We Were Smarter About Copyright Law 100 Years Ago
An anonymous reader writes "James Boyle has a blog post comparing the recording industry's arguments in 1909 to those of 2009, with some lovely Google book links to the originals. Favorite quote: 'Many and numerous classes of public benefactors continue ceaselessly to pour forth their flood of useful ideas, adding to the common stock of knowledge. No one regards it as immoral or unethical to use these ideas and their authors do not suffer themselves to be paraded by sordid interests before legislative committees uttering bombastic speeches about their rights and representing themselves as the objects of "theft" and "piracy."' Industry flaks were more impressive 100 years ago. In that debate the recording industry was the upstart, battling the entrenched power of the publishers of musical scores. Also check out the cameo appearance by John Philip Sousa, comparing sound recordings to slavery. Ironically, among the subjects mentioned as clearly not the subject of property rights were business methods and seed varieties." Boyle concludes: "...one looks back at these transcripts and compares them to today's hearings — with vacuous rantings from celebrities and the bloviation of bad economics and worse legal theory from one industry representative after another — it is hard not to feel a sense of nostalgia. In 1900, it appears, we were better at understanding that copyright was a law that regulated technology, a law with constitutional restraints, that property rights were not absolute and that the public would not automatically be served by extending rights out to infinity."
I will only say this, that if the measure before us should pass, and should produce one-tenth part of the evil which it is calculated to produce, and which I fully expect it to produce, there will soon be a remedy, though of a very objectionable kind. Just as the absurd acts which prohibited the sale of game were virtually repealed by the poacher, just as many absurd revenue acts have been virtually repealed by the smuggler, so will this law be virtually repealed by piratical booksellers. At present the holder of copyright has the public feeling on his side. Those who invade copyright are regarded as knaves who take the bread out of the mouths of deserving men. Everybody is well pleased to see them restrained by the law, and compelled to refund their ill-gotten gains. No tradesman of good repute will have anything to do with such disgraceful transactions. Pass this law: and that feeling is at an end. Men very different from the present race of piratical booksellers will soon infringe this intolerable monopoly. Great masses of capital will be constantly employed in the violation of the law. Every art will be employed to evade legal pursuit; and the whole nation will be in the plot. On which side indeed should the public sympathy be when the question is whether some book as popular as Robinson Crusoe, or the Pilgrim's Progress, shall be in every cottage, or whether it shall be confined to the libraries of the rich for the advantage of the great-grandson of a bookseller who, a hundred years before, drove a hard bargain for the copyright with the author when in great distress? Remember too that, when once it ceases to be considered as wrong and discreditable to invade literary property, no person can say where the invasion will stop. The public seldom makes nice distinctions. The wholesome copyright which now exists will share in the disgrace and danger of the new copyright which you are about to create. And you will find that, in attempting to impose unreasonable restraints on the reprinting of the works of the dead, you have, to a great extent, annulled those restraints which now prevent men from pillaging and defrauding the living.
- Thomas McCauley on copyright, 1841.
Help stamp out iliturcy.
After reading some of those excerpts, I agree that it was handled better in those days. I wonder though, was the degradation of understanding on the side of the copyright law or on the side of the technology that enshrouds copyright law. I think judges and jurors understand the law quite well, it's the technology that implicates people that has increased in complexity and allowed lawyers to play with to exacerbate the situation. Music, Movies, works of art are all a very complex business today thanks to wonderful new technology. I think this is a better explanation.
Another explanation might be the failure of practicing fully communal societies like the U.S.S.R. Back then it could have been construed as possible for art to flourish with everything in the public domain. After watching the few movies that came out of communist countries, I think it definitely inhibits the production of quality art. Don't get me wrong, I'm not arguing for either extreme. I'm just saying that there's a happy medium and we're gravitating away from that.
My work here is dung.
100 years ago, we did not have the technology to replicate information as we do now. Hence there was little public demand to be able to do so. Today it is different. A law so rejected by the people is doomed to failure (Prohibition in America in the 1920s anyone?). Copyright law if far too draconian - so much so that many people violate it without realizing it, and many others deliberately do so out of apathy.
