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Public Domain Day 2014

An anonymous reader writes "What could have been entering the public domain in the US on January 1, 2014? Under the law that existed until 1978.... Works from 1957. The books On The Road, Atlas Shrugged, Empire of the Atom, and The Cat in the Hat, the films The Incredible Shrinking Man, The Bridge on the River Kwai, and 12 Angry Men, the article "Theory of Superconductivity," the songs "All Shook Up" and "Great Balls of Fire," and more.... What is entering the public domain this January 1? Not a single published work."

7 of 225 comments (clear)

  1. Sherlock Holmes by innocent_white_lamb · · Score: 5, Informative

    Actually, Sherlock Holmes is finally in the public domain. It took a court order to shake it loose, though.

    http://www.latimes.com/books/jacketcopy/la-et-jc-new-sherlock-holmes-copyright-20131230,0,5610784.story

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  2. Re:Would it matter? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

    I don't think that this is correct. I definitely couldn't find anything out there about it happening in the US. EU it seems this is the case though.

    And every so often there's something that slips through the cracks. It's not often, but it happens sometimes (the one I always remember is "Charade" (1963) which entered the public domain because Universal messed up their copyright notice for the film).

  3. Re:So? by Penguinisto · · Score: 5, Informative

    sibling is right... if it's so crappy, then why the need to rent-seek on them? Consider that the majority of the works' creators are dead by now (it's been 56 some-odd years), so it's not like they're directly benefiting from copyright. So who is benefiting? The kids, the corporations, and a whole lot of other people who did approximately bupkis to create these works.

    Copyright is about a temporary monopoly on a creative work. It is emphatically not meant to be a perpetual money machine.

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  4. Re:And none ever will again by TWiTfan · · Score: 5, Informative

    I don't know who the fuck modded this down (Disney fan maybe??), but I'm dead serious. Back in the day, I used to teach my students the in-and-outs of copyright law (75 years plus, or whatever the hell the law happened to be at any given time). But since the 90's, I just tell them that anything that anything published from 1923 onwards will always be under copyright.

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  5. Re:Pay up and enjoy it... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

    Actually there are plenty of works being lost every day that no one has access to as a result of over extension of copyright. Relatively obscure works from prior to the 1920s are plentiful because they are in the public domain and are freely available. Works that are still covered by copyright are difficult to find even if you're willing to pay for them.

    http://www.theatlantic.com/technology/archive/2012/03/the-missing-20th-century-how-copyright-protection-makes-books-vanish/255282/

  6. Re:And none ever will again by dkleinsc · · Score: 5, Informative

    And the real irony is that Disney built its animated empire on stories in the public domain:
    - Snow White? Grimm's Fairy Tales.
    - Pinocchio? Carlo Collodi, 1880.
    - Fantasia? Classical music from the public domain. The highlight, the Sorcerer's Apprentice, is from Goethe in 1798.
    - Bambi? Nope, they stole that one too, from a 1923 work of Felix Salten
    - Cinderella? That was written about 1700.
    - Alice in Wonderland? Lewis Carroll, of course.

    Basically, if it's a "Disney princess", they almost definitely stole the character from somewhere else.

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  7. Re:They Should Lose Public Protection by maverickgunn · · Score: 5, Informative

    And this still works perfectly well today, thank you very much.

    Perfectly well? Really? Do you realize how many works are completely lost, from film, to music, to software to any other creative field simply because they never entered the public domain and copyright holders either disappeared or held them tightly in their grasp? On top of that, you have corporations like Disney whose entire existence was built on the works of others now abusing that same privilege to deprive future generations of their own creativity.

    I wouldn't call either of those things "perfectly well".

    Defending property rights of the citizenry is among the top tasks of any government.

    Intellectual property is only "property" because the government, our government, labeled it as such. It shares little in common with actual property: it's not tangible, it doesn't degrade and it's not limited in quantity or duplication. Were it not for the public invention of protecting it, it would have no inherent protections. So if we receive no public benefit, why should we spend public resources defending it for them?

    Are you "deprived" of food, because you have to pay for it?

    Of course you are. That's an obvious statement. But it's an entirely different situation because food is a tangible product limited in quality and quantity. It has inherent protections intellectual property does not so comparing the two is asinine.