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The Mouse That Ate the Public Domain 345

An anonymous submitter writes: "Antitrust lawyer Chris Sprigman has written a thoughtful column In Findlaw's Writ on the issues behind the 1998 Copyright Term Extension Act and the legal challenge (Eldred v. Ashcroft) to that law. I only spotted one mistake. Sprigman states that Disney's 1967 movie The Jungle Book came out a year after Kipling's copyright expired, but I can't see how, under the terms of the 1909 copyright law, an 1894 book could have had its U.S. copyright expire much later than 1950. Except for that one glitch, (if that's what it is) it's a fine column. There's no explicit mention of computer software except in the mention of the title of a 1970 article by Stephen Breyer, but everything he says about the usefulness of the public domain in literature applies with a vengeance to source code. And his is discussion of the U.S. Constitution's framers reminds us (though Sprigman doesn't develop this point extensively, and might not himself put it in as blunt terms as I'm about to) that there's even a deeper reason than utility to cherish the public domain: it is our right."
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The Mouse That Ate the Public Domain

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  • by BrianGa ( 536442 ) on Thursday March 07, 2002 @12:14AM (#3122872)
    The copyright extension act (passed at the behest of Disney and the Gershwin heirs, who cynically manipulated the death of Sonny Bono to their own ends) was a bad law. What's more, I think it is an unconstitutional laws. Whatever you think of copyright, the law in the US is clear. The Supreme Court has ruled that the Constitution provides Congress the power to grant copyright solely for the public benefit. It is part of what has been called the "copyright bargain". The public gives up for limited times the freedom to copy the work, in return for the production of new works as a result of the exclusive copying incentive. Retro-actively extending existing copyrights by definition cannot encourage the production of new works, which is a major justification for copyright law. (The companies will surely argue in friend of the court briefs that giving them additional copyright time will cause them to keep old works in distribution, which is a public benefit. We'll have to see how this plays out). Companies like Disney don't need gov't subsidies. The Gershwin heirs should go get jobs. Authors already had life+50 years protection before the new law. How much more can you want?
    • by Anonymous Coward on Thursday March 07, 2002 @12:24AM (#3122906)
      Laws as arbitrary as copyright laws must be bad.Why not 40 years or 27 years? Five years should be enough. And it can get really nasty. How about a book that is out of print and unavailable at the library? How can it be wrong to distribute a book that is out of print? Just who is protected by such a ban? And just how is it that an internet lending library is illegal? If I distribute etexts of copyrighted works and people promise to return them in the set number of days just how does that differ from either a public or private library? They argue that electronic distribution is just so good that they can't make a living but so what. It used to take fifty guys to mow a lawn with a sycle and now they can't earn a living. Should we have made lawn mowers illegal?
      • Somebody said words to this effect:

        The fact that a viable business has been made from a particular activity in no way places a burden on society or government to protect or preserve the viability of such a business.

        I wish I could remember who.

        • That was Robert Heinlein:

          Robert Heinlein in "Life Line," one of his earliest published stories:
          "There has grown in the minds of certain groups in this country the idea that just because a man or corporation has made a profit out of the public for a number of years, the government and the courts are charged with guaranteeing such a profit in the future, even in the face of changing circumstances and contrary to public interest. This strange doctrine is supported by neither statute or common law. Neither corporations or individuals have the right to come into court and ask that the clock of history be stopped, or turned back."

          Had a bitch of a time finding it. Eventually, I found it in a Jon Katz artice on /.!
      • What sickens me is how hypocritical some posters seem to be regarding EULAs and Copyrights on slashdot.
        If you want copyright laws to be only 5 years, well, guess what, Linux, Apache, etc., are all in the public domain, which means that people can freely use them WITHOUT the use of the GPL and other free-mod licenses.

        When it's in public domain, no one can own it, which means no one can impose licenses to use the copyrighted material.

        Don't forget, Copyright law protects open source projects from abuse and misuse as well. It's not an evil, and making it as short as possible would allow big corps. to win with software as well.
    • How much more can you want?

      Jack Valenti is on the record saying he wants his full consitutional due. Since congress is only allowed to grant copyright for a 'limited-time,' Jack wants it to be "Infinity minus a day."

      (I know, I know... I can do the math. But that just makes it funnier, no?)
      • This piece sounds a lot like Lessig. Not the Lessig that went before the DC Circuit on Eldred, either, but right out of the Future of Ideas (a fine read, by the way).

        But to my comment: the infinity minus one day, to my recollection, was a suggestion originally propounded by Mary Bono, widow of the last Congressmen.

        I think this got canned for two reasons:

        1) It was too obviously an end-run around the Constitution's requirement that Congress extend exclusive rights "for a limited time." Obviously, neither Mary Bono's legislative assistant nor Go-Back, Jack, And Say Something Stupid Again Valenti's corp. counsel gave that comment any thought before it wormed its way into the talked points. (Doh! Boston Strangler strikes again...)

        2) it would seem to violate the Rule Against Perpetuities. Its probably explained on Findlaw. Anyway, property rights hawks spent a long time struggling to get "intellectual property" called 'property' (think about it - there's nothing "intellectual" about Britney Spears, but damned if her mp3s aren't IP) so it's about time they take the good with the bad.

        Just my inflation-adjusted $ .02...
        • the infinity minus one day, to my recollection, was a suggestion originally propounded by Mary Bono

          She stated at time of CTEA passage that the idea for perpetual copyright came from Jack Valenti, and he later admitted it in a debate with Lessig.

          She said that she had been advised that the Constitution (in its "limited times" clause) prohibits an unlimited period, so she said she hoped that when Congress extended copyright next time it would be for "forever minus one day." You mathematicians figure that one out.

          I can't wait until 2019.

    • Your note on the Gershwin heirs points out another constitutional argument:
      The Congress shall have Power . . . To promote the Progress of Science and useful Arts, by securing for limited Times to Authors and Inventors the exclusive Right to their respective Writings and Discoveries.
      Note that it doesn't say Inventor's heirs, just Inventors. It seems that a very strict constructionist should simply throw out the '+70' part of the 'life + 70' clauses of the current law - there is no constitutional power for that (of course, how this would apply to corporations is a bit of a conundrum).

      There's no mention of this in the article, nor apparently in Eldred v. Ashcroft ... I wonder if they are pursuing this angle.

      • Not true. Copyright is a property that can be bought, sold, traded. It's a commodity, and as such, can be passed via the will; you know, that thing you pass your private property down to.

        It's not always their heirs, anyhow. Sometimes the copyright goes to a good friend or whatnot.

        I will admit that I'm not sure that copyrights, initially, were considered to be private property that could be bought or sold. It would be interesting to know ...
        • by psamuels ( 64397 ) on Thursday March 07, 2002 @01:36AM (#3123121) Homepage
          Not true. Copyright is a property that can be bought, sold, traded. It's a commodity, and as such, can be passed via the will; you know, that thing you pass your private property down to.

          Not according to the Constitution. The Constitution doesn't talk about IP. It talks about copyright for the creator. The P part of IP is just one of those "well surely that's what they must have meant" things. (Response: Maybe and maybe not. And don't call me 'surely'.)

          I am seriously thinking of putting my IP where my mouth is: adding a line to each source file I create, right below the copyright and the GPL blurb: "In ten years this work will automatically revert to the public domain. That is, if the latest copyright date listed above is from at least ten years ago, the copyright has been abandoned." Does anyone have a better way to express this?

