Million-Dollar Donation To Fight Abusive Copyrights 368
WeekendKruzr writes: "There is a story on C|Net detailing how Duke University's law school received an anonymous gift of $1 million for the express purpose of funding '...advocacy and research aimed at curtailing the recent expansion of copyright law.' It's good to know that we have some well-funded idealists on our side, even if they are 'Anonymous Cowards.' ;^) This, combined with the recent rash of even large corporations running afoul of intellectual property law, could precipitate some tangible results in the next couple of years."
A good start, but??? (Score:2)
To fund think-tanks to write papers? To to pay-off^H^H^H^H^H^H^Hlobby politicians for better laws? Or to fight court cases?
Why not just give this to the EFF?
There is too many unanswered questions to say if this will really help.
Re:A good start, but??? (Score:3, Funny)
Value of research (Score:5, Insightful)
This isn't being used to fight of lobby bad laws.
It is to try and find out what is good and bad about the existing laws.
We don't know the cost benefit curve for copyright length, they are going to try and define it.
(yes, that is a simplification)
Many "content creators" want infinite copyrights, to milk out as much as possible.
Many "content consumers" want short copyrights to copy and create derivative works for little or no cost. (that isn't the only reason)
At some point the time is long enough to have benefit for "creators" and short enough for "consumers" that both sides can be "happy". They are trying to find out what that point is.
I hope that's not true (Score:2)
The aim of copyright law should not be to find some middle ground between the greed of the providers and consumers, but to create an environment that makes as much stuff available to as many people as cheaply as possible, at the same time making sure that content creators are well rewarded for getting into the creation business in the first place.
Meaning (Score:2)
when I said "content creator" I was meaning the general group of creators editors distributers and stuff.
Re:A good start, but??? (Score:2)
Don't hold your breath. (Score:2, Insightful)
I think it's very naive to expect any major changes and/or law corrections. A good commercial, asking people vote for candidates that support removal of opressive/excessive copyright restriction night be of more help.
Re:Don't hold your breath. (Score:2, Insightful)
A few men firing an artillery gun that has bad aim can be cut to peices very quickly by a devoted team with swords and knives - this is what should happen here.
Soko
Commercials are for selling Beer (Score:2)
1. Support thier campaign - $$$
2. Give them a good arguments/rhetoric to support your cause.
3. Give them voters
This money is going towards reason #2 (education/rhetoric). You may or may not know, but the Telcoms and tech industry is on *our* side (file sharing is the killer app of telcom and consumer electronics industries), and they have already started lobbying against the MPAA's and RIAA's Hollings and P2P Hacking bills.
Re:Don't hold your breath. (Score:2)
I think its very unhealthy to focus on anything the but the simplest concept. (not to bitch at you or anything, but there are so many similar comments up there...)
I just hope the bucks don't stop there...maybe a few lawers could donate an hour here and there...
There will be no change (Score:3, Insightful)
Even more important, stricter copyright laws help the media corps sell more product, and GWB is in favor of anything that helps US corps sell more stuff.
-c
Re:There will be no change (Score:2)
Actually yes he has [slashdot.org]:
5) How Do You Feel About Intellectual Property?
by Phil Gregory
In this age of the Internet, intellectual property has become a very important concept to many people. Many companies make their living on the artificial scarcity provided by intellectual property laws, selling information that they have either created or aggregated. Some others, mostly in the Free Software world, make their living seemingly in spite of these laws, selling their services based on information that is freely given.
Do you feel that out current system of intellectual property is a good one? Which parts of it (e.g. trademarks, patents, copyrights) do you feel are well suited to the world of the Internet and which do you think need to be changed (and, if changes are needed, what changes are needed)?
Bush:
In the next five years, we anticipate that two-thirds of software will be distributed over the Internet, making it more important than ever to ensure strong copyright protection for computer software. In the United States, much of the legal framework already exists, but we need to redouble our efforts on enforcement. In particular, the next President must make sure that the US Department of Justice and US law enforcement agencies have the resources to enforce our intellectual property laws. In the international community, the challenge is even tougher since we must both help establish a legal framework for intellectual property protection and ensure it is enforced.
Re:There will be no change (Score:2)
Spend more time at home telling your kids not to mastrubate or something!
bad news for Linux? (Score:2, Funny)
But like it or hate it, Linux's success pretty much hinges upon intellectual property laws. Without copyright and patent laws that make the GPL enforceable, Linux would be no better off than *BSD, and certainly wouldn't have made the inroads it has at IBM and HP.
Microsoft will always do fine, with or without intellectual property laws. They sell certification, training, and support in addition to IP. And Linux's only advantages--better stability and security--are only as safe as its code base. If intellectual property laws are repealed, then Linux as we know it is doomed.
