Slashdot Mirror


Public Domain Act Introduced Into Congress

AnElder writes "In his blog yesterday Lawrence Lessig said '...Congresswoman Lofgren (D-CA) and Congressman Doolittle (R-CA) have agreed to introduce the Public Domain Enhancement Act into Congress.' Today the Eldred Act website features two press releases announcing the act's introduction, as well as its immediate support by '...the American Association of Law Libraries, the American Library Association, and the Association of Research Libraries...'" We ran a link to the petition supporting this Act a few weeks back.

11 of 299 comments (clear)

  1. Re:One problem I have with it. by GenSolo · · Score: 4, Informative

    According to the page about the act (see old /. article... RTFA?), it can only be renewed every 5 years until the end of the copyright term. Therefore, when the term would normally have expired, it would expire. People just have to pay extra for it this way.

  2. Re:One problem I have with it. by loucura! · · Score: 5, Informative

    They aren't renewing the copyright, because Copyright in the US is Creator's life + 70 years, or in the case of Corporations 80 years, or something like that. This is merely a provision which allows a work to fall into the public domain after 50 years from the copyright date, unless the work is commercially viable, in which case, the copyright holder pays a small fee to keep the rights until the copyright term is completed.

    --
    Black and grey are both shades of white.
  3. Re:Ugh by jonman_d · · Score: 4, Informative

    Please RTFA.

    From The Eric Eldred Act FAQ:

    2. How would it work?

    Fifty years after a copyrighted work was published, a copyright owner would have to pay a tiny tax. That tax could be as low as $1. If the copyright owner does not pay that tax for three years in a row, then the copyright would be forfeited to the public domain. If the tax is paid, then the form would require the listing of a copyright agent--a person charged with receiving requests about that copyright. The Copyright Office would then make the listing of taxes paid, and copyright agents, available free of charge on their website.

    They're not expanding the term of copyright. They're shortening it, in most cases, and making you pay a small fee to hold it for more than 50 years, in all others.

  4. Berne Treaty? by loucura! · · Score: 4, Informative

    They say in the FAQ that this doesn't violate the Berne Treaty, because it isn't formally a "formality" nor a "registration", but you have to file a registration document and pay a fee to the US Copyright Register, which appears at least to this (NAL), that it is a formality and a register and in violation of the Berne Treaty.

    --
    Black and grey are both shades of white.
    1. Re:Berne Treaty? by imadork · · Score: 4, Informative
      they also say this in the same FAQ:
      It is possible that those charged with enforcing Berne would take a different view. They might see this tax as a simple way around the "formality" requirement. But as John Mark Ockerbloom nicely points out, Berne only imposes its requirements for the minimum term. If there is a formality problem with structuring this as a tax, then the proposal could be structured to apply only beyond Berne's minimum term.
      Which is exactly what they do in the bill by saying that you have no requirement to register until after 50 years, which is the minimum Berne term.
  5. We need a few congressmen in our pocket by caitsith01 · · Score: 4, Informative

    Given that the record and film industry appears to have invested heavily in buying some congressmen, perhaps its time for the open source/public domain movements to do the same. All the good will in the world wont lead to actual passing of legislation when Time Warner/Sony/EMI/Bertlemann/Conglomokorp actually owns people on Capitol hill... we have a petition, but they have votes in Congress.

    I don't see why the EFF and similar groups can't 'invest' in a few reelection campaigns. The business model is established by numerous corporations and special interest groups - all it would take are funds. In fact the same applies to all progressive social and political groups... how come the bad guys are smart enough to heavily influence politics with their money but the good guys aren't?

    --
    Read Pynchon.
  6. It's about 50 years in the past, not the future by Googol · · Score: 4, Informative

    The idea is to end the regime of "perpetual copyright" by ensuring at least some works, which should by rights already be in the PD, get there. Right now, none do.

    This is about 50 years in the past, not 50 years in the future.

    =googol=

    IP Law in two easy lessons

    Theft by value: I take something that is yours.
    Theft by reference: you think of something; I think of the same thing.

  7. Re:One problem I have with it. by loucura! · · Score: 4, Informative

    Copyright is currently Life of Creator + 70 years. This amends current copyright law, such that the copyright can fall into the public domain after 50 years have passed since first publication (or 2004 whichever is later). This greatly benefits us because it enriches public domain.

    Therefore, your assertion that this law does nothing, is incorrect.

    (I was going to say something about your (apparent)inability to read, but I decided against it because I'm a nice person.)

    --
    Black and grey are both shades of white.
  8. Min. copyright term is 50 years (Berne Convention) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Informative

    The U.S. can't nullify a copyright before 50 years without violating the Berne Convention, which requires at least 50 years of copyright protection without registration.

  9. Re:Will it get through?? by GlassHeart · · Score: 4, Informative
    Does this bill have any chance of getting through the two houses of Congress?

    There are three important factors here:

    • Disney doesn't really care if it passes. They can easily afford the registration fee and procedure to protect their copyrighted works.
    • Disney would look really stupid if it opposed even this bill. At the time of the Sonny Bono Act, Disney was "protecting its investment" from lapsing into the public domain, so the question was "how long should copyright really be?" Today, the question is "should copyright last over fifty years with no obligation from the creator to even register?"
    • Disney can use the works that do lapse into the public domain in its own products, without having to pay royalties.
    If Disney realizes the opportunity to create some good PR for itself (for little or no cost!), then maybe it'll have a chance.
  10. Re:What about home security cameras? by twifkak · · Score: 4, Informative

    Berne Treaty limit is life of the author plus 50 years. This is a hack, using the world "tax" instead of registration. The 50 years from publication was decided on just to make it friendly. Of course, this is all just information I stole from the faq that an earlier comment linked to. :)

    --
    I know you were joking, but I want my Karma, so I'm going to reiterate your post in a serious tone.