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View Poll Results: How Long Should Copyright Last? | |||
In Perpetuity |
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7 | 3.66% |
50+ Years |
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32 | 16.75% |
20-30 Years |
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50 | 26.18% |
10-20 Years |
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33 | 17.28% |
10-20 Years with renewal option for 10-20 more |
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45 | 23.56% |
25 Years with option for public referendum to nullify |
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4 | 2.09% |
10 Years with option for public referendum to nullify |
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15 | 7.85% |
What's Copyright? |
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5 | 2.62% |
Voters: 191. You may not vote on this poll |
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#121 | |
Optimist
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Copyrighttrollocracy
Quote:
Nevertheless, intellectual property is not the same as physical property. On that subject, I wonder how much my car would cost if the price of each and every invention is built in the final price: something for the wheel inventor, a bit for the rubber inventor, steel inventor, glass inventor... It would be a bit like monopoly game when the winner is known but the game is not over yet. Boooooring.... The world of perpetual copyright would be very boring but only until it ends in a possibly interesting and most probably bloody revolution started by the copyrightless population. You chop some wood for 3 days, you get paid. You drive a truck for a month, you get paid. You think some time, a day, few years, maybe even longer until you think of something new to build and then you and your descendants should be getting some money forever. Yeah, right. So, it took an author a year to write a book. Fine. I have no problem that he gets paid for every copy. His/hers spouse and children should get paid if (s)he dies too soon. But there has to be an end to that. Sooner or later we would reach a point when half new books, new songs, new inventions would be disputed by copyright owners of previous works. It would take forever to clear anything new for publishing. It would be the Dark age of copyrighttrollocracy. I have voted for 10-20 year in the poll. No extension. |
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#122 | |
Grand Master of Flowers
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Quote:
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#123 | |
Optimist
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Quote:
![]() Anyway, hundreds of years is significantly shorter then forever. |
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#124 | |
Grand Master of Flowers
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Quote:
There are reasons to be opposed to copyright, but the fact that we can't keep track of it is not a reason. |
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#125 |
Optimist
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Melancholy Elephants
I would limit the copyright (and patent!) duration to 20 years. My concerns are more or less described in the story "Melancholy Elephants" by Spider Robinson I have read years ago. I am so glad that the author has published the story on his website for anyone to read. Here is the link:
http://www.spiderrobinson.com/melancholyelephants.html Thanks Spider!!! |
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#126 |
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#127 | |
Grand Sorcerer
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Quote:
Songs have even more hassles; do you register the lyrics and music separately? If you add a few verses and change the chorus a bit, do you need to register each change? Requiring pre-registration for protection is a bad idea. The current system has some big problems (including the time & hassle to register in order to file useful infringement lawsuits), but there's good reasons not to require registration before the protection kicks in. But I'd love to see "it's protected for 15 years from creation in fixed form automatically--after that, you have to register it." That's plenty of time to decide your college newspaper articles are worth developing into a book, or your high-school poetry is worth polishing & selling to the New Yorker. It would mean anything more than 15 years old would be public domain, available for everyone, unless it was on a list somewhere. You could find out if the lyrics used by the garage band you were part of as a teenager are restricted (and know who to ask about permissions), or if your new band can safely put them on an album. Otherwise, you're stuck with "Who wrote that? Tony's girlfriend, wasn't it? What the heck was her name, and how would I find her now?" |
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#128 |
Groupie
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20 years should be the absolute maximum allowed.
It is an appalling abuse of logic and reason that someone who writes a 3 minute song when they are 18, still has to be paid for it's performance when they are 60 years of age and their children have to be paid too. What kind of nonsense is that. |
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#129 | |
Grand Master of Flowers
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Quote:
If I own a house, I can rent it out until I die, and then I can pass it on to my children and they can do the same, then pass it on to their kids. For hundreds of years, in theory. |
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#130 | |
Grand Sorcerer
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Quote:
If, however, you build a house, and sell it to someone else, you don't have the right to give it to your kids after you die. You could rent it--with a detailed contract, which the renter agrees to, and has the option of negotiating terms, or leaving when the terms or fees become too much. Books are generally sold, not rented. There's no contract describing the terms of use, no ongoing payments, and no option to stop paying and returning use to the original owner. Authors (and publishers) generally prefer not to have to negotiate usage rights with each book buyer. There's no signed contract between the two establishing what rights the buyer's bought--there's a receipt, like a deed, that says "it's yours now." Copyright is an attempt to apply rental terms to purchases. And for the most part, it's a good thing; otherwise, many authors would be prone to only releasing their works to a tiny, high-paying audience, perhaps that had signed nondisclosure agreements. I'm in favor of copyright monopolies... for a limited time. But they don't parallel directly to physical property concerns. If you make a house, anyone else is free to make a house that looks just like it. |
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#131 | |
Grand Master of Flowers
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Quote:
I don't see a logical or moral claim for society to determine that Paul McCartney should have lost all rights to "Paperback Writer" in 1986, for example. (And, again, I know that this wasn't your argument). |
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#132 |
Banned
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Seeing as how the current copyright term of life of the creator plus seventy years routinely inhibits those born along with each works creation to freely share and derive works created during our own lifetimes in whole, we submit that a reversion to a more adequate time period for copyright restrictions is NECESSARY in order to fully promote the progress of science and the arts, as was copyrights original purpose.
I feel that 15 years is more than adequate. ![]() |
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#133 |
cacoethes scribendi
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It could be curious to have this poll run twice, once for people that do not derive their living from works protected by copyright and again for those that do. As someone that has for years attempted to run my own small business I am very conscious of the assets I've built (and copyright is an asset). I try to imagine what it would be like for an author to have spent a life-time writing to turn around and discover that some individuals would like to arbitrarily take away what they've worked so hard to achieve. (It's not too hard, I've actually experienced someone wanting to arbitrarily try to assume ownership of years worth of my work.)
Yes, the times they are a changin' (thanks Bob), but have some thought for those what started their careers when books were all printed. Put yourself in the author's position: imagine you own a work still in print after 15 years and discover that someone wants to arbitrarily take away your entitlement to that income, all for some strange idea that they are automatically entitled to copy that work for free. |
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#134 | |
Wizard
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#135 | |
Grand Sorcerer
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Quote:
If you spend your time making a physical product and then you sell it. According to you it is arbitrary and strange that you cannot sell it again. Most authors i know seem to look at writing as a methof to earn money withing the current laws and rules. They accept the rules whatever they are and do not seem to have the kind of opinion you describe here. |
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