Re:bad news for Linux? (Score:2)
Can you prove that Linux is successful because of the GPL? Is there any way to show that, if Linux was under the BSD license, it would have failed? I would argue that Linux succeeded because it just happened to be in the right place at the right time. I mean, really, can you honestly say, with a straight face, that IBM and HP put money into Linux *because* it was GPLd?
The fact is, the BSDs are successful in their own right. And while they're not as successful as Linux in the commercial marketplace, I highly doubt that has anything to do with licensing. I know I'd still be using Linux if it was using a BSD license. Wouldn't you?
As for Linux's advantages you listed, "stability and security", you seem to forget that OpenBSD, a landmark of security and stability, is a BSD-derived operating system. So, clearly, these advantages have little or nothing to do with the GPL. Heck, I can't even understand why the GPL would promote these things. The popular "Linux" name exists because there is a group of developers who perform quality control on the kernel source. This is totally unrelated to licensing, since the same thing could be done if Linux wasn't GPLd. The only difference is that, theoretically, a company could create a distribute their own Linux-based kernel, and close it up. But where's the harm in that? If people wanted "stability and security", they'd just go for the official Linux kernel distribution.
So, please, try to explain to me why the GPL has *anything* to do with Linux's success. I'd love to hear it, because I sure don't believe it.
Re:bad news for Linux? (Score:2)
I doubt IBM would put a huge amount of effort into something which was under a BSD type license. Why should they invest large amounts of effort just to have their work stolen by their compeditors. The GPL at least allows IBM to benefit from the work of the others who use their software.
Doug
Re:bad news for Linux? (Score:2)
The GPL attracts more programmers than BSD. Many of us don't appreciate the idea that we might spend our time writing a quality piece of software and turn it over to the community, only to have a company turn around and make a tiny change and start selling it.
The forced openness of the GPL is a big part of what makes Linux successful.
No, good news (Score:2)
BSD could and would have done better, were it not for the License problems they were having with AT&T in the early 90's. This held them up a lot, and in the meantime Linux got the attention and popularity.
Re:No, good news (Score:2)
The BSDL offers NO ADDED BENEFIT WHATSOEVER to those that might want to build commercial software on top of BSD or Linux.
Your arguments are dependent on a very selective view of the available facts. The vast majority of copylefted "shared infastructure" infact accomodates commercial/proprietary software development.
Re:bad news for Linux? (Score:2)
As they state in the article, they're not against copyright and patent laws and are not seeking to obliterate them. They are mearly trying to find a cure for the ones that hinder innovation (to paraphrase).
Anonymous Coward? He's got sense, if you ask me (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Anonymous Coward? He's got sense, if you ask me (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Anonymous Coward? Try Anonymous Hero (Score:2)
Re:Anonymous Coward? He's got sense, if you ask me (Score:3, Informative)
I'm not trying to discouraging people to help out, there's not a lot you can do to help out if you're dead.
It's troll-er-riffic!
OK, I can deal with the poster trolling, but it's really frightening that someone thinks that this should be moderated up as "insightful".
Re:Anonymous Coward? He's got sense, if you ask me (Score:2)
Of course, no offense to the people who modded it up. I suppose they realized what I had really intended to post!
Re:Anonymous Coward? He's got sense, if you ask me (Score:2)
If anything is unrealistic, it is your dismissive attitude.
Re:Anonymous Coward? He's got sense, if you ask me (Score:3, Insightful)
When you think these trivial issues are worth killing over, that should be your signal that you are completely out of touch with reality.
Got news for you:
1) These issues aren't that important. Your ability to steal music is NOT a signal of a freedom apocolypse. If you don't like it, just don't buy it. Recorded music is just not that important.
2) These people are not satan. They have friends and family like everyone. They like making money, like everyone. They are not going to kill people just so they can have better copyright law. In short, they are far, far, far better balanced than you are.
mechanics of anonymous million dollar transfers? (Score:3, Interesting)
Especially these days, when big secretive money moves are watched more carefully.
A bunch of 50s in some briefcases?
Some kind of anonymous bank check?
Or does the University probably know, but part of the deal is that they don't tell anyone?
Re:mechanics of anonymous million dollar transfers (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:mechanics of anonymous million dollar transfers (Score:4, Informative)
Usually the benefactor pays a legal firm with a cashier's check and the legal firm pays the university. The university to be sure that all is legitimate can ask who the benefactor is, but will need to sign non-disclosure agreements before they can find out. These agreements give the law firm the ability to sue the school if they leak the information (usually for more than the initial investment).
