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Diary of Anne Frank Subject To Copyright Dispute (theguardian.com)

Bruce66423 writes: The Diary of Anne Frank, a Jewish teenager killed by the Nazis whose writing survived in the Amsterdam building where she had hidden, is causing problems. It has been 70 years since she died, making it public domain by European law. A French academic has made it available online with profits going to charity. However, the Anne Frank Fonds, the foundation established by Anne’s father Otto Frank, claims that: “Otto Frank and children’s author and translator, Mirjam Pressler, were inter alia responsible for the various edited versions of fragments of the diary” in 1947 and 1991. They add: "the copyrights to these adaptations have been vested in Otto Frank and Mirjam Pressler, who in effect created readable books from Anne Frank’s original writings."

150 comments

  1. uhhh by Adambomb · · Score: 1

    isn't it Anne Frank? or have i been an idiot about that this whole time.

    --
    Ice Cream has no bones.
    1. Re:uhhh by Adambomb · · Score: 1

      oh nevermind they corrected it.

      --
      Ice Cream has no bones.
    2. Re:uhhh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Too bad you can't edit your post to correct it, splitting the non-word "nevermind" into the proper "never mind".

      It's actually an adjective describing the Slashdot editor collective.

    3. Re:uhhh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    4. Re:uhhh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I don't know about the parent poster, but I'll join them on their position.

      I consider your reference as invalid for the following reasons:
      1. "Nevermind" is not part of the Oxford nor the Merriam-Webster dictionaries. "Never mind" is in both dictionaries, and has been defined used correctly.
      2. The definition appears to be incorrect on reference.com. It states that "nevermind" calls attention, and thus needs to be used in the negative - i.e. "Pay him no nevermind" is equivalent to "pay him no attention", and would be opposed to "never mind him". Either they have it wrong, or the poster used it in the wrong way.
      3. Web examples at the bottom of the page use the opposite of the described definition and examples, and matches the definition of "never mind". It looks they have the wrong definition. If they have made a mistake with the definition, it is reasonable to assume they could have made a mistake when the spelling the word/phrase.
      4. The company has been going since 1995. The company hasn't been around long enough for me to think they are a credible authority.
      5. Their dictionary is called "Random House Unabridged Dictionary". Sounds cool, but not that credible.
      6. Microsoft Word's dictionary marks "nevermind" as incorrect, and "never mind" as correct.

    5. Re:uhhh by silentcoder · · Score: 1

      Staying out of the discussion but I just want to point out that trusting Microsoft on anything at all is an extremely risky endeavor, up to and including their dictionary.

      --
      Unicode killed the ASCII-art *
    6. Re:uhhh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Hi! I would also like to stay out of this discussion. Hence my post. Although I don't necessarily have something of value to contribute with. Just wanted to stay away, as I said. Thank you.

    7. Re:uhhh by Prune · · Score: 1

      I'm still waiting for a reference to a respected dictionary.

      --
      "Politicians and diapers must be changed often, and for the same reason."
  2. Where is the dispute? by guruevi · · Score: 5, Interesting

    - The original is public domain, someone is making it available which is entirely legal.
    - Someone else has copyright on the adaptation, the adaptation isn't being published as public domain.

    Why would the adapters claim copyright on the original by virtue of its adaptions? If that were the case, numerous people would be able to claim copyright on all biblical manuscripts or someone claiming copyright on papyrus artifacts or stone tablets at museums.

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    1. Re:Where is the dispute? by SydShamino · · Score: 1

      It's not clear that the guy published the original diary online. If he published the 1947 adaptation, the people who wrote/edited that adaptation might have a claim.

      --
      It doesn't hurt to be nice.
    2. Re:Where is the dispute? by Kjella · · Score: 5, Interesting

      The full version has to my knownledge never been published, only the edited versions so I assume that is what is being made available. Now if it was an adaptation that would be copyrighted, like Disney turning old folk tales into movies. But it's not really an adaptation, it's an excerpt at least that is what is claimed. You can't find an old book with a hundred pages, pick ten and say this "adaptation" is copyrighted anew. Once the copyright expires the whole text is passed into the public domain and you can quote any parts you want. So...

