Copyright Alliance Presses Presidential Candidates 291
I Don't Believe in Imaginary Property writes "Not satisfied with the current copyright terms of life plus seventy years and huge financial liabilities for infringement, the Copyright Alliance is pressuring presidential candidates for stronger copyright laws. In particular, they want the candidates to promise to divert police resources to punish even non-commercial copyright infringement. After all, without copyright, what would become of the next Shakespeare, Michaelangelo, or da Vinci?"
Great Works (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Great Works (Score:5, Insightful)
Oh I'm sorry, I'm forgetting about the poor media execs...
Re:Great Works (Score:5, Insightful)
On the one hand we have media execs that demand tougher copyright laws "to protect artists" while having clauses inserted in the same bill to cheat them of their returned rights.
On the other we have a bunch of folk who want to have everything for free and construct elaborate explanations as to how this is great for the artists.
Copyright is a legislative issue. The chance of a Presidential veto of copyright legislation is quite small. The opinions of the candidates are pretty well irrelevant.
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Man, I'm sick of this strawman argument. The only people who want everything free, forevah, are retarded 12-year olds. The rest of us just want to pay a fair price, which basically means premium price for new/popular stuff, and a lot less for everything else. You know, how the market works.
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It is the argument repeated time and again on Slashdot. Evul medja execs, blah, cheat artists, blah, get my movies from bit torrent via the Pirate Bay.
The objective of the Priate Bay is not to make content available a
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But he's not misrepresenting people's views! There are a lot of people out there who are in favour of abolishing copyright. They may not get modded to +5 Insightful very often, but they are there. Some of them are more passive than others, opting to wait and try to steer the market away from copyright. Others are a bit more forward about it, some of whom demand that copyright be abolish
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You might be interested in this site, Project Gutenberg, [gutenberg.org] or perhaps for helping out the cause, it's companion site, Distributed Proofreaders. [pgdp.net]
Short background: Project Gutenberg is a "digital printing press" for all works that have fallen into the public domain
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Well, then Slashdot is dominated by retarded 12 year olds. Because the dominant ethos here is "I want it free, and if you don't give it to me, I'll steal it, and there's nothing you can do about it".
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And before you say: no, allofmp3's prices were not fair prices. Not in the slightest.
And, just like the GP, you brought up a pointless and baseless claim. Nice move dumbass! Now fuck off back to your hole.
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Of course - there is a gray zone where the creator may have died with debts, leavin
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This can apply to all sorts of people.
but in general the value of copyright after death of the creator(s) is rather low.
Especially if encouraging them to create new works is a primary idea behind having copyright.
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OK I have just finished writing a book. If copyright was not transferable I would have had no choice other than to self publish.
OK so you didn't quite mean that I guess, you meant that the author's share is not transferable. But that means that I have no option other than to rely on income from royalties.
Re:Great Works (Score:5, Interesting)
On the other we have a bunch of folk who want to have everything for free and construct elaborate explanations as to how this is great for the artists. "
I'm increasingly of the belief that the morality of file sharing is irrelevant. Right or wrong, I doubt even the government can stop it, as easy as it's become. And we're already at the point where companies' pursuit of profits are inhibiting the good of society, and stopping file sharing (if we are to assume that is even possible) would go much further than that, with a result a lot worse than starving artists and media executives.
Re:Great Works (Score:5, Insightful)
Society is not held together with technical security measures. It is held together by accountability and honesty.
The critical mistake of the RIAA is that they engaged in a whole heap of unethical practices such as the returned rights grab at the same time that they were demanding ethical behavior from others.
The RIAA made it socially acceptable to commit file sharing. People don't see the behavior as criminal, they don't see it as wrong.
This should not suprise people, after all President Thumscrews is doing the same in Iraq, preaching to the world about the benefits of democracy while actively encouraging the use of torture.
Hypocrisy has a corrosive effect on society.
