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Originally Posted by spindlegirl
Has anyone ever tried copyright until a certain ceiling of dollars has been earned vs the passage of time? Say, after 100K has been profited to the author...
That way, someone who had slower success still stands a chance of earning as much as someone who is big name for doing the same amount of work (maybe even more than) as the big author who everyone grabs their novel sight unseen? Or if someone's novel isn't just that great, or not trendy, then they can receive that money when it does "hit".
I knew someone who wrote knitting patterns - sort of - that way. They charged a fee for a pattern until they had earned back in time what they had put into it and profited... then they made it free (while not yet public domain).
Probably a silly idea, but it's a way to encourage earning income... No different than if I build a house, it would earn me a wage, but then to earn more i'd have to build another house...
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I began thinking along the same line, but soon realized that while it might work for a lot of books, it doesn't work for all. A new Stephen King release would be out of copyright within a month, maybe a week. Not to mention hit songs, they'd be out of copyright the day after their release. I could see this work in a socialist society, it would be considered fair that it was in public domain once the copyright holder had earned a specific amount.