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?'"
BSd machines guest and never get departures of turned over to yet
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?
Why can't my doggie rise from the grave and rejoin his "The Barking Carolers"(copyright 2002, Cujo Dog)? How do musicians and democrats maintain their lock on the re-animation franchise.
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?