Excuse for why is your room always messy?
Another explanation might be the failure of practicing fully communal societies like the U.S.S.R. Back then it could have been construed as possible for art to flourish with everything in the public domain. After watching the few movies that came out of communist countries, I think it definitely inhibits the production of quality art.
I don't think that the problem is in the "public domain" thing but it's in the "dictatorship" thing that went on. Practically all the artists - especially those with any skill - were recruited to work for the propagandamachine.
In addition, horrible bureucratic machine added to that. Not only did it mean that many were assigned to jobs that didn't suit them best (IE: Someone with very hight artistic skill assigned to work long days at a factory) but emphasis was on numbers. Producing 10 average quality works is better than producing two very good because it doesn't show in the statistics.
As a third problem, the comparison is a bit off. People shouldn't compare the soviet union to modern countries (Germany, USA, etc.) at the time. When the revolutions happened, Europe and USA were industrialized societies, Russia was a very rural society. Their industrialization started with two wars and then a horrible dictatorship. It isn't really the best possible setting to develop a movie industry in.
So yeah. Whether public domain thingy affected things or not, I would assume that many other things affected it so much more that bringing these two up as if they were related would be misleading.
Anyone who thinks this is about anything other than a bunch of rich bastards exploiting a segment of the population is deluding themselves. They're simply upset that they got their hand caught in the cookie jar and now pay people smarter and more eloquent than them lots and lots of money to explain why the establishment owes them that cookie. Damn, I love America. Those few of us who are compelled from silence and apathy quickly settle on endless argumentation and debate, rather than activism. We weren't smarter about copyright law a hundred years ago... We were just less about words and more about actions back then. If the government screwed with the population a hundred years ago, the population screwed back. Nowadays, we all live in anonymous big cities and feel no attachment or trust with anyone else. And without trust, we can't even resist the most pathetic attempts at social control.
#fuckbeta #iamslashdot #dicemustdie
However we have been fed misinformation and lies by the 'industries' and a lot of the general population is beginning to believe it.
I don't call that smarter.
---- Booth was a patriot ----
Ok, i missed a word in the subject and thought it said ARE, not WERE.. just ignore the comment :)
---- Booth was a patriot ----
No, the reason you never heard of the all-too-real Andrew Galambos' absolutarian IP concepts is because he had his lecture attendees sign an NDA! Would Galambos compromise his principles by giving away his startling revelations or permitting the great unwashed unrecompensed access to his revolutionary concepts? NAY!
There are complexities inherent in these issues that make an immediate set of solutions highly unlikely. Philosophically it should be argued we're social creatures and all have a share in the universe of ideas we've engendered. Even the most creative people are subject to a sort of ideological horizon in place during their creative lifetime that delimits the content and reception of their output. Given ideas as universally shared social artifacts there is still the question of reimbursing creative people for their output. J.S.Bach, in his time, was unconstrained in his use of the ideas of others and others weren't constrained in their use of Bach's output. One of his sons C.P.Bach, (IIRC), was famous for loitering under Beethoven's window and stealing musical ideas literally as Beethoven struggled to create them. C.P.Bach would then incorporate Beethoven's ideas in his, often, farcical works before Beethoven had finished fully developing the ideas C.P. Bach had stolen. Copyright laws we're meant to give some measure of protection to intellectual property and justly so, but, also property is integral to most western concepts of democracy. I recall it's in the works of Locke that property rights and property owners are seen as fundamental to defining entitlement to democratic rights and privileges. Although I don't remember Locke addressing intellectual property. Today much of the impetus pushing legislation is driven by job creation and the generation of tax revenue. Intellectual property rights are being exaggerated in the name of jobs and tax revenue. Perhaps a further complicating factor is that the PC has been turned into a digital aggregator of once analogue, disparate information sources. The PC with an internet connection is a TV, Radio, Newspaper, Telephone, Postal Carrier...inter alia and all those old conduits are struggling to make sure their old piece of pie isn't downsized in the change over. With all this stuff in the pot it's unlikely a solution set will be soon in place.
ideopath @ play
Idiocracy. Scariest movie I've ever seen.
