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#106 |
Guru
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Join Date: Feb 2012
Device: Kindle
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#107 |
Grand Sorcerer
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Location: Monroe Wisconsin
Device: K3, Kindle Paperwhite, Calibre, and Mobipocket for Pc (netbook)
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Isn't there also the problem of transfer of ownership? I mean say you own a studio like Universal or Paramount back in the day and due to financial problems (which the real studios had) you have to sell off your old films to another. Does your copyright automatically transfer over to the new owner of the film so that they can claim to be the only one with the right to publish the work in question? Such has been argued in the past in other media besides books. Conde Nast has tried to claim that they own a vast number of Old Time Radio programs and that if someone wants to have them they have to pay through the nose for a handful. They have tried it with pulp magazines as well such as The Shadow and I wouldn't be surprised if they had tried to argue that they own Doc Savage as well. I think there's a problem with that mentality though. It smacks of greed. If you have to pay $40.00-$60.00 for a handful of OTR programs on CD or a similar amount for old fiction who would be able to afford it? Only the rich, that's who.
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#108 |
Apprentice Curmudgeon.
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Location: Runaway Bay, QLD, , Australia
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I fail to grasp how a reduced copyright term is going to create advantage to individuals. Here in Australia we have tens, possibly hundreds of thousands of books that are in the public domain, but copyrighted in the US. How does that translate into an advantage for us? Does the fact that George Orwell's 1984 is not protected here, but is still under copyright in the US really make a difference? A formatted eBook version is still going to cost 99¢, regardless of its status.
I see a degree of resentment of copyright, but no valid argument as to why it should be reduced. |
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#109 |
The Grand Mouse 高貴的老鼠
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Join Date: Jul 2007
Location: Norfolk, England
Device: Kindle Oasis
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#110 |
The Dank Side of the Moon
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Location: Denver, CO
Device: Kindle2; Kindle Fire
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#111 |
Member Retired
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Join Date: Jan 2011
Location: Limbo
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Now we are getting somewhere, money is the poison that runs through the veins of society. Too much greed, too much desire of power, of having more than your neighbor. It's like a nice car or a nice house or caviar does only taste really good if you know that nobody around you can afford it.
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#112 | |
Grand Sorcerer
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Join Date: Jan 2008
Device: Pocketbook
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Quote:
What is protected is the middlemen's right to exploit copyrights. (In the US, preferably forever minus 1 day.) Make no mistake, that's what all the legal wrangling and extensions are all about. As to Doc. It is still under copyright in the US. The earliest the first Docs could come out of copyright is either 2021 (for the Laurence Donovan Docs d. 1950 - 1950 + 70 + 1 = 2021), or 2029 (treating all Docs as "work for hire" - 1933 was the first year that Doc was published, so for the Docs published in 1933, it would be 1933 + 95 + 1 = 2029.) In Canada, (under the standard Berne treaty, without extensions), 159 of the Docs are certainly in the Public Domain, due to the authors deaths, and possibly all of them, should they be considered "works for hire" which have a 50 year + 1 term. (I'll look it up on my sticky and report back.) (They actually were works for hire. The authors were paid a flat fee, never received royalties, and with one exception, never had their names appended to their works. Those are the standard definitions for work for hire. but whether or not it would be worth the court fight, who knows...) And Conde Nast does own the copyright, as they bought Street and Smith, a long time back... Last edited by Greg Anos; 07-14-2012 at 07:39 AM. |
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#113 |
Grand Sorcerer
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And here's the Canadian law...
