Eldred Attracts Heavyweight Supporters 230
dipfan writes: "Opening briefs have now been filed with the Supreme Court for the Eldred v Ashcroft copyright case, arguing that the Sonny Bono Copyright Term Extension Act is unconstitutional. The anti-extension case has attracted some big name supporters, including Intel, and Nobel prize winning economist Milton Freidman, who argue it is "highly unlikely that the economic benefits from copyright extension" outweigh the additional costs, and that copyright extension reduces consumer welfare. (Previous coverage of the case on /. here and here)"
I love it (Score:3, Insightful)
So a limited time will now far exceed several generations. I can totaly see how this will benefit all the people of the good 'ol USA.
Economic recovery, here we come!
If ever there was a case that should win. (Score:5, Insightful)
The copyright extension can't reasonably be argued to server any Constitutionally argued purpose. After all, to be extended, the works in question had to be produced.
Absent a time machine, how do you encourage the creation of something that's already been created?
The only thing you can do is negate the other side of the deal: transfer of your work into the public domain.
This is not even an issue of being for or against intellectual property. Congress used its Constitutinally provided powers to grant intellectual property to authors, but demanded consideration in return. That consideration was placement of works into the public domain after the author or subsequent copyright holder had been granted an adequate opportunity to exploit the work.
We have delivered on our end of the bargain. The copyright holders must deliver on theirs.
Re:If ever there was a case that should win. (Score:4, Funny)
"Stop! In the name of Love
Before you break my heart"
How could they resist...
Re:If ever there was a case that should win. (Score:2, Funny)
Re:If ever there was a case that should win. (Score:3, Funny)
Is easy to win the Supremes over, just before they make a bad decision shout:
"Stop! In the name of Love
Before you break my heart"
Actually, no. That song's not in the public domain, and thus you'll have to be fined on the spot & beaten with Diana Ross's weave.
Re:If ever there was a case that should win. (Score:2)
And what is Disney's business plan anyway? To have copyrights extended whenever Mickey Mouse risks becoming public domain?
Re:If ever there was a case that should win. (Score:3, Informative)
That he didn't recuse himself shows a very serious lack of integrity among the Justices. Who knows what conflict of interest they'll allow next?
Re:If ever there was a case that should win. (Score:2)
It's hard to imagine that Mrs. Thomas would have been in a paid position and that Justice Thomas wouldn't recuse himself. More to the point, it's nearly impossible to imagine that she would have been in a paid position and the Democrats wouldn't demand that Thomas recuse himself.
I'm betting she volunteered.
Re:If ever there was a case that should win. (Score:5, Informative)
That Thomas and Scalia should have recused themselves is absolutely obvious to me. And I don't say that just that it's Bush involved and I dislike him (as an aside, I never liked Gore either). The fact is that the court acted disgracefully in a very important ruling. You can't forget that -- it's not just the effect of the ruling, but that they have revealed that on truly tough cases (not just subtle, but personally tough for those Justices) they will not act fairly. They do not deserve respect, and they do not deserve to be given the benefit of the doubt. They only deserve that when there is no evidence to the contrary, but evidence has been presented, and we need to look at the evidence whenever it's present.
(Besides this, the volunteer premise is false: Bush's campaign was flush with money. What may have appeared to be volunteer work seldom was. Lots of people worked on that campaign for purely monetary reasons. Get-out-the-vote door-to-door campaigners were being done by employees. Phone soliciters were payed. Everyone was on the payrole. It was not some grassroots campaign done by true supporters. It was a corporate campaign, from top to bottom, for a corporate president. Sure, it had the appearance of legitimacy, but corporations learned to fake that a long time ago.)
Re:If ever there was a case that should win. (Score:2)
OOC -- where do you get your "information" that everyone on the Bush campaign was paid? Out in my area, lots of volunteers were solicited to do lots of things. How do you count people who put lawn signs in their yards, or delivered lawn signs to be put in yards? Hand out leaflets? Knock on neighbors' doors. I know some of those activities were done by unpaid volunteers because I did some and so did some of my neighbors.
Re:If ever there was a case that should win. (Score:2)
They can however bribe justices with money, free movie showings, food, etc.
And what is Disney's business plan anyway? To have copyrights extended whenever Mickey Mouse risks becoming public domain?
The really ironic thing is that the early Mickey Mouse movies may well be public domain anyway. Since apparently Disney didn't comply with the copyright law en force in the 1920-30's.
Re:If ever there was a case that should win. (Score:3, Informative)
This is addressed nicely in the ecomomists' brief. The Disney argument might go like this: "if we get this windfall, we'll spend it on new creative projects."
The economists point out that if a profit-maximizing corporation had a potentially profitable project, they could seek funding from banks or investors. If the corporation has more money than profitable projects, they should invest those excess resources on something else.
A starving artist, they acknowledge, might not be able to get the same kind of investment that Disney can get. But for the starving artist to get anything out of extension, they would have to already own a copyright that was about to expire. And that, they point out, is unlikely.
Re:If ever there was a case that should win. (Score:2)
Besides, the result if ambiguous. If Disney loses a copyright to the public domain, who's to say others won't find additional and different ways to profit from the same material?
The goal is to benefit the American people at large, not to enrich Disney or any other copyright holder.
Re:If ever there was a case that should win. (Score:2)
Or their copyright may well have value, but they assigned it to someone else. So the copyright term on the work means absolutly nothing to the artist in the first place.
GNU files amicus curiae brief (Score:5, Informative)
Also, the FSF filed a "friend of the court" brief [gnu.org], though if, like me, you are not a lawyer, you might rather just read the press release [gnu.org].
Open Petition? (Score:2)
This sort of high-profile case is just crying out for a shown of public support. Do you think a couple of free software heavyweights could agree on a middle-of-the-road viewpoint on Copyright law (by which I mean somewhere other than abolish it) in a form that "open IP" supporters everywhere (or just in the US ;) ) could "sign" in an online show of support.
The recent /. article on Copyright would probably been a good place to look for ideas ;)
Re:Open Petition? (Score:2)
Re:Open Petition? (Score:4, Insightful)
Even if the justices think that a law is a pathetic, weak, idiotic law -- if it's Constitutional and all, they need to uphold it as is. It's the other two branches' job to reflect the populace and consider bending to petitions.