I've studied patent and copyright law professionally, and still haven't seen a clear and compelling argument for how it ought to work. As the articles note, one of the main questions is, "Do/should we recognize a creator as having a property right to his creations because there's a moral right to control them, or only because we think it's convenient for society? Ie., is this a 'fundamental right' or a government-granted privilege?" We've largely abandoned the notion of fundamental rights in the US, to our great peril. Because of that abandonment it's harder to think clearly about the question.
The Constitution's wording is ambiguous on this point, but seems to treat "intellectual property" as a privilege rather than a fundamental right. The theory echoes Jefferson's argument that ideas are like a candle-flame, such that "he that lights his taper from mine" doesn't diminish my supply of light. That's roughly what one of the articles was saying about the new tech of player pianos doing no harm to the existing rights of composers to sell sheet music. We've lately been treating IP as more like a right, one of many government-granted 'rights' to forcibly control people.
There was a comic called "Licenseable Bear (tm)", that brought up real arguments amid some silliness. What do you think of its argument that a physical object is ultimately made from resources acquired by right of conquest, while a song or story is created from a person's mind and so is at least as legitimately the creator's own property?
Revive the Constitution.
Your presumption that the violation of copyright in some way guarantees harm done to the holder of the copyright is an interesting and novel economic theory. Have you got a citation you would like to share?
Help stamp out iliturcy.
Wow, I didn't realize there were that many 100+ year old Slashdot readers pining for the early 1900s.
The problem with today's copyright is something that as deep connections with the past and with our own society. There was a breaking point somewhere on the past that decided to use the technology, not for the good of mankind, but for the profit of some. I don't know were we could be if it wasn't for this breaking point somewhere on the past.
The problem is that copyright, patents, etc, have no moral stand besides not letting others to profit with someone's work. That problem only exist because of copyright, and patent laws on the first place, so there's really no point at all. While copyright and patents are two distinctive things on the eyes of the law, the principles and people who supports them are basically the same.
Every work today it's derivative work of someone, either were talking about music, software, art... Copyright and Patents are going to have many problems on the future, since the conflicts of interests will grow exponential over time. There will be some rupture on the future for sure. There are countries already that abolish patents, and almost copyright laws, because they realize that today's technology and free communication isn't compatible with this system. Knowledge and culture shouldn't be restricted, either because it's not fair for those who can't afford, either because it's something that slow us down in evolution.
We had things on the past that slowed us down 500 years in scientific evolution, like the Spanish inquisition. Let's us stop copyright and patents from doing the same.
The same section of the Constitution that delegates to Congress the power to grant copyrights and patents also grants to Congress the authority to declare war. In both cases it does not compel Congress to do so.
Help stamp out iliturcy.
What the presented material shows, is that our attitude was different from today's. Whether that was smarter or stupider, depends on one's opinions. The article provides nothing to add to the debate...
In Soviet Washington the swamp drains you.
You guys are all about bashing copyright law... ...except in a GPL article. The FSF website specifically states that the GPL "assures the copyright of the software" and protects the rights of the author. Without copyright, the GPL has no power, and people can do whatever they want with your open source code, including sell it as a closed source product.
No, the reality about Slashdot's position about copyright law is that it's derived from the desire for piracy. People have adopted an anti-copyright position to make themselves feel better about using PirateBay. For crying out loud, Slashdot posted a hypothetical argument a while back claiming piracy was good and that content creators would make up the difference through "concerts and speaking tours." To expect someone like John Carmack to tour the country in a speaking tour rather than develop software--which is what he wants to do for a living--is proof that Slashdot's positions on copyright are completely self-serving.
You're against copyright when it serves you (piracy). You're for it when it serves you (the GPL).
