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#46 | |
Basculocolpic
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#47 |
Basculocolpic
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#48 | |
Philosopher
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Jane Eyre is public domain as well, you can get a free copy, or you can pay a bit more to get some added features. I've read Dante's Inferno, and it had extensive footnotes explaining what the text is talking about. I could have gotten a free copy, but I wouldn't have understood nearly as much if I didn't have the notes. If I buy that, I'm paying for the notes. |
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#49 | |
Grand Sorcerer
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#50 |
Addict
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I do think life + 70 is way too long. Life + 25 would be far more reasonable - that covers a good chunk of the next generation even if the author dies when the child is a baby. The only exception I would like to see is if it's been left to a charity - such as in the case of Peter Pan & Great Ormond St Hospital; in that case, I think it should be perpetual.
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#51 |
The Grand Mouse 高貴的老鼠
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Any "Life+" copyright term is too uncertain. It gives wildly different copyright lengths to works created at the start and end of someone's career.
The UK System before we joined Berne seems best. A fixed term from publication, or the lifetime of the author, if that's longer. So an author retains copyright during their lifetime. When they die, copyright continues on all works published less than the fixed term ago. Their works gradually come into the public domain, which is (IMO) a benefit to the estate. Unfortunately, the Berne convention introduced the Life+ system internationally and unless something extraordinary happens, I don't see it ever changing from that. |
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#52 |
Wizard
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There is a much greater overhead in trying to establish publication dates (and whether copyright was registered/renewed, etc) than the year of death. Life+ has the huge advantage of being straightforward.
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#53 | |
The Grand Mouse 高貴的老鼠
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But this isn't really about convenience. (An infinite copyright is much easier to determine than any finite one, after all.) It's about what's best for the public in the long run. |
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#54 | |
Wizard
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And if you go to other countries where the nobility was abolished, or which had major wars fought, I think you will find the percentage of ownership retention is even smaller. Besides, there is a key difference between copyright and physical property. If I sell a piece of physical property, it is gone from my control. If I sell a book, well with copyright, it is still under my control. -- Bill |
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#55 | |
Grand Sorcerer
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Currently, copyright law is heavily entangled in commercial value; whether a copy has an impact on the market value of the original is one of the major factors in deciding infringement. |
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#56 |
Avid Reader
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Copyright should last no more than 10 years with no renewal possible.
Patent should last 10 years with one 10-year renewal allowed. Trademark should last 10 years but be renewable indefinitely. |
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#57 |
Wizard
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I think limiting copyright to 10 years only is a bit too strict. Sometimes, it can take ten years or more to develop sequels or movie adaptations, etc.
I do think that a relatively short period should be the baseline for copyright, but that there should be a chance to extend it for a work that is popular enough (or in some cases, so you can publish works that failed earlier in your career that find new interest once an author develops a following). -- Bill |
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#58 |
Philosopher
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Copyright isn't going to be shortened, the most we can hope for is that it isn't extended forever. Maybe we could just give Disney a special copyright for Steamboat Willie, that might take away a lot of the pressure to keep extending them forever. Too many books get lost in limbo.
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#59 |
Grand Sorcerer
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Increasing scale copyright reg:
10 years: Free copyright 11-20 years: Pay $10 to register. A token amount, but it means that most people's blog posts and college newspaper articles will enter the public domain, while anything they have a commercial interest in gets registered. 21-30 years: Pay $100 to register. No problem for anything that actually has a market; not worth registering "all this stuff I might someday come up with a way to monetize." 31-40 years: Pay $500 to register. Again, only going to be the stuff that's *worth* keeping on the market. Movies, yes; songs, maybe not. (I have no idea how photography copes with copyright registration, but if it's "collected works of [photographer] from [year]," that should be okay.) 41-50 years: Pay $1000 to register. Again: Disney registers all their movies, but maybe not all their individual children's books. (But maybe they do. Disney has a lot of money to throw around.) 51-75 years: Pay $10,000 to register each work. The Bridge On The River Kwai stays in copyright; Plan 9 From Outer Space enters the public domain. Lord of the Rings remains copyrighted; the Mike Hammer books enter the public domain. Sixty-five geeky websites pop up with creative marketing ideas for newly PD movies and books; inside 18 months, all but five of them have gone broke. |
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#60 |
monkey on the fringe
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To me, it's fortunately. With my ideas on property rights in the decided minority, I'll take any backdoor approach that keeps extending copyright.
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