Project Gutenberg Volunteers Partial IMSLP Hosting 100
bbc writes "Project Gutenberg has volunteered to host all it legally can of the IMSLP's catalog. The Canadian provider of free public domain music recently caved to legal threats from an Austrian sheet music seller. On the Book People mailing list, Project Gutenberg's founder Michael Hart wrote: 'Project Gutenberg has volunteered to keep as much of the IMSL Project online as is legally possible, including a few of the items that were demanded to be withdrawn, as well as, when legal, to provide a backup of the entire site, for when the legalities have finally been worked out.'"
Classical music is the new Rock'n'Roll (Score:1, Troll)
Re:Classical music is the new Rock'n'Roll (Score:4, Funny)
(Just in case anyone needed more evidence that pretty much everything "new" still contains 99% things-that-came-before, making the idea of copyrights absolutely absurd...)
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I thought that this was an absurd legal opinion, and if really pushed it may eventually be overturned... at least with some future court cas
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Letters Patent (Score:3, Informative)
In the 70s (or somewhere around then), when the original Gilbert and Sullivan copyrights were about to expire, there were some people who wanted to have
someone think of the musicians (Score:5, Funny)
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Don't want any body parts falling on me.
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What in the? (Score:2)
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Comment removed (Score:5, Informative)
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So, if someone started coming to an American company with a claim that they should be filtering all of the things which are illegal in, say, Iran ... would the American companies tell them to go fsck themselves, or would they happily comply? (Or, in this case, I gu
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If the US would respect an extradition request from Iran for whatever content is being distributed, I would imagine the American comapany would
Re:Universal != Universal Edition (Score:1)
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They would sure based on where the downloader is, not where the company is located.
IANAL
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If the US would respect an extradition request from Iran for whatever content is being distributed, I would imagine the American comapany would comply (although not happily).
I'm not sure why you think so. I don't think many U.S. judges would bother to enforce a judgment from an Iranian court against a U.S. company that was doing business in the United States, simply because someone in Iran could get on the internet and access their stuff online, and in doing so, violate Iranian laws.
The enforcement of foreign judgments in the U.S. is governed by "Uniform Foreign Money-Judgments Recognition Act, 13 U.L.A. 149 (1986)", which I don't have time to read through at the moment, but W
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I said "If X then Y." Claiming the likelihood of X is low does not change my point. Later, I do claim that if extradition would not be enforced, the company would laugh at them. (Source: Elementary logic texts)
My other claim, intermingled in there, is that Canada would ship them off to the US. As evidence I would cite Australia doing the same thing.
Re:Wrong continent (Score:1)
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Oh, crap. How did I miss that?
Thanks for the correction.
Cheers
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Indeed: the proper standard response to these unenforcable "C&D" (cease and desist) letters should be "FOaD" (fuck off and die) letters, especially when the entity sending the C&D is in another country.
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Re:I don't even understand that sentence. (Score:5, Informative)
Project Gutenberg [gutenberg.org] - the first and largest single collection of free electronic books - has volunteered to host IMSLP's (International Music Score Library Project) collection of scores.
Related story: Provider of Free Public Domain Music Shuts Down [slashdot.org]
Props to Gutenberg. Donate [gutenberg.org] if you can spare a few bucks.
I was waiting for this... (Score:2)
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Comment removed (Score:5, Insightful)
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I am not defending them, since I think copyright is a silly idea and a peculiar recent Western European innovation that most of the world rightly rejects, but let's have some perspective here.
>>> So it's extremely amusing that your website has a copyright notice on it.
john
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163 of the world's 194 (or so; depends on who's counting) countries are parties to the Berne Convention [wikipedia.org]; several more are parties to other multilateral copyright treaties.
I'm not sure how you figure that less than 15% of the world (by number of countries; by population or by economic power, the percentage is far, far lower) constitutes "most of the world".
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And studies have shown that a large percentage of the population of the USA don't agree that man evolved from apes, but that doesn't make it the case. Just because a large number of people agree on something does not make it right. Take away the cash flow and there simply won't be popular/commercial music of the same form as there is today. Now you and I may not think th
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And studies have shown that a large percentage of the population of the USA don't agree that man evolved from apes, but that doesn't make it the case. Just because a large number of people agree on something does not make it right. Take away the cash flow and there simply won't be popular/commercial music of the same form as there is today. Now you and I may not think that's a bad thing, but I bet the guys buying the bootleg CDs of Britney & Rhianna would feel differently.