Re:mechanics of anonymous million dollar transfers (Score:2)
Cashier's check for a million bucks? Uhh...somehow i dont think you can buy those at the local supermarket
Re:mechanics of anonymous million dollar transfers (Score:2)
Could you explain the logic behind handing someone a million dollar gift and then proceeding to sue them?
Oh, you're a lawyer? Nevermind, my mistake.
-
Simple! (Score:2)
Re:mechanics of anonymous million dollar transfers (Score:2)
Re:mechanics of anonymous million dollar transfers (Score:2)
(as of ~2 years ago, the max amount a MO could be made for was $700 IIRC)
Theory on the donor.... (Score:2, Funny)
Just a minute... (Score:5, Funny)
Interesting article submission, yet it violates my patent on "a method for using ASCII test to simulate a pointy nosed person winking and smiling
Re:Just a minute... (Score:2)
A tough job (Score:2)
the patent problem is a bigger issue (Score:5, Insightful)
The patent problem is horrid. Unlike copyright, where at least people might claim some rights based on creation, patent law is clearly corrupted. People patent things that are not inventions -- they patent "business methods" of dubious originality, they patent software methods which have been in use long before the patent filing ("oh, no documentation that you used it? no prior art, then"), and moreover, patents screw the little guys, because patents cost a metric fuckton of money to get, especially en masse. If I write a book, copyright protects me automatically, and filing a copyright is cheap. If I didn't want to file a copyright, nowadays technology gives me other irrefutable options -- like publishing MD5 checksums in the paper -- that are even cheaper. If patents are truly for novel inventions, then why are developers in the software industry constantly afraid of stepping on patents? If all that many people are coming up with something independantly, doesn't that imply that the patent holder was just the first to file on something obvious that followed from existing technology, instead of the inventor of something novel?
Moreover, with patents, we affect all of technology, from CS to biotech, and we stop innovation. Having to pay $10 more than you should for a Britney Spears CD isn't going to hurt the economy -- but having to pay too much for inferior technology for 25 years that no one can legally improve upon, well, that's going to hurt the economy. Patents on obvious inventions slow innovation, hurt growth, damage industries, restrict R&D -- and this effect cuts across industries.
I'm sorry, but this is a lot more damaging that whether or not you can legally rip and/or trade mp3s.
this will probably (realistically) be used for pat (Score:2)
Re:the patent problem is a bigger issue (Score:5, Insightful)
Oh? How are you getting this? Merely coming up with a creative work doesn't seem to impart control, nor inherently need it to be artifically given. You're not arguing from a standpoint of utility, or you wouldn't've made such an absolute statement. You appear to be arguing from a stance of natural rights.
So... what natural rights? Are you, the author, HARMED because I can copy your work. I'm not excluding you from your ability to do things with it. I can't stop you for the same reason you couldn't stop me. And you ignore the notion that multiple authors may create a work. Did Disney create the Little Mermaid movie themselves, or by using previous works. Who then would be owed control if it flowed from the author?
Copyrights do not work like this. You cannot claim rights for as trifling a thing as a creative work MERELY because you created it. (which as we've seen may not mean complete creation anyway)
The way this _actually_ works 'round these parts is that people are granted copyright protection when society, and the government acting on its behalf, find it in _their_ best interests to do so. Whether it is in authors' best interests is irrelevant, save where that is a factor in the public's.
And frankly, I'm disturbed that you take such a dim view of copyright anyway. Copyright is culture. Our folk heroes now are Bugs Bunny and Luke Skywalker. Our common cultural experiences are in books, music, tv shows and movies. It's how we tell one another about ourselves and the world around us.
It is vitally important.
Do we study ancient Greece because of their inventions (precious few of them) or their art, architecture and philosophy? Do tourists worldwide flock to Rome to marvel at the way that the Sistine Chapel was constructed, or what's painted on the ceiling? Art is damned important. The damage that can occur to our culture is far more signifcant than you understand.
Re:the patent problem is a bigger issue (Score:2)
Well, no control mechanism magically appears when I write a poem or record a song. So you're right that control isn't automatically or fundamentally given upon creating an original work. However, I disagree with the end of your sentence -- the suggestion that it inherently doesn't need to be given is, frankly, wrongheaded. People who create content have repeatedly stated and shown that when their creations have no protection, they go create them elsewhere. Employees who are told that the ideas they come up with over the weekend during NON-work hours somehow belong to the company, well, those employees leave fast. There is a reason why Silicon Valley is in California -- there are laws on the books that protect me from a predatory employer who wants to steal my weekend hobby. So the idea-guys flourish here. Startups abound. And back to content, I create poetry, essays, technical articles, and sometimes graphics. I fully expect to be given -- artifically or otherwise -- the right to capitalize on that creation. I want to present my work in the best light, and in some cases I want to charge for it. If a magazine wants to republish it on the Web, I want my penny-per-page-view. If there is no copyright system in place, it does not create some Kumbaya communal ownership structure. Instead, it gives big companies the ability to appropriate my work and sell it with a million-dollar marketing push that I cannot match, and then all the money for my work goes to them. Fuck that.