        • Blockquoth the poster:

          Not true. Copyright is a property that can be bought, sold, traded. It's a commodity, and as such, can be passed via the will; you know, that thing you pass your private property down to.

          Repeat after me, class: Intellectual "property" is not property . The whole stupid term only came into use within the past two decades, for goodness' sake; and only because the Content Cartel wanted to push its insane definition of copyright infringement as "piracy". In other words, the people calling it property are -- amazingly enough -- the people who most benefit from the misidentification of intellectual output as property.


          It boils my blood to see the argument framed using terms that were designed to bias the debate toward one side. It especially boils my blood to see the opposing side accept that stupid definition of terms. It's time to get over it, so we don't keep refighting a battle that shouldn't have to be fought in the first place.

          • > Repeat after me, class: Intellectual "property" is not property . The whole stupid term only came into use within the past two decades

            If you're claiming that copyrights were not sold or transferred in a commiditized fashion before 20 years ago, I think thats flat out wrong.

            http://www.publaw.com/1976.html:

            Under the Copyright Act of 1909 the ownership of a copyright could only be transferred in whole, and not in part. If the copyright owner assigned anything less than the entire copyright such transfer was only recognized as a license and not an assignment. The owner of the entire copyright was called the "copyright proprietor."

            Seems to suggest that even the 1908 copyright law included the right to transfer (only in whole, not in part), a copyright, thus, effectively making it property.

            Whether or not we use the stupid IP term or not doesn't change that copyrights were transferrable by law long LONG before you claim they were.

            Now, what constitutes infringement is a whole other thing. I think 50 years, period is sufficient. But don't let your distaste for the current legal and social climate of copyright issues get in the way of recognizing that even if we've 'swung too far' towards the private interests with respect to the private vs. public implications of copyright law, copyrights have long since enjoyed the ability to be transferred to another party. Thus, it is property, and has been for a long time. As it relates to the parent post, the fact that a copyright can be transferred via a will plus the ever-growing copyright lifetime, allows heirs (as the parent poster noted) to live off the fruits of their parents/grandparents/etc. I think it's wrong, but that doesn't mean that it hasn't been that way for a long time.
        • Not true. Copyright is a property...
          Not true.

          Copyright is a government granted limited monopoly that must (according to the US Constitution) be granted for a very specific and limited purpose and for a limited term.

          The records of the writers of the Constitution unanimously make it very clear that copyright is not property and that it must be limited; that it is granted for a purely pragmatic purpose. Some, Jefferson particularly, were opposed to as strong a measures as even the original limited 14-year term (granted only after registration with the Lobrary of Congress and after payment of the appropriate fees).

          That's the Constitutional picture. It is the law that is supposed to bind Congress, the President, and the courts.

      • I don't know that any law specifying "life+x" is a good idea, particularly if x is small... it's too easy to set life=0.
    • by Jeremi ( 14640 ) on Thursday March 07, 2002 @12:34AM (#3122938) Homepage
      The companies will surely argue in friend of the court briefs that giving them additional copyright time will cause them to keep old works in distribution, which is a public benefit


      I'd love to see the opposing lawyer shoot that argument down by pointing out that with computers and the Internet, anyone can "keep a work in distribution", and that copyrights are typically the main thing keeping works out of distribution -- not the other way around.

      • I'd love to see the opposing lawyer shoot that argument down by pointing out that with computers and the Internet, anyone can "keep a work in distribution", and that copyrights are typically the main thing keeping works out of distribution -- not the other way around.

        Indeed, you are right. Read the briefs online at http://eldred.openlaw.org [openlaw.org]
      • While reading the article (and several linked therefrom) I had this thought:

        Disney's artificially-extended copyright on Mickey Mouse retards DISNEY itself from innovation: they have no incentive to develop new characters to replace Mickey, and they have no incentive to make more-creative use of the character than someone else might (were Mickey to fall into the public domain).

        Also you're absolutely right about the realworld effect of extended copyrights being to actually keep works OUT of distribution: There are hundreds if not thousands of old films decaying in vaults, simply because their owners are not yet required to release them into the public domain, and they see no financial advantage in re-releasing them under the present system. By the time they are required to do so by their copyrights expiring, it will be too late -- the material will have deteriorated beyond salvage.

    • by Waffle Iron ( 339739 ) on Thursday March 07, 2002 @12:41AM (#3122966)
      The companies will surely argue in friend of the court briefs that giving them additional copyright time will cause them to keep old works in distribution, which is a public benefit.

      That's what systems like Gnutella are for. There is zero justification for that assertion.

      The argument these companies would make is just a thinly veiled attempt to steal from the people. The Constitution clearly states that IP reverts to the people after limited times. Subverting the government to get around the Constitution is nothing more than 'piracy' on a monumental scale.

      • You make a very perceptive statement -- that artificially closing off access thru extended copyrights is actually piracy committed against the public. Now if only some major columnist would pick up on that concept and present it to said public!! That's how to get the masses up in arms about it -- make sure they understand that all this material would have been THEIRS if only the corporations hadn't figured out how to squat on it. "We wuz robbed!"
    • The only valid negative moderation is "offtopic". Everthing else is a matter of opinion.

      The parent here makes a very valid and sane argument, far more realistic than most legal briefs that depend on the minutia of statutes for rationalizations.

      The so-called "moderator" who rated the parent as a "troll" should be publicly rebuked. Too bad we'll never know who it was.

      Bob-

    • by mpe ( 36238 )
      (The companies will surely argue in friend of the court briefs that giving them additional copyright time will cause them to keep old works in distribution, which is a public benefit. We'll have to see how this plays out).

      So what it isn't the "public benefit" in the US constitution. If they want an ammendment then that's what they should ask for.

      Companies like Disney don't need gov't subsidies. The Gershwin heirs should go get jobs.

      Do you think for one second the writers of the US constitution would approve of copyrights effectivly acting as pensions not only for authors but their children and grandchildren? They'd be the first to say that simply having a talented ancestor does not excuse their need to do honest work.

      Authors already had life+50 years protection before the new law.

      Which was already rather questionable. If the idea is to encourage people to produce new works then at the latest death of the author should place the work into the public domain. Since there is no way they can produce any new works...
      What's needed is something like "copyright lasts X years (where X might be somewhere between 5 and 20, subject to debate and probably different depending on the specific catagory.) However if the author retires or dies all their current work goes immediatly into the public domain (if they decide to come out of retirment only something they produce subsequently is subject to copyright.)"
  • Read the full text of the Copyright Term Extension Act at the Tech Law Journal [techlawjournal.com].
  • by CrazyJim0 ( 324487 ) on Thursday March 07, 2002 @12:23AM (#3122897)
    Ask any staunch patriotic working class American what they think hollywood suits should be paid. "I work in a fish gutting factory for minumum wage, what do they do? Make fancy pictures. I'd give me remaining 3 fingers to do what they do for half of what I make."

    Heh, the truth be told is that the answer on how much someone should be compensated is simple. Aim to give them money equal to middle class people so they can make a living doing art.

    Granting a dynasty to hollywood, sports players, or musicians... Not only is easily viewed as unfair, but detracts from the actual art they are to produce.

    Some easy to see detractors:
    Instead of aiming more art at specific groups, art becomes less targetted at a general audience.

    As for sports, the teams that can pay the big $$ can get the best players.

    • by Anonymous Coward
      I ask you -- What mysterious force/entity causes them to get paid so much? Think about that for awhile.
    • IANAE (E=economist or whatever), but it seems to me, at least in the US, that salary is based on the potential for bringing in revenue for the company. I realize there are many other factors too, but this seems somewhat common.