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No, that's not quite true. Naturally, it's easy to get that impression from sites like Slashdot, but in the wider community AFAICT, people do feel guilty about piracy. One person, I kid you not, was actually relieved that a CD was copy protected, so that he wouldn't have to face the decision of a new CD + guilt, or nothing. What the RIAA has done is polarised the debate somewhat
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I disagree. I think most people found it socially acceptable to copy stuff long before this whole debate got started. Ever since it was easy to copy stuff at home people have been doing it. Why do you think so many games back in the 80s used copy prevention measures? Back then there were no anti-file sharing crusades, no headline-making law suits, no fat-cat executives making ea
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It's not great for the artists. It's just too bad for the artists. It's pretty damn good for everybody else.
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It's not great for the artists. It's just too bad for the artists. It's pretty damn good for everybody else.
Because it seems so counterintuitive given some popular (well fed) preconceptions, but the evidence appears to be that it is about neutral for the artists. They lose a little to students, and gain a little from older fans who get to sample their work.
There's an old post of mine [slashdot.org] with some relevant links.
Re:Great Works (Score:5, Insightful)
I am well-acquainted with the anti-copyright and anti-IP community. These are not people who "want to have everything for free", but generally people who put great value on innovation and creativity. We just believe that innovation and creativity are not being served by the current system, which is designed only to enrich people who have neither innovation or creativity. Most of us actually pay more, and put more energy into supporting artists and innovators directly. This is evidence that the corporations who control content see themselves as above the law, and will go to extreme lengths to protect their immoral and tenuous hold on the flow of ideas. They are fighting on several fronts to keep themselves rich and powerful. They want to destroy the currently relatively neutral manner in which information moves on the internet. They are using every technical tool to try to lock-down content so that they keep complete control over it's movement and use. They want to destroy any publicly-funded spread of content such as libraries. They want to destroy and lock-down any uncontrolled use of content such as Internet Radio, Slingox and similar products, or P2P content sharing. And they will go so far as to destroy the Internet as we currently know it in order to achieve their goals. They will not stop until the Internet is nothing more than a metered, monitored and mediocre method of moving money from our pockets to theirs. They will go to any lengths, including subverting the constitution, bribing lawmakers, and using the police powers hitherto meant for public protection in order to save their wealth and power. Because without their pimping of the creativity of others, they have nothing to sell, no assets, and will disappear.
I don't think it's hyperbole to say that the RIAA, their sponsors and others like them are the enemy of anyone that believes in liberty, creativity, and the free flow of information and ideas. If you support artists, creators of media, writers, inventors, innovators, or if you yourself are one of these, they are your enemy too.
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Not everyone just wants stuff for free (although that would be nice). Innovation and art is being stifled in the name of copyright and giving artists and execs more money for no work. It's a broken system when a person can make 1 song and live the rest of their lives without working a single day. I'm sorry, but no song is worth that much wealth, and receiving
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Re:Great Works (Score:5, Insightful)
This is true. However, I think the reason there are more artists is purely because there is more money. Not because the human race is suddenly more artistic. I'm sure if the money disappeared then so would the 'me-toos' that drown out the good works. The true artists would remain because they've always been there regardless of money.
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Re:Great Works (Score:5, Funny)
I'm no fan of copyright as it exists today, but just because I don't believe entertainers should necessarily be fabulously wealthy doesn't mean I want them to die broke and penniless, and that did happen a lot more prior to copyright.
That said, the idea of diverting further police resources to prosecute people who listen to music they're not supposed to listen to is terrifying. Yikes! If I didn't already live in Canada, I'd move to Canada.
Re:Great Works (Score:5, Insightful)
Many people died paupers, not just artisans and inventors. Even today, most musicians, authors, poets and inventors die without making much money from their art, while most other folks have a bit more income.