Yes you are. Part of copyright is -- or dammit, I want laws passed that make it this way -- similar to the limited monopoly concept: I want you deprived of the content if you won't pay for it. I need copyright laws to force you to miss out so that market forces create demand. See, I believe a lot of the "I never would have paid anyway, so what's the harm" questions are bullshit. You will buy it if it's the only way to get it. And if you really won't, then when my product doesn't sell, I'll know I need to lower the price or make a better product. That's not only the system that I believe is currently in place, it's the system I want enforced, and if it's not exactly as I described, then I want it to be that way, and I'm willing to go vote to get people in office who will support that.
Now, after disagreeing with you so much, I want to make one concession: copyright laws go too far right now. Even with my own creations, I don't want my kids to live off of them. I don't want their grandkids to live off of them. I want enough time to sell my book or CD, make some money, and maybe have enough time to sell a greatest hits or compilation or a few reprints. So while I defend the copyright system, I want it completely rolled back to the original copyright system put in place 200 years ago: 14 or 28 years with 1 renewal. That's it. That's all.
Re:the patent problem is a bigger issue (Score:2)
So, in terms of the inherent right to intellectual property, I believe it does exist, because you shouldn't have the right to force me to think and create for you. Copyright law is merely a mechanism for shifting the onus of proof onto the distributor that they have the right to distribute, rather than the creator to show that they never publically released a work, thus meaning that someone violated a contract.
I don't believe that the 'popular culture' which is sold by big media firms is important to us, no. Art is important, but I'm talking about the dangers of losing Britney Spears, and you're countering that the Cistine Chapel is important? I'm sorry, but Britney != Cistine Chapel.
Re:the patent problem is a bigger issue (Score:2)
True. But I am sure you will agree that culture is not something static, it is something that changes and evolves and constantly reinvents itself.
If that is the case, then the kind of copyrights we see today (author's life+75 years is it ?) are not helping culture but in fact are holding it back. Or, how about the kind of copyright law that says: 'you can buy a CD, but you can't make a backup of it even for yourself; you can buy a DVD, but make sure you play it in the approved countries, on a licensed player, oh and too bad if you don't run Windows'.
So, I am not saying that copyright is bad, but the way it is being abused these days.
However, I am not too sure what your point is, you seem to be arguing both that copyrights are bad, and that simultaneously they are not bad.
Copyright for $.37 (Score:2, Informative)
Re:the patent problem is a bigger issue (Score:2, Interesting)
In my opinion, a lot of the failures of the world wide web to capture all information (especially educational or 'high quality' content) in a searchable manner are related to our attitudes towards copyright and IP.
Re:the patent problem is a bigger issue (Score:2)
I'm certainly not saying that we should indefinitely extend copyright -- Bono and the supports of the Mickey Mouse Copyright Extension Act were clearly pandering to entertainment industry interests, starting with Disney.
That said, patents cause a larger problem -- if I wrote font rendering software, someone can circumvent my copyright by writing their own version. But if I patent the only valid method to render such fonts, then no one can circumvent it. This is why the focus on much of copyright is on creative works like music -- because no matter how much you listen to Dave Matthews Band, you can't just duplicate their creative abilities -- it just isn't the same. That can't be said of something more rote, like the copyrighted code produced during the creation of a program. That can be duplicated, and is, all the time.
Re:the patent problem is a bigger issue (Score:2, Insightful)
Wot? Call me an economically challenged dumb-arse, but isn't that 10$ per CD is going into big ol faceless record corporations pockets? For doing sweet bugger all?
I think Id rather use my 10$ PER CD to support a local restaurant, buy something physical that is actually WORTH the money it costs, or maybe even buy more music!? Surely the money is better for the economy spread out all over the place, purchase things that its actually worth. How is paying $30 for goods worth $5 (and I'm being generous) good for the economy?
My view: 5 year IP Copyright.. for everything. You write a book, great. You have 5 years after publishing to make money of it, after that, if some publishing house can publish your book in hard cover, on quality paper for HALF THE PRICE OF WHAT I PAID FOR MY FALL TO BITS PAPER BACK that more power to them. Made a killer app, milk it for all its worth, but after 5 years anyone can burn it and do what they like.