Re:Open Petition? (Score:2)
Good quote (Score:4, Interesting)
``Actually, Sonny [Bono] wanted the term of copyright protection to last forever.''
--Rep. Mary Bono
144 Cong. Rec. H9951 (daily ed. Oct. 7, 1998)
Re:Good quote (Score:3, Interesting)
Although there were rumours that Sonny wanted out shortly before he went eXtreme tree-skiing.
Re:Good quote (Score:4, Insightful)
Sure, it brings US copyright law more into harmony with Euro laws, but then again, Europeans have a history of supporting hereditary privilege, which is what "70 years past the death of the author" amounts to. It creates a trust fund for a select few to inherit, a privilege which they did nothing to earn, and it burdens current creators and entrepeneurs with supporting the children of their predecessors. To paraphrase Jefferson, it is a debt levied on the living by the dead. It's a very un-American and anti-democratic viewpoint. The addition of Milton Friedman's name should be a sign that being a rabid capitalist doesn't mean favoring corporate welfare of this sort; the CTEA takes away from the public domain and gives to the corporations without expecting anything in return.
For the record, I have less of a problem with long terms on works for hire, but the next thing they'll try is "Copyright for as long as the corporation exists", clearly unconsititutional.
Re:Good quote (Score:2)
As for ther "heriditary privilege", European nations now (for the first time in history) spend less on farm subsidies (taxes to donate to people who have land) than the United States.
Re: farm subsidies (Score:2)
-l
Re: farm subsidies (Score:2)
Of course, it may be that every man, woman, and child in the United States thinks they owe farmers $700 each; I certainly wish I could convince the government to shovel money at me based on being a landowner. You may not care the damage it does US relations with allied states. But you ought to.
Re: farm subsidies (Score:2)
I didn't buy any hype. I came up with that justification on my own since I don't buy the poor small-time farmer argument. The US probably pays farmers to kill more corn than necessary to feed the entire population... but I don't have numbers to back up that assertion. :-) My point is that while many fundamental industries (textiles, manufacturing, etc.) can and will move largely overseas where manual labor is cheaper, some of those industries are requisite for any serious long-term defense plan.
No, they don't need handholding. Frankly, many of these farmers are terrible businessmen, sold on the old rustic ideal of the independent farmer. There needs to be a lot more consolidation across the industry. Farming collectives are nice, but they don't quite get there in terms of ROI. Farming must ultimately succumb to market forces, just like anything else. However, that doesn't change the fact that we need to keep enough farming local... and today, I don't know how much that is.
Lastly, too much consolidation is a poor defense plan too. If all our food is grown in just Iowa or something, a few nukes could take out the entire supply. There just need to be some checks and balances.
-l
Re:Good quote (Score:2)
It's not just a matter of term, there is also the matter of scope. e.g. US copyright law has always been very draconian with respect to derived works. (Which wasn't an especially big issue where copyright was fairly short term anyway.)
Up until 1988 UK copyright law, whilst fairly long term, tended not to view creating many derived works as potentially infringing. Indeed it would be perfectly possible to create something which was entirely derived from other works and meet the 1956 acts definition of "original". In 1956 the idea that creative works are often inspired by and derived from other works was apparenly well understood, at least in London.
More recently we have had rounds of "harmonization", which appears to translate in taking the most extreme parts of copyright laws from all over the world and putting them all together.
Re:The USA has heriditary presidents! (Score:2)
I have no trouble with the estate of an author holding the copyright for a limited period after the death of the author. (Especially when they build on the original work.) I have a problem with copyrights lasting for the life of a corporation. Does anyone else see the irony if "forever" copyright existed previously, Disney would never have been able to make Snow White, Sleeping Beauty, Cinderella, etc...
P.S. I have a recording of Thomas Edison from 1918. I wonder how EMI would feel if I made a record from that :-)
Go for it! The first motion picture, Fred Ott's Sneeze ought to be public domain too!
Oh the irony, the irony... (Score:2)
I can't really think of too many of Disney's kid films that wouldn't have violated a forever copyright.
I'm not sure if Jungle Book was out of copyright by the late-ish '60's or not. Hunchback of Notre Dame, 20,000 Leagues Under The Sea, Peter Pan, The Littlest Mermaid, too many others to remember. Sure, they're done in-house stories, but Disney has made Big Money strip-mining the free commonwealth of shared culture, something they couldn't have done if it was all locked down in perpetual copyrights.
They're hypocrites, and I bet they'd have the gaul to sue anyone else who dared make another Cinderella movie, in spite of various version of the tale going back hundreds of years. (Too bad they left out the red-hot iron shoes for the step-mother and step-sisters.)
This isn't so much the Sonny Bono law, as it is the Mickey Mouse copyright law.
I hope copyright extensions get repealed (Score:4, Interesting)
The biggest issue I have is with the duration of copyright. Originally set to last 14 to 28 years from date of creation, it now stands as 95 years from the death of the copyright owner. The latest lengthening (the Sonny Bono Act) might have to do with strong lobbying from Disney, as Mickey Mouse would have lost its copyright in 2004. And to extend it again, 20 years at a time only takes a mere act of Congress.
On one hand, I'd like to see creators get just rewards for their work. But I disagree with a near-eternal guarantee, that might stifle creation in the future because current creative minds can rest on their laurels. In other words, they can stop working and continue to enjoy a revenue stream, while I need to keep working to get my next paycheck.
Re:I hope copyright extensions get repealed (Score:2)
Is it 95 years? I thought it just went from 50 to 70. If it's 95 then I need to fix my sig.
Re:I hope copyright extensions get repealed (Score:2)
Or the creative minds' parents, or kids, or family, or employees
Re:I hope copyright extensions get repealed (Score:2)
I don't think Judy Blume's descendants are idly living out their days on royalties from "Superfudge", for instance, nor did Electronic Arts stop after the days of "Pinball Construction Set".
If something IS so awe-inspiring that it'll really stand the test of time for ninety years, *shrug* I don't have a problem with that, especially with purely artistic works -- there's less public harm in, say, having a nigh-indefinitely copyrighted Mickey Mouse flick than there is in having an indefinitely-patented hypothetical rhinoviral cold vaccine. If Disney slams the door and people stop paying for Mickey Mouse, big deal -- it's only Mickey Mouse.