      Even though someone may work much harder in some sense than another, it depends on the product/service for sale by the company.

      Or this could be complete bull...
    • People already get paid what the common middle-class american says they should. Here's how it works: a baseball player works his ASS off, practicing for hours every day in high school and college for no guaranteed gain. Then a scout sees him playing, and takes him on the team. Then he works even HARDER, studing everything about every other player and the game he can get his hands on. And that's the AVERAGE player. Then Joe Blow, who spent his high school years looking for trim, and his college ones getting stoned, pays $40 a seat to see said baseball player perform. In fact, a lot of Joe Blows do this. Then Joe Blows go back to their fish gutting jobs that need no training. This determines the players salary. Public demand for top-notch athletes and quality games. The same goes for movies and music. Steven Spielberg is getting paid exorbitant sums of money because people love his movies. They love his movies not because he's a natural at it, but because he spent his youth sneaking around movie sets and studing directors. He deserves it.

      Yes, maybe they'd give their 3 remaining fingers to get paid what they do, but they obviously won't give what really matters: their time and effort.

      Now I'm not saying they need all that money and glory; in fact, I think it's a hinderance to them, but the public is paying what they consider appropriate, and if anyone deserves it, it's them.

      Note that this has nothing to do with how long their copyrights should be extended.
      • by Anonymous Coward
        Finally, some (un)common sense!

        Most of the posts on /. are becoming so repetitive and predictable... everything should be free (not realizing the historically demonstrated holistic effect of taking things without paying: destruction of incentive to produce), it's America's fault (usually implying motives that suspect the worst rather than offer the benefit of the doubt, while presenting the opposite sensibility toward anyone else), and Microsoft is evil (nevermind that most of the diaper-laden chumps here think that a puristic engineering philosophy is sufficient to meet the needs of the everyday person). Don't get me wrong... I like free stuff, I question my country on a regular basis, and Microsoft is more of an imitator than an innovator... but some people are just bent on raging and not really thinking. Watch same people implode over time as all their predictions and hot air build to nothing but personal frustration, failed relationships, and angry dissociation, prejudice, and hostility toward their fellow citizens.
    • Granting a dynasty to hollywood, sports players, or musicians... Not only is easily viewed as unfair, but detracts from the actual art they are to produce.

      Oh, so they're producing art, are they? Only tangentially, if at all. Let me tell you a secret -- THEY'RE IN IT FOR THE MONEY!!!

      If you don't like that, don't pay to consume what they produce. Convince others not to. But don't legislate for the fish-gutter's taxes to go to artists -- she'd resent that even more than the current state of affairs, where she can at least escape from her stinking every-day reality every now and then "at the movies". This is a commercial choice she makes, and the key word there is "choice".

      Middle-class socialism == +3, Insightful? That $3 crack must be especially potent today, moderators... do your worst! :)

  • by caduguid ( 152224 ) on Thursday March 07, 2002 @12:23AM (#3122899)
    Sprigman states that Disney's 1967 movie The Jungle Book came out a year after Kipling's copyright expired, but I can't see how, under the terms of the 1909 copyright law, an 1894 book could have had its U.S. copyright expire much later than 1950.

    One way it could happen (though I don't know if it's the case here) is that there used to be renewal deadlines, and if you missed them... too bad. An example that comes to mind is It's A Wonderful Life (1946) [imdb.com] whose copyright shouldn't be up for quite a while yet... but which became popular when it lapsed into the public domain through someone missing a filing deadline.
    • The Jungle Book came out 1899, so it would have expired under the 1909 copyright act, which provided for 28 years of copyright plus a renewal term of another 28 for a total of 56 years. Kipling's copyright thus expired in 1955. IMDB says the Jungle Book came out in 1967.

      This appears to be an error on the author's part, unless I misremember the copyright provisions. (It's been a couple years since I thought about copyright terms from that far back).
  • How to keep the public domain our right?

    I suggest that, with all the new .$$$ domains being developed that we make one that is really public and keep it so through aggressive legislative activity.

    The .org was supposed to be public but it is not. /. for example is commercial and private. we need to establish stringent standards for such a public domain and keep it as clearly registered and demarcated public groups.

    your personal webpage should not be in this public domain, sites that actually advance the public interest should be.

    I don't think that ICANN can responsibly deliniate which sites fall into this category. Who can? I do not know. Groups like eff.org should be involved in this decisionmaking process and corporate groups should not. The debate on what is in the public interest and what is not continues.. I don;t think that game information or whatever should be there, though.

    I think things that in themselves maintain freedoms on the Internet itself should be, and that the government should be involved. On a global scale, public interest sites on the Internet should organize and lobby global orgs such as the WTO, etc. to delineate this public space on the Internet. There should be a dot-whatever URL-style that people can go to to look up environmental, technical, social, and political information from verifiably independent sources.

    • I honestly don't know where your rant is coming from. It seems completely unrelated to both the parent article and reality.

      First, I'd like to clear up your apparent misconception that "public domain" refers to the .ORG TLD. It doesn't.

      Second, .ORG was never intended to be limited to "sites advancing the public interest." Quite the opposite, it was .COM that was intended solely for sites of a commercial nature. .NET was supposed to be used by ISPs and other organizations related to communications and networking. .ORG was meant as the "catchall" for anything that didn't fit other categories.

      If there's anything to complain about, it's the fact that country code TLDs are underutilized, especially .US (lousy Yankees).
  • The problem with copyright is that it is meant to allow the creators of works to make a reasonable profit off of what they have created before it is drawn into the pbulic domain, this allowing them to make a tudy sum and thus motivating more people to create their own private creations.

    But, copyright law was created before the U.S. reached the Industrial age, which in turn led to large corporate style think-tanks. These laws were aimed at private inventors rather than large corporations, so when you bring a company like Disney into the equation there is sure to be some abuse.

    The general attitude for copyrights has shifted dramatically during the past 200 years. Originally the sole purpose (whether you agree or not) was to motivate further technological and intellectual progress. In the 19th century this shifted to protecting the property of corporations (although not so much until the the 20th century when the industrial age evolved into the information age).

    The solution is definitely not to eliminate copyright law outright, simply widespread reform. Being a capitalist country should not rely on government protection of property, seeing as how that is contrary to the concept of capitalism in general. But we do need government intervention to aid private inventors, perhaps in the form of government subsidies. As an added fact, we need to keep at least some copyright laws to keep all those copyright lawyers employed.

    • by caduguid ( 152224 ) on Thursday March 07, 2002 @12:43AM (#3122973)
      But, copyright law was created before the U.S. reached the Industrial age ... The general attitude for copyrights has shifted dramatically during the past 200 years.

      Not meaning to pick on U.S.-centrism, but copyright laws were created before the U.S. reached _any_ age, and the original purpose was to... wait for it... protect media cartels from competition and maybe be a handy mechanism for censorship, to boot.

      Within the last 200 years, well, fair enough. The U.S. constitution said the purpose was to motivate further technological and intellectual progress. But within many other countries (especially in Europe) there is much more attention/justification around 'author's rights' than around 'scientific progress'.

      It's a sad, but true, fact that the obviously insincere rationalization for the Mickey Mouse copyright extension is at least in part true: it _did_ bring the U.S. into line with international copyright practice. (And no, I don't buy the standardization line... I said it was obviously insincere.)
      • by EricEldred ( 175470 ) on Thursday March 07, 2002 @01:29AM (#3123100) Homepage
        But, copyright law was created before the U.S. reached the Industrial age ... The general attitude for copyrights has shifted dramatically during the past 200 years.

