Tuesday
Aug182009
Discussion on Copyright Today
20090818 at 10:53
Yesterday, my friend Alex Scoble made a provocative statement:
Dead people shouldn’t have copyrights…it’s stupid
This led to a full-fledged roundtable on copyright, on the social networking site FriendFeed.
Photographer Thomas Hawk made some observations about working for Disney toward the very end of the conversation.
For the record:
Transcript:
Alex Scoble
Dead people shouldn’t have copyrights…it’s stupid.
August 17 - Comment - Like - Share
John E. Bredehoft, Stephen Edgar, Jason Nelson and 71 other people liked this
Dead people don’t their estate does. - Chris Greene
Yeah, that argument makes it less stupid? Not. - Alex Scoble
+Chris. Or companies which may have invested in the intellectual property. - τorƍue
@Alex - Sure it does. Tolkein’s kids have a right to everything their parents left them. - Chris Greene
Copyrights is like an inheritance to the kids, but rather than estates being given, they are giving their intellectual property. - Wizetux
Alex, I agree with the sentiment, but if a copyright is invalidated upon death, then a sufficiently valuable copyright would provide incentive to off the owner. :P - Tanath
Like hell they don’t…They have a right to the money/property he bequeathed them at death, not to keep on making money based on his works. That’s not how copyright is supposed to work. It’s supposed to grant a limited time for which a creator can recoup the costs of their work. It’s not supposed to transfer to their children and to their children’s children. It should be a lot closer to the patent system. - Alex Scoble
I think it’s stupid that copyrights last much longer than the average human lifespan. I think it actually does a lot of hamper innovation. - Victor Ganata
Why are patents for 17 years but copyrights are effectively without end? It’s stupid, that’s why. It’s all so Disney can continue to make money off of Mickey Mouse without coming out with new content. - Alex Scoble
The patent system is borked too… - Tanath
@Alex -According to you argument intelliectual property shouldn’t be transferred. If that’s the case, then why does a company get to maintain ownership of IP after the creator passes? - Chris Greene
Because they bought off Congress. - Alex Scoble
@Alex - Adding to that, then if the company is passed on to realatives they no longer own that IP? - Chris Greene
LOL, blunt & to the point. :) - Tanath
@Alex: copyrights have an end: in the US it is 70 years after the death of the creator. - Wizetux
@Alex - So a company is not property then? - Chris Greene
That would certainly provide incentive to innovate… - Tanath
The whole point of the patent/copyright systems are to spur innovation and the creation of new works. The current system actually runs counter to this goal. And no, copyright is not property. - Alex Scoble
I didn’t say copyright, I said a company - Chris Greene
copyright is a system of revenue for work created. - Wizetux
I don’t care about companies. This conversation isn’t about companies, it’s about copyrights. All arguments that don’t deal with copyright, but with other ideas other than copyright and patents will be ignored by me. - Alex Scoble
By the way, a company’s copyrights now last for 95 years. - Alex Scoble
It is. I asked if a companies IP (and copyright) is transferrable once the originator dies. As such, is the company transferrable? - Chris Greene
Wouldn’t copyrights force people to not copy off others work, and come up with something of their own? I don’t get how they inhibit innovation/creation. - Heather
The original U.S. Copyright Act granted rights for 14 years with a 14 year extension. Now it’s 70 years after the author dies, or if it’s a work-for-hire, 95 years after publication, or 120 years after creation. - Victor Ganata
But it would force creators to come up with new stuff every few decades, instead of milking their one good idea for the rest of their life. The current system encourages mediocrity. We shouldn’t be surprised that that’s what we get. - Victor Ganata
Patents do stifle innovation: http://www.physorg.com/news167… I think the argument generalizes to copyright as well. - Tanath
Heather: If you and someone else are both offering the same service/product, which one are people likely to choose? Without the copyright/patents, it forces competitive innovation on everything, including existing products & services. - Tanath
I think it’s perfectly acceptable for my estate to retain my copyrights after I die. I will be explicit in my will what I want to happen to them. Just because I’m dead doesn’t mean they stop being mine. - Lindsey is Fierce!
Alex, what have you done to try to change the Constitution? - Glen Campbell, B.A.
