andrewducker: (Default)
andrewducker ([personal profile] andrewducker) wrote2003-06-11 08:55 pm

Copyright

Go here, open the Flash version. Boggle at the state of the Public Domain.

No time to explain my feelings right now, but goddamit there ought to be a 20 year limit on all copyright.

[identity profile] allorin.livejournal.com 2003-06-12 02:54 am (UTC)(link)
I've seen them, and don't agree with them.

The examples you use are all Shakespeare. And, perhaps, were all reasonably successful. I can give you plenty of examples that weren't.

Again, I ask - what if it was "Sandman". Would you agree to anyone being able to pilfer, change, and generally abuse that material?

[identity profile] allorin.livejournal.com 2003-06-12 04:50 am (UTC)(link)
That strikes me as a little selfish - what about Neil Gaiman? Yeah, you can avoid the bad and stick to the good, but he has to put up with seeing all sorts of cack writers dilute and pollute his work. Do you think he wants that, or enjoys it? Does his reputation become tarnished by association with it? Does his enthusiasm for his own work diminish, as he loses faith in how it will be adapted (wasted) by others?

Is this not, in fact, one of the main reasons Alan Moore had for falling out with Marvel?

[identity profile] allorin.livejournal.com 2003-06-12 07:51 am (UTC)(link)
I'd still argue (taking Watterson as an example), that if creators work under the impression that their IP will eventually be subverted, that you will in essence stifle creativity. Would Watterson have been as willing to create Calvin & Hobbes if he knew the trouble that was in store for him?

By your argument, you're effectively telling any creator that they either keep their creation to themselves, or deal with it being used by anyone for anything. I can't see that encouraging creativity, I just can't. To me, the real greed is with people that can't accept IPs as they are given to them, and must duplicate them or otherwise use them for their own purposes. To me, that is greed. If someone writes a good book, or paints a picture, or records a song, or whatever, let THEM decide how they want their creation to be used. Why should they have to put up with something they created being used for something it wasn't intended?

Let's continue with C&H. A hugely popular IP. Heron raises the spectre of Disney below. Say Disney had been able to use C&H however they wanted.... what would have happened then? Yeah, they want to hold onto Mickey, but Copyright laws work both ways, and stop huge corporations from using any IP they want.

Let's take a more personal POV. My dad loves music. It's his life. So, say he dies, and I write him a song. I record it, it's published, charts and all proceeds go to research into whatever killed him. The song then turns up as a soundtrack to a porn movie. Is that right? Forget your ultra-liberal leanings, and think about that question - Is That Right? Or do morals not come into anything any more?

Exposing the Happy Birthday story:

(Anonymous) 2003-07-15 02:33 pm (UTC)(link)
http://www.kuro5hin.org/story/2003/7/5/112441/6280