2004-07-23, 16:30 | Link #1 |
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Philosophocal debate concerning copyrights
This is not intended to complain about how we should get free anime, because, although it would be nice, people deserve compensation for their product.
The reason I am bringing this up, is because I just thought about an episode of The Simpsons, where Homer was trying to become an inventor... In the end, after trying to destroy Isaac Newton's chair at the museum, and leaving his (rather horrid design, mind you) electric hammer, the heirs to Newton's estate got 'richer'... My question is, should an individual or group of individuals continue to hold copyrights and make money from something done so long ago? Should everything become public domain after a period of time? |
2004-07-23, 17:59 | Link #2 | |
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2004-07-23, 18:08 | Link #3 |
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Join Date: Dec 2003
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Who cares if you inheritted it. It is still listed as yours. You are now the owner.
And copywrights are a little different than owning some property. Btw: it was Edison in the simpson's episode and it wasn't all that long ago that he lived... |
2004-07-23, 19:12 | Link #4 |
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Ok then, let me give a better example... some PC games are so old now, that the developpers(sp?) have essentially abandoned it.. aka abandon-ware... can't think of any examples for the moment, but the point is, some companies will refuse, no matter how you persuade them, to let hardcore fans who still like the game tweak with the source code to make it harder to cheat (such is the case in multiplayer games) or just better in some way.
I just feel that some companies are improperly hoarding something which should be made public. |
2004-07-24, 10:58 | Link #6 |
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I'm not aware of any law in the world under which copyrights don't expire after a period of time. Indeed, the notion that everything will eventually and unavoidably become part of the public domain is part of the fundamental philosophical underpinning of the notion of copyrights. The recent push to rewrite this notion (along with the likes of the DMCA, EUCD etc.) is a significant part in one of the great challenges we face in this century, the threat posed to democracy by corporatism. (A state that can very easily decend into fascism).
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2004-07-24, 12:05 | Link #7 | ||
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They might also want to resurrect the project at a later date - in a new form, sequel, or such perhaps - and fear dilution or one taking sales away from the other. There's also this for the U.S.: Quote:
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2004-07-24, 12:12 | Link #8 | |
nothing 2 do with calvin!
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2004-07-24, 13:12 | Link #9 | |
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2004-07-24, 13:21 | Link #10 | |
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Sure, your family should have the right to say "My uncle made this", even after you die, and prevent anybody from claiming otherwise, but they shouldn't retain the sole right to make money from it... everybody should be able to benefit from it. I guess my argument really only applies to programming and computer technology. |
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2004-07-24, 13:55 | Link #11 |
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Like Lambda said, copyrights expire after a certain amount of time If, lets say, after 10 years the inventor hasn't "improved" on his piece then he has lost his copyright priviliges. But I doubt the piece will be available to the public (copyrightless). It will probably be state owned or until someone buys it.
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2004-07-24, 21:06 | Link #13 | |
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2004-07-24, 23:51 | Link #14 | |
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They enter the public domain afterwards. For the implementation of software, the length of time is a bit high. Technology would have progressed beyond that long before then, but since you can't copyright an idea alone and must attach an actual piece of work, it's a reasonable solution, IMHO.
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2004-07-25, 00:25 | Link #15 |
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i remember hearing disneys mickey mouse was supposed to be public domain about now but disney being the big company they are wont allow it Poor steam boat willy Well anyhow alot of good things are already public domain like romeo and juliet , older books and other things we all enjoy I think true art will find its way to into peoples hands for those who want it somehow
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2004-07-25, 00:55 | Link #16 | |
鶏肉がとてもおいしい。
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It may seem that they last a lot shorter, but that's becuase they are often not marketed for a long time after the patent is taken out. Anyway, I agree on the whole software thing. It's pretty lame that a piece of software sits around unused under copywrite. However, at the same time, engineering a system by which protection expires would be a mess. Not only that, but you'd have people killing each other off to make their patent/copyrights expire! |
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