        It is true that the Framers felt the early American republic needed some protection against the large content producers of their day in London. But if there is to be a shift, it should recognize that today it is the large content owners in Hollywood and New York that seek protection by means of global trade treaties--and they have the least need in the world for protection--they have already achieved dominance. Developing countries have reasons to oppose strong "intellectual property" laws.

        Another point is that the U.S. Constitution Article 1 Section 8 is based on the 1710 British Statute of Anne, which also gave exclusive rights to "authors" and not publishers. The publishers have been trying ever since to win back the monopoly they enjoyed before then with the Stationers' Company guild, in return for censorship of material offensive to the crown.

        Today it is a few media giants, large global corporations, who claim to produce and therefore own all ideas and expressions. They are quite willing to censor material for the government or other powerful groups.

        it _did_ bring the U.S. into line with international copyright practice...

        No, the CTEA did not "harmonize" U.S. copyright law with European law, that is a misconception that Jack Valenti keeps lying about. In fact, there is no way that retrospective extension could be harmonious, because before 1978, U.S. copyright dated from date of registration not from date of author's death--that causes many confusing differences between term in England and the U.S.

        As the Jungle Books example shows. Since Kipling died in 1936, his works were protected by copyright in England until 50 years after his death, and so still at the time of the film in 1967--until 2007 now that England increased the term to 70 years after author's death. In the U.S., however, the second volume of the book published in 1895 would have been protected 28, 56 (when renewed) and then 75 years after first publication in 1895, and went into the public domain (IN THE U.S.) in 1966, one year before the film, as the column states. If the CTEA term had operated to harmonize, or if it had applied before 1966, then the work would still be under copyright both in the U.S. and England. Disney would have had to pay many bucks for worldwide rights unless it could, as it did, "pirate" the work from the public domain owned by you and me.

        The Jungle Books example shows also that copyright is also used to suppress the creation of derivative works as much as it is to give incentives to produce new works. How can Kipling be given an incentive to produce any new books--he died in 1936! Why should not every schoolchild be allowed the right to draw her own figures from The Jungle Books without having to pay Disney a royalty or even get permission? But Disney and other large corporations claim to produce and own all our culture and ideas--even our genetic information--and the right to rent it back to us as pay-per-view forever.

    • Some very good points about the history and the missapplication of current copyright law. Despite this, corporations and think tanks do need incentive to do research or create intellectual property, however, because only the largest institutions can afford to do reasearch in certain areas, or create certain media (large action films, etc.) and without copyright, there is less incentive to do this.

      The only thing about your post that confuses me is the following;

      "Being a capitalist country[, we] should not rely on government protection of property, seeing as how that is contrary to the concept of capitalism in general. But we do need government intervention to aid private inventors, perhaps in the form of government subsidies."

      Obviously you never read the assignments on Adam Smith. (What do you mean it's not required reading? Bah, what do they teach in schools these days?)

      However, I'm very impressed. You seem to be managing feats that most contortionists would balk at, endorsing both libertian anti-government control and the democrat's semi-socialist agenda AT THE SAME TIME.
      • corporations and think tanks do need incentive to do research or create intellectual property, however, because only the largest institutions can afford to do reasearch in certain areas, or create certain media (large action films, etc.) and without copyright, there is less incentive to do this.

        But innovation and creativity do NOT come from these "largest institutions," rather from small ones. We ought to grant exclusive rights for only a very short period to keep up the innovation instead of allowing firms to sit on their government-guaranteed profit stream.

        For example, in Massachusetts small biotech firms are increasingly NOT seeking patents, but rather protecting their discoveries by trade secret law. They can't afford to cross-license patents with the big firms, and can't afford to get into patent battles with them either. One feature of patents is that the term is limited, then the ideas go into the public domain and others can improve on them. But trade secrets might be forever.

        Strong "intellectual property" laws protect only one segment of the economy, one made increasingly more obsolete by technology. That's why they foolishly attempt to use laws to control the technology in their interests against ours.

  • by jcsehak ( 559709 ) on Thursday March 07, 2002 @12:37AM (#3122950) Homepage
    Let's say you're a songwriter. You write a hit tune. It goes to the top of the charts. You collect royalties up the wazoo. Great. A year later you realise, that since you're getting enough royalties to live comfortably, you really have no reason to write more songs, other than you might enjoy it. So you say, I'll write tomorrow. I've got lunch dates all day today. And you get lazy. Soon the public (your fan base) is funding your inaction.

    But if the copyright only lasted long enough for you and your label to recoup expenses and make a tidy profit on top of that, chances are you'd be getting back to work a lot sooner. When you're hungry, you work.
    • you really have no reason to write more songs, other than you might enjoy it.

      I'd say for the vast majority of songwriters/performers that they enjoy writing songs is the primary motivator, money is secondary.

      Stephen King is a rich man several times over, but he still churns out books. I recall reading somewhere that Paul McCartney makes something like $10K a day on royalties, but he still writes music and tours occasionally. The guys in R.E.M. aren't hurting for money either, but they're still recording. Granted, the pace may have slowed somewhat -- but I don't think that in itself is a bad thing.

      Hell, they paid Maria Carey something like $7 Million to dump her from her label and she's trying to get a new deal. (Note: I have no idea if she actually writes her own music, but work with me here...) From my perspective, it's a shame if she does record again, but the point is that money must not be her primary motivator to do music (if you can call it that...).

      OTOH, the guys in XTC have never had a big hit, but they keep making records. Robyn Hitchcock isn't burning up the charts, but he still records and tours. Many people would probably have looked for "real" jobs after they'd realized that they weren't going to get rich, but writing music is obviously what they want to do. In the case of XTC, they'd probably have made a few more albums if they hadn't had money/label problems. So, cutting off the money supply isn't the answer here.

      Expiring copyrights prior to the life of the artist is, IMHO, unfair. Even when you're talking about code -- if a person or company owns the code, they should choose what to do with it. Even if what they choose to do is selfish, it's their right.

      Something else to consider, given the mentality of most record labels -- if copyrights expired after a shorter period, how many labels would just sit on material waiting for the rights to expire before exploiting it so they didn't have to share any royalties? I'd almost guarantee it'd become a common practice. Songwriters would be getting just above minimum wage while the labels cash in a few years later.
      • Yeah, you might say that extended copyrights seperate the real musicians (the ones who do it no matter how much money they have/don't have) from the posers, and perhaps even thereby insure a generally higher quality level, but take F Scott Fitzgerald. I read somewhere that he wrote so much because his royalties couldn't support his crazy lifestyle, so he had to keep churning out stuff to stay afloat. Maybe there are a lot of people who have less demanding personal expenses who could produce quality work, but just get lazy. But is it society's responsibility to motivate these people? We'll always see quality work from dedicated artists, now matter what the laws are, but maybe reducing the copyright term might give some of the more unmotivated ones good reason to get out there and do some work. On the other hand, would that mean we'd just have more mediocre crap around? On the third hand, my Fitzgerald reference proved that you don't have to have a divine inspiration to create quality work, you just have to sit down and do it, for whatever reason. A very complicated issue, to be sure.

        That's a very good point, about labels sitting on content until it falls into the public domain, but I'm sure musicians could include something in their contracts about immediate release. Plus, if the material was in the PD when it was released, then other people could distribute cheap copies and the label would make way less money.