Copyright law isn’t spelled out in the Constitution. :) And I’ve done plenty posts about it here on friendfeed :) - Alex Scoble from IM
So I come up with a great book and publish it a month before I die and never personally benefit from its greatness. It’s stupid that benefit can’t go to my estate for a reasonable time. - LogEx
Yes, copyright law has been mutated into something ugly, but that doesn’t mean we should swing the pendulum all the way the other way. As usual, the right answer is somewhere in the middle. - LogEx
Yeah…17 years should be the answer. :) - Alex Scoble from IM
Oh and I wrote a letter to my state senators and my congressman to not pass the DMCA once…they just told me it was in my best interests…yeah right - Alex Scoble from IM
Lindsey: “Just because I’m dead doesn’t mean they stop being mine.” It kinda does, since you don’t exist anymore… - Tanath
IMHO I’d rather see lifetime+17 years instead of lifetime+70 years FWIW. Could still be inherited, but you wouldn’t necessarily have a whole generation or two of people that make their living off their parent’s work. And it would force businesses that owned IP to innovate instead of perpetually litigating over it. - Glen Campbell, B.A.
Logical Extremes: Public policy is supposed to be about what benefits society, not individuals or companies & corporations. - Tanath
I’d rather see a fixed period like how the patent system is. Problem is that big companies like Disney just pay off congresspeople to extend the rights. - Alex Scoble from IM
I’m surprised that they haven’t been able to do so with patents - Alex Scoble from IM
I always thought that an intellectual property, whether it is copyright or patent, should be moved permenantly into the public domain unless an effort to bring to market is displayed by the owner within a predetermined period of time( <5 years). - Geoff Schultz
That would be a step in the right direction. - Tanath
I’d like to see lifetime + 21 years or 70 years, whichever is greater. Maybe nudge it to 80 out of respect for expanding lifespans. Actually, my idea would be a fixed cap of, say, 20 or 40 years, but small steps, y’know? - Roger Benningfield
The world isn’t restricted to changing in small steps… - Tanath
It’s probably too much to ask that the pendulum go back to where it was originally, but at least the pendulum should start shifting in the other direction of decreasing duration. 120 years is a ridiculously long time. - Victor Ganata
Alex: What do you think about eliminating copyright and/or patents? - Tanath
I don’t think that would be a good idea…I think that would have the same effect on innovation that having copyright/patent periods too long does - Alex Scoble from IM
How so? - Tanath
For instance, drug companies wouldn’t bother spending the billions it takes to get new drugs made unless they got the guaranteed exclusivity that a patent brings - Alex Scoble from IM
I don’t know about that… and there are other ways to deal with stuff like that. Public funding is one option. - Tanath
Tanath: Short of full-scale, violent revolt, yeah, the world is generally restricted to small steps. And I don’t plan on offing anyone just to get Warner Bros. to surrender Superman to the public domain. - Roger Benningfield
copy rights should be timeconstrained, thats it (like 20yrs) - chaz2b
Roger Benningfield: I disagree. The advent of the internet for instance has changed & will change things rather quickly. Change is accelerating. And while you may not be one to off someone, the incentive would still be there, and from time to time it would happen. - Tanath
You know, if we adhere to cavet emptor, and choose not to protect the consumers from bad purchases, why should we protect the rich companies from bad investments? If they invest in something that everyone else duplicates (right away) isn’t that called competition? - Paul W. Homer
So your against inheritance - why should a copyright expIre ? - Nicholas Paul Gordon from iPhone
Copyright still expires, just not within our lifetimes. The original intent of copyright was never to provide indefinite protection. - Victor Ganata
The U.S. Supreme Court rejected the idea that copyrighted works should have the same protections as physical property in 1834 http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki… - Victor Ganata
I agree with you, Alex. The current system of copyright is completely borked & totally driven by megacorps like Disney. We should go back to how it originally was in the US. - joshua “magic” neff
Just for the records, it’s not an issue only at the US level. Since the Berne Convention, a lot of these questions are discussed at an international level (look for WIPO, ACTA,…) - Laurent
Dead people have descendants! And they SHOULD have rights! Dude… Dad up! - Arleen Anderson
Given the time frame they first specified, it was totally not the intention of the founding fathers to let copyright pass into the next generation. - Victor Ganata
Luckily for Disney, the strict constructionists of the Republican party saw through to the true, *hidden* intentions of the founding fathers! - Andrew C
Even better, they’ve managed to criminalize infringement. - Victor Ganata
