Copyright Cops Go After Town For Creating Little Mermaid Statue
from the cultural-artifacts dept
Dan sends in yet another story about copyright gone wrong. Apparently the small town of Greenville Michigan has a strong Danish heritage, and wanted to show that off with some artifact representing Denmark. It chose the iconic Little Mermaid statue, based on Hans Christian Andersen's story, and a similar iconic statue in Denmark. Apparently, however, the family of the artist who created the statue in Denmark is trying to clamp down and is demanding a lump sum payment or that the statue be taken down. The actual artist died in 1959... but thanks to recent extensions in copyright (yippee), copyright now lasts life plus seventy years.Of course, I'm wondering if the statue even violates the copyright at all. While the town says it was inspired by the one in Denmark, the actual statue is different:
At about 30 inches high, it's half the size of the original and has a different face and other distinct features, including larger breasts. "We've gotten a lot of heat about that too," he saysConsidering that so much of the statue is different, is it even a copyright violation at all? Apparently, this isn't the only town that's faced problems over such statues. The article notes, amusingly, that Vancouver, British Columbia -- after failing to get permission from the artist's estate -- instead put up a statue entitled "Girl in a Wetsuit" and even added swimming fins and goggles to get the point across. It's hard to believe that this one artist, whose been dead for fifty years, should have total control over statues of mermaids, but that's what today's copyright law gives us. Isn't it great?
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Filed Under: copyright, denmark, greenville, hans christian andersen, little mermaid, michigan
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do you support this sort of silliness ?
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The statue in Copenhagen is itself a copy; the original has been attacked repeatedly -- pieces stolen, arm cut off, painted pink, draped in a burqa -- and is now stored in a secret location
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You are basically saying that "Innovation by others should never happen".
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I can see why... That was my first inclination after reading this story...
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When will the madness stop?
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Withdrawn
Mermaid Freed
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Re: Withdrawn
This blog is as much of the problem as anything
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Re: Re: Withdrawn
Ideas?
This is new. I was unaware that one could copyright, patent or trademark and IDEA.
Interesting. When did this occur? Because I have ideas every day, lots of them in fact. I am infringing and didn't even know it - Yikes!
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Re: Re: Withdrawn
I know of no regime recognizing property in ideas. Sometimes people can take ideas and instantiate them. For instance, people may write stories about mermaids, or make statue of them, but the idea itself is generally recognized as being free for all to use.
Even thus, there is something wrong with an estate hanging around over an hundred years after the work was created, trying to restrict its use or enjoyment. Vampires, back to your coffins, the sun is coming! Leeches, back to your ponds! Zombies, back to your corporate offices!
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Bullshit.
Try and convince my child that he should have to pay for something that was made in the 1950's. He was born in the 21st century. There is no going back to the analogue world.
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Those of us that work at creating stuff will always expect fools like you and your son to pay for our work. We will also gladly pay a few dollars to take your stupid ass to court if you insist on taking our income from us.
Cry all you want, but in the end all the piracy is going to do is shift the penalties from being civil (monetary) to being criminal (time in jail).
When fools inist on breaking the laws because all they have to do is file for bankruptcy to get out of paying what is court ordered the next logical step is to legislate it to a criminal status so that the same fools will learn.
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Re: Re: shovel enough manure?
You will not be fed TROL..uh Michial!!
BTW you represent nothing and no one so leave "those of us" out of your bait..good day.
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Jail time for copyright infringement? Are you serious or just being a loud mouth jerk? Or possibly, you are a stock holder in a for profit company that runs prisons. In any case, a war on piracy (copyright infringement) is doomed to failure just like the war on poverty, war on drugs, etc the list goes on. Many states are in the process of letting prisoners out early because they do not have the funds to keep them there. Are you in favor of increasing everyones taxes in order to fund this crusade?
Do you even think about the spew that emanates from your keyboard In the future, please attempt to think these things through before deciding what all the rest of us should be doing - ok?
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Or perhaps I should parody your statement?
In the end, breaking the 55mph speed limit is only going to shift the penalties from fines to jail time.
In the end, all this bootlegging is going to do is put more distillers and rum-runners in prison.
Or to quote Cory Doctrow (because I can; it's so great that I can pretty freely copy his ideas without fear of getting sued!) "before the radio and the record came along the only way that people made money from making music was by standing in a hall and being charismatic. The fact is, technology giveth and technology taketh away. What was the business model in 1909 may be the business model in 2009. What was the business model in 1939 may not be the business model in 2007. That's how it goes."
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Greenville, Michigan can consider itself lucky
Henri
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Question
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So now that the air is clear what's your point in pointing out my website?
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In a prior post you suggest that society should put more people in prison. This was done with a tone of rightous indignation.
Then, a different poster, points out that you potentially stand to gain from this stance.
And you ask, "what's your point"
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Depending on where people go to school, theymay be taught that witness bias can affect credibility. Your web site suggeests the possibility of bias: you profit from the prison-industrial complex.
Your readers should be aware of that potential bias as they evaluate your credibility as you assert that more people should go to prison.
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Then if Michial had his way, he could profit twice: first when he sues him, then again when he goes to prison. Oh boy, happy days are here again!
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Im not saying that stupidity should be a capitol crime, im just saying lets pull the warning labels off everything and let the problem solve itself
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Re: capitol crime
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Never said
Facts are it would probably be better if it was criminal. At least then groups like the RIAA would have to have real PROOF, and they couldn't use the underhanded techniques that they currently use. Also if it was criminal there would be set penalties instead of arbitrary ones.