        One thing is sure: Anyone who creates anything, whether it's CDs or code, has a higher responsibility that only they can decide how to come to terms with.
      • Blockquoth the poster:

        Expiring copyrights prior to the life of the artist is, IMHO, unfair. Even when you're talking about code -- if a person or company owns the code, they should choose what to do with it. Even if what they choose to do is selfish, it's their right.

        Except they don't "own" the code. They hold the copyright to the code, an entirely different thing. Once you accept the fallacy that you can "own" code -- or music or literature, or what have you -- than it makes no sense for there to be any expiration of copyright. That, after all, would be a taking.


        But since intellectual output is not property, it cannot be owned. Copyright is a state-granted monopoly on a service (copying), not a state-granted piece of property. The intellectual output is licensed, so to speak; and of course, thus the license can expire. It's more like leasing mineral rights on federal land than purchasing property from the federal government.

        • Expiring copyrights prior to the life of the artist is, IMHO, unfair. Even when you're talking about code -- if a person or company owns the code, they should choose what to do with it.

        I was going to point out the huge flaw in your first sentence, but you've very kindly done it for me.

        • Something else to consider, given the mentality of most record labels -- if copyrights expired after a shorter period, how many labels would just sit on material waiting for the rights to expire before exploiting it so they didn't have to share any royalties

        I'm sorry, but you fail the clue check. The vast majority of people involved in song creation are now doing work-for-hire. The concept of an "artist" is the exception, not the rule. The labels already own the right to the song. Any royalties that they choose to pay to the people involved (to the creators of the lyrics or music, or to the meat puppet miming to them, for example) are a purely contractual matter. When the rights expire, it's the label that loses out, because they can't stop other labels or you or me copying or creating derivative works without restriction.

        The same applies even in the unusual case of an artist retaining rights and licensing them to a label. If the label chooses not to exercise their right to copy and distribute the work, they lose out as well when the creator's rights expire, because then their license become worthless.

        What you really illusatrate is how badly understood copyright laws are, and that what we need more than anything else is a single, coherent way of dealing with copyright and intellectual property. "Author's life plus some" is both relatively recent, and already obsolete!

        Consider that the majority of content that you and I experience on a day to day basis is done as work for hire. Songs, TV, film, some reference books; they are created by individuals, but the rights are owned by corporations. In this case, the expiry of the rights is based not on the creator's life, but on a fixed term. (And considering that that terms keeps getting extended on demand, I mean "fixed" largely in the sense of fraudulent).

        There's also a misconception that individual rights can only be licensed and not sold. Guess again. Once created, rights can be sold lock, stock and barrrel. No, this doesn't mean that you pretend that OmniMegaHyperCorp created the work or caused it to be created, you just sign a contract that says you give them all rights in perpetuity and without restriction, and (as if by magic) it happens. It's not part of copyright law, it's contract law, but it's de facto and supported by case law.

        But in this case, how long should the rights last? Lifetime of the creator? Fixed term? If the individual signs them over after fifty years, does that reset the clock on the fixed term ownership by the corporation? Or what if the creator dies two minutes after signing them over? Does that start the "death plus some" expiry? What if one individual sells rights to another individual? Or what if an individual doing work-for-hire for a corporation buys the rights to the work that they created some time after the fact? What if they then sell those rights back again? Most of these questions have yet to be answered by case law, because we keep changing and extending terms so often that most work is essentially worthless and not fighting over before the issue comes up. Where there's an exception, like early Disney work, Congress is happy to extend the duration of their copyright to avoid the issue.

        The whole issue of expiry is a big kludgy minefield. The only solution that makes any kind of sense is the original solution before we confused it by tying it to a lifetime: a fixed term associated with the creation of the work. It doesn't matter who caused the work to be created, or owns the rights, or how often the rights are bought or sold. The clock starts ticking the instant the work is created, and the bell rings after a fixed period, regardless of where the rights are in the pass-the-parcel world of modern IP.

        That's the way it used to work, and it was a damn shame that we "fixed" it, because it wasn't broke.

    • But if the copyright only lasted long enough for you and your label to recoup expenses and make a tidy profit on top of that, chances are you'd be getting back to work a lot sooner. When you're hungry, you work.

      But this leaves the problem of that the music companies will *ONLY* pick up on those things they can make a quick buck on. There's ALREADY a problem where they only care about stuff that they can make money off as quickly as possible, thus leading them to almost exclusively push "catchy", BUYMEBUYME but artless and substance-free bullshit like, well, everything on the radio. As is, they do at least have the possibility in the back of their minds that some bands are worth keeping around because their albums have *relisten* value, meaning people are still keeping those CDs around six years from now and playing them to their friends, meaning that that CD could potentially still be making money 20 years from now. As opposed to, say, the backstreet boys or new kids on the block, who 15 years from now will be lucky to get a single track on "HITS OF THE 90s VOLUME III!". Remove the incentive to put out long-lasting, solid albums with substance and shit, and you'll see a LOT more "britney"s and a LOT less "Dark Side of the Moon"s.. which makes this clearly not a solution to the current problems with the musical art.

      Clearly, instead, the solution is for all pop musicians to have heroin addictions. You see, if they have a heroin addiction to feed, then the money from that hit single will run out an order of magnitude faster, thus requiring them to continually produce new stuff to stay at the top of the charts.

      What, why do you THINK all great musicians have had drug addictions? You really buy that "troubled artist"/"escaping the intoxicating pain of intense creativity" line?

      (( note: i'm probably joking. i think. ))
  • I don't see how any of this applies to computer source code. If the source was never released to the public then I see no obvious reason why it should ever lapse into the public domain. The binaries which were released should have limited copyright protection, but it's not evident to me why something which was kept private should be required to be made publicly available. Do people's diaries and journals don't become public domain after their deaths? This is the closest analogy I can think of.
    • Re:Source code? (Score:2, Insightful)

      by UVaRob ( 243769 )
      This is a great point. Is the actual idea expressed in the binary? When the copyright expires are the binaries considered to be public property? Or is it the case that the source of the binaries is the expression of the copyrighted idea? So when the clock stikes on the copyright does everyone become owners of the source or do we have to reverse engineer the binaries? Should we even consider what our forefathers had in mind regarding patents or just write a new law? Is it fair that in 50 years Disney company no longer owns Mickey?

      Although I'm not sure I see the importance with computer code if it's only the binaries that become public domain as the longevity of particular programs is dwarfed by the life of the copyright.

  • by Michael Woodhams ( 112247 ) on Thursday March 07, 2002 @12:48AM (#3122984) Journal
    The article's closing sentence is: Perhaps if campaign finance reform succeeds in helping good arguments compete against ready cash, copyright will right itself.

    The fight against DCMA, copyright extension, UCITA (or whatever it was - the law being peddled to states to give click-through licenses teeth etc.) are all worthwhile, but they are attacking the symptoms. The influence of money over politics is the cause.

    (Disclaimer: I'm not a US citizen or resident, so arguably this really isn't my business.)

    Anybody want to get some easy karma by posting links to campaign finance reform organizations?
    • So, by your thinking, bad government is controlled by more government?

      Explain, please, how this works?

      • So, a math problem should be solved with more math?

        Your first book was terrible, why do you think you should write another one?

        Your first argument had some logical flaws, why do you insist on continuing to reason?

        Let me get this straight, you have a bug in your computer source code, so you are going to write even more source to fix it?

        Explain, please, how this works?

        • Bravo. I'm tired of this flawed mindset that there is no proper role for government, that government is intrinsically (and unfixably) flawed, and that government is responsible for all that is ill and none that is good in the world.


          That kind of junk thinking is fine in the freshman dorms but it's really time for people to grow up some.