Man, you are soooo onto something screwed up about this perpetual copyright concept. - Jason Nunnelley
I’m finding this discussion very interesting, although it seems that everyone knows a lot about copyright that I don’t so I’m a little behind. But I would like to contend that the intentions of the Founding Fathers (dun dun dun and lightening) aren’t the relevant concern. - Heather
Can’t blame the GOP entirely. The Dems were still responsible for the 1976 act, which extended it to 75 years or creator’s life+50 years. - Victor Ganata
I don’t know. I still believe the purpose of copyright is “to promote the Progress of Science and useful Arts, by securing for limited Times to Authors and Inventors the exclusive Right to their respective Writings and Discoveries”, and not simply to allow people to ride the gravy train into infinity and beyond. I suspect I’m not the only one who believes similarly. - Victor Ganata
Interesting use of “to infinity and beyond”. ;) BTW, I can’t figure that Wikipedia link out, I think my brain has melted but I don’t know what it means. - Heather
I’m in favor of prohibiting “authorship” transfer. And, the original term was 15 years - Now, it’s 70 years after the death of the author, and transferable to holding companies and trusts. Not to mention, Disney’s artists are “work for hire.” Copyright has become the tool of corporations and investors. - Richard ¿digame? Walker
IANAL, so the case write up itself is pretty opaque to me, but going by the summary, one side of the case contended that copyright is a natural right of a creator of any work, and that it should last in perpetuity, and that a copyrighted work should have the same protections as real and tangible property does. The case went to the Supreme Court, and they said, no, copyright can only exist as decreed and enforced by the state and it isn’t the same thing as real and tangible property. - Victor Ganata
Oh yes, except China. They don’t have to comply for some reason - perhaps because we can’t make them pay, perhaps because they haven’t signed any treaties. But maybe, the complete absence of “regional pricing” that makes sense is yet another problem with copyright today. - Richard ¿digame? Walker
I agree 100% http://www.youtube.com/watch… - Geo Meek
I’d be all for a fixed term like 15 or 20 years or something like life +5 years. - Steve is older than ever
Oooh, thinking about Alex’s original post I’m coming up with a great near-future sci-fi story where anyone who comes up with a hit song or story or movie immediately has hire serious bodyguards to protect themselves from the IP assassins who try to have them rubbed out so their copyrights will expire. - Steve is older than ever
I believe Microsoft Office would cost a small business in China their entire budget for a year.. A CD would cost one family’s income for a month. Or thereabouts. - Richard ¿digame? Walker
Ah … the Mickey Mouse clause - every time the copyright on Mickey gets close - the ‘fixed term’ gets extended. Copyright is driven by American capitalism ?? - Chris Loft
I’m not a capitalist? - Alex Scoble from IM
Because I don’t believe in unfettered capitalism, doesn’t mean I’m not a capitalist - Alex Scoble from IM
How is that not capitalism? I believe in responsible capitalism. Fettered capitalism is what we have now…more or less. :) - Alex Scoble from IM
Trading in knockoff goods should be analogous to illegal music downloads, meaning that cheap handbag should cost you literally millions, according to the Jammie (Jamie?) Thomas disaster. - Richard ¿digame? Walker
LOL Dave, and this is where we obviously diverge in opinion. Business has been allowed to run so rampant over society in the last 20 years that it’s caused a lot of problems. - Alex Scoble from IM
curious Alex: so the family of an arist should’ve benefit if a work is published posthumously if the work was finished on his deathbead? - Bastard Operator From FF
Yeah, I think if you read my comments, I’d like to have a fixed period of ownership (no longer than 30 years) rather than the system we have now…This would give families in the situation you propose some benefit from the works of a loved one. - Alex Scoble from IM
Sorry Alex missed it scrolling through… we’re in agreement. - Bastard Operator From FF
Patents without an intent to market are even worse - Alex Scoble from IM
What is it Warren Buffet is doing he’s left his kids “Enough money to do whatever they want and not enough that they can do nothing” - Bastard Operator From FF
Yeah, in my mind, corporations living off the teat of the dead is even a bigger problem than the “welfare rich” - Alex Scoble from IM
I feel like if *poof* all copyrights were over after 30years from origination there would be a lot of shitty movies in production in a year or two. Plus, I understand Disney is the devil and whatnot, but if a character (like Tinkerbell maybe) is still popular and stuff involving the character are still being produced, shouldn’t that reinforce the copyright? Going back to Tolkien, LotR could have been made a movie, copyright free, as of 1954. But what about his stuff that wasn’t published until his son formed the notes into full books? The original material came from Tolkien, but the son actually assembled and edited the material into a book. - Heather
