Why Johnny Can't Read Any New Public Domain Books In The US: Because Nothing New Entered The Public Domain
from the and-won't-for-many-years dept
Every year, January 1st is "public domain day" around the globe. It's the day when all works that have had their copyrights expire enter the public domain, since copyright term is based on the year of publication, rather than the exact date. While some parts of the world still have something to celebrate on public domain day -- such as how the works of James Joyce are now in the public domain in the EU, here in the US as we've noted in the past, we're left waiting... for nothing. Because thanks to massive changes to copyright law, as well as copyright term extension, absolutely nothing has or will enter the public domain for many years in the US (minus a specific declaration by the copyright holder... and even then it's not entirely clear that qualifies).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:
- Rudolf Flesch's Why Johnny Can't Read: And What You Can Do About It
- J.R.R. Tolkien's The Return of the King, the final installment in his Lord of Rings trilogy
- Michihiko Hachiya’s Hiroshima Diary: The Journal of a Japanese Physician, August 8–September 30, 1945, translated by Warner Wells, md
- Evelyn Waugh’s Officers and Gentlemen, the second book in his Sword of Honour trilogy
- C.S. Lewis' The Magician’s Nephew, the sixth volume his The Chronicles of Narnia
- Vladimir Nabokov's Lolita
- Jerome Lawrence & Robert E. Lee's play about the Scopes “Monkey Trial,” Inherit the Wind
- Isaac Asimov's The End of Eternity
- Jack Finney's The Body Snatchers
- Arthur C. Clarke's Earthlight
- Elvis Presley's first TV appearance (on Louisiana Hayride, March 5, 1955)
- Episodes of "I Love Lucy"
- The first issue of William F. Buckley's "National Review."
- "The Seven Year Itch," directed by Billy Wilder; starring Marilyn Monroe and Tom Ewell
- "Lady and the Tramp," Walt Disney Productions' classic animation
- Alfred Hitchcock's "To Catch a Thief," starring Cary Grant and Grace Kelly
- Two of James Dean’s three major motion pictures: "East of Eden," directed by Elia Kazan and co-starring Raymond Massey and Julie Harris; and "Rebel Without a Cause," directed by Nicholas Ray and co-starring Natlie Wood, Sal Mineo, and Jim Backus
Unchained Melody (Hy Zaret & Alex North), Ain't That a Shame (Antoine "Fats" Domino and Dave Bartholomew), Blue Suede Shoes (Carl Perkins), Folsom Prison Blues (Johnny Cash), The Great Pretender (Buck Ram), Maybellene (Chuck Berry, Russ Fratto, & Alan Freed), and Tutti Frutti (Richard Penniman (aka Little Richard), Dorothy LaBostrie, & Joe Lubin),As they point out, it's really even more ridiculous than this, because under pre-1978 copyright law, most works didn't even go to the full 56 years of copyright protection. Instead, the vast majority of works gave up their copyright after 28 years. If the rates from the time held up, about 85% of the works created in 1983 would be in the public domain today. Instead, they'll be locked up until most of us are dead. Isn't that wonderful?
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?
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Filed Under: copyright, copyright extension, public domain, us, why johnny can't read
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Re: Pair o' sights?
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One score
I'd say even that is too much. People should be able to make use of the culture they grew up with while they're in their prime.
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Re:
I do have a questionf for Rikuo...where's your blog?
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And this is why...
And why I'm teaching every student I come into contact with to ignore all forms of "intellectual property". Whatever merits it might have once had, it's now become a farce, subject to the will and greed of corporations.
So go ahead, maximalists: lobby and legislate and even prosecute all you want. You'll be dead soon enough and the next generation will mock your selfishness and ignorance.
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Re: Re:
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Re: Re: Pair o' sights?
The children of construction workers don't get royalties from the buildings that their parents worked on that are still standing.
The children of piano teachers don't get royalties when their parents' student have a recital.
Heck, the children of artists don't get royalties when their parents' works are resold.
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Re:
If it had something to do with copyright, I'm sure Mike would've made mention.
Since it has nothing to do with copyright (unless it states we'll nuke foreign copyright infringers), it's not a topic for this forum.
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Re:
If it had something to do with copyright, I'm sure Mike would've made mention.
Since it has nothing to do with copyright (unless it states we'll nuke foreign copyright infringers), it's not a topic for this forum.
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Re: Re: Re: Pair o' sights?
they are working on this one
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Re: Re: Re:
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This just makes it obvious that it isn't for authors and inventors benefit.