Verizon? Is that you? (Score:4, Interesting)
Simply put: Piracy is the killer app for Telcoms and consumer electronics industries, unless it's in the Telcoms and consumer electronics.
My theory: I think the Telcoms and friends want to devalue the entertainment industry. They want the same exclusive content that AOL/Time Warner enjoys, but rather aquiring the content via an expensive merger, our friends would much rather buy all that content at commidity prices, or sign exclusive deals to act as the conduit to deliver music and entertainment at competitive prices.
If you really want to figure out who's conspiring what. (1) You have to be realistic (2) You have to determine how it pays off
Re:Verizon? Is that you? (Score:2)
If that were true, then how come the video game industry is thriving?
The Game Industry is not very far from the Entertainment Industry. They'd co-exist on a venn diagram with the *AA on one side and the Telcom/IT Industry on the other. If piracy was as destructive as they say, then the PC video game market wouldn't exist.
My personal theory is that the *AA has a monopolistic business model that earns them ridiculous amounts of money. With the internet, now they have to be fair like everybody else. Suddenly, it's not acceptable to say "You cannot return an opened CD" anymore. They'll have to *gasp* understand what customers want and give them the opportunity to decide "I really don't want that afterall."
Gaming Industy is harder to rip off... (Score:2)
If more people downloaded this stuff (your mom and uncle), the entertainment industry would see less money. (Most people I know who download songs don't buy CD's anymore, why should we?)
The Gaming industry has starting moving in on the subscription model, which has worked out VERY well for them. You can't cheat the subscription model, you can only compete with it.
Secondly, It still isn't easy to download a game. Many of them span many CD's (take forever to download), and many more will buy it just because it's more convienent.
Once piracy becomes more mainstream, it will hurt the industries who it's easy to pirate. Here's the order from most susceptible to least.
1. Music - Small downloads, many devices geared for it
2. Movie - Compression makes download acceptible via highspeed internet, some won't comprimise with quality and will buy DVD.
3. Computer Gaming - Can turn to subscription services, or make games REALLY big (600 - 3000 Megs) thus making the VERY inconvienent to download.
It all makes sense when you realize ... (Score:2)
They are now in a panic because the Internet provides a new distribution channel that (partially) obsoletes their cartel. This is the whole source of the IP and IRM fuss. They are struggling to find a way to prevent us from getting our art to audiences via this new medium that they (so far) can't control.
Verizon has realized that they have a real opportunity here: They are part of a cartel that in most of the world has a monopoly over telecomm, including the Internet. If they can get into a position of controlling both the communications and the content, then they will have total control over all the world's information except the relics on hard copy in libraries. The RIAA and MPAA will be dead, but to distribute your art, you'll have to get a license from whoever controls your Internet connection. Verizon is volunteering for this position, and hoping that by publicly attacking the RIAA and MPAA, the world's artists will support them.
If you don't believe this, read their TOS. You aren't allowed to run your own web server. That is, if you have an Internet connection through them, you can't use it to distribute your own work. You are required to use their web servers. They are, of course, in a position to strictly control what is on their own machines
It's really hard to be too paranoid here
Re:Verizon? Is that you? (Score:2)
My theory: I think the Telcoms and friends want to devalue the entertainment industry. They want the same exclusive content that AOL/Time Warner enjoys, but rather aquiring the content via an expensive merger, our friends would much rather buy all that content at commidity prices, or sign exclusive deals to act as the conduit to deliver music and entertainment at competitive prices.
-------
That's a good theory, but if that were the case, why are they (the telecoms) fighting like mad to hand over the whole broadband industry to AOLTW by fucking up DSL competition, and letting cable (dominated by RoadRunner) undercut DSL price-wise? You would think that if they wanted this killer app to keep going, they'd sell DSL at $10/mo like they do in Japan, Canada, and every other more civilized country in the world.
Good question (Score:2)
The technology industry wants to sell TV's, CD-RW's, DVD-RW's, Harddrives, portable MP3 players, portable DVD players, and anything else the consumer wants. If they could sell a machine that would enable the consumer to watch any movie they want or play any song they want, for free, they would be in heaven. (Better yet, THEY would like to be the ones charging $5 per view)
The entertainment industry makes the technology industry's products more exciting. With filesharing becoming popular, it's making the telecommunications industry more exciting (File Sharing fuels highspeed internet sales)
Here's where copyright law comes in: VERY strong copyright law hurts all of these fair uses that are currently fueling the technology/telecom industry. If a person can't burn a CD of music they downloaded from thier high speed connection, what good is the burner and a high speed connection?
