As I see it, this whole matter cannot be cleared up or resolved in any way - There will be parties, whichever way things go, who will feel (justifiably) that they have been wronged.
I do not think any real comparison can be made between patents and most copyright - [in theory only! ->] With a patentable idea, one has the choice of patenting, which forces disclosure of the idea, or not patenting and using the idea for ones own benefit whilst keeping it a "trade secret".. Patenting provides [in theory only!] a means whereby an inventor can share the idea, with the concequential benefit to humanity, in exchange for protection of their right to exclusively "own" their idea for a limited time.
The difference with copyright is that (certainly for music) the "product" cannot be exploited unless it is "shared" - You cannot make any money from, or gain any advantage by keeping a song a "trade secret" - As soon as your song is heard by someone "skilled in the art" it would be available for anyone to use and do what they pleased with, if it were not for copyright.
So, unlike with patents, there is no mechanism to regulate the "market price" of a copyrightable work - With patents, if the protection and value of having a patent was not deemed by the inventor to be worth having, then they have [in theory only! ] the option of keeping their idea secret and exploiting it - But a creator of a musical work, or an author, or artist or whatever, whos "product" cannot be used secretly, does not have this choice.
So whatever mechanisms are applied to give artists protection, these mechanisms cannot be "governed" by "market forces" in the same way patents can.
"At the end of the day, I should be able to use it without the interference / intervention of the publisher, and I should be free to resell it if I want to." - Dewster
Is one side of the argument - but is it really a "fair" proposal ? ... Who defines what is "fair" or what "justice" is ? Nobody! - because these are just words touted to back up our delusional "rights"... I could say that I think "I should be able to use it without the interference / intervention of the publisher" but would disagree with the right to sell it without restriction (at least for a reasonable time after the creation of the original, so as to give the creator an "advantage") ..
But who are any of us to decide? Lets be honest - if there were no restrictions, the vast majority of people wouldnt pay a penny to the artist - I have seen the nature of most people clearly with regard to this, where they are happy to take my designs and time and effort, but when I ask them to make a small donation to the charity I support (streetkids rescue) they suddenly dissapear (or come back with a different email identity, LOL ;-)
It is no surprise to me that big business has "taken up the cause" of the artist, and that this has been twisted and corrupted into what we see today, where both the artists and the consumers are exploited.
But as to "rights" - What "right" do I have to use something I have heard, which was created by someone else ? - Or, for that matter, what "right" did they have to expose me to their creation (LOL) ? Could I argue "rightly" that because they exposed me to their tune, and it embedded in my brain, that I have the right to use it as I choose?
None of the above matters - all that counts is whatever the lawyers manage to wangle. "Rights" "wrongs" "justice" "fairness" None of these count for anything - "its not fair" is something only the young or lucky deluded say.
Fred.