Did Scott Turow Keep The Copyright On His NY Times Op-Ed About The Importance Of Copyright?
from the questions,-questions dept
We were among many different commentators who mocked the recent op-ed in the NY Times by Authors Guild boss (and best selling novelist) Scott Turow, in which he seemed to suggest that to incentivize the next Shakespeare, the world needs much stronger copyright laws. The day after that op-ed was published, Turow was at the Senate speaking out in favor of censorship in the form of the COICA law. This is somewhat startling, and if you're a member of the Authors Guild, you should be asking serious questions about an organization that supports censorship.While many people pointed out the hilarious irony of Turow and his colleagues using Shakespeare as an example for stronger copyright laws -- since the Bard lived in an era without any copyright laws, and was famous for directly copying the works of many others -- some others noted a separate bit of irony. In taking to the pages of the NY Times to insist on the importance of copyright for authors, or warning that authors may not have incentives to write any more, some pointed out that the standard NY Times Op-Ed agreement involves handing over your copyright on the Op-Ed to the NY Times to do whatever it wants with it.
And, yet, this still seemed worth it to Mr. Turow. In other words, despite his explicit words talking up the importance of copyright as the key motivator for content creation, his implicit actions suggest he knows quite well that there are many, many other incentives to create, and many people -- including himself -- are willing to create even when they do not retain the copyright on their works. As the author of the above linked article, Wendy Kaminer, notes at the end of her piece:
When editors at the Times publish an op-ed stressing the cultural value of copyright protections, it's probably not your copyrights they have in mind.
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Filed Under: copyright, scott turow
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Re: No, he didn't give up on copyright, he sold it. So it still gave him benefits and may have been an incentive to write.
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Re: Re: No, he didn't give up on copyright, he sold it. So it still gave him benefits and may have been an incentive to write.
iow, all the kool-aid slurpers on this site.
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Re: Re: Re: No, he didn't give up on copyright, he sold it. So it still gave him benefits and may have been an incentive to write.
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Re: Re: Re: No, he didn't give up on copyright, he sold it. So it still gave him benefits and may have been an incentive to write.
Cant wait for #6... oh wait. Check on #7 as well. #8 The diety is TD.... #9 duty bound are ya?
So that leaves #10 Ah yes... ya touched on that one too... not creating is somehow something to be feared.
@- & Lawrence Nice question though I think the wrong one & "may have" isn't it either. Occums razor & human nature: Do you really need an incentive to create?
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Re: Re: Re: Re: No, he didn't give up on copyright, he sold it. So it still gave him benefits and may have been an incentive to write.
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Re: Re: Re: No, he didn't give up on copyright, he sold it. So it still gave him benefits and may have been an incentive to write.
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Re: Re: Re: No, he didn't give up on copyright, he sold it. So it still gave him benefits and may have been an incentive to write.
So what was Shakespeare’s incentive to write?
Did that sound different that time? Different enough to answer?
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Re: Re: No, he didn't give up on copyright, he sold it. So it still gave him benefits and may have been an incentive to write.
Money? Fame? It gave him both, though not in great amounts. Or maybe he just liked writing.
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Re: Re: Re: No, he didn't give up on copyright, he sold it. So it still gave him benefits and may have been an incentive to write.
Better step up your game.
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Re: Re: Re: Re: No, he didn't give up on copyright, he sold it. So it still gave him benefits and may have been an incentive to write.
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Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: No, he didn't give up on copyright, he sold it. So it still gave him benefits and may have been an incentive to write.
Sorry, I confused 2 things in the above post. Please ignore (or delete) it.
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Re: Re: Re: Re: No, he didn't give up on copyright, he sold it. So it still gave him benefits and may have been an incentive to write.
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Re: Re: No, he didn't give up on copyright, he sold it. So it still gave him benefits and may have been an incentive to write.
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This is a concept lost on Mike Masnick.
Because he's never created anything original.
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Re:
Do you have anything useful to add? Anything at all? Anything that might make someone go like "uhm, that was interesting"?
And don't come with "the kool-aid drinkers of this site will just put me down because they are a bunch of freetards" speech. Because, if this is a truly one-sided, terribly biased website you seem to believe it is, I really really don't understand why you keep coming back.
I don't want you to stop posting. I just want the baseless attacks to stop.
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This is a concept lost on Mike Masnick.
Because he's never created anything original.
Ah the old fallacy that "you have to be a rabbit to understand rabbits".
Actually -to understand something properly then being to deeply involved in it is the last thing you want. It is perfectly reasonable - in fact preferable - to understand things from the outside.
The fact that you don't understand this point suggests that you have never understood any subject properly.