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We shouldn't be duped into thinking this corporativism is helpful at all for the artists. Frankly, I don't think any legislation - even well intentioned legislation - will ever help artist. What will help them is open distribution channels where they can retain control inste
Re:Great Works (Score:5, Insightful)
Sir Isaac Newton wrote, "If I have seen farther than others it is because I have stood on the shoulders of giants".
So did Shakespeare, Michaelangelo, da Vinchi, Bocaccio, Chocer and everyone else.
If copyright was enforced at that time they would have been in jail.
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Re:Great Works (Score:5, Informative)
Sorry, the OP is right. The quote is not from Einstein. It is from a letter of Sir Isaac Newton to Robert Hooke dated 5 February 1675 (corresponding to 15 February 1676 in our calendar).
typo (Score:2)
That should be "15 February 1675".
Re:Great Works (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Great Works in the case of Newton (Score:2)
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And that is the very least of his great achievements.
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I was arguing that the laws have a positive effect on innovation. Even if I am right, it is not surprising that corporations or advocacy organizations would emerge to demand these laws.
So what you have to explain is why, in spite of the correlation, these laws have no effect on innovation. I would argue that there is no explanation simpler than causa
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Which causes which ? Do draconian copyright laws cause more innovation, or does an innovative society tend to enforce draconian copyright laws ?
Don't forget that innovation is bad for large and powerful corporations. They have nothing to gain from market disruptions caused by it, and everything to lose. It could easily be, then, tha
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No, you don't seem to. Big corporations hate innovation. They fund university research to stay competitive against other big corpor
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You appear to be saying that correlation is irrelevant. Example: Putting my hand on the stove is correlated with burns on my hand. Since correlation doe
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Technically, yes, but since the various AA's decided that Shakespeare et al live on through their work, they granted a de facto copyright for 75 years since one of his plays was last read or performed (effectively a derivative work). They're also campaigning to get RIAA maths adopted across the scientific community, to the extent that one copyright year is equivalent to 830 terran years.
insightfull?? We're moderating ironically now? (Score:5, Funny)
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Damn! too late (Score:5, Insightful)
Slashdot can be depressingly predictable at times.
Without copyright... (Score:5, Insightful)
Widely imitated styles that will help usher in a new Renaissance of learning, arts and science?
Much weaker copyright (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Much weaker copyright (Score:5, Interesting)
And I'm blatantly violating copyright laws all the time with my BT tracker, but am I bothered? Do I look bothered? I don't see anything wrong with "blatantly ignoring" a law I don't believe is right. We need so many people to "blatantly ignore" it that they have no choice but to concede (like that'll ever happen).
-uso.
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Answers to nurembergtrials@thepast.com
ZOMG Lobbying! (Score:5, Funny)
Copyright Alliance Presses Presidential Candidates
OMG! Special interest groups are pushing their agenda by pressuring politicians! We've never seen that before! But what will become of us!?!
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In case you're not aware Obama is the one candidate who's the most anti-special interest groups of all, by far.
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Problem is that you'll never get a straight answer from most of the candidates on this issue. And if you do can you trust them once they're elected?
Best bet is look at their records and see who's already been bought.
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So you point is ... we should all just stick our heads in the sand because it happens all the time and we should just blissfully ignore it?
Maybe, if people are made aware of specific instances of "special interest groups" lobbying for laws that benefit them to the detriment of everybody else, some of them will pick up a pen and write to their representatives to express their opposition?
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Your rights and liberties will slowly but surely be devolved to the point where you are just another piece of corporate property.
Oh shut up you bloody communist hippie. Lobbies have been holding Washington DC by the nuts for almost 50 years, sure that lead to a bunch of ugly stuff but don't get me started with that whole "OMG corporations are evil they're coming for your soul!!!" type shit.
Getting you money after you die... (Score:5, Insightful)
Copyright is supposed to exist to promote creating stuff, so you can profit of what you created. "As long as you live" should be long enough for anybody.
I certainly will not be creating anything and thinking: "And when I die, my grandson will still be getting money for this!"
