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#31 | |
Grand Sorcerer
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#32 | |
Grand Sorcerer
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The mouse house is simply not going to roll over and go to sleep when their business model is at stake. They haven't in the past, they won't in the future. All that SOPA proved is that a full-frontal legislative assault won't work any more. That just means is will have to be "sneaked in". Legislatures have been doing that (for a fee) for over a hundred years in the US... Sorry to seem argumentative, but somebody has to point out the opposing view (and why). |
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#33 | |
Grand Sorcerer
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Copyright does not have that dynamic. A creator of copyright does not gain by other copyrights going into the public domain, so they are not willing to sacrifice the "long tail" (which costs the copyright holder <nothing> to maintain, unlike patents which cost money to maintain) for every last perceived penny. That's why RIAA/MPAA work so hard to maintain and extend copyright. If they had to pay a fee on an ongoing basis to keep their copyright, or (hypothetically) had to pay a patent fee to obtain/maintain a copyright, the length would shrink fast. Example - musician Les Paul invented and patented the electric guitar pickup. He got a royalty on every electric guitar made until the patent expired. If he could have gotten a royalty on all copyrighted music created using his invention, would there be a demand to keep the performances in copyright forever? I don't think so. If you really want to solve the "copyright problem", tax copyrights. Why not? We tax all other forms of real property... |
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#34 |
cacoethes scribendi
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Do you have specific examples of books that have previously been published as ebooks or print-on-demand that are now orphaned? I grant you that it is possible it might happen, but it seems much less likely that works of significance will become unavailable for purchase in this way.
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#35 |
Guru
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That's a great idea. If the government is providing a service to a business (the copyright holder) by enforcing copyright protection the copyright holder should pay for the service. Why should they get a free ride and have their business subsidized by the taxpayers. If they are no longer interested in paying for the service they should lose the protection. I don't say the yearly fee should be high but it should not be free. That would solve the orphan works problem.
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#36 | |
cacoethes scribendi
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I have no particular problem with the idea that copyright of extended duration should incur a fee. But it isn't a just creators of copyright material (ie. everyone) that benefits from the no fee, no registration, system. It's the management of copyright itself. At the moment (in some countries at least) it's simple: create it and it's covered. If you start having variable length copyrights you need all the management and associated costs that go with that, not to forget all the treaties that you have to fit in with or change, not to forget that users of copyright material can't just look at a date to get a good idea, now they must research every item in detail. It should be feasible to require a fee for extended copyright (I can't see it being feasible to require a fee for some more limited/basic form of copyright, copyright covers so much more than just books, and so many more people than just authors of novels), but it would be a significant undertaking and not one that seems likely to happen any time soon. Last edited by gmw; 07-10-2013 at 08:53 AM. |
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#37 | |
Media Junkie
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But I'm sure the copyright will be extended yet again. I'm no fan of piracy, as I've said before artists and those who work with them should be paid and my concern form a consumer's viewpoint would be that rampant piracy would lead to less choice of entertainment content (but that has in no way happened as far as I can tell). However, this excessive copyright terms nonsense is the one aspect of the debate that makes me waver, for older stuff. I guess I wouldn't feel too badly about the piracy of Beatles or The Who albums, William Faulkner novels, or old Disney movies at this point. |
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#38 | |
Grand Sorcerer
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#39 | ||
cacoethes scribendi
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It's all very well to get sarcastic about how little the famous few need the money, but understand that copyright isn't really about them - if there were fees involved in extending copyright then they could certainly afford to pay them. Copyright is a much bigger topic than a few famous people. Quote:
Why do you think losing the copyright holder must be as common as before? It seems to me that our record keeping has improved considerably in the last hundred years or so. |
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#40 | |
Wizard
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When the particular issue of sound recording copyright was being debated, one point that came up was that the "little guys" weren't likely to benefit, or would benefit by a few pounds/euros a year (literally in some cases). The big names (famous people, large record labels) stood to make a lot of money. I'm afraid I don't have links or anything, this is from memory. What about niche interests? Availability is an issue to the people who share that niche interest, but niches are unlikely to be commercially viable. An example - my father-in-law has a lot of vinyl records that are around 50 years old. None of them are available commercially now, and they're unlikely to ever be so. He'd like to turn them all into MP3s and offer them online to anyone that wants them. He can't do that, so they're unavailable to anyone. Legally, he can't even make copies for his own use, since the UK doesn't have a fair use exemption for private use. |
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#41 | |
Media Junkie
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But hey, don't let the facts get in the way of a good argument, eh? Last edited by usuallee; 07-10-2013 at 01:08 PM. |
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#42 | |
Philosopher
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#43 |
Grand Sorcerer
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Not completely true.There was no copyright in Greco-Romans times, or before the 1500's, at the earliest. All IP created before then was inherently public domain...
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#44 | |
eReader
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Free works are just a side-effect of the public domain. The real strength is its ability to fertilize the ideas of the next generation, and that can't happen when works are locked away or lost. Disney isn't even the real problem, they make keep things under copyright for too long (in my opinion) but they also make sure to keep their properties in the public discourse. It limits derivative works, but the capacity for inspiration remains. The problem with records is that even though record-keeping has been getting better, as long as copyright keeps getting extended it's still bound by the record-keeping of the nineteen-twenties. Record-keeping from the twenties to the fifties isn't getting any better, and the more time that passes, the more records from the earliest part of that era are being lost rather than being kept and updated. Modern record-keeping is better, the records they kept in the past are exactly the same. The more time that passes, the more likely it becomes that records will be lost, and with them the copyright holders. This is one reason why I like to tie copyright terms to the publication of the work, not the life of the author. It makes it much easier to track things down. |
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#45 |
Wizard
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Yes but if you wanted a copy then you had to either write it by hand yourself or pay someone else to copy it - a self-limiting system. Once printing arrived then any printer could copy anyone's work without recompense to the originator... and apparently did so which brought us eventually to the copyright hole we're now stuck in...
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