There was a great deal of progress made before the invention of IP law. Humans are compelled by their natures to create and learn the creations of others and improve upon them. This is called progress.
Some time ago it was commonly agreed (with some dissent) that to reward creation with a monopoly on the use of that creation might accellerate progress, which is a social good.
I've seen some research to suggest that the optimal term for this monopoly is around 12-14 years. Any longer than that and the monopoly's benefit decreases until eventually it even prevents the natural flow of progress.
But that's moot. The creation of IP as a construct as a side evect creates rapacious corporate monstrosities. Their greed cannot be sated and the only way to kill them is to abandon the experiment and abolish the monopoly.
Help stamp out iliturcy.
The phonograph of 1910 would set you back $50-$250 good-as-gold dollars.
Why else do you think public performance rights -
the coin-in-the-slot nickelodeon - became the real sticking point for musicians and composers?
The phonograph record or cylinder of those days was for all practical purposes a rental.
Only the most expensive players would have had separate - acoustically linked - tonearms and horns ["speakers'] and a diamond or perhaps carbide-tipped stylus.
Edison used custom pressings and a set up like this in blind "tone tests" with live musicians and singers to demonstrate "hi-fi" reproduction.
If I said I didn't have an incentive to grow oranges unless I could plant a tree in your yard,
or if I said I didn't have an incentive to grow cotton unless I could own slaves on the
plantation, most people would see this is these as the worthless shallow arguments that they are.
But if I said I didn't have an incentive to to make beneficial or creative works without a
copyright monopoly, then all of a sudden people just take it on faith, they don't even question
it, they just assume that society would fall apart without them. In my humble opinion, this is
intellectually dishonest, especially considering that the entire Renaissance happened without
copyrights.
The simple fact is, there is no equivalence relationship between copyrights and property rights -
incentive does not a right make. The moral and historical foundation of property derives from the
fact that property has physical limits, while the foundation of copyrights derives from kings
who granted publishers monopolies in return for not publishing bad things about the monarchy. The
history of copyrights is not one of rights, but control of sharing and restricting the open use
of knowledge.
That is why people who copy are not criminals, thieves, or akin to pirates who board ships and
murder people. No, in fact they are really victims of a cruel deception. A deception that
copyrights somehow financially benefit artists and creators. The simple fact is, that for every
artist that makes it "big" there are literally thousands who copyrights haven't helped a bit,
even hindered, or destroyed.
However, this is not the only failure of copyrights - it is just one in many issues related to
copyrights that are just blown off ignored, or glossed over. Like the failures of Hollywood
culture, the failures of big media to provide quality material, the failures to provide
reasonably priced books to college students while tabloids are dirt cheap, and massive anti-trust
behavior in the software industry to name a few.
While the problems associated with copyrights might have been bearable 20 years ago when the
biggest issue was Xerox machines, today we are entering into the information age where
information is so easy to copy and manipulate that there can be no middle ground. Our society
will either have to control all of it or none of it. Our communications will either have to be
monitored or free, our privacy to be either continuously probed or protected.
In that sense, copyrights are like a vine that will never stop growing to choke off our freedoms
until we cut it off at the root. The DMCA, infinite extensions, billion dollar lawsuits, are all
just symptoms of a poor belief system - not the cause. So the efforts to find a "middle ground"
on copyrights are a failure because they do not address the core issue. That contrary to
copyrights, the right to copy and distribute creative works and knowledge is a right!
Like freedom of religion, and freedom of the press, the right to copy things is a right that
exists above government. It is a moral right, it is an inherent right, it defines the very nature
of the human condition. It is beyond politics and the petition of leaders.
In fact, the entire foundation of politics rests on the notion that it's better to fight wars
with words than wars with bloodshed. But to copy things does not require coercion or violence at
all, the rules are not the same. We will not change the copyright situation by petitioning our
leaders, or voting to change the system. No it can only be changed by defiance.
