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Re: Copywrite laws are they to vague?
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Also, it's not just congress - before anything becomes law, the senate must also pass any such thing, and the president must abstain from vetoing it - Further, the Supreme Court is the body that rules on wether a law is unconstitutional or not, and are the offical interperters of law, and they haven't been keeping quite as close to the original constitution as I might like. [ June 19, 2003, 00:15: Message edited by: Jack Simth ] |
Re: Copywrite laws are they to vague?
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[ June 18, 2003, 22:16: Message edited by: Atrocities ] |
Re: Copywrite laws are they to vague?
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[ June 18, 2003, 22:18: Message edited by: Jack Simth ] |
Re: Copywrite laws are they to vague?
Geckomlis - I edited my response to your post in response to you editing your post.
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Re: Copywrite laws are they to vague?
<font size="2" face="Verdana, Helvetica, sans-serif">Originally posted by Jack Simth:
It used to be that patents expired after 20 years and copyrights after 75 - but I have heard that has changed recently. As for unconstitutional: The constitution actually makes specific allowance for copyrights and patents: <font size="2" face="Verdana, Helvetica, sans-serif">So does it mean that batman and superman are already public domain? the whole issue was about just making skins, but I would think if it is common knowledge like that it would be ok, and most sites that I know of really are for non profit |
Re: Copywrite laws are they to vague?
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I agree that it is not just Congress (which includes the House and the Senate) making copyright eternal. My post was meant to be informative rather than argumentative. My opinion is simply that the balance has swung towards author’s rights in the United States. I have no opinion as to whether this is good or evil. Gecko |
Re: Copywrite laws are they to vague?
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Mhmm. But in the case of fan art, the corporations waving legal threats are not little businesses, and the fan art is not competing with the corporations' business in any signifigant way. Fan art is in fact a promotion, celebration, and endorsement of the product. Moreover, private citizens should have the right to mention and produce non-commercial images or even duplicates of commercial media. If they can't, then you're very close to prohibiting things like parody or even discussion of corporate media. With even small children participating in discussions by means such as web pages etc., digital images have become a very common form of expression. Trying to make it illegal for the sake of paranoid corporations' intellectual property-mongering is preposterous and well, evil. Quote:
That's a very different kind of thing from fan art. For one thing, you're talking about a patent of an algorythm. In many cases, the patent office grants patents for ideas which are something anyone can thing of by considering the problem, so that whole institution is in need of complete reworking. For another, you're talking about a megacorporation as the perp, not a private citizen. Megacorps will of course succeed in perpetuating their ownership of anything they can get their hands on, for as long as they can get away with it. I wonder how long it will take for another system to replace it. Clearly it's awfully inefficient to have us designing hardware and software and lawsuits all for the purpose of limiting everyone's access to media, when the technology to freely share all of it is already in place. There needs to be another system developed for rewarding content creators, which allows creative people to earn a living while still making their content available for free distribution. PvK |
Re: Copywrite laws are they to vague?
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That is the very sort of thing copyright law is supposed to address. While I do disagree with the indefinite extension of copyright, I also cannot agree with "no profit, no foul" fallacies. That is not a matter of a power grab (the letter from Marvel, below) ... it's a matter of law: if marvel DOESN'T actively and aggressively protect it's trademarks and associated intellectual property, they lose them. Marvel exists to profit form selling stories and other products based on that intellectual property. Take the recent X-Men films; if copies and derivations (etc) could be made and distributed for free and without penalty by persons OTHER than those who made the films and/or own rights to the intellectual properties with which the films were told, then, the films would never have been made. MOST films owuldn't get made, nor would most books be published. It's a business, and it's about profit. Just like the inventor of a new machine should profit from his or her creation, the creator of a new piece of intellectual property should be able to do likewise. Put it in perspective WRT SE4: if anyone were allowed to hand out copies of SE4, without Aaron seeing a penny, and with him unable to seek any sort of legal intervention ... ... then SE would probably never have happened, let alone be onthe FOURTH Version. The man has to put food on his table, after all. |
Re: Copywrite laws are they to vague?
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Re: Copywrite laws are they to vague?
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[ June 19, 2003, 00:19: Message edited by: Jack Simth ] |
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