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A little confused
While I understand your consternation regarding the retroactive extensions, I'm not sure I understand the level of your ire. Ok, yeah - I'd love to be able to do whatever the hell I like with Folsom Prison Blues, but I don't see it as my RIGHT, or as something that I've had taken away from me. It'd be nice, it'd be fun - but you seem to be annoyed that some sort of contract with the public has been breached.
You make it sound like the public made a deal with content creators: "We are GOING to arbitrarily take the fruits of your labors and generate personal profit from them, but we'll be nice enough to give you a couple of decades to make a living first." I've never seen that as the spirit of works entering the public-domain. I don't feel I'm ENTITLED to use these works just because I had the decency not to use them illegally for the last 50 years.
If you're going to take issue with immoral and in-ethical extensions of patent and copyright laws, it seems to me that the pharmaceutical industry would be a better target - when THEY circumvent legislations and tack on a few more years to the copyrights on their drugs, tens of thousands of people die without access to cheaper generics.
When you're talking about musical copyrights, the biggest downside I can see (besides the fact that I can't bootleg and sell any James Dean movies yet) is that we'll never be treated to the Biebs' cover of Folsom Prison Blues.
I call that a wash.
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Re: Re:
How 'bout just blowing up their computers? (“Powerful Senator Endorses Destroying Computers of Illegal Downloaders”, AP, June 2003)
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Re:
Especially in the case of Asimov, I dare say that there are certain adaptations made by people who honestly don't care. They got their corporate sponsors, who cares what a dead guy thinks?
Either, same as it's ever been. Corporate idiots who did nothing to create the original work continue to profit, while lesser known works are destined to be destroyed forever because they didn't make enough money. Meanwhile, those of us who wish for culture to be available to all are labelled freetards and pirates...
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Re: Re: Re: Re: Motive
It makes people unhappy, and when you can get all the power you'd normally get from martial law by passing several shady laws anyhow--plus you can claim with a straight face you've never declared martial law on the US populace.
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Umm.. because Disney wants to get other people's money without having to work for it. If they honoured the agreement they made to make the films for the amount of copyright offered at the time, Why, they would only get the money they agreed to make the movie for! Where's the free money? The stuff they get just by voting for more money (with *real* votes, not the fake ones the rest of us get)? What do you expect them to earn *all* their money?
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Re: A little confused
Damn, wish I was that greedy & self-centered.
Anything I make--when I'm dead--you can have it.
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Re: A little confused
Here's the thing. Do you want to know how Disney started out? He created movies that used and recycled content and ideas from fairy tales that were in the public domain (Snow White, Beauty and the Beast etc). He was able to freely use those tales without having to negotiate expensive licensing deals with either the authors, or their estates. Imagine if he'd had to, and Disney decided that the license costs were too high, and decided not to (say what you will about the evils of Disney, the movies they created are simply fantastic works of animation).
Now, with all these works not in the public domain, the same thing can't happen. What if someone other than Peter Jackson wants to create a Return of the King movie? Well, thanks to this, they can't, not without paying Tolkien or Jackson exorbitant fees. Thus copyright here has impeded in the creation of works of art.
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Re: Re: A little confused
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Re: Re:
I don't think anyone understands the power of Asimov. He created the word "robot" based on his own influences in sci fi. He influenced people as disperse as Keiji Inafune, who created Megaman based on the three laws and the entire field of robotics wih his observations and stories.
But it's amazing how people don't understand that others don't build new stories in a vacuum. There's no evidence of this. Even Asimov would probably say the same thing.
Doesn't this also explain the insanity of copyright law right now? Where's the evidence that it's needed?
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Re: A little confused
As it is, though, these works remain under Copyright, and it is still technically illegal to create archival copies for cultural preservation, and it's also therefore illegal for the Public to gain access to those archival copies for their enjoyment.
Right now, there is a collection of recordings of Jazz music from the '30s by some of the masters of early Jazz - from Armstrong to Basie - that no one is allowed to listen to because they're under Copyright, even though it's not clear that anyone actually holds the Copyright to these recordings. So they will remain in an archive in Harlem until the Copyrights expire, probably sometime around 2025 at the earliest, if not longer. It's a travesty that no one will be able to listen to it.