      If the published versions are a strict subset of Anne Frank's writings, the copyright is expired. That they published selected diary entries can't prevent others from quoting them too. If they've done more than to retract certain entries and actually edit the diary then yes it's still copyrighted but its authenticity as the literal diary of Anne Frank is compromised. They can't have it both ways, either it is her diary and the copyright is expired or it's a post-war original work of authorship based on her diary, but not both.

      --
      Live today, because you never know what tomorrow brings
    3. Re:Where is the dispute? by AthanasiusKircher · · Score: 2

      - The original is public domain, someone is making it available which is entirely legal.

      Well, maybe not. According to this, the original manuscripts were never actually published until a critical scholarly edition came out in 1986.

      And apparently under applicable law in 1986, what may matter is not when they were written, but when they were published. Apparently posthumous publication in some circumstances remained under copyright until 50 years after the first date of publication -- the date of the death of the author in this case is irrelevant. This provision about posthumous copyright was dropped in 1995 in the EU, but apparently the law was also written in such a way so as not to diminish any copyright term that went into force before 1995.

      That's the problem with copyright law -- it not only depends on the country, but also exactly when copyright was first granted. Different eras are often under different rules, depending on when the laws changed.

      Why would the adapters claim copyright on the original by virtue of its adaptions?

      Apparently that's NOT what's being claimed here. It's not the adaptation that is the issue, but rather the effective publication date of the original manuscript. Now, I don't know much about the details of the case, but apparently there is some applicable law that has been used to support the arguments of those claiming rights. (By the way, I absolutely agree from a moral perspective that this SHOULD be in the public domain by now. But it may not be under applicable law.)

      If that were the case, numerous people would be able to claim copyright on all biblical manuscripts or someone claiming copyright on papyrus artifacts or stone tablets at museums.

      Well, no -- because no one could claim copyright on most biblical manuscripts, since their contents has mostly been published for many centuries.

      On the other hand, for recent scholarly finds, there actually have been cases made for copyright of portions of the Dead Sea Scrolls, for example. In this case, the text required significant deciphering and editing (including lots of interpolation of letters and words, etc.) to make sense of passages. Without a modern edition, the original sources would be meaningless to everyone except experts in ancient writing and languages, so it does makes sense in some cases that modern editions should be granted copyright.

    4. Re:Where is the dispute? by AthanasiusKircher · · Score: 5, Informative

      They can't have it both ways, either it is her diary and the copyright is expired or it's a post-war original work of authorship based on her diary, but not both.

      Actually, that's precisely what they are claiming, and there are valid legal arguments for it under copyright law. Multiple new editions of an old work can be published and may be copyrighted. As someone who has worked on scholarly editions of source materials (though I've never been a primary author on one), there's a lot of original research that often goes into making judgment calls on how to take some handwritten source and turn it into a printed text. In particular, you often have multiple sources (e.g., different drafts, different fragments of manuscripts) which require reconciliation and interpretation.

      I don't know anything about the sources of Anne Frank's diary, though -- but I do know that apparently Anne Frank began rewriting some portions with an intent on publication at some point in 1944. That presumably means that any edition would have to make choices about how to present the sections she originally wrote vs. her redrafted ones for publication, which also may require reconciling elements in the portions which had not been rewritten before her death to make sense with the ones which had been rewritten.

      This may or may not be a straightforward process to put all this together in a format that would be easily accessible and understood by readers. I don't know enough about the sources.

      Nevertheless, what we have here apparently is the following:

      (1) The first edited version was published in 1947 by Otto Frank. I don't know how much editing was done here, but apparently it was more than just selecting entries, given that there would be multiple versions of some entries. The copyright to that is claimed by Otto Frank, who died in 1980, and applicable copyright law for his version thus extends to 70 years after his death.

      (2) The original diaries were finally published in a scholarly "critical edition" in 1986. Under applicable copyright law at that time, posthumous publications were granted a 50 year term after the first PUBLICATION. So, that would extend to 50 years after 1986.

      Thus, yes it is both. It is her diary, but copyright law as of 1986 said what matters in posthumous publication was the date of publication, not when the author died. (That law has since been changed in the EU, but old works still under copyright are grandfathered in.) And it is also a post-war "original" edited work, whose copyright expires at a different date. This is actually quite common for scholarly editions, such as edited publications of correspondence by famous people, etc.

