the ultimate, primary intended beneficiary is the public
the ultimate, primary intended beneficiary is the public
Posted Oct 24, 2015 10:38 UTC (Sat) by Wol (subscriber, #4433)In reply to: the ultimate, primary intended beneficiary is the public by mips
Parent article: Appeals Court Gives Google A Clear And Total Fair Use Win On Book Scanning (Techdirt)
imho, copyright should be reduced to the Berne minimum of 50 years, and the CREATOR given the option of extending it, ten or twenty years at a time, after that. Such extensions obviously would have to be registered, although I would also add that the legal presumption would be that if the author is alive, they have extended it.
Maybe allow the creators descendants - who were alive when the work was created! - to extend it too.
Cheers,
Wol
Posted Oct 28, 2015 8:25 UTC (Wed)
by jezuch (subscriber, #52988)
[Link] (7 responses)
And thus reward them for... what?
Posted Oct 28, 2015 8:32 UTC (Wed)
by dlang (guest, #313)
[Link] (6 responses)
Posted Oct 28, 2015 13:52 UTC (Wed)
by jezuch (subscriber, #52988)
[Link] (5 responses)
Well, yes, but I doubt anyone wants their children to become parasites on the society :) At least I wouldn't; all I want for *my* children is a good start, and only that. And I would expect that the society itself would consider it bad as well. This is a balancing act, obviously, but the current situation is quite absurdly advantageous to copyright holders (and their descendants).
Posted Oct 28, 2015 14:33 UTC (Wed)
by dlang (guest, #313)
[Link] (4 responses)
If a parent makes an investment that pays returns over the next 50 years and passes that to their children, does that make them parasites? what if the parent passes the same money as a lump sum?
There have been many cases where famous people have struggled to finish autobiographies at the end of their life to have something to pass on to their children. Why should it matter if it's a lump sum or royalties paid over many years?
Now, the question becomes what reasonable limits to this are. The proposal of one generation after the author (descendents who were alive while the author was can extend the copyright was the proposal I saw) seems like a reasonable compromise that lets someone support people they know without extending it insanely.
remember that this proposal is coupled with copyright being short but renewable instead of extremely long. If copyrights need to be renewed every decade or two, most works aren't going to get renewed and will fall into the public domain MUCH faster than the life+50 of the Bern Convention, let alone the life+90 we currently have in the US
Posted Oct 28, 2015 15:09 UTC (Wed)
by madscientist (subscriber, #16861)
[Link] (1 responses)
Posted Oct 28, 2015 15:32 UTC (Wed)
by dlang (guest, #313)
[Link]
In any case where the lifetime of the 'next generation' is a problem, the lifetime of the author will be a problem shortly afterwords (with the next generation of authors). So it's not a problem I think we have to specifically address now.
Posted Oct 29, 2015 14:31 UTC (Thu)
by Wol (subscriber, #4433)
[Link] (1 responses)
We have a bunch of rather annoyed artists who are alive and well, and who are miffed that their creative works from the 50's and 60's are falling out of copyright ... :-)
(Musicians, not composers or authors ...)
Cheers,
Posted Oct 30, 2015 17:49 UTC (Fri)
by Jonno (subscriber, #49613)
[Link]
However the Berne convention does not give any rights whatsoever to the performers of a work, only to it's authors (in case of music the composer and lyrics writer). The Rome convention added similar rights to performers (technically this isn't copyright, though it is often called that), but only requires "Creation + 20 years".
That said, TRIPS raises all minimums to 50 years, and while not all Berne signatories have signed TRIPS, all WTO members have, so that probably covers every reader here...
the ultimate, primary intended beneficiary is the public
the ultimate, primary intended beneficiary is the public
the ultimate, primary intended beneficiary is the public
the ultimate, primary intended beneficiary is the public
the ultimate, primary intended beneficiary is the public
the ultimate, primary intended beneficiary is the public
the ultimate, primary intended beneficiary is the public
Wol
the ultimate, primary intended beneficiary is the public
Actually the Berne convention requires "Life + 50 years" for most works (if the identity of the author is known, otherwise "Publication + 50 years"), though for photographic works the minimum is "Creation + 25 years", and for cinematographic works the minimum is "Publication + 50 years" (if published within 50 years of creation, otherwise "Creation + 50 years").