Worse, there are huge storerooms at the movie studios in Hollywood that hold collections of some of the most influential and (culturally) important movies of the Silent Era and the early "Soundies" that are simply decaying in their tins. The film is a material that is extremely fragile and doesn't survive even in controlled conditions, and so the reels are covered in a brow-gray gunk that used to be film. None of those movies will ever be seen again because the Copyright owners have no interest in recovering what's left (they don't see a market) and no one who has the funding is able to recover them all because they can't get the Copyright releases - if they can get it at all. In many cases, the studio that "owns" them can't even prove they have the Copyright.
And so our Culture is being destroyed or lost because no one is allowed to make valuable archival copies, and no one is allowed to view them because the proper royalty payments can't or won't be made.
Even if it can be proven that the works are true orphan works, no one will touch them because someone will make a Copyright claim that needs to be verified, even if the claim is invalid.
Worse yet, derivative works that build on this culture (like tributes and documentaries and the like) can't use this material, even if they can get their hands on it.
It is as if Copyright is making it illegal to record and share any of our History that occurred between 15 years ago (which is roughly when most Copyright owners seem to abandon their works) and 95 to 170 years ago (which is when the current Copyright extensions expire).
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You may not see those things as your rights, but you should. They are yours (and mine) and we (the public) bought and paid for them by granting their creators their limited monopolies.
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Re: And this is why...
However, as I understand it, no one can _make use_ of these items in a commercial, and often non-commercial, way. So while the public may be able to read/watch/listen to these works, they can't use them to make new works.
But my question is, if other countries have allowed them to become public domain, they can make new works from them, right?
Ah, that is why the US is trying to get every other country to have the same copyright extensions the US has. It's also why, whenever one country extends its copyright, others are brought along so everyone "plays fair".
Got it!
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Re: A little confused
It's called copyright. You know, the limited term artificial restriction that's meant to give a *temporary* monopoly to artists in return for the creation of more cultural works. I wonder how such terms extended decades beyond the artist's death achieves this aim?
"it seems to me that the pharmaceutical industry would be a better target"
...which Mike has also criticised on many occasions. Your point?
"When you're talking about musical copyrights, the biggest downside I can see (besides the fact that I can't bootleg and sell any James Dean movies yet) is that we'll never be treated to the Biebs' cover of Folsom Prison Blues. "
You do realise that the above list is just the list of the best known works that *should* have entered into the public domain, under the original agreements entered into by the original artists? Why do you think that the works should have been retroactively "protected" after the artists' deaths, let alone allow works considered less commercially viable to rot in vaults with no legal exposure? What possible benefit could there be to anybody, other than a handful of corporations who had nothing to do with the creation of said works, especially considering that several clearly and legitimately built on previously existing works themselves?
You do also realise that "public domain" does not mean that the existing owners of copyrights cannot make money, only that they no longer have the exclusive right to do so? I'd love to see East of Eden, but I'll be fucked if I'm buying a full priced DVD of the movie in order to do so just because Warner lobbied for some right to keep the film for 56 years after the star's death. Hell, there's several songs on that list I only know because of the cover versions - should I not be allowed to listen to the originals because someone has profit to be made?
"I call that a wash."
I call you a fool.
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Re: A little confused
Forever, my life and my children's lives? Now that's entitlement.
Once you release something it becomes part of the culture, a part of the collective fabric of America (or wherever you are from)or for some master pieces the world. So why is it that the corporation who contracted you and gave you a decent upfront payoff can retain the rights to that work indefinetly?
Do you really think the only reason we would want something in the public domain is so we can make money off it? Maybe I would like my kid to be able to play Folsom Prison Blues at a recital without worrying about rights, or to be able to buy a book of tabs/lyrics to classic songs like that with out having to pay rent to whoever bought the rights to that song 50 years ago. Maybe a school would like to be able to show classic movies by Hitchcock or staring James Dean without having to worry about licensing. The purpose of making these things public isn't so new people can make money off them its so everyone can enjoy them for free and can share, modify, copy, emulate, remix, use them freely.
Infinitely extended copyright only puts a tax on our culture.
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Re: And this is why...
If your lands were invaded, you could migrate somewhere else. Then all the land was claimed and national boundaries were set, and your options were more limited.
Religion was supposed to set you free by letting you worry about the afterlife rather than the hell of living. Then the Catholic Church uses it to control you and makes you believe you can be condemned to hell on the word of a priest or pope.
Literature and other forms of art allowed you the freedom to imagine anything you like and escape into that world. But government censorship and obscenity laws and intellectual property laws impose upon this freedom.
The internet started out as a relatively free space where anything could be exchanged without the imposition of physical limitations. But now governments and the wealthy and powerful are trying to crack down on this too.