You're confusing questions of fact with questions of policy.
Questions of fact should not be resolved democratically. In fact, to do so is ridiculous. Either we evolved from apes or we didn't, either the earth is getting warmer or it's not, etc. Whether large numbers of people believe A or B doesn't make A or B more or less true in an objective sense.
However, where opinion does matter is on issues of policy. Whether we evolved from apes or not is a question of fact; what we want taught in schools (science o
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Without copyright there would be no reason for anybody to be in the software business.
This is the Information Age, if I can't sell information that I own then I have nothing to sell.
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This is the Information Age, if I can't sell information that I own then I have nothing to sell.
Then you deserve to starve.
Here's a hint: you can sell your labor, just like most of the people who are alive or who have ever lived, have done. That works just as well for computer programmers as it does for plumbers, doctors, and lawyers. Negotiate a fair price for your time, get paid up front, and let the buyer do whatever the hell they want to do with the stuff you produce for them.
Welcome to the service economy; it's the same as the old economy.
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Now it is true that at some point someone would pay someone to design and build software that they need, the problem is that then the solution would exist for that problem and I could not get paid to design a system that does the same thing. Now I realize that that sounds ludicrous, after all why should I write the same th
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Without copyright there would be no reason for anybody to be in the software business.
This is the Information Age, if I can't sell information that I own then I have nothing to sell."
Oh please...
Without copyright, you'd still be paid to produce software for people who want to use it. Same as now.
Even under current copyright law, you cannot own information - all you're selling is the promise not to
prosecute; i.e. a license.
In the absence of copyrights, you are paid to w
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There's lots of people even in the West who reject respecting copyrights themselves, because the result of "someone else will pay for it" gets them lots of free stuff, and free stuff is awesome. There are fewer people anywhere who reject the idea of requiring others to respect copyrights, because the result of "nobody will pay for it" might cause the supply of free new stuff to dry up.
On the ot
Re:I was waiting for this...NICELY???? (Score:2)
They sure didn't say that very nicely? It was like: OBEY, OR DIE! Obey the EU directives, or our Canadian lawyer will get you good!
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True, music publishers generally aren't as scummy as the *AA, but they're scummy in their own special way. They make money selling sheet music; if you can legally copy public domain music, then they don't make money. Thus, they have no incentive to promote a healthy public domain, and every incentive to keep works out of it. So you'll see things like old PD editions reissued as "edited" with no changes except for a new copyright notice. Actual, old editions that are in the PD, when available, are often insa
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I agree that copyright needs fixing, but that is a separate issue. Here and now, I must say to them, bravo!
Sort of ... (Score:1)
I mean are we talking guitar tab and stuff like that or proper orcheatra scores? The former is a few quid but the latter cost hundreds/thousands to rent for a performance dpending on the size/length.
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This is a bizarre stance and I don't believe there's any possible way they could get it upheld (although maybe in the E.U. and in Canada, who knows), but it was enough to scare the site owner into taking the whole thing down.
I can think of a bunch of similarly contentious issues that never were forced to go that route: up until fairly recently, you couldn'
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You misunderstand how import duties work. (Score:2)
Surely if I live in the UK and buy something from Amazon.Fr then its up to Amazon to make sure that I pay any import/export duty and any relevant taxes that may be due.
I have no idea why you would think this. Why should that be their responsibility? It's purely a UK domestic issue, between you and your taxman, basically. They're just selling something and handing it over to a common carrier for shipment. After that, they wash their hands of it. You can even read Amazon's official stance [amazon.com]: "Your packages may be subject to the customs fees and import duties of the country to which you have your order shipped. These charges are always the recipient's responsibility." (Emph.
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-Gareth
fmm. (Score:4, Insightful)
after all I would hazard a guess this is all about money, not copyright.
well done Project Gutenberg.
Re:fmm. (Score:4, Insightful)
Considering copyright itself is about money, I would say you are correct.
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It is about money, but indirectly.
If OmniCorp Music can whip up some outrage by pointing at people breaching their 90 year copyrights (regardless of medium or profit), then when Omnicorp Film want to buy a hundred or hundred and fifty year duration law, they'll be able to hire less expensive lobbyists and give smaller 'campaign donations' to fewer Senators.
