Active Users:324 Time:16/05/2024 02:27:35 PM
Patents and copyrights aren't meant to last forever (shouldn't, anyway) Vivien Send a noteboard - 04/01/2012 10:33:30 PM
Today we have copyrights extended for an unreasonably long time (and if disney continues to have its way, indefinitely), way past the death of the creator of the work.

The good folks at the Center for the Study of the Public Domain at Duke University put together a depressing list each year of what would have gone into the public domain under copyright law if the law prior to 1978 remained in effect. You can check out this year's unfortunate list of works seized from the public in a retroactive one-sided renegotiation of the deal the copyright holders had with the public. These works should be in the public domain, and they're not... and the public got nothing in exchange for having these works taken away from us. Pulling from their writeup, here are just a few of the works that I thought you might find interesting:


Nothing can be taken from us that we never had to begin with.

The thing is, with the list of works from 1955 above, when they were all created, the maximum term of copyright of 56 years was a perfectly acceptable trade-off for those creators. They got their monopoly, and they created their works. What I can't understand is what the logic is in extending those rights retroactively. Clearly the incentive to create was fine as it was. Why should it change after the work was created?


Why should they ever give up their monopoly?

I fail to see any injustices being done or rights violated. If I'm wrong, please explain it to me, rather than just stating that it is so.
Reply to message
Why Johnny Can't Read Any New Public Domain Books In The US: Because Nothing New Entered The P.D. - 03/01/2012 11:33:34 PM 1751 Views
I find it difficult to see this as stealing rights from the public. - 04/01/2012 11:15:35 AM 888 Views
Are you arguing for illegal use of legally protected works? - 04/01/2012 09:34:18 PM 816 Views
No. I'm saying that keeping works in copyright doesn't stop them from being read, watched, etc. - 04/01/2012 10:24:50 PM 821 Views
That's not the point, though. - 05/01/2012 01:05:17 PM 872 Views
???? - 05/01/2012 03:22:58 PM 842 Views
Re: ???? - 05/01/2012 04:04:21 PM 872 Views
not to mention public libraries *NM* - 05/01/2012 03:21:04 PM 478 Views
Blame Disney. *NM* - 04/01/2012 05:48:00 PM 615 Views
I don't get it. - 04/01/2012 05:51:19 PM 1107 Views
You know those Jane Austen parodies? Only because Jane Austen is in the public domain. - 04/01/2012 09:32:20 PM 915 Views
Answering you specifically - 05/01/2012 04:57:33 PM 851 Views
But that doesn't make sense. - 05/01/2012 07:18:08 PM 998 Views
Here's the gist of it. - 06/01/2012 04:18:29 PM 846 Views
Patents and copyrights aren't meant to last forever (shouldn't, anyway) - 04/01/2012 10:33:30 PM 880 Views
I know they aren't. I don't necessarily agree that they shouldn't though. - 05/01/2012 05:01:05 PM 792 Views
Copyrights stifle creativity. - 05/01/2012 07:48:08 PM 876 Views
Re: Copyrights stifle creativity. - 06/01/2012 04:39:24 PM 1269 Views
Re: I know they aren't. I don't necessarily agree that they shouldn't though. - 06/01/2012 12:47:50 AM 805 Views
Why. - 06/01/2012 05:05:20 PM 1418 Views
That is a very confusing article. - 04/01/2012 10:19:22 PM 930 Views
Works published between 1923 and 1978 are different - 04/01/2012 10:25:16 PM 869 Views
Do you think it is right that Disney can protect its movies? - 05/01/2012 05:29:08 PM 815 Views
Ok, what has movies Disney done lately that were on par with its classics? *NM* - 05/01/2012 07:44:20 PM 368 Views
And speaking of Disney's classics... - 05/01/2012 10:06:16 PM 960 Views
Until Disney discovered and copyrighted them, they obviouslty didn't exist. *NM* - 06/01/2012 12:58:55 AM 405 Views
Except of course they haven't copyrighted them... - 06/01/2012 01:53:01 AM 799 Views
nice theory but you can make a Little Mermaid movie if you want - 06/01/2012 02:48:47 PM 843 Views
Well, if corporations are now people, then maybe their copyright could be different? *shrug* - 05/01/2012 07:57:38 PM 967 Views
Do you really want corporations to be immortal? - 06/01/2012 12:50:11 AM 868 Views
In a sense, aren't they already? - 06/01/2012 02:42:53 AM 961 Views
Re: Well, if corporations are now people, then maybe their copyright could be different? *shrug* - 06/01/2012 01:18:04 AM 863 Views
It's a thorny issue and I largely agree with you - 06/01/2012 02:50:24 AM 896 Views
Huh... apparently, Mickey Mouse is already Public Domain anyway - 06/01/2012 07:30:36 AM 1036 Views
Can you back that up? - 06/01/2012 04:17:35 AM 986 Views
Re: Can you back that up? - 06/01/2012 06:02:01 PM 786 Views
Re: the piracy issues - 06/01/2012 06:30:46 AM 971 Views
Book piracy - 06/01/2012 05:21:40 PM 1075 Views
corporations have always had rights - 06/01/2012 04:08:12 PM 837 Views

Reply to Message