Defiance by holding the belief that people have rights, even if those rights appear contrary to
the popular mob or to the system. Defiance, by shedding off the guilt and shame that those who
try to impose copyrights impose on us and understanding that they are the ones who should be
guilty and shameful. Defiance by copying and sharing creative works whenever we have access to
them. Defiance b
I like living in an era of computing and modern medicine. I don't feel nostaligic for a time when you were likely to die before you hit 40. I think we should probably abolish copyright altogether, but we could at least start by limiting it to 5 years. If the "artist" or creator can't perform their work sufficiently well to compete with others performing it (ie much better) they don't deserve the revenue. The argument that nothing new would be created is pure fud.
Most people can own and operate a camera but will still hire a professional photographer (and mosti will not the cheapest one) to shoot their wedding. Professional photography isn't dead. We haven't had to artificially regulate it. There will always be room for people to be paid to do something well, or at least well as judged by the populace.
These posts express my own personal views, not those of my employer
Ideas are NOT copyrighted and have never been. If you think this is a decent argument against copyright, then you've already lost the argument. The only people who conflate "ideas" with "copyright" are people trying to drag you to a predefined conclusion.
Whatever happened to Winnie the Pooh in Canada? I remember a big deal was made of the fact that Canadian copyright expires 50 years after the death of the author, which would put Winnie in the Canadian PD sometime in 2006, but I never heard anything after the fact.
I ask because even 50 years seems like an insane amount of time to cling to a copyright, but here in America (land of the free corporate overlords) we're looking at upwards of 120 years on some things. If I want to find PD samples to use in songs I have to scrape together what I can find from what few recordings even existed at the time. The original intent of copyright has been so thoroughly corrupted that there's little or no resemblance to what it was supposed to represent.
Copyright law draws a distinction between idea and expression. Expressions, according to the law, are copyrightable. Ideas are not. This is important because it preserves freedom of speech: you can express the same idea with a different expression. That's the theory.
Please, then, tell me, is Mickey Mouse an idea, or an expression? If it is an expression, what idea is it expressing?
A court actually ruled on this one. Its conclusion? The "idea" of Mickey Mouse is "mouse." Everything else is expression.
Great. We have the freedom to express "mouse" in different ways. But all of the cultural meanings and emotions and passions and history around Mickey Mouse? Those are part of Mickey Mouse too. Not of "mouse." They are ideas. And yet, they are protected.
Take a piece of music. What is the "idea" of a symphony? In the U.S., a single bar of music can be copyrighted. Music is all expression. No idea. What relevance does this strange division have for music?
Take Holden Caulfield. J.D. Salinger recently sued another author for writing an apparent sequel to Catcher in the Rye. Salinger won. Not because the other author used the same names, or the same plot, but because the story and the character were similar.
These immaterial things we hold in our heads? According to the law, most of them are not in fact ideas. They are expressions.
The law can define its terms however it likes. This is what we call an analytic distinction: it does not correspond to characteristics of the world. The distinction between idea and expression is invented, just like the arbitrary line drawn on a map and called a border. It's a legal fiction. Each individual case makes the difference between "idea" and "expression" more clear, and yet more complex: the border becomes every more jagged, ever more detached from ordinary human speech and experience. Case law can say what it likes, but it does not have the authority to redefine the English language. Its terms have nothing to do what ordinary people mean when they use these words.
Yes, you can copyright an idea. That's what copyright does.
It's a troll. Thomas McCaulay's speech was effective and the amendments to the law under consideration were adopted. The era of endless copyrights didn't begin until 1976 and we are only now realizing what damage it's done. The various copyright extension acts also retroactively protect works already produced - which could not in any way serve the "promote progress" goal.
Oh, and Thomas MaCaulay was a Brit was speaking in the British House of Commons about a British law. He was renowned for his eloquent and thoughtful speeches. He later traveled, wrote the History of England and other works, was made Baron Macaulay and eventually of course, died.
Help stamp out iliturcy.
I wonder if someone at RIAA or the US Government actually did pay for the use of Galambos' ideas...