    5. Re:Where is the dispute? by AchilleTalon · · Score: 3, Interesting

      The diary was first published in 1947 in Dutch and in 1952 in English (the American edition). In 1986 a commented version was edited and published and in 2001 5 missing pages were added and published again. The 5 missing pages were removed by Anne's father, Otto, because these pages were showing tension between Otto and his wife and they were showing Anne was not loving so much her mother. These pages were given by Otto before his death to Cornelis Suijk who finally sold them to Anne Frank's foundation for 300 000 USD. Cornelis Suijk was previously director at the Anne Frank's foundation.

      --
      Achille Talon
      Hop!
    6. Re:Where is the dispute? by AthanasiusKircher · · Score: 1

      The diary was first published in 1947 in Dutch

      Not the original diary, but rather a version that apparently combined two existing versions, since Anne Frank apparently began rewriting sections, drafting them for publication before her death. Thus, the original 1947 publication was not a complete version of the whole thing, but rather an edition that reconciled various elements of the original to make something more readable and coherent.

      In 1986 a commented version was edited and published

      Yes, the first complete version of the original, apparently showing both the "A and B versions" of the rewritten entries, etc.

      Apparently the present copyright holders are claiming that the 1947 version should be considered as an "edition," and thus Otto Frank should be treated as "author" in terms of copyright, since he had to make choices about how to reconcile versions and such (as well as omitting various entries and passages for various reasons). And apparently the copyright holders are claiming that the 1986 date is valid for the publication of the full original.

      Again, I personally think most of copyright law is bogus and all of this should have passed into the public domain decades ago. But this seems to be the way the copyright holders have argued in line with existing law (and courts seem to have upheld their claims).

    7. Re:Where is the dispute? by gl4ss · · Score: 1

      the present copyright holders are claiming whatever suits them at the time. the foundation claims anne as the original author on their page.

      then they go on to claim that all original author or such copyrights transferred to otto. so at time of publication (according to the text form the foundation) otto would have been holder of the copyrights and that anne is the original author. they will change the author(as editor) to otto soon enough I suppose.

      well, they don't say when it would expire. they're trying to keep them forever, basically.

      the foundation does not make the financial data easily reachable either.. so.. for all we know 90% goes to the people working for the foundation. from the semi-forced school sales of the book.

      --
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    8. Re: Where is the dispute? by guruevi · · Score: 1

      Perhaps under Dutch copyright law but EU copyright law (which didn't exist yet by then) which applies in this dispute trumps any Dutch laws (most laws have to be harmonized). Perhaps they might have a claim under French law but then they needed to have operated some sort of business in France at the time being (if I remember the old French laws correctly)

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    9. Re: Where is the dispute? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You should have added "IANAL", because from what you say, it is quite clear that YANAL.
      There are more factual mistakes than sentences.

    10. Re:Where is the dispute? by jabuzz · · Score: 5, Interesting

      At best Otto Frank was Ann Frank's editor. As far as I am aware this is one of a very few cases where the editor is claiming copyright and is thus highly dubious and open to legal challenge.

      The other editor claiming copyright I can think of is Christopher Tolkien.

      A similar dubious copyright claim is that of Lyn Pratchett who attributed as having copyright interests in Terry later books, something again which is legally dubious as she was not responsible for the creation of the books.

    11. Re:Where is the dispute? by silentcoder · · Score: 5, Interesting

      As it stands, the diary as it is generally read in the US is severely abridged. Frank's original included significant discussion of all the other things that a girl going through puberty tends to experience - including sex drive and masturbation (and how this is affected by the kind of conditions she was living in).

      Those bits are usually left out of the version used in schools, which is the only version most Americans have ever read - which is a bloody tragedy.

      Then again - I bet most anti-refugee republicans have read the book while attending school, and I also bet none of them know that the Frank family had applied for refugee access to the USA before the war and been denied... I don't think they realize the irony of having once felt such sympathy with that young victim while now actively campaigning to create a whole new generation of her.

      The few who do would probably think it's hillarious to say something "like thank goodness for people like us then since clearly being a xenophobic asshole leads to the creation of rare and exceptional literature".