What is the next frontier into which we can retreat to escape these greedy, power-hungry assholes after they ruin the internet?
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Re: Re: Re: Pair o' sights?
But their working on it in the EU yes they are, those progressive nitwits.
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Re: A little confused
Consider for example an old TV talk show - it's not being broadcast, it's no for sale anywhere, and nobody really would pay to see it - but your favorite musician appeared on there and sang a song. You'd like to see it, or at least hear it, but you can't, because the rights are owned and the content is locked away. Thankfully someone had it on VHS and uploaded it to Youtube. Technically that's illegal because it's not in the public domain, but now you can at least see the performance. Otherwise it would be culture lost.
Before copyright, everyone had a right to copy any work of art. If someone recorded a song, you could take that song an do anything you wanted to it, including singing it yourself without acknowledging where it came from.
Government created copyright to prevent that from happening - mainly so big publishers wouldn't take someone's book and profit from it without paying the writer.
Now the tables have turned, and copyright protects the big publishers from having their work used by the general public.
So yes, you have a basic human right to copy anything you happen upon. It's the essence of being creative. See something you like, copy it. The government took away that right with copyright, and when it's reasonable most people agree that it's fair, because without it a lot of people may not create anything.
Copyright term extensions, however, have gone way beyond fair, esp. considering when all those works were made, the original creators knew the original terms of copyright and were fine with them. It's the corporations, which profit on the work of (dead) artists, that longs for eternal copyright. They want to keep making money on the same material for years and years.
The funny part is, just because it's in the public domain doesn't mean they can't still make money on it. There are plenty of publishers making money on public domain books. But they want complete control.
Copyright has locked our culture away, and we need serious pro-public copyright reform.
Oh, and most songs licenses are set up so anybody can cover them, even the Biebs. You don't have to ask permission - you just have to pay royalties to the original artist. That's because the music industry at least realized that artists cover songs all the time and it would be impossible to grant permission every single time.
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Re: Re: Re: A little confused
You know how tough it is to go work when you have a famous name?
Try to be more sensitive.
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Re: Re:
"Started in 1997 by Floor64 founder Mike Masnick and then growing into a group blogging effort, the Techdirt blog uses a proven economic framework to analyze and offer insight into news stories about changes in government policy, technology and legal issues that affect companies ability to innovate and grow."
But I think you are right, TechDirt has lost its focus. How does this bit of information affect a company's ability to innovate and grow?
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Re: Re: Re:
I assume you mean that his use of the term "robot" set the modern connotation of an artificial lifeform usually made of metal or similar substance since Karel Capek coined the term in Rossum's Universal Robots in 1921 to denote synthetic humans made from other substances.
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Re: A little confused
You write as if when these books were written, the authors had an expectation that the works would be exclusively theirs forever. That has never been the stated deal.
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They do this now.
"You may not see those things as your rights, but you should. They are yours (and mine) and we (the public) bought and paid for them by granting their creators their limited monopolies."
You hit the nail on the head BentFranklin.
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Re: NDAA
And then everybody will read it and discuss it intelligently in a civilized manner.
Half of the above missives might be false...
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Re: Re: A little confused
Nice theory. But unsupported by the historical record, at least in England and her colonies.
Instead, the actual history is even more fascinating:
Printing was introduced into England by William Caxton in 1476. During the subsequent Elizibethan age, printing was under state control by Star Chamber. Following the English Civil War, and the restoration, state censorship continued, under the Licensing Act of 1662 (14 Car. II, c.33). After the Glorious Revolution (1688), the Licensing Act finally expired without renewal in 1695.
That Statute of 8 Anne, c.19 (1709) came about as a result of the end of official state censorship.
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LOL @ Mike. Obviously, the retroactive extension is not for the purpose of incentivizing the creation of works that have already been created. That clearly does not make any sense whatsoever. That should lead you to suspect that some other reasons exist for the retroactive extensions. Perhaps you could even do a little research to determine what those reasons were. I know, I know. You're not a real journalist. But still, if you want to pretend like you're making an argument about how stupid it is, it only makes sense that you address the actual reasons for the extension. Too much to ask? I suppose. This is Techdirt after all...
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Re: Re: A little confused
don't deny it. how else would you think that the government has any duty to the public.
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Re: Average_Joe Jan 3rd 2012 2:50pm
You attempt to argue by starting out with a straw-man fallacy and expect people to listen or even consider your points?
Then you throw in personal attacks "You're not a real journalist. But still..."
