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View Poll Results: How long should a copyright last? | |||
Current length is good |
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9 | 6.43% |
Post-death length should be longer |
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2 | 1.43% |
Post-death length should be shorter |
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69 | 49.29% |
Fixed length only (state length in post) |
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36 | 25.71% |
Lifetime only (state length for organizations in post) |
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24 | 17.14% |
Voters: 140. You may not vote on this poll |
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#76 |
C L J
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Death+50
EVERYWHERE the only exceptions being Creative Commons publications. |
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#77 |
Wizard
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I think that the right to produce copies of a work should require that said copies be made and made available for purchase. If a publisher finds it not in their interest to keep a work in print, then the rights should revert to the author. If the author is no more, then the work should fall into the public domain. Making the right to copy itself a marketable commodity is a part of the problem. It is treating the copyright like mineral/oil rights, that can be bought and sold with nothing of value being produced.
Luck; Ken |
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#78 | |
Grand Sorcerer
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Quote:
McCauley covered this in 1842. Publishers would always have some version for sale (at an outrageous price), just to keep the copyright. A book held by copies for sale, at, say, $10,000 USD for a copy. Or the headaches of Print On Demand. Company X has an employee buy 1 copy a year. Voila, continually in print... |
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#79 | |
Wizard
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Yes, there would have to be some way to prevent that. Perhaps a stiff penalty if caught taking actions to hold on to the copyright through such fraudulent compliance. Luck; Ken |
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#80 | |
Guru
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#81 | ||
Grand Sorcerer
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Or are you just thinking of older books, say from the 1950's, that are unlikely to be digitized prior to copyright expiration? Quote:
I do have a concern about the lack of mention of books in my last link. Might it be that automated copyright enforcement won't work for books because the minimal needed download bandwidth raises fewer flags? If true, then, by your economic logic, copyright length for movies should be longest, music in-between, and books the shortest. And I don't think too many people here would advocate that. |
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#82 |
cacoethes scribendi
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Under "natural law" all property belongs to the strongest entity that wants it. Oh, for the good ol' days, eh?
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#83 |
Wizard
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#84 |
cacoethes scribendi
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#85 |
Guru
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If you can't get the gov to change the length of copyright back to it's original length maybe they could simply say that any copyright for which a yearly fee is not paid will not be enforced by the government whether or not it's still technically in force. If a book is making money for the publisher they will pay it and keep the book available. If they deem the book not worth keeping in print the enforcement will lapse and the author or anyone else can make it available and sell it directly. Why should publishers or anyone else get a service like copyright enforcement for free anyway? Stop giving out corporate handouts. This would help decrease the deficit, keep orphaned or abandoned works available, and allow authors to actually get some money from their work creating a book abandoned by their publisher.
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#86 | |
Grand Sorcerer
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(You can't touch it, but I don't see any reason to spend a dime on it. Too bad.) |
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#87 | |||
Fanatic
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To put it another way, to sell your back-catalog, you've got to keep yourself in public view, and the main way to do that is to publish a new book that sells quite well. But if you can do that, the question has to be do you really still need the monopoly on the earliest parts of your back catalog? |
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#88 |
Wizard
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#89 |
Guru
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Fixed term of 20 years for humans, 10 years for non-humans.