(Note that my logic although superficially similar to yours - is in fact quite different and (unlike yours) valid.)
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Re:
Do you mean to publish or not to publish? ..to share your thoughts or not to share them?
>> This is a concept lost on Mike Masnick.
This website is proof he has decided to publish his commentary and analysis.
>> Because he's never created anything original.
That's because Mike is not a human being. The Mike is an obelisk that is progressively teaching Anonymous monkeys how to beat the Turing test.
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We are all familiar with the Library of Babel?
See, Mike is a by-product of Anonymous monkeys.
He's A Long serial bit stream touring complete round the world
Able to raise Cain among primates who can't comprehend
Though a program, he's teacher of the Turing test unfurled.
HAL? ..I know. It is a pity I come here to babel.
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Re: Re:
Yeah but no one's interested in that enough to rip it off.
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Why would someone rip off something that's free to begin with?
As for the "no one's interested" part - anytime I do a Google search on keywords like copyright or patents this site seems to always be in the Top 10, so it seems that quite a few are interested, despite you wishing otherwise.
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Get a grip ppl and stop falling for the damn obvious. His comments are complete bollocks and take 1 post with 1 line to dismiss to anyone intelligent.
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So yes, Mike has been "ripped off" many times.
Next baseless assertion.
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Logical error
A. The mother of all invention is NOT incentive.
B. Did history and technology switch Whats In It For Me from What Do I Need?
I suddenly smell the acrid of matches about to light my feet. So question, is the point here to find incentives or meet our needs? P.S. Happiness is a need.
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Re: Logical error
Meeting our needs is an incentive like any other, but meeting our needs comes with a free bonus: it gives you a clue to the solution.
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Re: Re: Logical error
I think you missed point A.
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Logical error
A. The mother of all invention is NOT incentive.
B. Did history and technology switch Whats In It For Me from What Do I Need?
I suddenly smell the acrid of matches about to light my feet. So question, is the point here to find incentives or meet our needs? P.S. Happiness is a need.
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But what about his great-grandkids?
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Mike Masnick supports copyright
Cries of "CENSORSHIP!!!!" are a red herring. If you want to imply censorship is inherently bad, please be willing to go all the way.
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Mike Masnick supports CENSORSHIP
It's early morning...
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Re:
Isn't copyright supposed to be an incentive for the creation of art? Therefore, if the copyright holder sells his copyright, isn't he basically "giving up" on art (or that particular artistic expression)? Because he basically just gave away his "motivation".
Also, does the buyer, who now holds copyright over a specific artistic expression, have any motivation for creating more art? If no, then, wouldn't the model of "selling copyright" eventually extinguish every form of artistic expression?
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Copyright allows people to make an income by selling their work. Selling your work to a publisher is nothing new. And you do need copyright to do it, or any publisher can run your story for free and it becomes much more unsellable for the writer.
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Right, but you don't give away your rights in that case. What I was wondering was what happens to the artists supposed incentive when he just sells away what is, supposedly, his motivation to create more art?
"And you do need copyright to do it, or any publisher can run your story for free and it becomes much more unsellable for the writer."
Why do I need copyright? I've seen many many cases of artists who make a decent living while giving away their art. They are just smart enough to understand how to make a profit from item that are somehow related to their art or to themselves. In the software world, that is an easy one: sell services. You can just give the software for free.
I think that artists could find similar methods of making money out of their art, without needing a special law that virtually guarantees them profit.
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When he creates more art, he gets copyright for that as well and has the choice to sell it, keep it, and/or market it as desired.
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If you read the comments after David Post's article, it is mentioned that in fact there were STRONGER copyright laws in Shakespeare's time: http://volokh.com/2011/02/17/there-should-be-a-name-for-this-one-too/
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He is like a magic blog man thing.
The rest of us would get reamed in comments for something like that, the rest of you are climbing up Mike's butt and enjoying the smell.
Perhaps this post is a parody, and or Mike is trying out new material for his stand up routine.
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This article is just silly because of course Turow knows that there are other reasons people write. It's also silly because an op-ed piece is hardly the next War and Peace.
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And Justin Beiber's latest single is hardly the next 1812 Overture......and.....wait.....what was your point again?
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LOL. Beiber got his start on YouTube, singing other people's songs.
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Look, anyone who says copyright is the only incentive to create is wrong.
Anyone who says the assignment of a copyright shows that copyright is *not* an incentive to create is just as wrong.
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Shakespeare is not the same at a torrent-loving couch potato
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Re: Shakespeare is not the same at a torrent-loving couch potato
That is a fact.
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Re: Re: Shakespeare is not the same at a torrent-loving couch potato
Sorry. Sometimes I like to pick nits.
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