      --
      Unicode killed the ASCII-art *
    12. Re:Where is the dispute? by silentcoder · · Score: 2

      > the original manuscripts were never actually published until a critical scholarly edition came out in 1986.
      That doesn't actually matter. Copyright is automatic, and exists from the time of creation - not the time of publication. That's a Berne Convention standard so no signatory country's laws (and that includes all of Europe) can fail to comply with it.

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    13. Re:Where is the dispute? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Numerous people do hold and use copyright on various bible adaptations - from versions for children to many versions for adults.

    14. Re:Where is the dispute? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Christopher Tolkien has written more than his father, though. He has a massive amount of notes, back stories, and feedback to use as a reference for new works. This is no different from another author taking GRRM's notes and creating the final novels should he not live long enough to complete them himself. We've already seen this with WoT and Robert Jordan. Are you claiming GRRM and Jordan should get copyright for something they didn't write just because they had a few notes of the plot?

      And, no, I'm not a fan of Chistopher's work. I feel he's utterly destroyed would could have been...

    15. Re:Where is the dispute? by AmiMoJo · · Score: 1

      Someone in Djibouti or Yemen needs to put it online, as even if Otto Frank's claim is legit his copyright has expired in those countries anyway.

      --
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    16. Re: Where is the dispute? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In EU, we are so sensible that we don't need someone to tell us they're not a lawyer. We know you Americans have a tendency to be literal and anal about the most moronic things you could possibly imagine, but that's not the case here. When we order a coffee, we assume the cup's contents are hot. When we use a keyboard, we understand it might kill you -- if you decide to intentionally choke on the pieces you rip off of it.

      Hell, someone may even say they *are* a lawyer even if they're not and if you are retarded enough to believe them that's your problem, not the one's posing as a lawyer.

    17. Re:Where is the dispute? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      LOL no there are not "valid legal arguments". There are loser arguments made by losers but they're not valid nor legal.

      Copy Right is the right to copy given to the original author (for a bit).

      "Scholarly" blah blah blah useless crappy people like you who take other people's work and put it out again and claim YOU hold the rights to THEIR work, NO. That's not copyright. That's the bullshit you spew.

      It's her diary. She wrote it. It's in the public domain now. Everyone else who wrote "something on top of her work" can suck it.

      Suck it.

      E
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    18. Re:Where is the dispute? by Maury+Markowitz · · Score: 1

      > Someone else has copyright on the adaptation

      In order to enjoy protection, derivative works have to show significant derivation. It is not clear that a translation is such a thing, although I'm sure there's case law on this somewhere.

    19. Re:Where is the dispute? by AthanasiusKircher · · Score: 2

      That doesn't actually matter. Copyright is automatic, and exists from the time of creation - not the time of publication. That's a Berne Convention standard so no signatory country's laws (and that includes all of Europe) can fail to comply with it.

      Look -- I'm not a lawyer, but apparently prior to 1995 there was SOME law that stated posthumous publication fell under different laws. Apparently, that law is no longer in force but previously copyrighted works are grandfathered in. And apparently courts have agreed with this line of reasoning. (I've already said this repeatedly, but just to be clear, I think the length of time on these laws is stupid and the diary should be PD by now... that doesn't change legal arguments here, though.)

    20. Re:Where is the dispute? by AthanasiusKircher · · Score: 1

      As far as I am aware this is one of a very few cases where the editor is claiming copyright and is thus highly dubious and open to legal challenge.

      Well, the general concept is NOT "highly dubious" -- editions are well-established in European law and are generally granted a 25-year copyright term (if I remember correctly).

      As I read more about the specific case of Anne Frank, though, it appears the publishers are trying to pull more significant shenanigans, effectively claiming Otto as a sort of co-author, rather than an editor. That seems a real stretch to me, but you'd have to look at how many changes he made and of what type before publication.

    21. Re:Where is the dispute? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      The diary as it is generally read in the US is not in Dutch, so there is a separate copyright on that translated version.

    22. Re:Where is the dispute? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      (1) The first edited version was published in 1947 by Otto Frank. I don't know how much editing was done here, but apparently it was more than just selecting entries, given that there would be multiple versions of some entries...

      Your 'apparently' doesn't follow from your 'given'. It's a non-sequitur. Editing does not grant copyright to the editor, and it never has. Unless he created some original work in that 1947 edition, the copyright will still be based on the life of the *author* herself. And, if he *did* create some original work, only *that* will still be under copyright until 2050, because he is not the author of the parts Anne wrote.