Wow, and you wonder why everyone here gangs up on you!
Mike HAS addressed the actual reasons for the extension, control, but he wonders why. It sure as hell ain't for profit because the public, at large, has the attention span of a gnat. So extending copyrights only ensures that those who CAN create USING older works, or derivatives there-of, are limited to those who can license with the copyrights owner. These license fees are cost prohibitive for a reason, but in actual fact, you'll find the re-users of said work are actually giving their recycled creation rights to the owner of the rights of the original work.
So it costs them nothing, they are just trying to control content creation.
Go take your equilibrium and go back to sleep.
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Re: A little confused
Why should "we the people" give them any monopoly at all? Many creative industries do quite well without such monopolies.
You are assuming that monopoly is their RIGHT and it isn't. It is a PRIVILEGE, given by US to them to encourage their creativity. That is the exchange. THEY get a limited monopoly and WE benefit from their creativity.
There is nothing in the vastly extended monopoly that encourages the ORIGINAL creator -- we're long past that cause and effect. Today the BENEFIT accrues to some big corporation and the original creator gets nothing.
The agreed-upon exchange has been destroyed. WE get NO benefit so why should we keep extending the privilege?
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Duh.
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Re: Re: Average_Joe Jan 3rd 2012 2:50pm
The lord of the rings just had a big movie a few years ago that I'm sure someone got money for the copyrights to the story for (although is wouldn't have expired yet at that time anyway, but you get the idea). Why would you think people won't listen to old stories?
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Re: A little confused
Close, but not quite. It actually went like this: "There is NO conceivable way to physically own and control a copyable expression, like a piece or artwork or music, except by refusing to share it at all - in that situation nobody wins, so we will agree to treat creative expression in a manner similar to physical property for a couple of decades to make it easier for you to make a living - but after that it reverts to its natural state of public ownership."
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Piracy is good.
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Re:
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Re: Re: A little confused
Are we, the public, supposed to respect and support anyone whose argument is simply "I worked once so I deserve to be paid indefinitely!"
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Re: A little confused
What do you see the spirit of works entering the public-domain as? Because I get the impression you don't see any reason for the public domain.
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Re:
It's generally known the only reason it was done in the first place was to keep Mickey Mouse out of the public domain (and he's still out of the public domain). Many people don't see that as a very convincing argument, however.
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Re: Re: A little confused
Also, it's may be true that the conceivable way to "own" a copyable expression before copyright was by refusing to share it, but people still "won" that way, and still do today simply by getting paid up front to share it.
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Re: Re: Re: A little confused
So while jupiter did overstate it, the point stands: copyright created the idea that you could "own" an expression. Unlike physical property, which you can defend with a big stick, there is no natural way to own expression, other than never sharing it with anyone. If I steal your house, you can try to steal it back - but if I hear your poem, not only can you not take it back, I can't even give it back if I want to. It's in my head, and though I may forget it eventually, I can't take it out of there and neither can you.
That's why copyright is a contract with the public: an agreement to grant completely artificial rights to creators - an agreement to "pretend" we don't own your poem, even though it's right there in our heads and we could write it down any time. One can certainly argue that there is a degree of this in all law - that's what society is - but in few areas is it so extreme. Sure, we agree not to steal houses, thus saving us from all sitting vigilantly with our big sticks 24 hours a day - but underneath that societal contract, there is still the reality of the stick. No such reality underpins copyright: it exists by public consent only.
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Re: Re: Re: Re: A little confused
You left out religion.
Gutenberg's first major work was the Gutenberg Bible (ca. 1454-55).
After that, came the Protestant Reformation and the Counter-Reformation.
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This gives me an idea
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so what?
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Re: Re: A little confused
Right, they will just hold a secret hearing where Disney will just claim that that just isn't possible. We feel soooo violated!
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Re: Re: And this is why...
And as for the expected results: the DARE program is reported to increase drug use in kids and abstinence-only sex education leads to higher rates of teen pregnancy.
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Re: Re: Re: A little confused
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Re:
I'm not even interested in discussions about trying to fix the broken copyright or patent systems anymore, short of the complete and total abolishment of these systems.
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Re: A little confused
Can't live with that? Fine. Don't create anything. You're not important. Your work isn't important. Neither you nor your work will be missed. You're disposable, expendable, replaceable. Someone better than you will come along and produce better work, while you disappear into well-deserved oblivion. The only possible value you have to society is summed up in the phrase "organ donor".
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Re: One score
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Ay?
