And nah, we have better than capitalism. The whole mixed economy thing that lets capitalism deal with what it's good at (elastic goods that respond effectively to market forces, mostly), and state control handle the rest (healthcare, infrastructure, etc., etc.). Even the US, grand fellatrix of the market, uses that particular system.
Wait, since when? Last time I checked US healthcare was inordinately expensive, even with the relatively recent implementation of obamacare. The absurd pricing seen in nearly every citizens average hospital visit hardly seems under control.
On topic, copyright is a very complicated system in today's society. This over-complication, with all the associated lawyers and rules and departments and precedents, prevents important changes from occurring in reasonable amounts of time. For instance, changing perceptions of how digital media can or should be used in the creation of other digital media (think about a youtube movie review with part of the movie shown, that then gets taken down for copyright infringement) are not reflected in the policing of the law. There are free-use copyright protections, but these are more often than not disregarded when a particular content provider is shut out due to automated claims systems. So not only are the laws archaic, but the parts of those laws that ARE relevant are often ignored, forgotten, or explained away as "just not feasible in today's technological society." Ridiculous!
I mean, this thread is not the place to learn about this subject. While your opinions are certainly interesting and relevant, you would hit the max character limit before you managed to even come close to explaining the subtleties. A couple of hours at your local library can really give you a better picture of today's implementation of copyright law, and a few more hours can net you a greater understanding of why that implementation is largely irrelevant to the newer generations.
If books aren't your thing, there are quite a few documentaries around. Like
this one, which discusses sample-based music mashups and why they should have a right to exist.
And while it could be argued either way that capitalism is solely to blame for the worst of the copyright laws, I don't think anyone would disagree that the current implementation of them heavily favors the interests of those who can actually fight within the system. So, capitalists. Expensive lawyers and wasted time aren't all that big of a deal for our largest corporations, in fact a lot of them have in-house lawyers who literally have nothing better to do. For your average content producer there's no reasonable recourse for someone stealing your work and/or accusing you of theft, simply because it can destroy your life if you fail to win the case (and even if you do win, you won't always get everything paid for). That sort of imbalance is an example of uneven law enforcement, which is pretty antithetical to a functioning democracy.
Not that we've had one of those for a loong time. . .