Stop The Presses: Disney Tells Court About The Importance Of The Public Domain
from the that-disney? dept
As you may know, Disney has something of a reputation when it comes to copyright and the public domain. While the company itself is somewhat notorious for taking works from the public domain, putting its own animated spin on it and then claiming copyright as far as copyright will take them, it also was the prime mover in extending the term of copyright back in 1998 in the "Sonny Bono Copyright Term Extension Act," which is often referred to as the Mickey Mouse Protection Act. It holds that nickname because Disney lobbied heavily for the Act and because it prevented Mickey Mouse from reaching the public domain. As Tom Bell has shown, there's a well-known Mickey Mouse curve that shows copyright extending basically every time Mickey Mouse is about to hit the public domain:"We conclude that a patentee's use of a royalty agreement that projects beyond the expiration date of the patent is unlawful per se."But, because there can always be questionable rulings, there was another court ruling that (bizarrely) found that you can get a license for something that was never patented if you work out an agreement to that nature (that's Aronson v. Quick Point Pencil). This has made things messy.
In this case, some Spiderman fans patented a an invention of a toy that could shoot webs out of the toy's wrists, a la Spiderman. Marvel bought the patent from the inventors, promising a royalty if the company made such a toy, which it did. The patent expired in 2010 and Disney/Marvel stopped paying. The inventors sued... and have so far lost twice in the lower and appeals courts. The issue is now before the Supreme Court, with the direct question of whether or not the ruling in Brulotte should be overturned. Hopefully, it will not be. Once something is in the public domain it should stay there. And that is exactly what Disney/Marvel is arguing -- in ways that seem somewhat antithetical to the company's stance on copyright. Take this for example:
An essential part of the bargain at the heart of the patent system is that, when the patent term ends, all rights associated with the patent terminate and the patented idea is committed to the public domain for the free and unrestricted use of all. The same policy concerns animate other well-settled patent precedents, including the rule that a licensee may not be required to continue to pay royalties after a patent is invalidated. Private parties are properly forbidden from attempting to evade those congressional judgments.Just switch out copyright for patents and you see how this looks quite out of place for Disney to be arguing, since it has fought incredibly hard to make sure that the "end" of the copyright term is an amorphous, ever changing concept that is always in the future. And then there's this incredible statement, warning of how horrible it would be if royalties might accumulate forever:
If anything, modern developments underscore the need to protect the public domain from the aggregate toll of patent royalties that would accumulate foreverYou don't say, Disney. How very, very interesting...
Hopefully the Supreme Court makes quick work of this and sides with Disney in protecting the public domain on patents. But it will be interesting to see these statements come back up a couple of years from now as Mickey Mouse nears the public domain again, won't it?
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Filed Under: copyright, kimble, patents, public domain, spider man, toys
Companies: disney, marvel
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Anyway, if you have a shred of honesty, I'd re-read the article and locate the actual point being addressed, because you completely overlooked it.
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I know, I know that intellectual work is not your strong point but that's what happened here. Sorry if your head explode out of the effort to understand it.
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They love the Public Domain as long as they can mine things from it and then claim ownership.
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"Did the Monarch of the British Empire really just give a speech criticizing expansionist imperialism?"
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I'm curious to know how that sort of thing actually works in the legal system, since it's not uncommon for a company's lawyers to present a staunch arguement in one lawsuit, and then have another set of lawyers make the exact opposite argument in another suit -- and succeed both times.
While to the outside observer this might demonstrate a clear example of hypocrisy when viewed in the big picture (nonwithstanding the standard response of "that was different") it just seems like a corporation can indeed have it both ways.
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Disney copies Public Domain at every opportunity
The reason they are now arguing for Public Domain now is that it's getting harder to find good Public Domain material to copy, produce, and copyright.
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This is a contract not a license
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"Just switch out copyright for patents"
This is a breathtaking escalation of your "arguments from fantasy" method. I like your being obviously out to lunch, so keep it up!