But in either case criminal or civil, the idiots flaunting their copying of music, and the fools that either indirectly or directly promote their actions are only going to make the legislation worse, not better.
The musician has the right to decide how they want their music distributed. If they choose to sign with a label for distribution, then they give that right of choice over to the label. If either choses that they only want their music sold on CD or even 8-track for that matter, then it's the consumer's responsibility to choose to buy it that way or not at all. The consumer has no right to get to that music in any other fashion.
You can cry all you want about how the record labels need a new business model or how the musicians get screwed, but you have no right to download music if that isn't one of the chosed distribution paths.
And you have LESS of a right to try to force any business or person to change their models just because you don't like it.
If you want to see the business models of these companies change, then stop consuming their products. If you illegally download their product you are still consuming it, just depriving them of revenue. If you distribute it without permission you are only perpetuating the problem.
As long as their is a demand for the products that they offer they will remain in business and keep their business models the same as they are today. If you demonstrate a demand by illegally downloading their products then you only instigate them going after you under the law.
EVEN if you buy a CD from musician directly who uses one of these labels you are only demonstrating a demand for the music they are producing.
Changing the law or crying about the law is like pissing into the wind, it will come right back at you and you won't like what you get. Congress has NEVER made a law better by passing more laws. All they manage to do is make it worse.
If you stop consuming music from these labels, and stop downloading the music giving them an excuse latch onto for their business models you will either change them or put them out of business, and you will take away the funds that they are using to go after you legally. Breaking the law only defeats the purpose by giving them something to cry about.
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Re: Never said
There is a matter of "fair use".
If I buy a musician's CD directly from him or from his label, I have a right to make copies of the CD's contents. I have the right to move those copies that I made to use in devices that I own. I have the right to distribute those copies, to family and friends, as long as the distribution is of a personal and non-commercial nature.
"...but you have no right to download music if that isn't one of the chosed distribution paths."
I have every right to download music from systems of people who I personally know and who give me access to their systems. If my wife, who is in Nepal, has a copy of Nativity In Black and I can download if from her computer through HTTP or through FTP, there's nothing Ozzy can do about it when I choose to download the song.
I have every right to open my own system to my own kids, siblings, cousins and friends and allow them to download songs from my own collection.
Personal, non-commercial use is fair use.
The problem that record labels and deluded artists face now is that, with today's mechanisms, the meaning of "personal" has changed that it's become very disadvantageous to their aging business and distribution models. This is not their fault but this is also not the doing of the general public. Yet these labels and artists would tax us all because they cannot cope with change.
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Re: Never said
So, who's using force? If you want to around making a claim like that, then you need to provide some evidence for it. Otherwise take your straw man and shove it.
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Bigger boobs
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Facts are it would probably be better if it was criminal. At least then groups like the RIAA would have to have real PROOF, and they couldn't use the underhanded techniques that they currently use. Also if it was criminal there would be set penalties instead of arbitrary ones.
I'm confused. First you say that you never said it SHOULD be a criminal charge. Then you say it would be better if it was. If something would make things better, isn't that what SHOULD be?
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What I was saying about making it criminal is that it would be better than the current system because the penalties would be more consistant, if not 100% consistant because it would most likely be a flat fine per song. By making it criminal the person commiting the infringement would also have an incentive NOT to do it by not wanting it appearing on their record.
The system is broken, that I agree with. But abolishing copyright is not the answer, but neither is the ongoing theft of revenue from companies and individuals that rightfully have earned that revenue through the investment of their money, time and efforts.
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There's also a valid argument that if so many people break the law because they don't think it makes sense, the law should be examined with an eye to reducing or abolishing it. Copyright law is supposed to be about benefiting society, not just a tiny minority.
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Where's Disney is all this
Or, more realistically, will a child wonder why the statue doesn't look the mermaid-character she saw on her DVD?
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Re: Where's Disney is all this
Wonder if that's cause to patent the penis? Look out Dr. Johns suppliers!
As to can't patent an idea #16. Agreed we "shouldn't" but we still do. Look at the first real distributed media; the Bible.
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Earning revenue
Sorry, Michail. You only earn revenue, when another party pays you for your efforts/investments/raw material.
Revenue is not a right, is a consequence. Companies will earn revenues when their offerings, regardless of how much effort or material goods they have invested, are relevant for second party. And many music labels have lost their relevancy.
And the discussion about demand misses the point completely. Nobody has and nobody will ever stop consuming music just because it is not distributed digitally.
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Re: Earning revenue
A simple truth that most tools don't understand. Projected income is not actual income. But one can only steal what is actual; and if there is no stealing, there is no theft.
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Horray
then beat him senseless and send him home to his momma to cry a little
this is not the way the copyright law is supposed to be applied, next case please !
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Artistic inspiration
Maybe someone should tell that society that Warhol made his name basing his art directly off of other popular culture images. A sculpture inspired by the Copenhagen mermaid surely deserves its own recognition, just as a painting of a soup can does.
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If I take a photo of someone elses photo which one of us has the copyright? I created an original image of another original image, so...?
Michial. Stop preaching such random garbage at people who have little respect for your opinion - and it is an opinion so jump off that horse, it's a little too high.
The fact is that while a cheaper, easier and faster way of accessing media exists it will continue to be used. If the producers of that media have failed to make that method of distribution profitable then they are at fault.
If movie producers refused to embrace DVD's would we all still be stuck on VHS today, even though the technology is readily available, cheaper and better?
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Insperation or Submition?
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