Re:I hope copyright extensions get repealed (Score:5, Insightful)
Which raises an interesting question.
How come our laws are structured so that the guy who cures cancer has to make back his entire investment in 14 years, but RIAA and MPAA get to sponge for 90 years plus the life of the creator?
If the rationale for these intellectual property "protections" is that they somehow promote innovation and investment, how did we conclude that a fucking cartoon mouse is deserving of 90+ years of protection, but a cure for cancer, only 14?
Re:I hope copyright extensions get repealed (Score:4, Insightful)
A writer, for instance, can probably get away with writing quite a bit without deriving from "Snow White", say -- there's nothing, besides constraints on imagination and effort, stopping a writer from designing his own distinct universe. And if they're REALLY creative, the universe might be so distinct that it won't involve axe-wielding dwarves, fair tree-loving elves with bows, and half-height people not named H*bbits to avoid the dreaded Lawyers of Mordor. Worst case? A creative work falls into oblivion, because the author refuses to license it to anybody else at prices that others will accept.
But systems and methods have to work in reality -- there may not be another satisfactory way around a problem. If, for instance, somebody designs a KSR/RGB Mars-style "treatment" that improves longevity by fixing long-term accumulated genetic damage, restores telomeres, and so forth, then that's a huge amount of IP. Some of the necessary methods may be the only effective solutions. So a long, closely-held patent could be used to throttle potential research in that area. What if, say, a radical anti-"playing God" group set up shell companies to quietly purchase IP, or even set up a biotechnology firm for the sole purpose of blocking applications by winning the research race? Imagine if a group tried to blackmail the world with a patented, 90-year-protected cure to cancer? The threat to society's potential welfare is much worse than that of, say, withholding "Steamboat Willie".
Re:I hope copyright extensions get repealed (Score:2)
failing to place works of art and liturature and music inthe public domain for a period of time that is so damn long that my great grand children will be middle age before they can reap the societal benifits of its public domain status is rediculous and not healthy for society. by extending the copyright, you run into the 1930's books issue, and that is not healthy at all and does not provide benifit to anyone.
Re:I hope copyright extensions get repealed (Score:2)
The reason why is a matter of lobbying history...
But consider that Copyright affords much less "protection" than Patent law.
Like almost everyone here, I too hope that the extension is struck down, and more importantly a clear precident is set for future extensions,
But the real evil of today's system, as some of the briefs pointed out, is that 100% of "written" works automatically receive copyright protection for the entire possible term. The previous system, where an application must be submitted and extensions must be granted was much more sensible, as many works immediately entered the public domain if the author did not feel the need for copyright (they couldn't later demand royalties when someone else makes a derivitive work from something they never intended to be profitable). Extensions also worked well to cause copyrighted works that were no longer "exploited" to enter the public domain, yet valuable works could remain protected. On of the briefs cites a study that only 15% of copyrights were extended. Today these simple and sensible proceedures have been lost.
Re:I hope copyright extensions get repealed (Score:2)
I presume that the practical reason is that there's a much stronger lobby for extending copyright terms than for extending patent terms. Although there are some companies and individuals who make a living building on newly expired copyrights, there isn't a huge industry doing so, so there isn't a powerful lobby trying to enforce strict limits on the length of copyright. OTOH, the holders of current copyrights have a strong interest in seeing them extended, making for a powerful pro-extension lobby.
In contrast, the patent system is much more even. Just about every big company that depends heavily on patents to protect its inventions also struggles against other companies that hold patents on inventions it wants to use. That means that they can see both sides of the patent issue and are less likely to be strongly in favor of extending patent terms. Of course this isn't true of every business. My impression is that Big Pharma is much less dependent on the availability of others' patents, so they're one of the few industries that lobbies strongly in favor of longer patent terms.
Re:I hope copyright extensions get repealed (Score:2)
How come our laws are structured so that the guy who cures cancer has to make back his entire investment in 14 years, but RIAA and MPAA get to sponge for 90 years plus the life of the creator?
Patents have a shorter duration than copyrights because patents are broader than copyrights. Copyright prevents you from making unauthorized exact duplicates of, for example, a book. You are allowed to read the story and write *exactly* the same story yourself as long as you don't copy the story verbatim. You can use the same characters (though you might have to change their names), the same plot, etc. Further, Fair Use evenallows you to copy passages for various purposes. With patents, on the other hand, you're not allowed to make any device that conforms to the claims in the patent (it's the job of, first, the patent office and, later, the courts to determine if the claims are too broad to be valid, so there are some limitations there). There are no fair use exceptions and you cannot just read the patent and then go off and design and build your own device using the same principles. You can design a device that does the same thing in a completely different way but that is more difficult than the analogous situation with copyright.
Because patents grant a more *powerful* monopoly, they also grant a *shorter* monopoly. Keep in mind that the idea of IP law is (or was, at least) to try to balance the creator's ability to profit with the public's ability to use new ideas without encumbrance. The ideal situation, from society's point of view, is a duration that is just barely long enough to incent creators to create and no longer.
Of course, it should be utterly obvious to everyone that from the point of view of the creator trying to decide whether to, e.g., write a book, there is no practical difference between a 50-year monopoly and a 95-year monopoly.
Re:I hope copyright extensions get repealed (Score:2)
Especially for independent authors. Big corporate copyright holders can quite easily licence other copyright works held by other big corporates.
Re:I hope copyright extensions get repealed (Score:2)
To be more precise, Steamboat Willy (the first Micky cartoon) would have lost its copyright. Later works would lose their copyrights at later dates.
Although given how much heavy duty recycling some of the 50+ year old Disney "classics" have gone through on VHS and DVD, I'm sure the company would love to keep on milking those for a few more generations. Although it looks like they're hedging their bets with all the derivative stuff lately -- Little Mermaid 2, Cinderella 2, Return To Neverland (aka Peter Pan 2), etc, etc.
Re:I hope copyright extensions get repealed (Score:2)
before DMCA what was there (Score:2, Offtopic)
Is it me but ever since mp3's it's like the entire world is an expert on copyright infringment. I remember teh days on slashdot when all teh articles were about supercooling my 300a. interesting paradigm shift.