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It is easy to bash the company because its works have benefited from the expansion of copyright terms, but to say it is "taking" things is just plain wrong and misleading to a fault.
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Re: Disney copies Public Domain at every opportunity
Wow, I wonder why that could be...
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You say that as though Disney had nothing to do with the expansion.
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No contradiction here
You can make a royalty contract about Mickey Mouse for 500 years. It will terminate in 500 years or when Mickey Mouse enters the Public Domain, whichever of the two happens first. Probably the former.
If the Spiderman web shooters had wanted to keep royalties for longer, they should have lobbullied Congress for an extension of patent durations timely. Since they didn't, the patent expired, rendering the royalty arrangement moot.
They did not do their homework and did not grease enough corrupt politicians timely. Probably their franchise would not have had the money to do so anyway. Poor losers.
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Re: Re:
What point being addressed did I miss? Quote the text you think I didn't grasp.
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Ever wonder why we changed our laws back in the 70's? It was because the US long before came to the realization that it was an outlier in the international community in matters of copyright law, and as a consequence of which US authors were quite often getting shafted in foreign markets.
Quite frankly, I happen to believe that the basic concepts embodied in our 1909 Copyright Act represent a better model that what is now the international norm. Unfortunately, once the genie is out of the bottle it is damn near impossible to stuff it back in, so it looks like long terms are here to stay for the indefinite future.
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This is familiar.
It's not ironic if you look honestly at the motivations.
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Re: No contradiction here
It's no surprise that Disney considers public domain as a GOOD THING. Disney was, and still is in some aspects, BUILT ON PUBLIC DOMAIN. They love TAKING from the public domain.
What Disney dislikes is CONTRIBUTING to the public domain.
You want good laws, you gotta pay for them.
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That's the portion that reminds us of Disney leading the efforts to extend copyright terms (feel free to click the link for further explanation but be sure to at least READ this article, you still haven't done it):
As Tom Bell has shown, there's a well-known Mickey Mouse curve that shows copyright extending basically every time Mickey Mouse is about to hit the public domain
Then Disney defending Public Domain:
If anything, modern developments underscore the need to protect the public domain from the aggregate toll of patent royalties that would accumulate forever.
You know, the Public Domain isn't restricted to fairy tales.
I would make some acidic joke on the doctors dropping you head first when you were born but I lost the words to your ability to be stupid (or fake it genuinely).
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https://www.techdirt.com/articles/20111122/04254316872/definitive-post-why-sopa-protect-ip-are -bad-bad-ideas.shtml
Stop being an obnoxious moron.
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Re: This is familiar.
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Re: Re: No contradiction here
They're parasites basically, taking, but never giving.
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That's called "enlightened self-interest" in some circles.
Sometimes you just have to stand back in amazement over the sheer balls of a whole-hearted thief.
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If it is, then someone will have to market them as snot shooters.
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If you think the points raised in the article are wrong, then by all means, provide counter-evidence to support your position. Just trying to dismiss something by claiming it's FUD doesn't actually do anything to support your claim.
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Re: Re: Re: No contradiction here
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Re: This is a contract not a license
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Are you claiming that lobbying from the US copyright industries had nothing to do with it?
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The inventor sold the patent. Part of the sale agreement was a payment when the invention was used. It was the equivalent of a patent royalty, but it was not exactly that since they transferred the patent.
Disney/Marvel waits until the patent expires, and starts selling a toy with the feature. They ignore the terms of the sale contract and don't make the additional payment. When taken to court their defense is that the invention is now public domain and they are free to use it.
Disney wants this to be a patent case. The inventors want this to be a simple contract case.
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Re: Re: Re: No contradiction here
Or to put into current parlance:
They are Public Domain leechers, not seeders.
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You're right, it is easy to bash the company because its works have benefited from the expansion of copyright terms that they spent tons of time and money fighting for.
"...but to say it is "taking" things is just plain wrong and misleading to a fault."
Of course they're "taking" from the public domain, that's exactly what is supposed to happen. They're being criticized for then going to great lengths to prevent others from doing the same thing with their works.
