Copyright law exists to protect the rights of the producers of copyrightable material. As I said, and you would agree I think, it was put into place because without it, many people would not produce the works they otherwise would, which would hurt the public. So in that sense, the law benefits the public. However, the law was not created for that specific purpose; it was created for the quite selfish purpose of protecting the creator of the works.
No it wasn't.
Owned...
It was created to make sure that these works were produced to benefit society (in fact the earliest copyright laws were a form of censorship = but that's another story). That utilitarian understanding of copyright has been upheld by the SCOTUS in every decision it ever made -- and US copyright law was the model for everyone else's.
Copyright law benefits producers only as a means of benefiting consumers, since it is the consumption of ideas that is valuable, not the production of them. If copyright laws no longer served the public good, that would be the end of them... whatever the producers said.
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