Re:before DMCA what was there (Score:3, Interesting)
I'm hopeful (Score:5, Informative)
This is probably the most important copyright case of our generation. The government has characterized retroactive copyright extension as a "national tradition", and if this case fails, the result will be that Congress will be given the go-ahead to continue the "tradition", and the result will be perpetual copyright. The entire idea of a public domain of ideas will be destroyed.
Eldred is our last, best chance to prevent perpetual copyright. It's a tremendous effort, the best contemporary legal writing that I've EVER seen. I urge all Slashdot readers to read through the opening brief. It should be required reading for anyone interested in the issues behind copyright extension.
Re:I'm hopeful (Score:2)
Me Too!
</AOL>
Seriously... I don't pretend to understand legalese, and yet this brief was a brilliant piece of work, obviously fitting the "DTD" for a legal brief, with all the appropriate legalese, yet understandable, direct, and clear. A masterful work by the attorneys!
Re:I'm hopeful (Score:2)
At least until we manage to drag the DMCA (kicking and screaming) before the supreme court.
And I agree, the opening brief [harvard.edu] is an excellent read even for non-lawyers. Highly recommended even for hackers allergic to legaleese.
-
Mickey Mouse is not the issue (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Mickey Mouse is not the issue (Score:2)
here in case you haven't.
I read the first 30 pages, it clearly focuses on the 3,350,000 copyright registrations between 1923 and 1942.
As another poster has pointed out, the brief is excellent reading. Why don't you try it.
Re:Mickey Mouse is not the issue (Score:2)
The 'individual' who benefits from current copyright law is likely to be a corporation, not the original creator, and that corporation is given great incentive to take the rewards out of the US for tax purposes, leaving society (and probably the original creator!) poorer in all respects. I find it hard to believe that this is what the framers had in mind.
One reply here points out that Ayn Rand wanted copyrights of only 7 years, so that people would not 'rest on their laurels.' It's funny to contrast that with Sonny Bono, who wanted copyrights to last forever, at the same time that 'I Got You Babe' was undergoing its obligatory retro-revival in movies and TV.
Re:Mickey Mouse is not the issue (Score:2)
Siva Vaidhyanathan on the Sonny Bono Act (Score:5, Interesting)
JH: "In your book, you refer to the DMCA as an example of what you call a "thick" copyright law. Can you explain the difference between "thick" copyright law and a "thin" law?"
SV: "...One way to measure the thickness of a copyright law is to look at the duration of protection. If works enter the public domain before an author's life expectancy expires, then it's a thin and democratic system. If the duration of copyright protection is absurdly long and potentially indefinite, then it's way too thick.
"JH: And the DMCA does this?
"SV: Not exactly. The Sonny Bono Copyright Term Extension Act of 1998, which added 20 years to almost all active copyrights, does this. The Copyright Act of 1976 did this as well, but it took people a while to complain about it. Before THE 1976 ACT, copyright terms were for a fixed amouNt of time: 28 years per term, renewable once. Since the 1976 act, the term has been life of the author plus 50 years, and now 70 years. The Supreme Court will hear a case in the fall about the constitutionality of the Sonny Bono Act. And many of us on the public interest side of copyright debates are hoping that the justices revert to the first principles of American copyright: that copyright is meant to promote creativity and expression, not retard it. Copyright has become corrupted to such a degree that it's now an instrument of censorship, as Dmitri Sklyarov and Edward Felten can tell you."
-- haaz, who will think twice before snipped for brevity's sake.
Re:Siva Vaidhyanathan on the Sonny Bono Act (Score:2)
Linking copyright to the death of an author makes finding the copyright expirary date non obvious (especially for a lesser known author). Also linking copyright expiary to the author's death makes asasination a possibility. Whilst no person would wait 50-70 years a corporation might think on that timescale. It comes from the Bern convention, maybe the US could put it's well known habit of ignoring treaties to good use for once.
Copyright has become corrupted to such a degree that it's now an instrument of censorship, as Dmitri Sklyarov and Edward Felten can tell you.
Which is back to where it was 300 odd years ago. Except with CEO's rather than kings doing the censoring.
Who's who (Score:5, Informative)
Eagle Forum/Phyllis Schlafly
Milton Friedman
Hal Roach Studios
Intel
Wendell Berry
Ursula K. Leguin
Barry Lopez
Peter Matthiessen
David Foster Wallace
National Writers Union
The United States Public Policy Committee for the Association of Computing Machinery
Computer Professionals for Social Responsibility
The Apache Software Foundation
The Domain Name Rights Coalition
The Center for The Public Domain
Public Knowledge, The Digital Future Coalition
The Public Domain Research Corporation
The Center for Book Culture
The Computer and Communications Industry Association
The Consumer Electronics Association
Re:Who's who (Score:2)
Apart from Friedman, Hal Roach Studios, and Intel, the words "Coalition" and "Public" and "Foundation" appear too frequently in that list. We need more corporations and industry associations to file amicus briefs.
But Friedman - wow. If anyone can convince the Supremes of the economic harm wrought by indefinite copyright, it'll be him. You go, Milt! (And happy birthday!)
Re:Who's who (Score:2)
Some of the individual names are noteworthy too - not just Friedman, but also well regarded authors like Le Guinn, Berry, and Matthiessen.
The light at the end of the tunnel may be wavering, but it's not out. Yet.
Heh heh, you said Sony (Score:2)
We're talking about Sony, Phillips, Toshiba, GE, and so forth here.
So sony with one N is against sonny with two N's? I was almost certain that Sony Music (an RIAA label) would support perpetual copyright.
Re:Heh heh, you said Sony (Score:2)
Sony Electronics is certainly not for perpetual copyright.
Re:Who's who (Score:2)
Re:Who's who (Score:2)
Re:Who's who (Score:2)
Can anyone tell me if there is a 'win by default' ruling in court if no judges show up?
Re:Who's who (Score:3, Funny)
Has Milton Friedman ever had a top ten hit? I didn't think so. Try again, and get us some _real_ names. Get, say Wayne Newton on board, and we'll start paying attention.