Heather if Popularity is a factor in copyright then Shakespeare and Dickens are still under copyright - Bastard Operator From FF
Heather, I think a law against shitty movies would be a great thing. - Steve is older than ever
Hate to break it to you, but there are already a lot of shitty movies getting made. - Alex Scoble from IM
Do we need more? lol - Heather
And one could argue that new works that are derivative of previous works would be protected under new copyright - Alex Scoble from IM
LOL - Alex Scoble from IM
I’m all for peeling away copyright laws. In a totally unregulated world, copyright would not exist. - Victor Ganata
Apparently I thought this thread was dead, while y’alls comments were queuing up. My bad, I don’t mean to talk AT the thread LOL - Richard ¿digame? Walker
Heather, just a bit of background on why Disney deserves derision - Mickey Mouse was ganked, cribbed, stolen, from Steamboat Willie, and much of their huge money makers are derivative of the Brothers Grimm, H.C. Anderson, etc. etc. Song of the South, though, is entirely original I think :) And what others have said about Mickey driving copyright extension is true. So, the fact that none of the artists working at Disney today own the copyright to their work, just highlights how things have changed. Walt is dead, and the mouse is in control. - Richard ¿digame? Walker
Heather, I think you’re mixing trademarks (like the characters of Tinkerbell, Mickey Mouse, etc) with the copyrighted works they appear in. I don’t think anyone is saying Disney should lose their trademarks, but IMO old works very well should have copyright expire. - Andrew C
Heather, 30 years from publication solves your problem nicely. A derivative work can get its own 30 year term, paying as appropriate to the work.it derived from - Richard ¿digame? Walker
By the way Alex, you’ve hit on my preferred solution exactly, with one small addition: rights of “authorship” can’t be transferred meaning Yoko can’t prevent a derivative Lennon work. That is Lennon’s call only. Not inherited. The heirs to “Gone With the Wind” attempted and failed to prevent publication of a re-telling from the slave’s perspective, “The Wind Done Gone”. I know my Lessig :) - Richard ¿digame? Walker
Arleen, you should concede that you missed the point, that inheriting the right to profit from a REASONABLE copyright is not the issue. Lessig has written extensively on why the ridiculous, RETROACTIVE copyright extensions have perverted the intent of copyright, and created a monster, namely effectively perpetual copyright bought and sold by holding companies, trusts, and media conglomerates. And occasionally a Michael Jackson. - Richard ¿digame? Walker
I love this thread! by the way. - Richard ¿digame? Walker
Good for bringing up this important topic Alex. Copyright lasts way too long. Disney and mega corporations ought not hold sole creative license to remix these important works from the past. Copyright should not last past your death. That’s just wrong. - Thomas Hawk
Why is it “just wrong”? There is as much to justify copyright being passed on to estates as chattel or property, Maybe copyright shouldn’t exist at all? - Brian Sullivan
It’s wrong because art needs to be recycled and prohibiting past creative efforts from becoming part of new creative efforts is harmful to art and the creativity that is possible. It puts limits in place that the artist has to deal with unnecessarily. Copyright is put into place as an incentive for people to create art. There is no need to extend that incentive on to the artists’ children, grandchildren or businesses. All copyright should die with the artist. - Thomas Hawk
Copyright law needs a complete overhaul. Or more accurately, to be thrown out and rewritten wholesale. - Jim Hearts FF
well, some sort of right to the proceeds generated by one’s efforts is warranted. If that could be accomplished without a set of laws, fine (I didn’t read this whole thread… maybe something like that was proposed). - Jim Hearts FF
I agree. I also believe that once you are dead, your image (publicity rights) should belong to the ages… in other words, public domain. Amazingly, in Tennessee, publicity rights last forever… literally. - Mitch Featherston
Thomas — your statement offers no argument — just sentiment and bafflegab driven by emotiion. If intellectual property ownership exists at all as a concept there it seems most logical to treat it the same as all other property. Do people need incentive to create art? I think it is one of those have your cake and eat things. Basically you can’t. - Brian Sullivan
Copyright ceases to be meaningful when it is allowed to be sold, assigned or passed to abstract entities - corporations with no accountability and a very long lifespan perspective. There are companies out there that do nothing but milk old pieces of music - they are ought of copyright in normal use, but the rights of use in film etc. are still held and charged at a premium. These companies are specialist at snatching those rights from failed projects, estates, and individuals and milking them. - Joelle Nebbe (iphigenie)