My strong-armed, manipulated copyright hold means more money for me. Profit from public.
You have no culture. We own you.
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Re: This gives me an idea
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Re: Re: Re: A little confused
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Re: Re: Re: Average_Joe Jan 3rd 2012 2:50pm
That was my point. You're only considering the works that are old and make money, what about the many, many more that do not make money but are not released into the public domain?
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Re:
http://www.techdirt.com/search.php?cx=partner-pub-4050006937094082%3Acx0qff-dnm1&cof=FORI D%3A9&ie=ISO-8859-1&q=National+Defense+Authorization+Act
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Re: A little confused
Well, it should not sound it was the deal, as clarifyed in the correspondence of the forefathers and why they accepted that monopoly that although evil they felt it was necessary for a very short limited time.
Copyright also blocks others from using the same things even if they were made independently, more importantly a monopoly hold back the use of resources that should be common to everybody that was the original intent of copyright and patents, with copyrights surpassing patents in evilness, heck big pharma can't hold back people back life + 95 years now can they? patents don't even have "derivative" anything you can create derivatives and it would be legal, so in the immoral scale copyrights is right there up with satan.
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Re: A little confused
It's not that it should be a right; it's that there's nothing wrong with it to merit the current laws and legal actions.
That is the deal. We let the work be profitable for a short period, even extend that period if the artist can prove that the market still demands it. We do not let the artist ride forever on one piece of work, nor crown him dictator for life with the power to legally rob and gag whoever slights him.
The biggest downside I can see is the pointless, wasteful, destructive regime we have today, threatening to crush you because you happened to do or say almost kind of the same thing as someone else.
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Re: Re: Re: Re: A little confused
“Property, Intellectual Property, and Free Riding” by Mark A. Lemley (Stanford Law School):
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Re: A little confused
But that's exactly what happened -- a contract with the public has been breached.
Copyright is a deal made with content creators for the benefit of the public, not the creators. The deal is that the creators get a limited-term monopoly in exchange for the public "owning" the creation after the term expires.
Retroactively extending the length of that term is a violation of that contract. Something has been stolen from the public in the sense that something was due that was intentionally withheld.
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Re: "He created the word "robot" based on his own influences in sci fi."
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Popular Culture vs Corporate Culture
A culture that is “owned” is a dead culture.
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Re: Re: Re: Re: A little confused
There are a certain group of people who get skeezed out anytime someone mentions the "People". These same people also purport to be stalwart defenders of the US Constitution.
Heh...it's only on the first line, 3rd word. They even wrote it in big letters.
We the PEOPLE!
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Re: Re: Re: Re: A little confused
Last time I checked, Chris was doing a pretty good job living off of editing his father's unreleased works and creating derivative works. Which, is probably the only antithesis I can think of as to why the children of authors shouldn't receive royalties and the works of the author should become public domain the moment they die because the whole point of copyright is to get the author to continue to create, and a dead author cannot create new works.
However, we all should be allowed to create derivative works -- why should Chris be the only one to do so just because he happened to be lucky enough to be born as the son of J.R.R. Tolkien and followed in his father's footsteps. Chris can still capitalize on the stuff his father didn't release. I don't get paid for all the work my dad did -- what makes an author/artist so special that their children get to rest on their parent's work?
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Re: Popular Culture vs Corporate Culture
Coming up next on Keeping Up with the Kardashians!
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This is totally off-topic, so I'll answer it once and ask in the future that you not try to raise off-topic discussions in the comments. It can really throw off a thread.
However, to be honest, while we've mentioned NDAA, it's (1) not really a key coverage area of what we write about, though it does touch on some stuff (2) the hype around it does not actually match what's in the bill (it basically codified what both the President and most in Congress already thought was the law) and (3) much of it is totally political. See the following to understand why: http://www.reddit.com/r/politics/comments/nxu96/obama_signs_ndaa_with_signing_statement/c3ctkzz
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Re: A little confused
Yes, because a contract with the public has been breached.
You make it sound like the public made a deal with content creators: "We are GOING to arbitrarily take the fruits of your labors and generate personal profit from them, but we'll be nice enough to give you a couple of decades to make a living first." I've never seen that as the spirit of works entering the public-domain. I don't feel I'm ENTITLED to use these works just because I had the decency not to use them illegally for the last 50 years.
Yes, the public did make a deal with content creators, but it's not what you describe. It's the opposite. Because the natural state of content was that anyone can make a copy of it -- and that was always considered good. Look at the history of story telling, folk tales and folks songs. It's all about others copying the content, sharing, building, etc.