Why Bother? (Score:2)
Why is anyone bothering to fight against the copyright extension, anyway? If you listen to the copyright holders, you'd know that everying under the sun is just going to be stolen by copyright thieves anyway. Of course then you also have to wonder why they're so worried about extending the term of copyright if they believe that it's impossible to publish anything without having it stolen. Something doesn't add up here...
The primary problem... (Score:2, Insightful)
If you like the base key changes in a work by Motzart, or Bethoven, you are welcome to use it. Unless someone since then has used that same combination of key changes, and their music is not in the public domain.
We have not seen quite the same situation in written works. Authors regularly steal story concepts from other books, file off the serial numbers, wrap them with new characters and locations, and publish it as a new story.
While I sympathize with musicians who cringe at the thought of finding some other musician taking their song and changing one or two words and re-publishing it. In writing, that would be plagerism.
On the other hand, if the creator of some work does not release the work to the public domain at some time, it will stifle creativity.
I think that Spider Robinson pointed out the problem best, though I do not remember the story or the book I found it in. When musicians can't publish the music they create, because it contains "substantialy similar" parts, we will see a greater loss to society than just about any loss due to war.
Then again, that's just my opinion. I can be wrong.
-Rusty
Spider Robinson copyright story (Score:2)
How will the Supreme Court function in this case? (Score:2)
First and foremost, there is the one-liner in the Constitution. That one line can be picked apart and the syntax and semantics debated.
Second, one can look for 'obvious' flaws in the existing (extended) law, and see if they (again 'obviously') flout the Constitution.
Essentially, is the focus from the bottom-up or from current-law down. I hear a lot about 'strict constructionism' on the Court, and that would seem to me to favor the first, bottom-up approach.
Beyond that, one can begin reading the thoughts of the framers of the Constitution. Any
Severability? (Score:2)
Does anyone know whether the various acts extending copyright have severability clauses in them? If not, does that mean that the extensions might be struck down entirely? That could be a bombshell.
I would like to read some arguments submitted by Ashcroft/US on this matter, however.
MM
--
Re:Severability? (Score:2)
That's what Eldred et. al. are arguing. To quote from their brief:
I'm personally a bit dubious about this argument. It seems perfectly reasonable that the rules for future copyrights could be different from those for past copyrights. After all, the arguments being made are all about the unconstitutionality of extending copyrights retroactively, so future extensions should not be affected. Even if the law does not specifically include a severability clause, there's no fundamental reason that the prospective aspects can't be severable from the retrospective ones. I strongly doubt that the Supreme Court would strike down the whole law based on this idea.
Software Copywrite Act. (Score:2)
You no longer need to send a copy of works to the Library of Congress in order to receive copyright, but it still needs to be done if you plan on publishing a large quantity, especially if you hope to legally protect the work. This is done, so that once it goes out of copyright, a copy will exist at the LOB so that it can be copied when it reaches public domain, and won't get lost.
I propose that any software in which you expect legal protection of your copywrite, needs to not only be submitted to the LOB, but must include the source code. This source will be sealed away, from public view untill the copyright ends of course. But will be also accessable by a court order (not contestable by the copyright owner), to government agencies wishing to examine the security of any systems that are vital to government interest. These security reports then (excluding any source code, and given reasonable time for the copyright owners to fix the security hole) will be available to the public. The source code will also be accessable by a court order during any court cases involving the copyright holder in which it is deemed nesseary.
Does the public care? (Score:2)
To the STRONG majority of the world's population, Disney and Mickey Mouse go hand in hand. They wouldn't want to see the creators of South Park begin marketing Mickey Mouse cartoons. People draw an association between a work (be it a song, movie, etc.) and the creator of that work. That connection is important on a cultural level, even if people don't realize it. I'm sure if you asked people on the street, a majority of them would say that yes, a company/individual who creates something should retain ownership of it. It's human nature. If I build a deck on my house, I wouldn't want my neighbors thinking they could hold parties on it. It's MY deck. I created it, therefore I should retain ownership of it. Human nature tends to this belief.
Would Disney (and other companies as well) have had much of its early material if it werent for the Brothers Grimm and other public-domain stories? No. But, that's not to say that 100 years from now the Earth will be devoid of any culture unless Disney releases Steamboat Willie into the public domain.
Re:Does the public care? (Score:2)
That's Not An Issue! "Mickey Mouse" is ALSO protected under Trademark law, which doesn't expire so long as it is "protected" by its owner. Someone trying to market "Mickey Mouse cartoons" (other than public-domain originals) without Disney's permission will find themselves in court on TRADEMARK violation, even if they aren't then infringing on "Copy"(Distribution)right any longer...
Re:Does the public care? (Score:2)
I think the difference here is that Mickey himself is a well known trademark of Disney - I don't think Steamboat Willie , per se, should be protected under copyright - it should be protected under trademark laws.
So, in other words, let's say the next thing up is Cinderella, they would get zero protection after the copyright runs out (which could mean lot's of cheap videos on the market, for example), but people would have to stay away from Disney's trademark.
Now, if in five years they change the trademark to something more modern, like Buzz Lightyear, then I believe any protection they got for Mickey should be gone.
Re:Does the public care? (Score:2)
In my opinion, the story itself should be released to the public, but not necessarily Disney's version of it (i.e., your cheap videos statement) The company no doubt spent millions to develop the movie, so I don't feel it should become public domain. The story, however, should be and other studios should be allowed to retell it in their own way. Just a thought.
Re:Does the public care? (Score:2)
This still has issues, though -- what about public performances? In the case of sheet music, for instance, I'd prefer that the public performance timeout be shorter than that for commercial reproduction; hence, after the shorter timeout orchestras that purchase sheet music to some number can then perform it only for the cost of that sheet music (for which the creator was compensated) but without having to license the public performance rights on top of it. Having the commercial redistribution rights only remain with the creator after the timeout of the work is licensed in a reasonable and non-descriminatory manner would be a Good Thing too.
All that said, though, whether the company spent millions to develop the movie has no bearing on when it should become public domain. The company that develops the movie should be granted enough compensation (or a chance at enough compensation!) to encourage them to develop more movies, and nothing more. Anything in excess contradicts the stated purpose of copyright law, that being the promotion of science and the useful arts.
