Inspired by
Topic: Legal Research in which there is a debate about whether a bitcoin private key can be considered property which endows rights on the owner, specifically the right to compute some mathematical functions which transfer a perceived value to another individual.
Well, there was a previous, very long, thread about intellectual property
here, in which many contributors rejected Intellectual Property Rights (call this the anti-IPR position) - for example, if one can somehow obtain a digital copy of a Hollywood blockbuster, then he is fully within his rights to view it and make additional copies at will; no-one can tell him how he should utilize his physical property (the computer). The information bits composing the film (or game or mp3) are not considered property.
Well, it seems perfectly clear that bitcoin private keys cannot ever be considered physical property.
If they are to be considered property at all, it can only be as intellectual property - like an mp3, they are merely strings of bits.This would seem to be a problem for anyone who holds anti-IPR pro-bitcoin positions. If someone, by manipulating his computer, manages to hack and obtain some bitcoin private keys (and, obviously, the associated bitcoins), then, according to anti-IPR, no theft has taken place and no anti-IPR judicial system will recognize a loss. Any physical attempt to recover the bitcoins would thus be unlawful.
It's not clear to me, though, what the anti-IPR position on hacking is. I mean, a hacker is merely issuing instructions to his own hardware which make it transmit certain bits of information, right? No-one can deny him that...
And the hacked party is free to program his own hardware to act, or not to act, on receipt of those bits of information...
You cannot infer that because an mp3 is a string of numbers and a bitcoin address is a string of numbers that the bitcoin address is IP because the thing an mp3 represents is also IP'd.
It's a logical fallacy.
You infer that because two things share a propertie they must share this other property.
Without any other information this is a false assumption.
You should first define what IP is, and then see if it applies to a bitcoin addres. And leave the mp3 out of it. MAYBE you will find out that the address should be IP in the same way an mp3 is, but you cannot decide beforehand and based on other random properties like that it is representable as numeral information.
For instance, the bible can be represented like a string of numbers, but there is no IP on it.
And there are mp3's that altho they are strings of numbers, are completely IP free.
So the fact that you're dealing with a string of numbers does not imply IP in any way.