Digital goods that cost nothing to copy create artificial scarcity through legal restrictions, inverting natural economics.
Laozi's paradox—that wholeness appears broken, fullness appears empty—illuminates tech's strange economics. Software and digital content have zero marginal cost to reproduce, yet we impose artificial scarcity through patents, copyrights, and paywalls. This inversion of natural abundance creates the very inequalities we struggle against. Those controlling distribution infrastructure capture disproportionate value not through superior creation but through controlled scarcity. Laozi warns against forcing the natural way: the Tao that can be named is not the eternal Tao. When we force scarcity onto abundant goods, we corrupt the system's nature. True benefit distribution would acknowledge digital abundance, allowing ideas to flow while finding alternative mechanisms—perhaps attention, reputation, or diverse service models—to sustain creators. This requires releasing our grip on artificial restriction, counterintuitively creating more sustainable ecosystems.
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