Intellectual property simply isn’t the same as real and tangible property. At least, that’s how the law stands now. - Victor Ganata
That’s how it works now, but there’s a bunch of authors who -more or less respectfully - dissent. This debate is as old as the public domain. - Laurent
Well, wouldn’t someone just kill you to make your copyright expire then?? - Dave Hodson
Making intellectual property equivalent to real and tangible property requires state intervention, requires writing new laws. Copyright and patent rights don’t exist without the government backing it up. This is clearly not laissez-faire. - Victor Ganata
The best solution is still probably a fixed term. Something like 20 years, regardless of whether the content creator is dead or alive. - Victor Ganata
Dave: you should write a book about this :) - Laurent
I have yet to see a convincing argument that copyright or “intellectual property” should exist at all. - Tanath
Sure it does Brian, my statement does offer an argument. I’m arguing that intellectual property should be treated different than tangible physical property. Ideas are just that. And I don’t think that an idea ought to be transferable after someone’s death to the detriment of the rest of society. That the benefit of transferring ideas intergenerationally is less than the benefit of allowing ideas to freely flourish unbridled by ownership for society as a whole. - Thomas Hawk
You seem to support the intergenerational transfer of copyrights Brian. Should copyrights be transferable intergenerationally forever if not why not? - Thomas Hawk
I think we should release this thread into the public domain. Because if you don’t say otherwise, std. “all rights reserved” death+70 copyright term applies. Some legal minds think you can copyright as little as 5 words strung together. Now, does anyone still think copyright today is reasonable or sensible? - Richard ¿digame? Walker
This is the internet, remember? US law doesn’t apply globally. :P And actually, common law copyright was thrown out in the US (see earlier in thread). - Tanath
Tanath, I realize that. But I’m not going to take your word for the second part. That is NOT my understanding of current law. You do not even need the little (c) anymore. - Richard ¿digame? Walker
You don’t need the (c) but you DO need to register a work in order to properly pursue infringement cases. - Mitch Featherston
Common law copyright is the notion that copyrighted works ought to be treated the same as real and tangible property, which the Supreme Court repudiated in Wheaton v Peters in 1834. Common law copyright is also not valid in the UK, from what I understand. - Victor Ganata
Yes Mitch, my point. If we do not release this thread into the public domain, someone can steal it and register it. I’m just pointing out how ridiculously things have been stacked against common sense and the “public domain.” - Richard ¿digame? Walker
Tanath, the thought is that if copyright and patents didn’t exist, no one would ever feel compelled to publish anything. Scientific endeavors would slow down considerably as the flow of information would be hampered, and there’d be no way to get anything peer-reviewed. - Victor Ganata
Victor: How do you justify that claim? - Tanath
Tanath, I can’t prove that it’s true, but that’s the idea behind it. But if there were no protections, I really do think the sharing of research would slow. It would be way too easy to steal someone else’s ideas without crediting the originator, and credit for original research is basically the currency of academia. - Victor Ganata
Simple proof of “prior art” would fix that problem. Not that the copyright & patent system works perfectly for that function either. It was Tesla that invented the radio for instance, and only recently that it was acknowledged in court. - Tanath
Thomas — I don’t support any specific amount of time or number of generations a copyright is to apply. Once the principle of intellectual property is established in law as it is in western countries— it will be subject to variances. Arguing for one length or another then becomes an emotional rather than a factual issue. I am thinking that the abolishing of the principle of intellectual property might be the ultimate solution. - Brian Sullivan
Tanath, it’s true that copyrights and patents won’t really deter anyone who is intent on stealing someone’s idea, but without them, the aggrieved party would have absolutely no ability to attempt to gain redress. - Victor Ganata
Unfortunately, Lessig’s supreme court case about copyright terms Eldred v. Ashcroft failed to impress the justices. http://www.wired.com/wired… I’m not very hopeful any of this can be remedied frankly. - Richard ¿digame? Walker
Here is a good TED video “Larry Lessig on laws that choke creativity” http://www.ted.com/talks… - Richard ¿digame? Walker