The Telecoms want to be the ones who deliver Movies on Demand
Because they don't own the movies and they can't shoot the owners, they have two options.
1. Negotiate with the owners
2. Buy the owners
It's tough negotiating with the entertainment industry, because thier business model has worked very well to this point, and they don't want to risk it on some hair brained scheme that might risk it. They want to give the telcom/tech industry as little of a cut as they must, unless the telcom/tech industry can give them a lot of sales.
The Entertainment Industry and Telcom/Tech industry all need each other, but both want to hold all the cards. The entertainment industry would get it's way by legislating copy protection in every device (Hollings Bill). This would enable give them unlimited control over the terms of usage. If they want to sell you a DVD that only plays 5 times, no one would be able to stop them. Any provider who trafficked thier content without thier permission would be held liable.
The telcom/tech industry would love the same thing, but they don't have the content. They basically have two options:
1. Let file sharing go rampant, fix it (Telcoms *COULD* stop filesharing), in return for a very exclusive/lucritive deal as distributor.
2. Let file sharing go rampant for many years, let entertainment industry suffer, watch stock plummet, buy stock and content, stop file sharing + protect content with DRM, resell at nice markup.
No conspiracy here, just good business strategy...
Follow the greed...
Re:Good question (Score:2)
1. Let file sharing go rampant, fix it (Telcoms *COULD* stop filesharing), in return for a very exclusive/lucritive deal as distributor.
2. Let file sharing go rampant for many years, let entertainment industry suffer, watch stock plummet, buy stock and content, stop file sharing + protect content with DRM, resell at nice markup.
Or, if the big money is in selling the hardware with content as mere support, 3)Let the entertainment industry twist in the wind (but with an occasional investment infusion to keep it alive).
Why this matters, and why it's mostly good (Score:5, Interesting)
Basically, corporations believe that public knowledge of technology and processes is bad, because it's hard to make money off of something everyone can reproduce. This country is founded on democracy (good) but also has strong roots in free-market capitalism (mostly good). Making money is why we as a country are so well off, and people seek to maximize their money making. Public domain knowledge of technology and processes reduces the chance to make money because people will pay you more for something that only *you* can make, hence putting a premium on innovative AND proprietary information.
Lawmakers in a capitalist society are easily swayed by the corporations with their lobbying and donations, making it possible to influence law in their favor. In this case, copyright law, when expanded, better protects the information of corporations, making it harder for technology and processes to come into the public domain. In a society where money is so valued, any chance to make money by the corporations is often countered by ways to save money by the consumers.
We as consumers would love to see copyright law weakened rather than expanded because it increases the potential to save money. Also, there is a certain ideology in promoting the free sharing of thought, ideas, and technology for the betterment of society. So when someone donates money to the cause of actively opposing copyright law expansion, it serves to benefit us (the consumers).
But the real question is this: Why would someone do this? Certainly someone with a cool million lying around did something to make that money. What is to be gained by an individual donating that much money to a cause that has its roots in opposing the big corporation and "the man"? Likely, it isn't because it was just philosophically the "right thing to do".
-AAAWalrus
Re:Why this matters, and why it's mostly good (Score:2)
I think the key is that to some people, a million dollars is not as much money as it is to you or me. And you have to wonder if this can be written off. I mean, it says the donation was anonymous, but that could very well mean that the university agreed to keep it anonymous. They could have written a receipt for it as an educational donation, and the donor could write it off as charity. The university may know who donated it, but agreed to keep it secret. Obviously there were specific things that this money was intended for, so there could have been stipulations with the donation.
I like the fact that someone is trying to do some good with the money, but you really have to wonder how far $1 million will go against all of the mega-millions that companies have invested in building copyright law.
A million dollars is a lot to you, me, and the university, but it probably isn't much to a Senator. ;)
Re:Why this matters, and why it's mostly good (Score:2, Insightful)
This happens all the time, when Joe Rich Guy donates 1M to Greenpeace, he can use it as a tax deduction. Same thing here.
So no, it's not pure philanthropy...it's using money that would have gone to the government to further a personal cause.
How very odd. (Score:2, Interesting)
What strange timing. I wonder if one of those fresh out of school lawyers will be taking up eBay's case at a significant discount. I wonder how much cheaper one of these lawyers is than a more expens... I mean experienced lawyer.
~Ben
Socialist crap (Score:2)
Don't try to legislate altruism, leave it to choice.
Re:Socialist crap (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Socialist crap (Score:2)
Finally something to slow down the reactionaries (Score:2)
I'm glad too but for a much different reason. This is a perfect exemple that shows the issue of economic rights is not a "Good" and "Bad" issue with "po'folks" on one side and "rich folks" on the other.