Copyright was a bargain in the other direction. It was -- explicitly, mind you -- a bargain that said we will NOT make use of your works or build on them to enhance the culture further for a LIMITED period of time in the hope that this artificial monopoly allows you enough time to make some money. After that we will go back to the natural state of things.
And, yes, you are entitled to those works. Not because you had the decency not to break the law, but because that's the nature of culture.
If you're going to take issue with immoral and in-ethical extensions of patent and copyright laws, it seems to me that the pharmaceutical industry would be a better target - when THEY circumvent legislations and tack on a few more years to the copyrights on their drugs, tens of thousands of people die without access to cheaper generics.
I've spent tons of time doing exactly that as well -- probably more so than I've spent discussing the death of the public domain.
When you're talking about musical copyrights, the biggest downside I can see (besides the fact that I can't bootleg and sell any James Dean movies yet) is that we'll never be treated to the Biebs' cover of Folsom Prison Blues.
First of all, thanks to compulsory licensing, Biebs can already cover Folsom Prison Blues, so that's not the point. But, do you really not recognize how much of culture is built on the works of those who came before you?
Please, read this book: http://www.thepublicdomain.org/
It's available for free online if you'd like. The whole thing is worth reading, but I particularly like Chapter 6.
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They keep making the same 12 movies over and over, this just helps them keep a larger pool to draw from. Back from a time when people were creative and kept making new ideas, because they couldn't produce one thing and just sit back and know their entire dynasty would live forever on the profits of it.
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Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: A little confused
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Re: Popular Culture vs Corporate Culture
much the same as if one could own colors & elements
it might just be culture today, but give them time, next up nobody will be able to use silver (the color or element) anyone without asking/paying up
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(no, really, "the artists" tend to be some of the most adamant defenders of copyright themselves, even though it hurts them)
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Re: Re: "He created the word "robot" based on his own influences in sci fi."
The guy was a horrible tyrant, and unfortunately, his minions decided that keeping the company immoral like that is the way to go.
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Re: Re: Popular Culture vs Corporate Culture
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Re: Re: Re: A little confused
That Statute of 8 Anne, c.19 (1709) came about as a result of the end of official state censorship.
So there were about 15 free years!
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Re: Re: Re: A little confused
There's 2 versions of it in production for release in 2012. You can be sure that Disney's lawyers will be ready if any of them appear to take their cues from Disney's version rather than the Grimm version, even though by all rights both versions should be public domain by now.
The bigger question is - would either version exist (or would Disney's version even exist) if Grimm's estates had to have approval and payment before any of them could be created? Would that make our culture poorer? Who should be the judge of that?
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Re: Re: A little confused
MAFIAA are just o bunch of greedy rotten excuses of humans (that includes the first publishers that made copyright this mess). Except that, through the Govt imposed monopoly they have the money to bribe... I mean, lobby in their favor.
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Re: Re: Re: Re: A little confused
That's actually a very a contentious issue. It was debated at length later on in the cases of Millar v Taylor (King's Bench, 1769) and Donaldson v Beckett (House of Lords, 1774).
Members of the Worshipful Company of Stationers and Newspaper Makers argued that a common law copyright existed prior to the Statute of 8 Anne.
But, according to Lord Camden:
In the United States, the historical issue was examined again in the case of Wheaton v. Peters (Supreme Court, 1834).
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Re: A little confused
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Being that I don't know much about law, would that mean the older works could themselves be freely distributed, but one could not create their own works and pass it off as Mickey Mouse?
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Its already happening with the swathe of 3D re-releases of movies at the theatres. When I saw Tintin the other day every single preview was for a movie that was being re-released in 3D.
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If we're talking about the Copyright Term Extension Act, there were lots of reasons why Congress enacted it. If you really want to learn about it, look up the history of the CTEA. Look up the Eldred case that went to the Supreme Court. Read the briefs submitted that go over all the reasons.
My point was that if Mike really wants to know why it was extended retroactively, he could actually and simply look it up. Instead, he just pretends like it's all stupid and doesn't make sense. I just don't understand why he constantly does this: If I wanted to declare that something was stupid, I would take the time to learn what was actually going on. Not Mike. He can't be bothered. I guess when you're hell-bent on dissing copyright, there's no time to let facts get in the way.
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Re: Re: A little confused
“The Anti-Monopoly Origins of the Patent and Copyright Clause” by Tyler T Ochoa and Mark Rose (2002):
(Emphasis added.)