Brian, I doubt you’d ever see copyright abolished. I do think that someone ought to be able to exclusively earn money from their idea for a limited amount of time. But I think that a reasonable amount of time has been pushed to excessive lengths by big business copyright protectors like Walt Disney. I spent a summer working in Walt Disney’s corporate legal department which was eye opening. Almost everything I worked on had to do with pursuing copyright infringement or doing research to try and come up with ways to further protect works whose copyright had expired. I think a reasonable amount of time might be 5 years. Extending it beyond one’s life though to me is simply absurd. Particularly at the cost to the rest of society in terms of the barriers towards creativity that it creates. - Thomas Hawk
I highly recommend Matt Mason’s book The Pirate’s Dilemma to almost anyone makes (or wants to make) a living from intellectual property http://thepiratesdilemma.com/ - Richard ¿digame? Walker
Victor: I don’t think “stealing” is the right word. That applies to physical property where something is lost. What’s wrong with letting everyone make use of everyone’s ideas? I’d also recommend looking at The Pirate’s Dilemma and Lessig’s talks. - Tanath
Thomas - I had no idea you spent time in the belly of the beast. That’s complete vindication of my suspicions. Thank you! - Richard ¿digame? Walker
I think one of the funny things about this conversation is the constant usage of Disney as the worlds worst offender here. For those of you who didn’t know the character of Mickey Mouse was created by Ub Iwerks (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki…) and his rights owned by producer Charles Mintz. You could also say that Ub and Walt co-founded the Disney studios back in the day after Mintz fired the Disney animators. Walt had the foresight to buy the rights to his character which at the time was almost never done. If copyright law had not been in place for Walt to purchase the rights to Mickey and maintain him over the years and the rights to the character protected after Walt’s death I have no doubt that the character would be nearly the icon that it is today. - Chris Greene
Yes Chris I mentioned Mickey being ganked in the “background on why Disney deserves derision” - Richard ¿digame? Walker
I just don’t agree with the negative press they get. It’s a two way street. If I create a character while working for Disney I expect them to own the rights to it. It’s the price I pay for a regular paycheck instead of forging out on my own. John Lassiter isn’t complaining that he doesn’t own the rights to the “Brave Little Toaster” after he was fired from Disney for suggesting that they should use 3D tech in the film. This was a guy who was working the jungle cruise ride a few years before. His creative vision and drive took him on to a place eventually where he did get the chance to create unique characters and content. I don’t see him complaining about the new relationshsip between Disney and Pixar. In fact now he get’s his way every time and in my view is making good use of Disney resources and property. - Chris Greene
A lawyer working for a RIAA file sharing defendant recently made news with a radical challenge - “file sharing IS fair use” - Lessig thinks that’s going too far - I’ll follow up later if I find anything. - Richard ¿digame? Walker
Chris - you also are confusing copyright and trademarks. - Andrew C
Chris, I don’t have a problem with “work for hire” - but people should be educated on what’s theirs and what’s the employer’s, and what can be negotiated in the employment contract. - Richard ¿digame? Walker
“Copyright is a form of protection provided by the laws of the United States (title 17, U. S. Code) to the authors of “original works of authorship,” including literary, dramatic, musical, artistic, and certain other intellectual works.”Firstly, copyright is a body of work so Steamboat Willy would be copyright, correct? That lead to the creation of the character and the trademarks that ensue. Disney should own them all which is the point I am making. Ub Iwerks can’t own the rights to Mickey Mouse or Steamboat Willy. Yes I know the Mickey didnt appear first in Steamboat Willy but I can’t remember the name if his first cartoon. - Chris Greene
No, the design of a character and the name is a trademark…that’s a separate issue, however, I find it odd that I have no problems with a company or family being able to protect their trademarks in perpetuity. - Alex Scoble from IM
Richard - I am a working artist and I am very aware of what rights I have to property (intellectual or otherwise) I create under my current contract. If you are not aware of those rights you shouldn’t be working for someone else. - Chris Greene
I’m skipping most of the comments, but tell me if this is right. 30 years after a book is written or movie is made, someone else could redo the work (changed names ect) and it would be legit “recycling” of art? So it’s not really about Mickey Mouse, it’s about the cartoons containing Mickey? - Heather
Chris - yeah, what Alex said. Steamboat Willy the cartoon is copyrighted. Mickey Mouse, the character appearing in that cartoon, is trademarked. - Andrew C
Andrew - That’s what I said, not Alex. Look above. - Chris Greene
Alex, trademarks have to be defended, where copyrights don’t, and trademarks can’t be transferred. So it’s not that odd, really. - Richard ¿digame? Walker