14:3 International Journal of Law and Information Technology 257
;-))
BTW, Stallman (RMS pour les initiés) just had some interesting things to say about these and a DRM "Swindle":
http://www.linux-magazin.de/NEWS/Video-Stallman-ueber-DRM-Patente-und-C
(interview on video in English of course - free from a famous Spanish holiday resort, beats rainy Redmond/WA
Listen you fucking ignorant little hippie. You really think people ACCIDENTALLY pirate the latest movies from a site called the pirate bay?
Tell it to the judge you fucking piece of vermin. I hope you get caught next and it ruins your pathetic little snivelling life, and that of your whole family.
Maybe if you weren't such a fucking retard, you might understand that theft is wrong.
Fucking get a life hippie moron.
"Are you aware that I have not broken any laws?"
"But people in the USA can download your copy. We're taking you down, pirate."
"So you're saying that Canadian citizens living in Canada are subject to USA law?"
"Oh, yes, we'd like that very much."
Careful what you do here--Disney could pretty much order the invasion of Canada.
Speaking of which, do private security companies operate across borders? Could Disney Security invade Canada? I'm sure that logistically they could... but would they? I'd rather not bet against them.
"The biggest problem with communication is the illusion that it has taken place."
The question isn't who is smart and who isn't. The question is where the power lies. Copyright isn't inherently smart or dumb, it's just that different scheme's of protecting or failing to protect ideas, art, and so forth, have different benefactors. The current copyright law was pretty much bought by the entertainment industry, who as it happens greatly benefits from the current implementation and would benefit more from an even stricter version, which they are lobbying for. I wouldn't call that dumb, it's smart. Of course it can become dumb if it's the only horse you bet on or if you fail to uphold the status quo, but that's true in pretty much every part of life. For the moment, money is still flowing. Lavishly, judging by the villas and private swimming pools.
Again, it's all a question of where the power lies. Perhaps it's stupid to have so little power lie with the people. That may be case. But that isn't a question of being smart about intellectual property, but about how to run a state. And perhaps again about power. Perhaps it's stupid to have so many people be ill informed. Maybe. But that again isn't about being smart on this topic, it's about being smart on how you gather information, or stupid, like in the case where you subscribe to a socialist newspaper because you're socialist yourself. And of course also about power, the power to suppress things, although that mainly works because people don't use non-mainstream media enough. But no matter how you look at it, the current situation isn't caused by people being dumb about copyright law specifically.
was made Baron Macaulay and eventually of course, died.
Well, that is good to know. Having a 200 year old still fighting against obscene copyright terms might be needed though.
K, well, slashdot's servers are screwing up when I try to login. However, my userID is Hierophant7.
This is one of the lamest piece of crap articles I've ever seen posted. How can anyone compare copyright law from 1909 to today's? In order for that to be a fair comparison, we'd need to unplug everyone from the internet, and raise the price of CD's and CD/MP3 players by about 1000%.
This article is the equivalent of a report declaring that there was less air pollution in 1709 than there is today, or that there were fewer drive-by shootings 100 years ago.
kdawson, sometimes I think you're missing some chromosomes.
Most people didn't have a phone and thus couldn't call emergency services. Many had no electricity. There was no cure for polio. Cancer was an absolute death sentance. Blacks rode the back of the bus and got lynched. Women couldn't vote.
In other words, let's not use nostalgia as a tool to advance reform.
Such a tactic would fit in all too well with the paleoconservative and populist movement that's threatening to give "new" direction to the Republican party. That movement already advocates a laissez-faire attitude towards certain things, based on the idea that it's "the way things were meant to be". They conveniently leave out that returning to the hands-off approach is objectively anti-labor and racist.
Did you even read TFA before posting that? It doesn't attempt to use nostalgia to advance anything. While I agree that using nostalgia as an argument resonates with a lot of people (particularly older voters), I don't see how it applies in this case.
It's not enough to bash in heads, you've got to bash in minds. - Captain Hammer