That's not what I said or think about the ORG at all. I think the ORG has some sensible folk but also many members that just like piracy and don't like copyright, at all. As I said, that approach is as right wing as Daniel Hannan and Punk. You've made a lot of pro-filesharing comments on this very site. If people can't own the rights to their ideas, who do you think will use them? Whoever has deep enough pockets to make the ideas a reality. I don't agree with 70 year copyright terms either. It is I, not any corporation, that owns the rights to my work. In the event of my death, my family would own it. Which corporations are you referring to? I don't understand your explanation, where do these corporations come from? Copyright law exists to protect me from these evil corporations, so they can't take my ideas without paying me. Copyright is an intrinsically liberal concept. I'd like to see a much shorter term, maybe 20-30 years on copyright; I think anything more than 50 is ludicrous in normal situations (e.g. Al Johnson, who penned the New Orleans hit "Carnival Time" didn't get a penny in royalties for 40 years or so after its release due to being swindled). I didn't see Coraline or Stardust, now you mention it I enjoyed his Doctor Who. Not a compelling argument for anything though, is it? Ultimately, I've been most underwhelmed by the ORG's output and think there are far better organisations for protecting our online rights. If it had a sensible solution for protecting authors and dealing with piracy I'd feel very different. As regards identity, you can call me what you like - it's the internet. Those names are the login details of the last person that used the machine - they were pre-filled for me. If I get the opportunity I'll introduce myself in person.