through a limited period of exclusivity. Stossel illustrates this with a clip from a gangster movie where Denzel Washington’s character defends his drug brand “Blue Magic” as a trademark, emphasizing the value of brand identity. He introduces the debate by questioning whether watching his show on YouTube constitutes stealing, setting the stage for a discussion on intellectual property (IP) with guests including David Koepsell, Lawrence Suskind, Rick Lax, Stephan Kinsella, Chris Sprigman, and Doug Stanhope.
The Role of IP in Encouraging Innovation [1:00–3:13]
Stossel frames the historical significance of ideas, crediting innovations like the printing press and electricity for improving billions of lives. He poses the problem: why invest years in creating if others can copy the idea and undercut prices? Using a light bulb invention example from filmmaker Kirby Ferguson, he argues that without recouping development costs, creators may be discouraged. Stossel explains that copyrights and patents were introduced to address this by granting temporary exclusivity—copyrights for media, patents for inventions. He notes the extension of copyright terms over time, from 28 years in 1831 to the author’s life plus 70 years by 1998, which David Koepsell criticizes as excessive, advocating for the abolition of all IP rights, while Lawrence Suskind, an IP attorney, defends their necessity.
Debating Copyrights and Moral Rights [3:13–11:22]
The first segment features a debate between David Koepsell, who opposes IP, and Lawrence Suskind, who supports it. Koepsell argues that creators like Shakespeare thrived without copyright, profiting through reputation and performances, as ideas are non-scarce and IP laws stifle free expression. Suskind counters that creators have a moral right to protect their work, akin to a farmer’s right to land, and cites Shakespeare’s harsh measures against play pirates. Koepsell highlights software developers opting out of IP, relying on brand strength, while Suskind defends pharmaceutical patents due to high R&D costs. The discussion touches on music copyright issues, referencing George Harrison’s $1.5 million lawsuit for “subconsciously” copying “He’s So Fine” in “My Sweet Lord.” Stossel critiques Disney’s lobbying to extend copyrights for works like Snow White, which Koepsell calls cronyism, noting that public domain stories are exploited while new works are locked up until 2032.
Magicians and Protecting Trade Secrets [11:22–18:14]
Stossel introduces magician Rick Lax, who discusses how magicians protect their tricks without relying on IP laws. Lax shares how a Russian individual profited by selling the secret to his “Vertigo” trick, prompting him to create a fake exposure video to mislead copycats. He explains that patenting a trick reveals its mechanism, so magicians avoid it, relying instead on community norms. Lax recounts the case of Valentino, a Vegas magician ostracized for revealing secrets on TV, and contrasts this with Teller’s rare success in copyrighting a trick’s choreography, winning $155,000 against a Belgian copycat. Lax compares magicians’ secrecy to trade secrets like Coca-Cola’s formula, which remain protected without registration, though stealing such secrets is a federal crime, as seen in a case involving Pepsi and the FBI.
Internet Piracy and Libertarian Perspectives on IP [18:14–24:07]
Stephan Kinsella, author of Against Intellectual Property, joins Stossel to argue that IP laws censor free speech and hinder learning, copying, and remixing—key to human progress. He rejects the term “piracy,” asserting that copying ideas doesn’t deprive creators, as seen in widespread internet sharing. Kinsella, a libertarian, argues that patents and copyrights, unlike perpetual property rights, expire (patents after 17 years, copyrights much later), proving they are state-granted monopolies, not true property rights, as detailed in The Problem with Intellectual Property. Stossel admits he’s pleased when his show is shared online but worries about Fox’s funding without IP protection. Kinsella counters that popularity from copying boosts creators’ fame, and alternative revenue streams like ticket sales or YouTube channels suffice, citing the defeat of SOPA legislation as a win against internet surveillance.
The Fashion Industry and the Benefits of Knockoffs [24:07–32:20]
Chris Sprigman, co-author of The Knockoff Economy, discusses how the fashion industry thrives without copyright protection. Stossel showcases undercover footage of counterfeit Louis Vuitton bags sold in Chinatown for $200, far below the $1,000–$25,000 originals. Sprigman argues that knockoffs democratize fashion, allowing stylish looks for less without harming luxury brands, whose wealthy customers seek status and exclusive experiences. He explains that copying signals trends, fueling a fashion cycle that benefits the industry, as noted in his C4SIF posts. Sprigman dismisses claims that counterfeiting funds crime or costs jobs, calling International Chamber of Commerce figures baseless, though he acknowledges risks in pharmaceuticals and airplane parts. He cites Charles Dickens’ success in America, where lack of copyright for foreign authors led to cheap books, boosting literacy and Dickens’ lecture tour earnings, as discussed in Freakonomics: Does Copyright Make Books Disappear?.
Comedians and Self-Regulation Against Joke Stealing [32:20–36:53]
Doug Stanhope, a libertarian comedian, explains how comedians self-regulate against joke stealing without government intervention. He notes that open mic performers caught stealing are publicly shamed and ostracized. Stanhope recounts how Robin Williams and Milton Berle were labeled joke stealers, with Williams facing physical confrontations and payments. He discusses Louis C.K.’s gracious handling of Dane Cook’s alleged theft, contrasted with Joe Rogan’s public call-out of Carlos Mencia, which ruined Mencia’s career. Stanhope emphasizes that comedy’s community norms effectively deter theft, aligning with Kinsella’s view in Defamation as a Type of Intellectual Property that reputation-based systems, not state laws, can govern creative industries.
Copyright, Parody, and Final Thoughts [36:53–41:06]
Stossel highlights the absurdity of IP laws, noting that singing “Happy Birthday” on air could cost Fox millions due to Warner Music’s ownership, despite minor alterations failing to bypass copyright. He explains that parody is a legal exception, allowing mockery of works, as seen in clips mimicking his show. Stossel notes international IP violations, like China’s “Sunbucks” coffee or “Crust” toothpaste, reflecting weak enforcement abroad. He references Thomas Jefferson’s view that ideas, like candlelight, can be shared without loss, though Jefferson supported limited IP terms. Stossel concludes ambivalently, acknowledging libertarian arguments against IP from Kinsella and others but defending some IP laws, as they incentivize his books and Fox’s show. He suggests creativity flourishes when ideas are free, echoing Matt Ridley’s metaphor of ideas “having sex” to birth better ones, but remains concerned about funding creative production without IP.
Transcript:
Introduction to Intellectual Property and Piracy [0:01–1:00]
Timestamp: 0:01
Dec 23, 2020 • 39min
KOL307 | Ernie Hancock Freedom’s Phoenix on IP in the Internet Age
Kinsella on Liberty Podcast, Episode 307.
This is my appearance on the Ernie Hancock “Declare your Independence” show for Dec. 17, 2020 (Hour 2). We discussed Intellectual Property in the Internet era, and related matters.