      • Correct. A significant way that the US government is kept in check is that there are three equal branches of government, counter-balancing each other.
    • Perhaps if campaign finance reform succeeds in helping good arguments compete against ready cash, copyright will right itself.

      Don't hold your breath. The CTEA passed by unanimous voice vote with short speeches by members of both parties. The SSSCA has the support of senators on both sides of the aisle--including those who oppose soft money campaign contributions.

      Who will speak for the public domain? Will you?
    • Attack the real root of the problem: Politicians and bureaucrats are IN DEMAND for the power they wield.

      The corruption of power is not just the addiction to personal gratification that individuals get from being powerful, it's also the astonishing amounts of money that flow into the hands of those same individuals.

      Here are two very serious hints: Paid corporate lobyists, and millionare representitives.

      So-called "campaign finance reform" will only ever favor the incumbant. Under the new rules, while their opponents and anyone who disagrees with the incumbants is muzzled, the politician in power gets to publish continually from their "office" about their daily successes in bringing home the pork.

      Imagine that, for a moment. Can you?

      Money flows into politics because there is something to be bought. Remove that power, and the money will go elsewhere. Jefferson walked from his inauguration party back to his rented room. Why? Because he as President didn't have any power anyone wanted to buy.

      That's my kind of president!

      Bob-

  • by alewando ( 854 ) on Thursday March 07, 2002 @12:49AM (#3122986)
    This has been hashed out on CNI [cni.org] many times [cni.org], but people keep forgetting either when Disney's film was released or when Kipling's copyright expired.

    For the record:

    Kipling's copyright expired in 1956.
    Disney released their version in 1967.

    Now let us never speak of this again.
    • Under a Life+50 copyright term, of course, it would not have been in the public domain until 1986.

      Under a Life+70 copyright term, it would still be under copyright today.
    • Kipling's copyright expired in 1956.

      In the United States only. It didn't expire until 1966 (life + 30) in a few other major markets.

      Disney released their version in 1967.

      Worldwide.

      The real reason for DVD region coding: a publisher may not be able to secure the worldwide rights for a particular copyright.

      • The real reason for DVD region coding: a publisher may not be able to secure the worldwide rights for a particular copyright.

        I don't believe this for one second. Even if I did, I can't see how that makes the manufacturer of a DVD player responsible for protecting the publisher from an infringment suit abroad. The publisher should avoid publishing in jurisdictions where he has not secured his rights. If a bootleg copy makes it into the as-yet-unsecured market, that is no fault of the publisher or the manufacturer.
  • by nickynicky9doors ( 550370 ) on Thursday March 07, 2002 @12:50AM (#3122992)

    I've read an number of historians who designate the year 1950 as the first year of the present age and accordingly date every year before 1950 as Before the Present. C. Shannon presented the Mathematical Theory of Communications in 1948 and John von Neumann had the first 'modern' computer up and running about the same time. We could take 1950 as a conveinent year with which to begin the Information Technology revolution.

    Noting the submission's referral to Kipling, Disney and The Jungle Book it's not uninteresting to note the technology to reinvent The Jungle Book has only just become available and prior to Disney and movies the only 'threat' to the book might have been an unauthorized printing and stage presentation. But Disney, TV, and the movie industry represent a reinvention of the work in a novel venue with it's attendant technology and the entrechment of that technology in patent law. The net and it's attendant conflicts and revolution of copyright law is also a case of new technology presenting a potential for reinvention and redistribution of existing works, which, are sometimes movies or recorded music. Putting aside the nuts and bolts of the law and it's processes it's interesting to take in the overview as a lack of social structures capable of keeping up with the growth of technological change, as much as, power grabs by the mature patent corporations.

  • by cats-paw ( 34890 ) on Thursday March 07, 2002 @12:54AM (#3123007) Homepage
    If you follow the link

    Correspondence between Jefferson and Madison regarding the drafting of the Copyright Clause

    and then read the mailing list message, there is a beauty in there by Madison. He thought that "monopolies" would be OK, for a limited time, and that there was little probability of abuse because of the democratic system being created in the US.

    With regard to monopolies they are justly
    classed among the greates nuisances in government.
    But is it clear that as encouragements to literary
    works and ingenious discoveries, they are not too
    valuable to be wholly renounced? Would it not
    suffice to reserve in all cases a right to the public
    to abolish the privilege at a price to be specified
    in the grant of it? Is there not also infinitely
    less danger of this abuse in our governments than in
    most others? Monopolies are sacrifices of the many

    Follow the link ! The Madison and Jefferson writings are just great. It's the "inifinitely less danger" part which kills me. It's obvious our current payola system of government would be abhorrent to the founders.

    • I think the idea here is the limited monopoly granted to, say, the holder of a patent. The patent holder has the ability to prvent anyone else from creating the patented item.

      Hence, the patent grants the owner something of a limited monopoly on the item.

      I don't think, as you can take from the context "But is it clear that as encouragements to literary works and ingenious discoveries, they are not too valuable to be wholly renounced" that they were talking about Microsoft-style monopolies, but rather the limited rights granted under patent/copyright law.

      Note that current patent law is VERY similar to the first patent laws written in Venice in ~1474 (search for it online).

      Copyright law originiated/became important with the mass-production made possible by the printing press.

      What's happening to copyright law is VERY interesting as it was created in a time where the methods of reproduction were very limited, namely to those with printing presses. Now, when anyone can produce perfect digital copies and distribute them easily, where should copyright REALLY be going? Instead of bemoaning all the (quite poor) new legislation, make some POSITIVE suggestions

      (ie, come up with reasonable suggestions for limiting length of copyright on a per/item basis: music 20 yrs, movies 10, etc, etc...)

      -Dan
    • by Arandir ( 19206 ) on Thursday March 07, 2002 @04:45AM (#3123549) Homepage Journal
      It's obvious our current payola system of government would be abhorrent to the founders.

      Most things about the current US government would be abhorrent to the founding fathers. Let's see now: gun control, campaign finance reform, the need for campaign finance reform, military actions without congressional approval, complete dismisal of the ninth and tenth amendments, fair compensation routinely ignored in eminent domain, post roads redefined as mandatory postal monopoly, general welfare redefined as redistribution of wealth, yada, yada, yada.
  • by Alien54 ( 180860 ) on Thursday March 07, 2002 @12:55AM (#3123012) Journal
    I can see Disney and others trying to extend their copyrights indefinitely so as to hold onto their franchise.

    After all, would you want to see an un authorized Mickey Mouse pr0n flick? (never mind ....)

    the thought is enough to make Disney spin in his refridgerator.

  • I read this and did a "mental double take":

    quote:
    Cultural giants borrow, and so do corporate giants. Ironically, many of Disney's animated films are based on Nineteenth Century public domain works, including Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs, Cinderella, Pinocchio, The Hunchback of Notre Dame, Alice in Wonderland, and The Jungle Book (released exactly one year after Kipling's copyrights expired).


    Now I know I am prolly missing something here, but, I have to ask; If these fell into the public domain, does that mean I can create a derivative work?
    For instance:
    Almost white and the seven gnomes?
    A romance novel about Cindy R. Ella meeting the perfect man/woman/whatever?
    A biography called "Truth, lie, truth, lie..." one puppets account of the porn industry?

    And so forth?
    Satire, derivative works, public domain and so forth that would bring down Mouse-k-lawyers faster than you could say "hey! check out this Aqua Skin for windows!".

    So if I did, does that mean you can take out of the public domain and "claim rights/own" it/the idea?

    Is that what is going on?

