this post was submitted on 15 Oct 2025
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It sounds like it would be an analogue issue that is already similarly solved in other respects.
For example, its not only illegal for someone to make and sell known illegal drugs, but its additionally illegal to make or sell anything that is not the specifically illegal drug but is analogous to it in terms of effect (and especially facets of chemical structure)
So any process that produces an end result analogous to copyright infringement would be viewed as copyright infringement, even if it skirts the existing laws on a technical basis, is probably what the prevailing approach will be
Hmm. I'm not familiar with that as a legal doctrine.
kagis
At least in the US
and this may not be the case everywhere
it sounds like there's a law that produces this, rather than a doctrine. So I don't think that there's a general legal doctrine that would automatically apply here.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Federal_Analogue_Act
But I guess that it might be possible to pass a similar such law for copyright, though.