DMCA and technologicly enforced copyright (Score:4, Interesting)
As more information is published on digital media, DRM is becoming a means of enforcing the copyright on the information. However, I know of no DRM systems which provide for expriation of protection. So, while the legal protection may go away after the granted term, the data is still protected technologically. I wonder, what are the legal implications of this?
Copyright was granted on the grounds that after the granted term, the information was to enter the public domain. If the information is designed by the distributors to never enter the public domain, does it still deserve copyright protection? It seems like this is analogous to patents vs. trade secrets where trade secrets have no legal protection because there is no obligation to disclose the way they work. You have to trade one for the other.
Re:DMCA and technologicly enforced copyright (Score:3, Insightful)
I realize also, however, that thanks to the DMCA, such tactics are now illegal. However, if I remember correctly, fair-use rights imply nothing about tha actual feasability of making said legal copies. I.e., if Sony wants to release musc and movies in a totally new "in-house designed" format which is almost totally impossible to copy, they are welcome to. The problem with that sheme is that past expierience with such products has only lead to miserable failure on the market. No one wants to buy such items.
It gets worse. Since the majority of the public does not care about the proceedings of this type of legislation/technology, the possiblity of such DRM schemes resurfacing is very alarming. Not necessarily because of the technological implications, but because no one would resist it, thereby leading to its grudging acceptance in the market.
Your point with regards to copyright protection vs. perpetual protection is well-taken, and I believe you are correct. But I seriously doubt that congress or the courts would make the same distinction with the lobbyists breathing down their necks...
We might be doomed here.
--------------rhad
Re:DMCA and technologicly enforced copyright (Score:2)
Mein gott! If I'm not mistaken, you may have just found the perfect argument for the anti-protection crowd. Because Celene Dion's latest CD has a "technology-enforced" indefinite copyright, it loses all traditional copyright protection. Hmm, sounds like a feasable argument to me (but I too am NAL).
Hmm, even stranger yet-- this may be the grounds upon which you can overturn the entirety of the DMCA. Must talk to lawer! << grabs at yellow pages >>
Re:DMCA and technologicly enforced copyright (Score:3, Interesting)
--------rhad
Re:DMCA and technologicly enforced copyright (Score:2, Insightful)
To address the point you make, which is well taken, the DMCA states: No person shall circumvent a technological measure that effectively controls access to a work protected under this title. The "title" here is title 17 of the US Code which covers copyright. Therefore, "works protected under this title" are, inherently, works which are still under copyright protection. Removing copyright technology of a work whose copyright has expired, therefore, would not violate the DMCA.
The author of the work, however, is not required to make his work easier to copy just because the copyright has expired. The law presumes that a work whose copyright has expired has been sufficiently exposed so that it will be "copyable". If the opposite was true, then the owner of a copyright over an unpublished work would be essentially compelled to publish it when the copyright expires. However, I am not minimizing your concern. This is a very valid concern which I had not thought about. It probably should have been addressed by the DMCA but wasn't.
I see the technology progressing to the point where the only available medium where a work whose copyright has expired is a protected digital file which cannot be copied. On the same token, it is the author's work and she is free to buplish it in whatever medium she wants. Bottom line is, you cannot force an author to publish a work in a a medium which is easy to copy.
I hope I've made my views on this clear
Re:DMCA and technologicly enforced copyright (Score:2)
Good point, but how do you suppose that's going to be done? The DMCA outlaws any tools whose primary purpose is to circumvent copyright technology. You're going to find it hard to argue that a tool which can be used to circumvent copyright tech is only going to be used on works which have passed into the public domain, I'll wager.
you cannot force an author to publish a work in a a medium which is easy to copy.
I see where you're coming from, but isn't that the point of copyright? It's a legal grant of the *right* to copy a work which expires, and after which all are supposed to have the right to copy the work. If that right to copy is denied to the public forever, why do the publishers continue to get legal copying monopoly?
Re:DMCA and technologicly enforced copyright (Score:2)
To address your conclusion, there is no quid-pro-quo in copyright.
I hate to say this, but apparently from your arguments in this thread you haven't read the briefs linked to in the article. The council for Eldred apparently uses as their argument that the extension fails to live up to the Constitutional terms-- an obvious quid pro quo of monopoly on distribution "to promote the useful arts". They have nice footnote references to materials I can't get copies of, but apparently from the location of the footnotes and source titles these are constitutional scolars claiming a quid pro quo trade in copyright.
Their argument goes something like this: the author wants a way to get reimbursed for his writings, and the easiest way to do that is to allow them to limit copy production. In return, when the term of copyright expires, they (or anyone else) may lay a claim of ownership. Now, since I changed the words around and paraphrased their argument, I know that little diddly errors crept in. Read the original.
To address your comments, I think we have to make a distinction between copyrights and patents. I don't think they can be mixed together in this discussion.
On the other hand, I think copyright and patent go hand in hand. Copyright protects the expression of an idea, and patents protect the implementation of an idea; while completely different in appearance, they are more or less the same concept under analysis.
In reguard to patents you state:
The quid-pro-quo is that in exchange for disclosing his invention (or making it "patent" or obvious in old English, hence the name), the inventor gets a monopoly which is limited in time.
I follow you all through that train of thought. You lost me with the switch to copyright though:
Copyrights, are a completely different beast. They arise from the simple fact that the founding fathers believed that an individual should be entitled to control his/her own expressions for a limited time. No bargain is really implied.
Okay, that would make sense-- IF the founding fathers in question were Communist hippy nuts. [Note to the trolls: yes, I already know the rumors about Washington's hemp crop. Go away.] Instead, these men were rational, levelheaded people who were embarking on the grand work of attempting to build a country based on the ideals of the age and avoid the corruption rampant in Europe at the time. Your statement makes no sense based on the fact that until this century, copyright did not apply to every creation but only to those that were registered-- and in that light, yes a bargain is very clearly implied- that the author, in return for their work, will gain goverment subsidy for a limited period of time. (In case you want to argue on this point, keep in mind that I am quite sure of my history and have read such documents as the Federalist papers and other correspondeces of the founding fathers-- and they felt that, while casual utterances did not deserve the protection of copyright, for commercial speech to prosper a (very!) limited amount of protection was required. I will require a direct reference to believe any statement that contradicts my forgoing argument.) Since I view copyright and patents as being two side of one coin, it makes sense to me that a person who decides that self-maintained restriction of dissemination (trade secret / SSSCA-style copy controls) rather than the government subsidy (patent / copyright) is in their best interest has, de facto, rejected all aspects of the subsidy; thus just as trade secrets and patents are mutually exclusive, I see copy controls and copywright as mutually exclusive.