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Alas, you'd likely have a lot of content producers dying young if the law worked this way -- this is why they adopted "life plus" -- so that nobody could immediately benefit from the copyright owner's death.
Personally, I think that a fixed term (35 years tops?) makes much more sense.
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Time to Pull Out Your Glad-Hand (Score:5, Insightful)
Candidates don't just need money (that's good too). They also need volunteers, and -- if they see people lobbying for volunteers to support pro-consumer candidates, they'll react to that.
This is where "Vote Early, Vote Often" actually applies.
Shakespear would not have happened (Score:5, Informative)
Methinks they need to read the Constitution (Score:5, Insightful)
United States Constitution, Article 1: "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;"
So I guess the correct response would be to enact legislation:
I think that about covers it. Any more that I missed?
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They are good ones, especially the first, but you might want to look at these:
http://zotzbro.blogspot.com/2007/04/some-thoughts-on-copyright-offensive.html [blogspot.com]
all the best,
drew
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For original works, copyright should be automatic and free of charge for the first 14 to 28 years. After that period, a tax of 5 to 10% of the gross recepits will be imposed.
For works derived from the public domain, the works would be considered public domain unless the creator can show the same amount of original work that would qualify for a copyright on a work derived from copyrighted material and copyright tax would apply immedia
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This is a major problem from a subtle angle...
It means that everything you come across is suspect. It may be in the public domain and available for your use, but you have no way of knowing this.
So. Automatic copyleft unless you put on a copyright notice at a minimum. Then at least anything you find with no copyright notice is safe to
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I like what you said, except your point #2 is based on a misreading. The "useful Arts" back in those days referred explicitly to craftsmanship and engineering--what we would expect patent law to cover today. It's the "writings" and "authors" wording that leads to our conception of art (in the modern sense) copyright.
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Prohibiting "work for hire" contracts, to ensure that the exclusive rights are secured for the author. According to the Holy Constitution, all authors should be freelance, not toiling on Massa Mickey's content plantation.
Well, why shouldn't property rights be transferable? And anything which allows one to charge others for its use is (at least partially) a property right. "Partially" because it may have other aspects (such as zero reproduction cost).
Setting up a body to make subjective value judgements about whether an artwork is "useful" or not, as the Constitution mandates, with an assumption that it is not (otherwise why would the Unquestionable Constitution specify "useful" at all?).
That's not necessary. It is "useful" if it is used. And if it's never used, the issue of ownership will never come up.
Repeal the Mickey Mouse Protection Act and "limit" the duration of copyright in order to promote "progress", rather than eternal milking of the same work.
This is very much true. The market place establishes fair price for the value provided by the asset. But the actual value, in the case of copyrighted w
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Penn and Teller need to do a show about this (Score:5, Informative)
I know someone who is older, around 60, whose father wrote music for movies and TV shows between the 1930s-1950s. He still gets a very handsome check each month for every time one of those shows or movies are broadcasted. The son lived his entire without working, just resting on the fruits of his father's labor. No new music is being produced nor does it encourage anyone to make any.
So I am left asking, what is this BS? This would encourage less productivity, not more.
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1. Copyright wasn't a social contract that benefited both sides by participating in it - society whereby content eventually enters public domain and producers of product. By enforcing Copyright, there is a cost to society that was deemed outweighed by the benefits of offering temporary monopoly to content producers (thinking that the temporary monopoly would lead to more time/money investments in these offerings).
Normal Common Law Contract law usually stipulates that there
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"[The perfect amount of money to leave children is] enough money so that they would feel they could do anything, but not so much that they could do nothing."
Write your own questionaires (Score:2)
Then, of course, blog about the results you get.