    Moose.
    .
    • If these fell into the public domain, does that mean I can create a derivative work?

      Yes, of course. See American McGee's Alice, for example of a non-Disney Alice, and look up Pinocchio on www.imdb.com for many non-Disney films (including "The Erotic Adventures of Pinocchio").

      Satire, derivative works, public domain and so forth that would bring down Mouse-k-lawyers faster than you could say "hey! check out this Aqua Skin for windows!".

      I would make sure I was deriving from the original work rather than the Disney version, but there's not much that Disney could do to you unless you were really ripping them off instead of making another work based off the original.

      does that mean you can take out of the public domain and "claim rights/own" it/the idea?

      Pinocchio and Alice in Wonderland are in the public domain. You have rights to your work based off those, and only your work.
    • by freeweed ( 309734 ) on Thursday March 07, 2002 @01:37AM (#3123124)
      No, you're just misunderstanding copyright. The stories about Snow White, Cinderella, Pinocchio(sp?)and the rest have long since lapsed into the Public Domain. You're free to copy Snow White verbatim, if you want. You're NOT free to copy Disney's Snow White movie, as the copyright on THAT, and THAT ALONE is still held by them.

      This is why, right around the time of every recent Disney animated feature, you see knock offs: Atlantis, Hercules, etc. Disney (at least according to current law) cannot do anything about these, either. The ORIGINAL story, characters, and whatnot are public domain. DISNEY'S version isn't.

      Note that Beethoven, Shakespeare, all the old classic works are also in the Public Domain. You're free to reproduce those as you will. You're NOT free to distribute the latest film version of Hamlet - whoever actually made that owns the copyright on that, but not the original story.

      The great irony with the Mickey Mouse/Sonny Bono law is that without well known works lapsing into the Public Domain, Disney would not be close to the giant they are today. Most of Disney's most famous (and most profitable) works have been based on stories that have widespread appeal - and Disney didn't pay a cent to license them.

    • If these [original stories with Snow White, Pinocchio, and Cinderella] fell into the public domain, does that mean I can create a derivative work?

      Legally: Yes. If you made a derivative work of The Adventures of Pinocchio by Carlo Collodi (English translation begins here [everything2.com]), making sure not to copy any elements Disney introduced (such as the dialogue and songs, the likeness of the characters, or the whale that replaced the shark), and Disney tried to sue you, any rational judge in the U.S. would ROTFL and throw out the lawsuit. This is why AOL Pictures (New Line and Warner) could release two recent [imdb.com] films [imdb.com] based on the story of the puppet, and DreamWorks could give him a bit part in a third [imdb.com].

      Practically: Only if you have enough money to defend yourself in court. If you don't have enough money for a good attorney, you have to represent yourself, and Hungry Minds' Law for Dummies® [dummies.com] doesn't cover defense against frivolous copyright lawsuits. Rambu$ anyone?

  • by Anthony Boyd ( 242971 ) on Thursday March 07, 2002 @01:18AM (#3123071) Homepage

    I'm at the cap, but I was a journalism major, had a few Usenet flamewars over copyright [google.com], and I'm thinking about challenging some of E.E. Cummings' copyrights myself. His copyrights should be expiring, but because of the murky nature of pre-1978 works, his estate continues to assert rights. I think they're just hoping no one will do the math. But anyway... on to your question:

    Sprigman states that Disney's 1967 movie The Jungle Book came out a year after Kipling's copyright expired, but I can't see how, under the terms of the 1909 copyright law, an 1894 book could have had its U.S. copyright expire much later than 1950.

    Yes, I'm not even sure that a 1894 book would be covered by the 1909 law. But assuming it is, it would be covered for 28 years, plus another 28 if they renewed. So in the year 1950 that copyright would expire. It may also be that while the book was published in 1894, it was set in fixed, tangible form a year or two prior to that, and copyright would begin from that point. So maybe 1948 the copyright would expire. However, there was a 1978 copyright law [mycounsel.com], which extended copyrights by 19 years. If Sprigman thought the 1978 law applied (it doesn't), then some poor math might put the copyright expiration date at around early 1967. That would be wrong, the book really had to enter the public domain by 1950, but the wrong numbers get sorta close to what Sprigman has. Maybe that explains his numbers.

    The Sonny Bono law extended those copyrights by another 20 years, by the way. So some things that should have been falling into the public domain are squeezing out a bit of extra copyright time. Nowadays, new works are copyrighted for the author's lifetime plus 70 years after death.

  • by rufusdufus ( 450462 ) on Thursday March 07, 2002 @01:52AM (#3123158)
    The author is applying a 1909 US law to a british subject. The british at the time had their own copyright system, which also had been updated several times. One of the updates was the allowance of copyright rights to british subjects living abroad. Thus kipling would have qualified for the British copyright, which was honored by treaty.
  • Like the author of the article said, the most important part about copyright, and I would extend this to IP law in general, is not about making sure people get paid. IP is supposed to be about limiting how long people can own things!

    It's all about the old saying "you can't take it with you" except everyone now is trying their damnedest anyway.

    Artists and innovators produced art and innovation prior to copyright and patent law, and they would continue to do so if it was abolish. In fact, it would drastically increase quality in all likelyhood, as pop garbage would stop.

    The US needs to take a hint from Parliment, who had this figured out centuries ago. Ownership lasts for existing life + 20 years, and stops, no extension.

    An awful lot of America's woes can be blamed squarely on the puritans (bloody conservatives) who came up with the rediculous idea that anything you earn or own in your lifetime belongs to you to do with as you choose until the end of time, utter complete hogwash. Now as a direct decendant of their idiocy we have the travesty of modern IP, and whiny brats squaling about death taxes and other limitations on ownership.

  • Under the '09 Act (as it existed upon its supercession by the '76 Act on 1/1/78) the term of copyright was 28 years plus a renewal term of 28 years. Add 'em together, you get 56. Add 56 to 1894 you get ..... 1950!
  • by Robber Baron ( 112304 ) on Thursday March 07, 2002 @02:27AM (#3123277) Homepage
    entertainment
    Pronunciation: "en-t&r-'tAn-m&nt
    Function: noun
    Date: 15th century
    1 : the act of entertaining
    2 a archaic : MAINTENANCE, PROVISION b obsolete : EMPLOYMENT
    3 : something diverting or engaging: as a : a public performance b : a usually light comic or adventure novel

    Somebody needs to remind the ENTERTAINMENT industry just what exactly their place is in the grand scheme of things! They've bent and twisted copyright laws and now they want to cripple every digital device under the sun, and for what? To protect Mickey Mouse cartoons and a few lousy movies??? NO! It's ENTERTAINMENT! It isn't something that actually matters that much! Yeesh, You'd think that it was a "national security" issue...like protecting nuclear secrets or something!

    No Disney, you can't cripple all the computers. People use them to do things that are more important than a stupid cartoon mouse...like helping to treat the sick!
  • by MOMOCROME ( 207697 ) <momocrome@@@gmail...com> on Thursday March 07, 2002 @02:30AM (#3123290)
    I continually find myself at a loss as to why so many consider software as something to be covered under Copyright Law. Unless I am mistaken, and I rarely am, Programming Code is nothing more than the ordering of electronic gates through a high-level intermediary, i.e., a text document which is then 'compiled' into the necessary arrangement to form a machine that acts on electrons.

    You can copyright all the blueprints you want, but that doesn't give people the legal right to market your 'invention', which is the arrangement of electronic gates found in the CPU, regardless if they obtain or duplicate your blueprints.