In Eldred v Ashcroft (2003), Justice Ginsburg decided that the Supreme Court would not enforce the “promote the progress” quid pro quo.
In Marbury v Madison, of course, the Court proclaimed that it was the final decider on the Constitution. Since then, Congress has gradually come around to the idea that they'll pass whatever legislation they feel like, and see what sticks in court.
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Actually provide a real argument for once, with citations and quotes to back up your points, insult free.
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If you feel something is worthy of discussion, you're welcome to submit a link. That would be much more effective than simply trying to discredit the blogger for his laziness.
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Actually provide a real argument for once, with citations and quotes to back up your points, insult free.
Sigh. You seem to miss the point. Mike ALREADY KNOWS the reasons the CTEA was passed. He's just PLAYING DUMB like it all doesn't make sense. Sheesh.
It's just ANOTHER example of Mike lying and manipulating his readers to diss IP law.
But if you're actually interested in the reasons, you can start here: http://thomas.loc.gov/cgi-bin/bdquery/z?d104:S483:
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Confusing text but I don't see any conspiracy of dumbness you're implying.
The point of an act is to start effective when signed and NOT be retroactive. This is akin to the police going back in their records and issuing "balance owing" to all who were caught speeding and given the older, lesser fines, in order to match the new fine values.
How well do you think such a retroactive law would go over with the public?
The only reason these acts get passed without much resentment is the fact that the masses don't know and don't care about copyrights. That alone should be the wake-up call that copyrights are out-of-touch with reality, as are those who ram them through the legislative process.
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The megacorporations must be destroyed, literally if need be, by any means necessary, before they destroy our country and our world in their greed and unrelenting lust for profit.
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Please explain why it's nothing more than a corporate cash grab instead of feebly trying to defame Mike.
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Re: Re: Re: Re: Average_Joe Jan 3rd 2012 2:50pm
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Go for it.
http://poopsenders.com/
(some people say they've gotten great results, others that it's a scam, so I'm not trying to say these guys are trustworthy)
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Re: Re: Re: "He created the word "robot" based on his own influences in sci fi."
I think Lawrence was referring to Steve Jobs' ability to take something that already existed and make it more marketable when he used the description in his comment about Asimov.
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Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: A little confused
Imagine if Greg Bear's "The Phantom Menace" was used as the script for Phantom Menace. It would have been decent -- and Bear used Lucas's script and added to it (and changed some of it too.) Pretty much like how Empire sucked before Brackett and Kasdan were brought in to redo it. This is why I find crowd-sourcing and open source so amazing -- the best product is created as a result of opening the project up to the users.
The problem is that most artists don't want to let go of the control they have -- but I've found myself that like free speech, you really get the best product when you allow others to get a say.
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Re: Re: Re: "He created the word "robot" based on his own influences in sci fi."
Somehow, I don't think that was what he was getting at (think "he took ideas that had been raised before and made it better/more popular")
"the company immoral"
Companies have morals now?
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Re: Re: A little confused
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Re: Re: And this is why...
long as someone is willing to fight the rest can go #### themselves.
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"Clearly the incentive to create was fine ..
Yeah - I smell a rat!! Or is it a mouse? Based on a rabbit.
It's the American way - steal someone else's horse then insist on padlocks to keep the "thieves" out.
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Feb. 15, 2067
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Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: A little confused
Oops, Terry Brooks novelized "The Phantom Menace", not Greg Bear. But Greg wrote some really good Clone Wars books.
Still, Terry Brooks novelization was better than Lucas's movie.
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Re: Re: A little confused
The ironic part is that the people who now performing this archival service are called "pirates".
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Anonymous Coward
Intellectual property first and foremost belongs to those who created it as well as their descendants.
I find it amazing that so many of you think you have an absolute right to works created by other people.
While I do understand the need for Pubic Domain, you act as if it is your God-given right and use it as an excuse to rip off the work of others.
People who create these works feel quite differently.
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Re: Re: A little confused
All of you are selfish who think you are owed something for work created by someone else.
And my guess is that none of you are talented enough to create on your own. Therefore, you have to rip off the work of someone else to make a profit.
This has nothing to do with preservation of art/culture. It has more to do with the public's desire to own absolutely everything.
Public Domain is why the work of Beethoven has been used to sell toilet paper.
Some people do not have the common sense to use the work of other's in a dignified manner.
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You're entitled to use them because the artificial monopoly that kept you from using them before has expired. Without copyright laws, you would be entitled to use them immediately.
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