Such moral absolutism is counterproductive in the worst way... especially for us in the IT world where the living is pretty good. So often I've heard people imply that "making money" and "doing what's right" are polar opposites. Like the Anarchists who would destroy every SUV they saw in the name of skater-justice. Constructive solutions are the way to go. And thinking reasonably about your world is the first step to finding them.
Whither EFF? (Score:2)
It's true that the EFF hasn't been batting 1.000 lately, but I've never even heard of the "Center for the Study of the Public Domain." Their web site talks only about "...hiring new faculty, creating new courses, setting up Internet Journals and creating new Fellowship Programs." Anyone know what cases they've actually participated in, if any? And for which side?
Sounds great =) (Score:4, Interesting)
Even at the undergrad level, it seems that Duke has taken an interest in the subject. This year, for the first time ever, the CS department is offering a course [duke.edu] that I'm currently enrolled in whose primary focus is intellectual property issues. It's panning out to be a pretty cool course, and is actually the only CS course I've taken thus far that doesn't involve any coding.
I think more CS departments should offer curriculum like this, since we (the techies) have a unique perspective on the issues, because we are the ones opening the public's eyes to the fact that our system of intellectual property law needs to be completely revamped.
If anyone out there has an interest in the topic, I'd highly reccommend reading John Barlow's The Economy of Ideas [wired.com] as a starting point.
Re:Sounds great =) (Score:2)
Re:Sounds great =) (Score:3, Informative)
Dear Sir or Madam (Score:2)
Now if only someone would put a million dollars into reforming our wheezing, corrupt implementation of the democratic process, so that million dollar donations like this one wouldn't be necessary.
IP will soon be matter of life or death (Score:2, Insightful)
*This* is what has to be said to wake the general public up.
$1 million (Score:3, Insightful)
As nice as this is, a million dollars just isn't going to cut it against Big [riaa.org] Media. [mpaa.org] Until we make this a national policy issue, one where actual numbers of voters are involved, we're pretty much screwed. Until then though, I suppose a million bucks can fund some studies and research to strengthen our position from a logical standpoint once the public realizes that they're being screwed.
Aint Democracy Wonderful (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Aint Democracy Wonderful (Score:2)
BTW, I'm all for restraining out-of-control copyright law, and grateful that we now have a significant chunk of change. But it is not democratic for one person to affect something. If we were really in a democracy, we would have been able to more directly have a say in this before things like the DMCA and SSSCA crept in to existence. And technically, we did -- our senators and representatives are supposed to represent us, but often times, they represent the corporations (and a few individuals) who give them -- or more likely, their party -- campaign contributions.
For the RIAA to buy off a senator (i.e. Hollings) makes the government into of a plutocracy -- rule by the rich. And so much of it is what I call a petrolcracy - he who controls the oil controls much more. But I digress...
Oh, last: that $1M didn't go to the American government. Duke Univ. law school != the American government. Neither of which are democratic.
Re:Aint Democracy Wonderful (Score:2)
It was sarcasm.
Plan of Action (Score:2)
And Duke is the best place for this? (Score:3, Funny)
Article (Score:2)
You were right. (Score:2, Funny)
Bill Gates? (Score:2)
What entrepreneurs went to Duke University and might have a million dollars to throw around? Anybody have a clue?
- subsolar
To The Donator (Score:2)
THANK YOU!
One million [pinky to corner of mouth] dollars? (Score:2, Funny)
Life + 75 years != a limited time (Score:3, Interesting)
If someone is sent to prison for life, is that "a limited time"? If you purchase a product which is advertised with a warranty that lasts ten years longer than you shall live, would you think the warranty is limited in time?
If I am awarded something or restricted from something for the rest of my life no matter how long I shall live, that is an unlimited time as far as I am concerned. If my ISP offered me $5/month Internet access for the rest of my life regardless of how long I live, I would consider that to be cheap internet service for an unlimited time. If my driver's license was suspended for life, that would be a complete revocation, not a suspension for a limited time. So I wonder what in the world the lawmakers were smoking when they thought that "a limited time" for anything granted to a person could be defined as a time period that is guaranteed to extend beyond their lifetime. Apparently "a limited time" to them is anything less than infinity.
Corporations are actually hurting themselves (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Imagine this (Score:5, Interesting)
Do people not understand that the law is there to protect them ?
I am an information consumer. Please explain how the DMCA protects me.
Re:Imagine this (Score:5, Insightful)
It protects your wallet from getting heavy.