I’m glad to hear that Chris. Good for you. I suppose you have nothing to say to people contemplating such a line of work. They should just “know”, hmm? - Richard ¿digame? Walker
Chris, my point is that copyright has always had a finite period, whereas trademarks can last in perpetuity. So just because the work has passed out of copyright doesn’t mean the trademarks that came out of it have to as well. Also, preserving trademarks doesn’t mean the associated works’ copyright needs to last in perpetuity. And no, I was referring to Alex’s comment that starts “No, the design of a character…” - Andrew C
Well if you;re asking for advice I can put a couple of things out there. First, make sure any original work you create on your own you copyright before you submit to anyone else for distribution marketing etc. As an artists you should know that any work you do while under contract to an employer or as a supplier becomes the property of the employer (or vendor). - Chris Greene
One of the research projects I worked for Disney on (now this goes back almost 20 years ago during college) was to research copyrighted works that had trademarked characters in them. I think copyright at the time might have been 50 or 60 years but trademark was 75 I think. Companies were releasing the oldest mickey mouse films and Disney was trying to argue that even though copyright was up Mickey was still trademarked, thus they could not sell them. Not just Mickey Mouse but lots of other characters. I got to look at a lot of the original copyright agreements between artists and Disney and the paltry sums that Disney paid for some of these copyrights would shock you. I can’t remember exactly but I think Snow White and the 7 Dwarfs for instance was bought for some obscenely low amount of money. Lots of the copyright assignments also included spouses signing off on them and agreeing to give up any rights to their heirs. One of the fun things about the job was that I got to also see Walt Disney’s last will and testament. He left a good chunk of his fortune to start the Arts School CalArts in Valencia. - Thomas Hawk
That’s helpful, Chris. - Richard ¿digame? Walker
Fascinating, Thomas! - Richard ¿digame? Walker
I used to have to send out cease and desist letters also everyday from Disney. They would send them out over the stupidest little things. I remember having to send one out to a guy with a little tree cutting business. A solo practitioner who had put Mickey Mouse on his business card and someone had turned him in. My cease and desist letter would include an acknowledgment form that Disney wanted them to sign and send back. If they didn’t send them back then the paralegal I worked for would get involved and contact them. If that didn’t work then it would escalate to an actual Disney lawyer. - Thomas Hawk
Tanath, yeah, maybe stealing is the wrong word. I’m not trying to equate intellectual property with real, tangible property. I’m not sure what a good turn of phrase would be, though. In an environment where only original work can really guarantee your livelihood (i.e., tenure), I just can’t imagine too many people wanting to freely share their ideas without any protections. The concept of prior art doesn’t really exist without copyright and patent law. - Victor Ganata
That’s very true, Victor - I was able to put some stuff in Creative Commons only because of those protections. I can share “non-commercial” rights and keep the other. - Richard ¿digame? Walker
Well, they vote! - Kreg Steppe
I agree! Apparently they can also be sued by the RIAA. - Logan Lindquist
Responding to a quote wayyy back in this thread (I had to leave for an hour or so, and things really kept rolling!): Tanath said: “Logical Extremes: Public policy is supposed to be about what benefits society, not individuals or companies & corporations.” Actually, that’s not quite true. (I know because I spent many many hours in seminars discussing writings and supreme court rulings on this topic!) Public policy in a democracy, and under our constitutional framework in the U.S., is *supposed* to achieve a fine balance between the ‘public interest’ and that of the ‘private individual’ but there are many protections of the individual to preclude the majority opinion simply running roughshod over everything and everyone they don’t agree with. -more- - Mark Jepsen
-cont.- Libertarians would have you think otherwise, of course, as though any ‘public interest’ is allowed to dominate. There are two flaws with that logic: First, the libertarians equate ‘public interest’ with ‘government control’ when, in fact, they can be diametrically opposed to each other; and second, the ‘public interest’ is often times best represented as a ‘collection of individuals’ rather than a monolithic group. Caveat: Money and political influence (which is usually money at some level) are often employed to skew and distort the delicate “public interest vs. private individual rights” in one direction or another, depending on what suits the “moneyed interests” most at that moment. - Mark Jepsen
Here’s an article that’s relevant: http://techdirt.com/article… “Why Virtual Property Doesn’t Make Sense” - Tanath
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conversation | tagged
copyright,
debate,
law,
legal 