So you conclude:
All the expiration [of copyright] means is that the author has lost his/her right to sue if the work is copied.
Ah; now I see the root of our disagreement. You see it as a right that is lost, whereas I agree with Eldred that expiration of copyright means that the public "regains" a right they partially lost (free speech / press).
Hmm. You wouldn't happen to be European, would you? From the brief, it appears your arguments are more in line with European common law than American....
DMCA doesn't protect PD works (Score:3, Informative)
I know of no DRM systems which provide for expriation of protection.
The Digital Millennium Copyright Act provides no protection against circumvention for works that have fallen into the public domain. From 17 USC 1201 [cornell.edu]: "No person shall circumvent a technological measure that effectively controls access to a work protected under this title" (emphasis by yerricde). Works "protected under this title" include works under a subsisting copyright.
This means it's lawful to sell DeCSS programs designed to decrypt the pre-1923 content on Charlie Chaplin DVDs. And without copyright term extensions, it would also be lawful to sell DeCSS programs designed to decrypt "Mickey's Early Years" and other pre-1946 content. (Actually, Mickey Mouse cartoons have fallen into the public domain due to a copyright notice flub-up [asu.edu].)
Re:DMCA and technologicly enforced copyright (Score:2)
Even worse, many of the DRM systems won't even last until the copyright expires (even if copyrights lengths go back to some reasonable term). For example: those DIVX encoded DVDs are really useful now!
"Original intent" disparagers should be ashamed (Score:2)
I suspect that of the groups and people submitting amicus briefs about the only ones with "clean hands" are Phyllis Schlafly and the Eagle Forum and Milton Friedman. Love them or hate them, people such as Phyllis Schlafly and Milton Friedman at least have consistency in their viewpoints, a true worldview and not opinions that bend with each passing intellectual fad.
Phyllis Schlafly and Milton Friedman can argue with clear conscience that they have always been in the fight to limit the role of the federal government over the lives of the people, regardless of the issues. In contrast all of the NIMBY environmentalists and gun control advocates are merely carpetbaggers, passengers of convenience who the moment the issue is gone will revert to readvocating increased expansion of governmental authority and regulation. In essence the left-wing supporters of the movement to strike down the opinion of the elected representatives of the people are merely seeking to steal property for their own purposes, because they have no intellectual foundation for their critique of the current system.
If the Constitution is merely a piece of paper to be reinterpreted as each generation sees fit, why shouldn't eternal copyright extension be a legitimate interpretation of this generation? If it is just as legitimate to question the applicability of the Second Amendment to today's society, why isn't it legitimate to question whether an 18th century understanding of copyright is not applicable to today's reality of mass media corporations continuously producing new works in new formats that the people have no problem paying for without visible public protest? See what happens once you decide to jettison the entire opinion of the past for the sake of expediency, it might just come back to bite you.
Oversimplification. (Score:2)
I hope that the same people who mocked the doctrine of "original intent", particularly with regards to the Second Amendment, aren't the ones promoting the Supreme Court's striking down copyright extension, an interpretation that relies precisely on the philosophy of ascertaining the intent of the framemakers of the Constitution.
Simply because an original intent arguement is the one Lessig is using in this case, hardly makes it the only one. Since the current Supreme Court is dominated by strict constructionalists, it's just the best argument to use on that group of people.
The opponents of copyright extension need to come up with something a little more substantial than an opinion that copyright extension damages the "public good".
For this court, probably. But I can certainly make a logically coherent argument the copyright extension does damage the public good, and protecting that is important. Even miniarchists agree with this to a point, whether they realize it or not, they just think that as little government as possible *does* maximize the public good.
Love them or hate them, people such as Phyllis Schlafly and Milton Friedman at least have consistency in their viewpoints, a true worldview and not opinions that bend with each passing intellectual fad.
Yes, they have. And so have people like Eben Moglin and Jessica Litman.
Phyllis Schlafly and Milton Friedman can argue with clear conscience that they have always been in the fight to limit the role of the federal government over the lives of the people, regardless of the issues.
They sure have. But this is where you really go off the deep end of libertarianism/objectivism blindness. Here's a tip, not everyone bases their political philosophy on that government regulation is either all good or all bad.
You criticize the left saying that they are inconsistent for supporting government regulation in one place, but not others. Did you ever stop to think that maybe the left doesn't view government regulation as inherently good or bad, but capable of being used for both? I concider myself liberal, and my take on government regulation is that it is a necessary evil. Does that confuse your oversimplified political spectrum?
In contrast all of the NIMBY environmentalists and gun control advocates are merely carpetbaggers, passengers of convenience who the moment the issue is gone will revert to readvocating increased expansion of governmental authority and regulation.
This is so flawed I don't know where to start. I can easily formulate a logically consistent position containing any combination of pro/anti environmental regulations, gun control and copyright extenstions. The world isn't so black and white, and people can hold many different views on important issues. To say that one can't be an environmentalist and against copyright extentions at the same time shows that your understanding of any political philosophy other than your own is virtually nonexistant.
In essence the left-wing supporters of the movement to strike down the opinion of the elected representatives of the people are merely seeking to steal property for their own purposes, because they have no intellectual foundation for their critique of the current system.
At this point, you've gone full-bore off the deep end, and continued to show you've never read a freaking thing about modern liberalism. If you had, you'd understand that free speech is very important to the left, and its primary argument against strong copyright laws lies in a pro-free speech basis. Try learning something about why people think a certain way before tarring them unfairly. I've read quite a bit about libertarianism, so I know not to strawman it like this.
See what happens once you decide to jettison the entire opinion of the past for the sake of expediency, it might just come back to bite you.