    Computer Code clearly falls under the auspices of Patent Law, and nothing further. It is a purely mechanical system, and the code is ultimately just shorthand to arrive at the desired effect. In other words, a diagram. Just as a lawnmower or lightbulb would require for a patent. That it is inconvenient to show a physical diagram of software is irrelevant, just as it is irrelevant to copyright computer code.

    That this simple fact continues to elude even the most (self-styled) brightest minds of our age boggles the mind. Individuals and Companies have been getting away with 'copyrighting' their mechanical inventions for far too long now, and I say it is high time that some sense is brought to the table.
    • I tend to agree with you, at least as respects machine/object code, but for different reasons. Machine code is code made by machines for machines. But the Constitution only authorizes Congress to protect the "writings" of "authors." I submit that the Framers never contemplated or intended that the concept of an author would encompass a machine or that something made by non-human hands and not readable by humans could constitute a "writing" within the meaning of the Constitution.
    • Software exists in several states:
      • An Idea - Programming is a creative process. You can fight me on this one if you want, but the programmer(s) have to come up with the heuristics/algorithms for dealing with a problem/situation before they can write the code that accomplishes their goal.
      • Source Code - A syntactically-structured organization of text that carries semantic meaning based on the grammar of the language it was written in. The syntax and semantics of any programming language can change over time (K&R vs. Traditional vs. ANSI C, for example), and old programs won't necessarily work without a compiler designed for the syntax/semantics of the time the program was originally written in.
      • Object code - A sequence of zero's and one's that describe a manipulation of electron flows through the CPU of a specific computer architecture.

      IANAL, but with the way the American legal system is in place now, this is what seems to be the digs. Source code is copyrighted - algorithms can be patented. Object code can be neither.

      Source code is a personal interpretation of an algorithm - a description in a particular language of a method for manipulatig anabstract quantification of a problem. That it happens to be realized on a computer is irrelevant - if a group of children understand the syntactic structure and semantic content of C++, you can write a parallel quicksort algorithm on a chalkboard, give them each cards with numbers on them, and have them quicksort the numbers. Source code is not a method - it is a description of a method. For all intents and purposes, it is a literary work [loc.gov], at least according to the U.S. Copyright office.

      Algorithms are methods - the RSA cryptographic protocol and the Lempel-Ziv compression/decompression algorithm are methods. They were patented, and the patent for RSA expired (Lempel-Ziv compression is still patented, AFAIK).

      If I take some source code, change all the while loops to for loops, change all the variable names to arbitrarily-assigned integers, and add an instruction to "do nothing for 5 minutes" between each basic block of actions, have I fundamentally altered your method? No. Your source code? Yes. Your resulting time/space complexity? Probably. This is why a "clean-room" implementation of existing code doesn't violate copyright. Person A didn't see Person B's code - if neither of their code looks the same, and each accomplishes the same result, how can you prove that A copied B's, or vice-versa? A similar argument follows for object code.

    • The problem is that the courts did not agree with you about code and patents. See there is this very old rule that you cannot patent mathematical formulas or physical laws. those things are said to be too abstract, and not really inventions. When the problem of code started coming up, the courts decided that code is more like an abstract mathematical formula than a machine. I think the courts were quite wrong on that one, and they did not understand the true nature of software. So they decided to make it unpatantable. I guees it is relevant that back then patents were a bit unpopular with the federal courts, who really disliked monopolies and limited patents whenever they could. Because software is unpatentable copyright protection was sought. Now software is patentable but copyright protection is widely used already. And it is free. Although copyright lasts much longer than patents it is not as powerful as patents. You cannot copyright an idea although you can patent one. So I dont think that copyrighting of code is that bad after all. It prevents you from copying code, but does not prevent you from doing essentially the same thing the same way if it is done with different code.
    • Computer Code clearly falls under the auspices of Patent Law, and nothing further. It is a purely mechanical system, and the code is ultimately just shorthand to arrive at the desired effect. In other words, a diagram. Just as a lawnmower or lightbulb would require for a patent. That it is inconvenient to show a physical diagram of software is irrelevant, just as it is irrelevant to copyright computer code.

      Patent law has nothing to do with software. The mechanical argument fails as the intent of a program is not the setting of gates (so a program rarely deals with the gates), it is the production of a desired transformation of some input data to some output data. This can normally be achieved in many different ways. Indeed the only examples that can't be done in different ways would very well serve as the definition of "obvious" when attepting to overturn the patent.

      Patent law does not cover effects and two patents can be issued to two different lightbulbs which achieve their effects in two different ways.

      Since the method of "setting the gates" for a software effect varies, even with the same source code, based on the processor, memory configuration, and compiler version it is impractical to the point of impossibility to apply the mechanical argument. There is simply no possibility of enforcing such an approach in software and there isn't even very much logic to trying.

      The strongest approach is copyright on the source code itself which abstracts the whole gates thing to a level where it is at least possible to debate whether something has been copied or not.

      Even this, however, is difficult as differing programming languages have some very different ways of expressing the same thing. Try APL, Forth, Lisp and C++ for multiplying two matricies; could you prove that they had been copied from each other (or that they had not)?

      The final approach is to patent/copyright an algorithm. This, though, is a real can of worms. Since an algorithm is simply a list of instructions, allowing the protection of these as if they were property means that there is no reason I can't "own" the best route from my street to the shops and route-finder programs would be a legal nightmare. Even cookery books would become rich pickings for lawyers as these are simply collections of algorithms (if we split algorithms for computers into a special category and ignore everything else what happens when a machine is programmed to make bread, is that covered or not?).

      So, perhaps the "(self-styled) brightest minds" of the age have actually thought about the difficulties involved in these issues after all. Isn't that reassuring?

      TWW

  • by NullLogic ( 179891 ) on Thursday March 07, 2002 @04:47AM (#3123557) Homepage

    Why not? He's already running your country, right? You silly americans should probably just overthrow your government, and be done with it. I'm kidding, of course. At the current rate of decay of your rights, you still have more than ten good years of "freedom".

    Honestly, it scares me to know that if US citizens can't protect their rights now, then the civilized world doesn't stand a chance when our turn comes. US laws have a rather insidious way of becoming global. Can you spell embargo?

    FWIW, IMO, copyright is a good thing. There are only two really major problems I see:

    • 20 years *total* is more than enough. None of this lifetime+time until december 31+320 years+6 full moons crap. 20 years. If you haven't made your money by then, I don't think another century is going to help.
    • Copyright is not a right that should be given to a non-person. Sure, corporations should be able to negotiate the right to use copyrighted material, but not to own it. Just how does that lifetime part work anyways with an owner that doesn't technically die?
    Heh. Well, *technically* it's legal to download and burn music here in Canada, so I'm going to go enjoy my rights while I still live in a free country.
  • by hyphz ( 179185 ) on Thursday March 07, 2002 @08:41AM (#3123913)
    If they actually made copyright extensions roll all the way backwards as well.

    For example, suppose copyright is extended. We would then apply that to all older works too, and find that when Disney made their Jungle Book film, the Jungle Book itself was still copyrighted. Thus, Disney must immediately start negotiations with Kipling's estate or lose the royalties they got from the film (inflation adjusted). Likewise with Hans Christen Andersen, etc..

    I think this is a really good idea, actually - after all, if these firms seek copyright extensions they surely ought to seek for *all* artists to get the extension, including those whose lapsed copyrights were exploited in the past.

    After all, heaven forbid that they were using the law as a competition weapon by cherry-picking the public domain now and then having copyright extended to cement their claims on the ideas..

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