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all the best,
drew
How about FAIR copyright and FAIR use? (Score:4, Insightful)
I Don't Believe in Imaginary Property writes (Score:2)
Part of my inaugural speech ... (Score:5, Interesting)
"Today, I am calling on Congress to fulfill their Constitutional duty to 'secure for a limited time' copyrights and patents. And limited time means limited time. It doesn't mean extending copyright every time Mickey Mouse might be due to enter the public domain. It doesn't mean sitting on patents for things that you didn't invent until someone else figures out how to make money off it, and then suing them out of the blue. When the Constitution was signed, it meant twenty years. If twenty years was good enough for James Madison, it's good enough for me. So I urge Congress to send me a bill restoring the terms of intellectual property law to their original forms, and making it clear that it's a civil matter, not a job for the FBI, because you know, Osama bin Laden is still out there and frankly I think the FBI has more important things to do."
"Thank you, good night, and God bless America."
But that's probably not the answer CA is looking for.
Unfortunately funny... (Score:2)
Don't forget to eliminate digital restrictions. (Score:2)
Copyright law means nothing as long as the big content digital restrictions conspiracy is allowed and protected by law. Technical restrictions prevent works from ever entering the public domain. The DMCA keeps people from distributing software that undoes these restrictions and so protects big content's illegal extension of copyright law. Big content's agreement itself is a form of racketeering that restricts competition by deciding who's content can be played. Restrictions should be outlawed and law en
Writer's strike (Score:4, Insightful)
"The future of our creative output in the United States is at stake in the 2008 presidential election," the letter to the candidates says. "It is critical not only for members of the creative community but also for the US economy to ensure that copyrights are respected and piracy is reduced. We are asking you to let us know what you would do to help preserve one of America's greatest strengths, its creative community."
My, how 'uncharacteristically' hypocritical of them.
Cost vs Benefit? (Score:2)
The only people who would benefit by such an extension are investors holding portfoli
Overheard from a cop to a concerned citizen... (Score:2)
So let's create our own content (Score:2)
This hasn't caught on in the artistic world yet, I guess primarily because art doesn't scale in the same way when the community works on it as a whole (in fact, that may tend to make it much worse...)
Some other possible factors:
1. The only people who are capable of producing high quality art may be primarily interested in using it a
Obligatory (Score:2)
The issue (Score:4, Interesting)
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As I see it, much of the best work in history has been ripped off from someone else. I can see the argument for copyright, but keep in mind that many of the best artists in history predate copyright. So we have a old counterexample to the claim that ending copyright will destroy artistic creation.
Second, you seem to be complaining that copyright is weak and then only cite examples where copyright isn't supported? There's always going to be some place where they will copy your stuff for cheap. Is the point
On of these things is not like the other (Score:2)
This argument tires me deeply.
You are talking about artists who had immensely powerful patrons.
No one sane crosses an Elizabeth or a Medici Pope.
You are talking about artists that could put others in total eclipse with a single line or a stroke of the brush. Shakespeare doesn't need to go to law.
What you do not see before copyright is the professional artist of lower or middle class origins who is will
Fixed that (Score:4, Insightful)
There, fixed that for ya. What is that, like the new RIAA & MPAA? All I know is if I were an artist that distributed copyrighted works, and I am, I wouldn't really see it necessary to make money off my works after I'm dead. I wouldn't really want to profit off my work more than it's worth either, that's for consumers to decide. I'm a productive member of society and I don't need to leech off of everyone to stay alive, I'm perfectly capable.
Oh, ok, I see that [wikipedia.org] The Copyright Alliance is a lobbying organization formed on May 17, 2007 by 29 companies and organizations including groups that represent songwriters, recording artists, film makers, authors, photographers and sports leagues (see members below). The group is led by Patrick Ross, who recently left the Progress and Freedom Foundation [The Progress & Freedom Foundation is a U.S. market-oriented think tank based in Washington, D.C. that studies the digital revolution and its implications for public policy.]
With such members such as RIAA, MPAA, NBC [slashdot.org], Major League Baseball [slashdot.org], Disney [slashdot.org], Viacom, Time Warner, NFL, so basically everyone who is a conduit for someone else's talent.