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The music is beyond copyright. The graphical representation of that music on paper is still under copyright. The folks publishing all this out-of-copyright music just come up with a new arrangement and typesetting every couple decades and get a brand-new copyright on it. The older publications fall into the public domain, and some are available [duke.edu] in various places [redhost24-001.com] if you know where to look [indiana.edu]. Unfortun
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the most commonly used format is lilypond, which is basically AFAIK a collection of macros for tex, and very good it is too. MusicXML is now on the way in too, but i've never used it myself, so i won't say anything more about it.
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Actually, the most commonly-used format, by a large margin, is ABC [abcnotation.org.uk]. It's a rather basic, plain-text notation, without without much in the way of fancy formatting. OTOH, it's fairly easy to read it directly. There's lots of mostly free software for it, and there are somewhat over 300,000 pieces of music online at about 350 ABC sites now. This is a couple orders of magnitude more than for lilypond, which is probably the closest competitor.
Those of us who have b
Notation Formats (Score:1)
Donations (Score:2)
Re:Donations (Score:5, Informative)
And I think that Project Gutenberg is one of the best initiatives on the Internet.
Where else could you get, for free, electronic versions of books in the public domain? And they provide multiple file formats as well.
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Alternative way of donating (Score:2)
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Transcriptions (Score:2)
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The BBC had a news article not so long ago where a picture wasn't allowed to be shown on TV because the owners refused to release copyright, so all the BBC done was to get someone to paint a picture of that picture and show the painting on TV.
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There aren't easy "loopholes" for copyright law, and attempts to do so like you are mentioning are go
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How would anyone ever be able to produce anything that anyone else has ever done, if I put a keypad on my phone just like another company has a keypad on their phone am I suddenly breaking copyright law because our products have the sameish/copied features?
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In the US, typefaces are not copyrightable at all. You can copy them all you like. Well, new typefaces could be subject to a design patent, but given that 500-year old typefaces are in common use today, and design patents only last for 14 years and many designers don't bother to
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It is novel and nonobvious, all phones before used dials, this is my artistic design for which I hold the copyright too, any other phones with keypads instead of dials must be derived works.
Why do I need a patent if I'm already covered by copyright law which lasts for much longer.
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Well, that you are the first person to put a keypad on a phone was not in the previous post. Certainly whoever did that first could seek a utility patent on it (and probably did).
But not a copyright. First, ideas and methods are not copyrightable, so you cannot stop other people from putting a keypad on a phone or having
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You mean this [teachersnetwork.org], the first result for IMSL Project [google.com]. Or this [vni.com], the first result for IMSL [google.com]?
If we need to take a little initiative and lookup these initalisms ourselves, perhaps the editors can take a little initiative and at least be consistent with the initialisms they use.
Michael Hart seems like a good guy (Score:2)
Thanks Michael!
Project Gutenberg? (Score:3, Funny)
Whack-a-mole (Score:2)
They acted like dicks (hint: if first contact involves lawyers, you're a dick) towards someone who, had they approached nicely, might have been willing to cooperate. Now they've moved their problem to an organized group who already knows how to deal with these sorts of things and isn't likely to back down against empty threats.
WOW this is nuts (Score:2)
They are saying that because the copyright is 50 years past the death of the author in Canada, 70 years past the death of the author in Europe, and the number varies in other countries, that the IMSLP (International Music Score Library Project) should be filtering IP's of people in those countries and enforcing the copyright lengths. Just because the work is Public domain in Canada does not mean that it is public domain in the USA and Europe. Thus they
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Re:WOW this is nuts (Score:5, Interesting)
This is quite clearly a good thing, and the Right thing. However, some legal jurisdictions haven't caught up with the modern world yet.
Where is Google? (Score:2)
Project Gutenberg's Problem (Score:3, Informative)
Gutenberg site (Score:1)
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Lessons in content reuse and forking (Score:1)
Too bad they didn't offer database dumps or other convenient means for mirrors to obtain the content.
kudos to Gutenberg - but something is really wrong (Score:1)
kudos to Gutenberg for hosting the material. It's good that we can shelter the content under their legal umbrella, but having content migrate to a few mega-sites like Gutenberg or the Internet Archive is not really good enough somehow.
We want a world where anyone who has some content can cheaply and easily share it - where it is legal to do so. 'Where it is legal to do so' is where all the trouble starts. Any little guy who wants to share his collection of PD banjo scores or what ever has to deal with ALL