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Every single damn fucking word ever said on this site - there is your quote.
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Of course the positions are consistent, from a greedy "what's best for me" position. They like extensions to intellectual property when it's their intellectual property, but they like when things enter the public domain so they can scoop them up (and then probably try and protect the rights from others).
The point is that it's ironic that one of the biggest lobbyists arguing to extend IP protection for as long as possible is currently arguing in court that they should be able to utilize an expired patent without paying royalties to the creator.
Either way, you are again looking at things purely from a legal standpoint and not from a reality standpoint. This article makes perfect sense to someone who isn't only looking at the legal arguments. Legally, Disney is "correct."
But that doesn't mean they're not still giant hypocrites.
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Mike too, of course. At least Bell stands behind what he says. Mike just runs away. Every time.
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Let's be sure to call them out about this when the copyright on Mickey Mouse is due to expire and they're wheeling out the orphan granny kittens, etc. to justify extending the term. Again.
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So he huffs and puffs, hoping to blow logic and truth down by means of attrition.
It is somewhat entertaining if you're in the right mood but for the most part it's annoying to those of us who are members of the reality-based community.
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So, no, you can't believe the public domain is important if you think they should be either extended or maintained as they are. 28 years is long enough.
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You want to spam bawk noises, go to a farmyard.
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What a surprise.
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Mike works for a living.
It's obvious she doesn't...
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Disney strategy, simplified
"That is why we will never let our intellectual property right expire, because we want to charge for Mickey forever."
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Now, put that into the context of a company that has lobbied heavily throughout it's entire history for extending the duration of intellectual property protections.
Now, go back to the quote where they talk about protecting the public domain from trolls that want their royalties to "accumulate forever." Now think about how Disney has spent millions of dollars trying to ensure that their own ownership of Mickey Mouse accumulates forever.
I know, sometimes irony is a difficult thing to grasp. This is complicated, high level stuff, and it's not something that was even argued in court! I know it's hard for you to accept that there are truths that haven't been determined by court precedent. Sadly, irony is not yet settled case law (but probably should be).
But it's real, and it applies here. You're completely hung up on the details of this specific case, in that the patent had already expired, so clearly the royalties should not continue (which is obvious to you, obvious to Mike, and obvious to the courts).
But that isn't relevant to the irony; the point is that Disney has claimed in court that extending patent protection indefinitely is a bad thing when they've argued for extending copyright protection since the company founded. I know you can't see it, but that's your lack of imagination and intelligence, not Mike's.
Sorry.
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Re: No contradiction here
The issue is the irony of Disney's statement that "modern developments underscore the need to protect the public domain [from patent royalties] that would accumulate forever." This is from a company that has heavily lobbied for extensions of copyright terms from the more reasonable 28 or 42 years to 75 years or life of the author plus 50 years then to 95/120 years or life of the author plus 70 years. This was specifically designed to prevent its own intellectual property from entering the public domain.
So, for a company that his historically fought tooth-and-nail to prevent their own products from entering the public domain to point out how important it is to ensure other people's products enter the public domain in a reasonable amount of time is hilarious.
It's like North Korea calling out the United States for human rights violations. Technically they're correct, however, their own policies make the accusation ironic considering the stance of the source.
That's all that happened here; Mike called out Disney for encouraging a stance that, historically, they've done everything they can to avoid. It's ironic, nothing more. Disney is going to win their court case (and should). They still have a stranglehold on Mickey Mouse for perfectly legal (but ridiculous) reasons.
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Change the word 'copyright' back to 'patent' and it becomes clear.
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It's funny because it's true!
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Re: This is a contract not a license
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Re: No contradiction here
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Funny how you lot insist on doing everything on the up and up, but you'll keep all your discussions and dealings secret and insult anyone that calls you out on it.
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The faster world developing the more flexible have to become patent legislation. It's an issue all around the world - where is rights of owner stops and where they are but breaking morality of needs?
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Seriously, WTF? They should have to pay royalties to use someone's IP for the rest of time just like the rest of us.
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