Settings

Theme

Ask HN: Is it okay to copy someone else's idea?

20 points by dmragone 12 years ago · 17 comments · 1 min read

Reader

Sometimes I see a Show HN or product launch and think "wow, I'd love to do something like that", perhaps as simple as changing the target customer.

Is it okay, for example, to take an idea aimed at developers and build something almost identical, but selling to designers? If it's pretty obvious the author of the original idea plans to expand in that direction, am I crossing the line by jumping ahead and trying to get there first?

akulbe 12 years ago

Oh yeah... besides, the prevailing wisdom is this: execution > ideas.

Most people talk up an idea, but never do anything with it. Talk is cheap.

cryptos 12 years ago

Copying was and is one of the most fundamental processes in human culture. You have learned to speak by copying! The "intellectual property" propaganda is a relatively new and artificial construct.

wikwocket 12 years ago

A number of prominent HNers would be all to happy if you copied their ideas, business models, or execution techniques. Many of them have blogs that are essentially, how to launch a business just like this in N easy steps. Some of them will even answer questions and coach you if you ask nicely.

That said, it is probably polite to not outright copy. For example no one likes the sites that mimic Stack Exchange's layout and even copy their content. Similarly if you copy someone's idea, market, and business model wholesale (without asking), perhaps expect some flak.

viennacoder 12 years ago

Sure, that's fine. Don't do a wholesale copy of he execution though -- you'll never win if you're always a step behind.

dotcoma 12 years ago

Google did it. Facebook did it. Then again, don't do a Facebook for dogs. Or dog-owners.

akulbe 12 years ago

Yes. I'd figure out a way to give some attribution to the original creator of said idea.

Check this out. http://everythingisaremix.info

idlehands 12 years ago

akulbe has hit a couple of important points. Just because someone thought of something, or even made a thing, doesn't mean they own the idea. If you copy their exact execution, shame on you. Otherwise, go for it. On paper, any social network is the same thing. But we don't use friendster anymore.

IF it seems appropriate to give credit to someone else for inspiration, go for it.

Just remember, the market will determine the winner. Effectively, that's really all that matters.

collyw 12 years ago

Say I am designing / building a database for work. If I want to clone that (and make it more generic for a wider audience). Are there problems with that?

  • Jemaclus 12 years ago

    Generally speaking, yes, that's a problem. If you're targeting a completely different audience and you use 100% new code, then you're probably fine, but the specifics really depend on your contract and the kind of people that run your company.

  • illyism 12 years ago

    Depends on your contract. But usually yes.

cprncus 12 years ago

"Copying" and "almost identical": No. Lame.

"Adapting" and "significantly different": Yes. Reasonable.

jonny_eh 12 years ago

It depends on the idea and how much you copy.

But it's probably moot anyways since the chance of success are so low.

frank_boyd 12 years ago

Of course that's ok.

Nothing is ever entirely new. Everything has parts of other things in it.

ragatskynet 12 years ago

Forget the word "copying". Let's call it "reinventing".

andrewhillman 12 years ago

Just about every technology is based on previous art.

zinx 12 years ago

That's what is evolution, no ?

Keyboard Shortcuts

j
Next item
k
Previous item
o / Enter
Open selected item
?
Show this help
Esc
Close modal / clear selection