Dead Musicians Signing Media Rights Petitions
epeus writes "Following from the Gowers coverage and the Musicians' ad in the FT, Larry Lessig admits he was wrong about term extension: 'If you read the list, you'll see that at least some of these artists are apparently dead (e.g. Lonnie Donegan, died 4th November 2002; Freddie Garrity, died 20th May 2006). I take it the ability of these dead authors to sign a petition asking for their copyright terms to be extended can only mean that even after death, term extension continues to inspire. I'm not yet sure how. But I guess I should be a good sport about it, and just confess I was wrong. For if artists can sign petitions after they've died, then why can't they produce new recordings fifty year ago?'"
The internet is a scary place sometimes. I read a comment on another site by some idiot who said "How will Stallman and Torvalds like it when the copyright protection that underpins the GPL runs out after 50 years - it will be a different story then. Typical socialist attitude to intellectual property: what's yours is mine but what's mine is my own."
> You make that sound as if it's a problem, but I'd guess that things would look much better if everybody
> who's just in it for the money quit making tables.
Let's say I'm not in it "for the money".
Let's say I make tables because I love working with wood.
Don't I *STILL* need to sell them for money?
How can I spend all day carving if I don't have any cash?
And if I spend all day carving, how else am I going to make money other than selling the things I make?
read before you post, you tool. He was quoting a website on the "scary internet", not asserting an opinion.
:x
Will I finally be able to use a video card with Linux 24.9.12?