Ask HN: It is "moral" to copy someone else's idea?
So I have an interesting concept for a "startup" (new business). However I got this concept by looking at how someone else is doing it, and thinking I can do it "better" (offer a better end-user experience).
The problem is now that I've seen their design if I created my own product I cannot help but rip off all of their good ideas, improve all of their weaknesses, and then ultimately screw them over...
As I said, I think I can improve on their design, but I just will feel guilty about screwing over another startup (and stealing their hardwork/research).
Has anyone dealt with this? Did you decide to go ahead with it or did you leave it alone?
20 comments
[ 3.1 ms ] story [ 61.3 ms ] threadMy opinion.
Patent enforcement is way out of line with how businesses actually work and have worked for millenias.
You can't put bars to prevent people stealing your ideas, and you can never prove that an idea was stolen (unless you think the broken patent system works).
Morally, I would have no problem...
It's kind of obvious, n'est pas?
The only time an idea has any value is when it's shared. Copy everything you can and make it better.
Others will in turn copy you and rise to the challenge, or maybe they'll decide that a career change is in order.
Either way, you've made the world a better place.
If you zoom in on a couple of cases such fab.com or airbnb.com, it is intesting to observe what happened. In Fab.com's case, Rocket internet were getting geared up to copy Fab as Fab was growing fast. Jason Goldberg wrote a letter to all the designers on fab.com and published a post on his own blog saying that it was pointless to copy them. Fab.com deals with designers, and designers hate when people copy them so it was very likely designers wouldn't want to have anything to do with a copy and the rocket clone failed. Airbnb bought smaller competitors, not the rocket clone managing to get around the clone that way.
Then there is the question, "are clones useful?" In some cases, very much so. If a startup wants to expand fast, one avenue it can take is to grow fast in a large city and then acquire the smaller clone startups elsewhere which have already tested how the idea needs to adapt to that context. This would be faster than organic growth.
Lastly, you realise everything is a remix. http://www.everythingisaremix.info/everything-is-a-remix-the... Almost every idea is a copy of the last. I used to work for an extremely famous designer, people always said "he was brilliant at hiding his sources."
Everyone learns from previous generations. Think of copying as a learning process. As one grows, you inject your own variation and create your own masterpiece.
The lesson being "Good Artists Copy, Great Artists Steal,"...but not from me.
I like your confidence. Just by copying their idea, you think you will be able to screw their startup? Think again. It may not be as easy it might appear to you.
But again, should you copy the idea or do it better ? Sure, hell yea. Why not ? Most ideas are anyway a derivative of some other idea.
Stop worrying about this. Go build your stuff and ship it.
You can try the following thought experiment: suppose you follow through on this new business, spend 6 months working on it, and a month after it gets going, someone ELSE copies the idea, does it a little better than you, and your sales go to zero. How will you feel?
You might think, "Well, all's fair in love, war, and startups. I made a good attempt, learned a whole lot, and I got beat fair and square. It doesn't really bother me, that is how the game is played. Now I'll try something else."
Or, you might think, "Wow. I just wasted 6 months. I didn't gain any new skills. I don't feel good about what I did. I wish I had spent that time doing something to improve myself."
Or, you might feel, "I WAS ROBBED. I spent all this time working on a real improvement on web site X, but web site Y just ripped me off and benefited from my 6 months of hard work."
Never mind what you think is the "right" answer - you might be happier in the long run trying to think of something new, or at least spending your efforts on learning something new.