There are not many authors whose works will still be making money after 20 years. Time to write a new book. As for companies, they're in it purely for the money. I asked about the books of one of Sweden's greatest writers recently (Marianne Fredriksson). Less than 20 years from first publication, some of them were no longer available from the publisher. If useful inventions, drugs, etc have a license period of about 20 years, why on earth should things intended purely for entertainment have a license period up to five times longer. I'd use the same system for music, film, etc. As to the objection that we can't shorten a period (life+50) after the convention is signed, if we can lengthen it as was done recently for music, then I think we can shorten it. |
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#90 | ||
Bookmaker & Cat Slave
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Quote:
This is one of those "truisms" that has always boggled me. That art should be created for the love of it, and not for filthy lucre. That any art created purely for filthy lucre is somehow inferior to, or besmirched by, any thought of monetary gain or compensation. What complete and utter old bollocks! (Katsunami: this isn't directed at you, but please do give it some thought). I personally blame the early Christian/Catholic Church for perpetrating this silliness. The Church, always seeking to get the most for nothing, convinced thousands upon thousands of laborers and artisans to "donate" their services for early churches, cathedrals, and the like, for "the glory of God." So that they were buying their way into the Kingdom of Heaven with the sweat from their brow, instead of asking the Church to actually <gasp!> pay for their work. I truly think that this is to whence you can trace back this idea that art for the sake of art, (which originally existed in large part only in churches, and for the glory thereof) is somehow better than art for MONEY. But let's look at all the artists we have apotheosed to the top steps of our admiration staircase today--Da Vinci, Michelangelo, Botticelli, Turner, Picasso, and, let's not forget, Ansel Adams, just for fun--all of whom worked for commissions, payment, and....da-dum, MONEY. Turner didn't die impoverished. Nor did Adams, right? And what do we mean when we say, "starving artist?" Don't we really mean...failed artist? Perhaps on a nice day, we mean, "artist whose talent hasn't yet been recognized," when we're in a kind mood...but when I hear people say, starving artist, or would-be author, they don't mean it kindly. They mean, wanna-be. Well, if a wanna-be means, isn't yet, and you have a studio full of watercolors or a computer full of books, and people think that means, wanna-be, then that means that a person who has surpassed "wanna-be" is commercially recognized. So, in short: WHO SAYS that art created for art's sake is somehow better than that which is created upon commission? Most of the works in Rome were created for money or for Papal favor (which = cash, back then). Much of what's in the Louvre was completed to be SOLD for money. What's the proof of that theorem, really? The only argument I can see for this, at all, is if that one takes a commission to paint someone's daughter or wife, (or husband, let's not be sexist here) and does it accurately and competently, and makes him/her look like a beast, well...yes. Compromise may well be required. And when you work in a strictly-commercial environment, like an Ad Agency, you have to do what the client likes/wants/works to sell their product. But, those are specific cases. The idea that art for the love of it is somehow superior to art done for money seems pretty thoroughly disproven, if you look at what we consider to be art today, on all fronts. Whether written (Joyce serialized Ulysses in publication), sculpture, watercolors, modern interpretive dance (do you all think that the dancers in those companies are dancing for free, or the choreographer is working for free?), the idea itself doesn't really hold up to scrutiny. Moreover, I think this does a disservice to the artist. The argument below: Quote:
I mean...what kind of thinking is this? When I read a piece of literary fiction, or even genre fiction, I know damned well that somebody sat at their computer, pen and pad, whatever, for a year or two or 10, and WORKED at writing that. Simply because I choose to read their labor for entertainment doesn't mean that they didn't work at it. If one plays video games, do you assume that all those game designers--who are artists in their own right--did it for love, and shouldn't be compensated, either? Honestly, this mindset seems to be cognitive dissonance. Art is something high and wondrous and noble, that should only be attempted or achieved for the love of it, but at the same time, it's ONLY art, created with time, and therefore, unworthy of being considered labor, and the work put into creating it has no value. Hunh? Do you think the same about programmers, lawyers, accountants, and other professions that sell their time by the hour? People seem to be viewing copyright issues as some "constraint" to prevent (these same evilly capitalistic, but simultaneously nobly artistic) authors from "profiting" (gods forbid, crass filthy lucre) from their labors for "too long," too long being determined by the poster, and seemingly based on some type of worthiness standard. To the contrary--copyright exists to encourage these artists to create, so that they are rewarded for their labors; so that their labors are not taken and used/viewed/sold without compensation to the artist who created them. And the "too long standard" seems to be established by the mere convenience of the person who thinks that the works are valuable enough to entertain, enlighten or enrich him or her...but not valuable enough to pay for that entertainment, enlightenment or enrichment. And certainly not enough to allow an artist's family or children to enjoy the fruits of his labor! Oh, no...for that, he should get a REAL job, so that his earnings aren't taken from his family when he dies. Silly bastard, why should he have the same rights as everyone else? He's only an artist, after all. Obviously, as we can see here from these discussions, indirectly opined by so many, that's not a "real" job. I would seriously love to see the arguments here all in favor of taking an electrican's life savings away from his family when he died. Or an accountant's. Or anyone else's--particularly your OWN. You'd never even consider it. In short--you're simply arguing that artists belong to some lesser class of people, some subset that don't deserve to earn and keep their earnings like everyone else. And it's only being argued because some of you want faster access, at no cost, to the products of their artistic lifetimes. That's the real irony. Hitch |
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