      (2) The original diaries were finally published in a scholarly "critical edition" in 1986. Under applicable copyright law at that time, posthumous publications were granted a 50 year term after the first PUBLICATION. So, that would extend to 50 years after 1986.

      Again, only the parts not originally written by Anne Frank herself would be subject to a longer copyright span. The posthumous publication grant of copyright wouldn't apply to any of the diary entries which had already been published.

    23. Re:Where is the dispute? by argStyopa · · Score: 2

      I think it's hilarious that you turn a discussion about Anne Frank into a an anti-Republican diatribe.

      Quick: do you know the party of the president during WW2, the one that REJECTED refuge-seeking peoples of Europe, including a ship full of children?

      BTW there's a pretty huge gulf between "refugee family with children" and the "single, healthy, male 20-something" 'refugee' that is the individual most reasonable people are rejecting.

      --
      -Styopa
    24. Re:Where is the dispute? by AthanasiusKircher · · Score: 1

      Your 'apparently' doesn't follow from your 'given'. It's a non-sequitur. Editing does not grant copyright to the editor, and it never has.

      You're partly right in that I misspoke. I don't claim to be an expert on European copyright law. Upon reading further, it's clear that current European law on "scholarly editions" of works varied by country -- it's generally 20-30 years in length, and is limited by EU policy to no more than 30 years. In any case, it's inapplicable in this case.

      But your assertion that no copyright protections exist in European law for editions is demonstrably false.

      Unless he created some original work in that 1947 edition, the copyright will still be based on the life of the *author* herself. And, if he *did* create some original work, only *that* will still be under copyright until 2050, because he is not the author of the parts Anne wrote.

      Yes, upon further reading the situation is slightly different from what I understood from the original articles I read about this case. Sorry -- honest mistake.

      What the publishers are claiming is not that Otto Frank made an "edition," but rather that his contributions were significant enough to be considered a "co-author" and hence would carry protection for him. (In cases of coauthorship, I believe the copyright protection extends to the last possible date from the various coauthors.)

      I agree this sounds completely bogus to me now. Otto Frank, to my knowledge, never claimed the work as his own. That appears to be a wacky argument the publishers invented in recent years (after he was obviously already dead). I agree that's bogus.

      So, the "edition" copyright should no longer be in effect, if it existed in the first place. And the "co-author" claim seems bogus to me, as I read more.

      Again, only the parts not originally written by Anne Frank herself would be subject to a longer copyright span.

      Apparently that may not be true under an obscure Dutch law. Decades ago, some countries grant different copyright lengths to posthumous works dependent on date of publication, regardless of when the author died.

      Again, I'm not claiming these arguments are CORRECT, only that they have been used in legal proceedings and apparently have some merit... though whether they'll withstand more challenges is an open question.

    25. Re:Where is the dispute? by AthanasiusKircher · · Score: 2

      "Scholarly" blah blah blah useless crappy people like you who take other people's work and put it out again and claim YOU hold the rights to THEIR work, NO. That's not copyright. That's the bullshit you spew.

      I probably shouldn't respond to sure a puerile post, but hey, what the heck.

      Look -- first off, **I** have never earned a cent off of claiming any rights off of anyone else's work. The work I did was for a foundation which was tasked with preparing a critical edition of the works of someone (obviously famous) who died hundreds of years ago. This edition required tens of thousands of hours of work investigating thousands of original sources and manuscripts. I was paid for some of the work I did at the time I did it, but I personally don't claim any rights to anything.

      Now, you may not care about any of this work or think it's stupid. But the vast majority of the publications in the project I mention were in publishing manuscript sources that previously had been unavailable to anyone except scholars who would travel to an archive. And many of the sources were in such disarray or had conflicting versions, etc. that it required a significant amount of editorial decision to produce something useful from them.

      Some scholars may find this stuff useful. Some of the previously unpublished works might be found to be interesting and find their way into a more "popular" canon of works. I don't know.

      But I certainly don't claim any rights to any dead person's work. And in this particular case, the work was significantly subsidized by a number of charitable foundations in the interest of getting this work out there. The volumes of the edition don't make any profit either -- it's a non-profit organization, and the money solely went to pay for publishing costs.