Re:Imagine this (Score:2)
The DMCA protects copyright owners. If you own any copyrighted material, it protects you. On the other hand, if you're one of the "information wants to be free" crowd, it's obviously an imposition. However, is that because protecting copyrights is a bad idea, or is it because people just hate the idea of forcing themselves to respect a law that's so easy to break, and that carries an almost non-existant chance of suffering any consequences?
Re:Imagine this (Score:2)
No, copyright law protects copyright owners. The DMCA is not, despite the name, a copyright law. It makes it illegal for a copyright holder to even CHECK if some media cartel's copy prevention scheme actually works and helps "protect" his/her copyrighted material. (Rot13 anyone?) It makes it illegal to disclose how to access PUBLIC DOMAIN material that has been encrypted by someone. It is a bad law which fails to achieve its stated goals, and which should be stuck down (in part if not in whole).
Re:Imagine this (Score:2)
There are plenty of creative people that don't agree with the current regime. Many of them may sympathize with our take on the issue and be just as outraged that their work hasn't taken it's rightful place beside that of Mozart or Shakespeare.
The King is alive and well and pissed off because Heartbreak Hotel hasn't ceded into the public domain yet.
Re:Imagine this (Score:2)
Re:Imagine this (Score:2)
I think most people on this board want reasonable protection of copyright, but unfair protection that only benefits the very large media companies is not in our best interests.
Re:mystery donor? (Score:2, Insightful)
A donor who really wants to stay anonymous can do so pretty effectively. Personally, I think we should respect their wish. It's rare someone will cough up this kind of a chunk of change for the more general and abstract public good, and if they would rather not be recognized (and end up having every ogg hacker or yahoo with some open licensing scheme they've hatched begging them for pocket change, we should let them be.
Yes...and in related news... (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Yes...and in related news... (Score:2)
"Today the RIAA and MPAA found themselves bankrupt, and filing for chapter 7. But not everyone is going hungry, the EFF and ACLU received record donations this last week".
Re:Yes...and in related news... (Score:2)
I don't mind 1984 so much as Rollerball, though.
--
You may call me Siggy.
Re:mystery donor? (Score:2)
He's a Microsoft enemy, yes...
Lawsuit v. Duke University School of Law? (Score:2)
If somebody wants to sue Duke Law School and hopes to suck them dry with legal costs, they are barking up the wrong tree. You generally don't sue people who (a) know more about the law than you and (b) have hundreds more lawyers than you, especially since (c) they have those hundreds more lawyers for free.
Re:Lawsuit v. Duke University School of Law? (Score:2)
PROFESSORS.
One million isn't much (Score:3, Interesting)
It isn't enough to fight anyone, but it is a good amount to pay a small staff to research the actual cost and benefits of copyrights.
We really don't have clear data on how much work is impeded by copyright patent length, and how much worse it would be if it was lengthened.
Nor do we know what effect shorter periods would have.
So little is really known that we can't intelligently argue all that fairly about the cost and benefit to society.
Re:This is a good start... (Score:5, Insightful)
Personally, I'm furious that I can't legally make a copy of Steamboat Willie to show to my kids. It's a piece of culture. It's history. It's not a commodity anymore. I should be able to say "look kids, here's the very first Mickey Mouse cartoon". But I can't do so unless Disney both decides to sell it, and I can afford it.
Just this weekend I explained this to an untechnical friend of mine. As soon as I explained that Steamboat Willie (and countless other pieces of culture) should belong to EVERYONE, not do Disney, he was confused. He truly did not understand the concept of 'Public Domain'.
His response was 'they can profit off Mickey Mouse, so they should keep it'
To which I replied, "Mark Twain's ancestors could profit off of Huckleberry Finn, but it's public domain. Profit isn't an issue. Copyright is a favor we grant creators. We own it. They stole it. This was exactly the same situation the founders of this country set up the law to prevent: a handful of corporations owning and controlling what we see, read and hear."
I actually watched as the hamster turned the wheels in his head. In an instant he was as pissed about the situation as I was.
This is our culture. This is our history. Whether any one person thinks any one piece of film, text, or music is trivial is irrelevant.
Fact is, in 100 years, when some kid needs to write a book report on 20th century culture, he'll be paying royalties.
So, in the end, we just need to increase public awareness, be it one person at a time. Your average Johnny Lunchpail doesn't realise what Public Domain is. They think copyright is forever.
That said, 1 million dollars to pay a bunch of future lobbyists isn't, IMO, the answer. 1 million dollars for a TV or radio campaign would be much better spent.
People are pissed when they understand the problem. We've all been taken advantage of.
Re:Copywrite Law (Score:2)
The legal theories that circulate around here don't do so in a vaccuum. They actually reflect US law as it has been in the past, as well as case law. We aren't all just pulling these ideas out of our asses.