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3D printing raises concerns around intellectual property rights, as it allows for easy replication of physical objects. What are the legal and economic implications of 3D printing on intellectual property and how it may impact innovation and investment.
So I feel that you know when we had piracy if we had streaming services in one night in Prague and run into a lot of this and replication issue for some time
There will be replication and so on and that's never going to stop. But when it comes to intellectual property, if we look at physical structures, it will probably, there will be a market for it, but generally people will have, want to have this source object.
So if you're talking about anything that has a reputable designer or this and that, there's going to be a lot more into that than there will be from a simple 3D printed material. and I wouldn't be too worried about physical objects 3D printed.
If anything, what 3D printing does do, and I know a few people working on this in medical and building and all that, is that it creates a lower cost option for those who cannot necessarily afford the original object. So it just adds a market, doesn't take away from it.