6. The term for which copyright shall subsist shall, except as otherwise expressly provided by this Act, be the life of the author, the remainder of the calendar year in which the author dies, and a period of fifty years following the end of that calendar year. R.S., 1985, c. C-42, s. 6; 1993, c. 44, s. 58. Marginal note:Anonymous and pseudonymous works 6.1 Except as provided in section 6.2, where the identity of the author of a work is unknown, copyright in the work shall subsist for whichever of the following terms ends earlier: (a) a term consisting of the remainder of the calendar year of the first publication of the work and a period of fifty years following the end of that calendar year, and (b) a term consisting of the remainder of the calendar year of the making of the work and a period of seventy-five years following the end of that calendar year, but where, during that term, the author’s identity becomes commonly known, the term provided in section 6 applies. 1993, c. 44, s. 58. Since the names of the work for hire people has become known, Life + 50 applies, so only 159 Docs are P.D. in Canada, with the next block becoming P.D. in 2028, one more in 2029, and the last 3 in 2046... (Even though none of the writers or their heirs and assign ever got a dime of royalties for any of them (with one posthumous exception)). Last edited by Greg Anos; 07-14-2012 at 07:51 AM. |
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#114 | |
Grand Sorcerer
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Location: near Philadelphia USA
Device: Kindle Kids Edition, Fire HD 10 (11th generation)
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Quote:
Cheaper is unassailable: The Kindle edition of Animal Farm is US$7.92. The Kindle edition of 1984 is US$8.55. The Kindle edition of Burmese Days is US$9.39. KoboBooks prices are generally higher. By contrast, scruplously legal web sites such as Project Gutenberg Australia, Project Gutenberg Canada, and MobileRead provide residents of countries like Canada and Australia, which had Orwell public domain days, all of his books for free. Better is speculative, but: A 28 year copyright term is short enough that it would pressure great writer's-blocked authors (Salinger? Ellison?) to eventually produce more books. But it's long enough that no one will think they have to churn out potboilers every few months due to that looming 28 years deadline. Life plus 50 was for a world in which age of death was highly unpredictable, and writers often were men with far younger wives. Now that most author spouses have their own careers, and there are old age pension schemes, the need is gone. Last edited by SteveEisenberg; 07-14-2012 at 07:52 AM. |
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#115 |
PHD in Horribleness
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Join Date: Dec 2008
Location: In the ironbound section, near avenue L
Device: Just a whole bunch. I guess I am a collector now.
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However, the fact that one can not with anything like a strait face try to make the entreaties not match the dictionary definitions of begging and pleading ... DOES make it beggging and pleading.
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#116 |
eBook Enthusiast
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Location: UK
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#117 | |
Maria Schneider
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Quote:
Sure, I get that a 25 dollar ebook that can't be lent is steep. But a 25 dollar hardback can be lent, sold or shared--or bought used for half or less than half. I'm a buyer of art and books. While making a bunch of artwork public domain so that I could use it for a cover might sound nice, it isn't practical to put the artist out of work. They make a pittance as it is for the most part. Lately I wanted to try a bunch of new authors, but didn't want to spend 8 to 10 bucks a book. I was able to borrow them from the library for 2.50 each. That's a total bargain. I know authors who have stopped writing because there wasn't enough money in it. One of them was a favorite author from way back. She had to move on to other things. Yeah, there are other books. Yeah, some people don't care. But there's nothing wrong with giving people a chance at their dreams and a chance to make a living. Copyright law even as long as it is today is not keeping anyone from being able to read what they want if they are willing to go find it. Last edited by BearMountainBooks; 07-14-2012 at 12:54 PM. |
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#118 |
Grand Master of Flowers
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Life plus 50 was enacted in 1976. I was a kid in 1976. It wasn't that different...
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#119 |
Grand Sorcerer
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Join Date: Jun 2008
Location: near Philadelphia USA
Device: Kindle Kids Edition, Fire HD 10 (11th generation)
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#120 | |
Grand Sorcerer
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Join Date: Jan 2008
Device: Pocketbook
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Quote:
That may not have been the intention, but that is the use today. An enormous amount of art was made in the US prior to 1976. The golden age of Hollywood, the golden age of Radio shows, painters and illustrators like Maxfield Parrish, et. al., the maturation of the pulps to literature, like the golden age of detective fiction, science fiction, ect., Jazz and Big Band music, and on, and on... Nobody complained that they couldn't create art because copyright was too short, instead, they created and made (or lost) money. Artforms rose and fell, but not because copyright was too short. But now, under the old rules, much of that would have fallen into the Public Domain. And the P.D. doesn't cost anything. This leads to a two-fold situation. #1. If P.D. stuff is free, why should somebody pay for the latest? Why not be cheap and get old (but new to you) art? Of course, not everybody will take that attitude, but for every one that does, that's one less sale of current material. #2. If enough people actually wants that old stuff, the extended copyright holders can re-issue it (if they bother to choose to) for a profit. actually a bigger profit that new stuff, because, for the most part, the upfront expenses have already been paid. Nobody wants to look at this way but by selling it as near or at new retail price, the old works don't undercut the current art pricing. BearMountain - how much worse off, as a reader, to have all the US works before Jan 1 1955 in the Public Domain? As a writer, yes, because of the tremendous amount of low cost competition, but as a reader? I don't see the problem. If you say this will cause a drop in new art creation, the market for people who want new, will always be there. What you will lose is the market of those who are forced to pay for old at the same rate as new, and who therefore may opt for new, instead. And frankly, the world doesn't owe you that market... |
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