The ideal CA presidential speech (satire) (Score:2)
here is a partial excerpt from:
"Microslaw satire"
http://slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=33107&cid=3582999 [slashdot.org]
My fellow Americans. There has been some recent talk of free law by
the General Public Lawyers (the GPL) who we all know hold un-American
views. I speak to you today from the Oval Office in the White House to
assure you how much better off you are now that all law is proprietary.
The value of proprietary la
Stronger copyright laws create more piracy (Score:3, Insightful)
The other problem is that culture loses out when copryright still applies to works that the owner refuse to distribute due to 'economic reasons', but fail to allow the public domain to take over.
With the strength of these fascist copyright holders, we need a fair use lobby with equally strong support. The sad thing is that when so many people fail to realise what they are losing, such counter-lobbies are unlikely to get much support or funding.
Ron Paul won't bend to this nonsense! (Score:4, Informative)
He doesn't take money from lobbyists or large corporations. Over 99.999% of Dr. Ron Paul's donations are from individuals, not PACs or corporations. Lobbyists don't even bother to talk to him in Congress because he is known as "Dr. No".
Contrast this to Fred Thompson who was a lobbyist for years.
If you vote, consider voting for someone who is principled and honest.
Copyright is too strong already. (Score:3, Insightful)
Now, the Consitution states that Congress may grant exclusive rights for a limited amount of time to their creators...they key word here is LIMITED. You don't have to be the sharpest tool in the shed to realize that most music, including the music of your youth, will not enter the public domain in your lifetime , so how does that give people an incentive to participate in the "bargain" of copyright? It is a bargain in the same way that the mob shakes down people for protection money, using their position of strength to muscle the average citizen or the honest business owner into paying them.
The last thing we need is another extension of copyright. The founders did not mean "infinity minus one day" (as suggested by former MAFIAA chairperson Jack Valenti) when they said limited. Enough is enough or would be if the MAFIAA wasn't so damn greedy.
Shoot whoever let this "journalism" through... (Score:3, Informative)
The first four paragraphs are fine. They state the facts, raise questions (which is always healthy), and everything is backed up. And then it descends into ranting and fear mongering.
"It is ironic that the content industry invokes the Constitution to support their position."
No, it isn't. In the face of acts by the FBI and the government that plainly are unconstitutional, this is a laughable statement. The intention of the American founding fathers, as has been mentioned many, MANY times, was to promote science, research, and art by providing some protection for the creators. The American Constitution, however, was built so that it could be amended, as the founding fathers were also smart enough to realize that things change over time. To call upon their intentions is hardly ironic, particularly since those same founding fathers passed the first legal extension to copyright law before the 18th century ended - so the history says that the founding fathers were flexible.
"Recent changes to copyright law influenced by the content industry--most notably the egregious Digital Millennium Copyright Act and the Sonny Bono Copyright Term Extension Act--have undermined the balance by restricting fair use and expanding the length of copyright protection to preposterous durations."
This is where the editorializing starts to get even less subtle, and the factual content pretty much disappears. The word "egregious" is a value judgment completely out of place in a news story, as is the statement that copyright protection has been extended to "preposterous durations." Lifetime plus seventy years is the author's lifetime, plus that of his/her children and grandchildren - in short, the people who knew him/her in life. It is far from unlimited. And just because some corporations have tried to abuse copyright law, that doesn't mean that fair use has disappeared - it hasn't. There is a great distinction between the content of a law and the abuse of that law.
"The steady expansion of copyright law poses a grave risk to creativity and innovation because it threatens to further erode the public domain. Artistic creation will suffer gravely when the cultural heritage of America can be chained down and held ransom."
