Supreme Court Takes Up Scholars' Rights 190
schwit1 writes with this quote from the Chronicle of Higher Education:
"For 10 years, Lawrence Golan has been quietly waging a legal campaign to overturn a statute which makes it impossibly expensive for smaller orchestras to play certain pieces of music. Now the case is heading to the US Supreme Court. The high-stakes copyright showdown affects far more than sheet music. The outcome will touch a broad swath of academe for years to come, dictating what materials scholars can use in books and courses without jumping through legal hoops. The law Mr. Golan is trying to overturn has also hobbled libraries' efforts to digitize and share books, films, and music. The conductor's fight centers on the concept of the public domain, which scholars depend on for teaching and research. When a work enters the public domain, anyone can quote from it, copy it, share it, or republish it without seeking permission or paying royalties. The dispute that led to Golan v. Holder dates to 1994, when Congress passed a law that moved vast amounts of material from the public domain back behind the firewall of copyright protection. The Supreme Court is expected to decide the case during the term that begins in October."
Re:You have the right to be smeared. (Score:2, Informative)
The 1994 law was passed by a Democrat majority congress and signed by Clinton. Keep knocking back that dkos kool-aid, numpty.
Re:I'm going to go out on a limb... (Score:4, Informative)
Thanks to the wonderful SCOTUSblog you can read [scotusblog.com] the opinion below, petition for cert, brief in opposition, petitioners reply, and the amicus briefs.
Re:You have the right to be smeared. (Score:5, Informative)
Oh yeah, because when you think Entertainment Mogul - the first thing that comes to mind is a Republican? Are you on crack agin??
* Doug Morris, CEO Sony Music (Formerly CEO of Universal Music), Democrat: http://www.campaignmoney.com/political/contributions/douglas-morris.asp?cycle=08 [campaignmoney.com]
* Lucian Grainge, CEO Universal Music (Owned by Vivendi), Foreign. Democrat PAC: http://www.opensecrets.org/usearch/index.php?q=Universal+Music&sa=Search&cx=010677907462955562473%3Anlldkv0jvam&cof=FORID%3A11 [opensecrets.org]
* Roger Faxon, CEO EMI (Under ownership of Citigroup), Foreign. No open records of contributions
* Lyor Cohen, CEO Warner Music, Democrat: http://www.campaignmoney.com/political/contributions/lyor-cohen.asp?cycle=08 [campaignmoney.com]
(Foreigners can't make political contributions (at least not directly to campaigns), so I looked up PAC funding.)