Sometimes the opinion of the past is good (short copyright terms), sometimes it's bad (slavery). Once again you show a blindness to the fact that life can't be so easily catagorized.
To close, I disagree passionatly with the right-libertarian style philosophies on many issues, (The US health care system being one) but I'm happy to have them as allies on issues we can both agree on (free speech, copyright limits). Instead of criticizing a group of people who *agree* with your position, but just have have a different basis for the reasons why, why not accept them as allies. Just because you agree with an evil statist liberal like me on copyright, doesn't mean you have to be swung to my belief on socializing health care. :-)
Re:"Original intent" disparagers should be ashamed (Score:2)
The reason that the "public good" is being used is that the Constitution explicitly authorizes Congress to provide intellectual property rights inasmuch as they promote the progress of science and the useful arts. Retroactive copyright extension does not promote such progress, hence it is not Constitutional. This is a simple, clear and convincing argument, particularly after relevant evidence is provided regarding presence or lack of such promotion. The argument, at its core, is not with regard to the "public good" at present moment, but rather with regard to what the Constitution permits Congress to do. Construing it as anything otherwise is a flawed carciature of the true positions of those opposing the CTEA.
Not only Milton Friedman but 5(!) Nobel prizes (Score:3, Interesting)
George A. Akerlof
Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences, 2001
Kenneth J. Arrow
Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences, 1972
James M. Buchanan
Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences, 1986
Ronald H. Coase
Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences, 1991
Milton Friedman
Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences, 1976
Impressing!!!
The Power of Compound Interest - Einstein (Score:2)
I can add some quantification by running the numbers. A publisher is investing when they buy a copyright, and expects a return on their investment, usually expressed as a percentage per annum to compare with other investments like bonds or stocks.
Consider a publisher who wants a 10% return rate, and is willing to pay 100 for a 20 year copyright on a given work. Then 25yrs is only 106, 40yrs 115, 100yrs and forever 117. But tastes change, and work may become irrelevant by events, so sales 20 years hence are very uncertain. The usual way of coping with the risk is to increase the rate of return. So try 30%, with 100 still for 20 years then even 100 years is only worth 100.5!
Note that these analyses assume flat sales through the period, like for established continual sellers. For heavily front-loaded sales like most modern works, the premia fall by a large factor (5-10 times). And more for risky (high rates of return required) authors.
and if the court decides in favor of eldred... (Score:3, Funny)
___
It's a matter of simple calculus (Score:2)
One of the conditions for sum to be finite is for the sequence to converge to zero. But the sequence is not. Its not even constant, by all means it seems that its divergent and this means the resulting sum will be inifinite.
This hints on intention, past record and dangerous trend in the congress that extrapolates into an infinite copyright if it won't be checked at some point.
Excellent read on copyright at k5 (Score:3, Informative)
The speech was made over 160 years ago.
Re:Problem... (Score:3, Informative)
(The arguments against severability are that Congress wouldn't have passed just the future extension, all the lobbying was for the extension of existing works, and the Court shouldn't be in the business of rewriting flawed legislation.)
Re:This is a good thing (Score:2)
companies will piss their pants hearing that, but I highly doubt that microsoft or ANY company that made a program in 1992 is still selling it. versions made thereafter? yes... that exact one? no.. they milked all the cash out of it possible, quit being greedy bastard children and give it up.
Re:Why Ashcroft? (Score:2)
Yes, that's the established practice. The individual holding the office of Attorney General is representative of the state's laws - and it's the law that's being challenged - so it's the AG's name that appears on the docket.
Re:Why Ashcroft? (Score:2)
Re:Do artists benefit? (Score:3, Insightful)
The labels, of course, have a huge problem -- the public's tastes can be quite fickle, and advertising a new potential talent is likely quite expensive. Those costs have to be borne by somebody even if the music doesn't sell -- either because it's drek, or because the public simply didn't latch onto it in sufficient quantities to justify costs. I don't know what fraction of artists actually do well enough to justify marketing costs, but if it's low, ugh.
That means that, realistically, either the labels have to be extremely good at picking (or deliberately building bands -- for instance, composing new boy bands aimed specifically at female pre-teens and early teens, by choosing what they hope are photogenic young males of specific ages, et al, or choosing female artists according to jiggle factor and mid-riff exposure) bands, or artists should be willing to share the costs, because otherwise the marketing machines collapse.
And without marketing, many obscure artists won't have much of a chance. It may have worked for Wilco, but what happens when there are no major labels and everybody is in the same boat? Then there's no prevailing culture to be "counter-cultural" against; opposing the labels isn't anything special, because there aren't any. That means that bands trying Wilco's approach would no longer be entitled to free publicity because they're trying something different. End result: Probably many bands with smaller audiences and smaller releases driven by word of mouth.
Keep in mind that nobody's entitled to an income on only their own terms, no matter how much they think they deserve it. If an artist's work is niche, lousy, or underexposed -- then it doesn't matter how much he loves the music. Love != quality or appeal. I'm reminded of the Elaine character on "Seinfeld" -- she loved to dance, but only masochists would have paid to watch her at the Bolshoi. If an artist seems promising enough to get a favorable contract, however, more power to 'im.
Re:Do artists benefit? (Score:2)
Of course, if there's a conspiracy among the labels to present only highly unfavorable contracts, then there's a bit of a problem.
In fact, there is such a conspiracy. Courtney Love wrote an article for Salon about it [salon.com].
"Melancholy Elephants" (Score:2)
" '[Endless copyright would be the] worst psychic trauma the race has yet suffered.... There are eighty-eight notes.
Re:Interesting... (and OT) (Score:2)
You can't sue the United States Federal Government directly (unless it gives you permission to do so). But you can sue officials of said government. In this case, the suit is agaist the John Ashcroft the Attourny General, not John Ashcroft the private citizen. The legal documents usually clarify this with something along the lines of "in the capacity of attourney general" when naming Ashcroft.
Re:The fundamental issue (Score:3, Interesting)
I believe that the case law establishing that corporations are "persons" goes back to the 1860s when certain railroads were allowed to receive land grants which Congress had promised to "persons" satisfying certain requirements about using the property.
I do agree with your general sentiment that it is easy for these very rich, very long-lived "persons" to abuse laws intended for mere humans.