This is a statement better suited for an op-ed, not the news section. Aside from which, history has already proven it wrong. The writer has conveniently forgotten that the United States has tended to lag decades, and sometimes generations, behind the rest of the world on copyright law. If expansion of copyright law to meet the European standard of length is so terrible, how is it that Europe and Canada, which have been functioning under those terms now for decades, have remained vibrant in their cultures, rather than becoming a literary and artistic wasteland?
"When the public domain shrinks, the potential for modern adaptation of classic works is severely constrained. In the future, innovative companies that want to bring older content into new mediums will be deterred by excessive and unjustifiable licensing costs as a result of copyright expansion."
Another unfounded statement. The public domain is NOT shrinking. In fact, the Sonny Bono act specifically stated that work that had already entered the public domain could not be brought out of it from the copyright extension. The Sonny Bono act also mandated that private letters and correspondences from public figures that had been kept out of the public domain due to lack of publication ("common copyright") would now enter the public domain, vastly INCREASING it.
Aside from which, a cursory knowledge of copyright law leads you to understand that you CANNOT copyright an idea. You can only copyright the exact implementat
Hover by sheer willpower. (Score:3, Insightful)
Arguing about the morality of copyright violations on the internet is a bit like arguing about the morality of gravity after you fall out of an airplane.
You can't sit there and arguable about inevitable thing being 'good' or 'bad'. They just are. Digital data is instantly and infinitely copyable. It's not an argument, it's not a debate, there are no pros and cons to list and weighty questions to decide on, carefully balancing the rights of each side. Copyright with no barrier except legal to copying is meaningless. Poof, copyright just vanishes into thin air.
So we have fallen out of the plane. We could, perhaps, use some sort of parachute to land slowly, or we could plummet to our death, but the plane ride is over and we are, indeed, going to end up on the ground.
Notice I am, in no way, arguing this is a good thing, so don't respond with 'You're an amoral bastard who wants to steal everything from people'. We Are Outside the Plane and Falling. That is just how it is. It is not a choice. It was an unforeseen, inevitable result of the internet.
And this may, indeed, be something entirely horrible that will destroy all artistic creativity forever, leaving us with nothing, or, worse, reality TV. I hope not. But the result of being outside the airplane and falling is not my fault, and I did not say I approved of what will happen, but, nevertheless, we are still there and still falling.
Almost all discussion that goes on here about copyright is missing this one vital fact, and is instead arguing about the in-flight meal and how we're going to build our own meals instead of eating that crap. Come on, people, pay attention, we're supposed to be smart. Did you not feel the cabin depressurized when we collided with Napster?
This is why I didn't really mind DRM. It was attempting to grab hold of the plane after we fell out, with a makeshift grappling hook build out of shoes. Not a really viable option, and obviously didn't work, but you have to give props that someone in the corporate world realized: We just fell out of the fucking airplane. Oh shit oh shit oh shit. Do something!
This article, OTOH, is talking about an attempt to legislate us back into the airplane. It's somewhat sad.
There's an important priciple here. (Score:5, Interesting)
Way to try to justify your illegal activity, slashfags.
Not that you care about either, AC, but laws should follow morals, not the other way around. Copyright laws are the result of corruption and following them is often immoral. They prevent the free flow of information more important than pop songs anyone can hear on the radio anyway. If the US is still a functional democracy, these initiatives will be defeated and bad laws like the DMCA will be rolled back. As is usually the case, private privilege has led to vast public harm.
Copyright laws have gotten so bad that scientific and medical journals are restricted and hard to find. This is both against the author's intentions and a sever blow to the whole purpose of copyright law. Authors who publish seek the widest possible audience. They want anyone who's interested to have ready access to their findings and that's what publishing is supposed to be about. The purpose of US copyright and patent law expressed in the US Constitution 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." [wikipedia.org] Any law that goes against that purpose requires a constitutional amendment. Again [slashdot.org] and again [slashdot.org], prominent scientists [slashdot.org] and artist [salon.com] have stepped forward to complain.
Wait, wait wait (Score:3, Funny)
"OMG no ur wrong fag.Lol."