      I don't know if any of this is at all relevant to Anne Frank's case -- the more I read about her case, the less I think the legal arguments are valid. To me, it sounds like the Anne Frank foundation (or whatever) is just trying to keep making money off of the stuff, which I find personally offensive too.

      But that doesn't justify a wholesale attack on scholars who are trying to preserve and disseminate valuable works of history and culture.

    26. Re:Where is the dispute? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Why would the adapters claim copyright on the original by virtue of its adaptions?" LOL. Because they're JEWS.

    27. Re:Where is the dispute? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      very few cases where the editor is claiming copyright

      Aren't Shakespeare collections still copyrighted by the publisher because editing was done to make them beyond the absolute raw originally published text?

  3. Oh, no! by __aaclcg7560 · · Score: 1

    I was so much looking forward to the zombie version of the Diary of Ann Frank. Nothing spices up a public domain story like Nazi zombies.

    1. Re:Oh, no! by 93+Escort+Wagon · · Score: 4, Funny

      I just knew someone would Godwin this discussion...

      --
      #DeleteChrome
    2. Re:Oh, no! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      why don't you use your talents of precognition to pick the right lottery numbers?

    3. Re:Oh, no! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Because he's too busy having sex with the neighborhood's stray dogs.

    4. Re:Oh, no! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      so if we are talking about hitler and the nazis, what would be the parallel concept to indicate that the debate has gone off the rails?
      "hitler did this thing, which i believe was arguably positive"
      "so did ___________! and since ____________ was pure evil, you can't argue that this thing Hitler did was positive"
      hmm, who is THAT MUCH WORSE than Hitler?
      damn, now i can't use this faulty analogy in a debate about Hitler. I guess I'll have to use real logic instead.

    5. Re:Oh, no! by silentcoder · · Score: 1

      Leopold the 1st of Belgium. His death-toll was just short of twice what Hitler did after all.

      So I propose an Ammendment to Godwin's law:
      In the event that somebody who actually knows the history of Leopold were to bring him up in a discussion that was about NAZIs in the first place, Godwin's law will apply.

      It also applies to this post in which the idea was first suggested.

      --
      Unicode killed the ASCII-art *
    6. Re:Oh, no! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Leopold the 1st of Belgium. His death-toll was just short of twice what Hitler did after all.

      Leopold II of Belgium.

      Learn your history :P

    7. Re: Oh, no! by silentcoder · · Score: 1

      Mea culpa. Memory aint what it used to be I guess.

      --
      Unicode killed the ASCII-art *
    8. Re:Oh, no! by catmistake · · Score: 1

      Which Godwin? The attorney? Or Frankenstein's grandfather?

  4. Dutch version expires January 2016 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    The book was published in Dutch in 1947 and copyright has expired. The French academic has published the DUTCH text.

    It's the *DEATH* part that's important. If Anne Frank wrote it, then its public domain, if her father wrote it (with a translator) then its not.
    However why would a translator be involved in a book in the original Dutch?

    The Anne Frank foundation is saying "this is a fraud, it wasn't really Anne Franks diary".

    This part:
    > "the copyrights to these adaptations have been vested in Otto Frank and Mirjam Pressler, who in effect created readable books from Anne Frank’s original writings."

    Is misleading, show me where Anne Frank vested copyright in her writings to her father? Show me the contract and if there isn't one then she didn't.

    Clearly this is an issue, because a publisher will tack on a young person as 'co-author' simply to extend copyright. The copyright needs to be some flat time since publication, which is a known date. e.g. 70 years period.

    1. Re:Dutch version expires January 2016 by gl4ss · · Score: 1

      the source material is public domain.

      however, editing it, the foreword etc are not.

      I think what it comes down to is who they attributed it to when they published. for marketing reasons I guess Anne..

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      world was created 5 seconds before this post as it is.
    2. Re: Dutch version expires January 2016 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      However why would a translator be involved in a book in the original Dutch?

      In addition to her translation skills, Mirjam Pressler is an editor of several other books besides the Diary of Anne Frank.

      She is capable of more than one function.

      Is misleading, show me where Anne Frank vested copyright in her writings to her father? Show me the contract and if there isn't one then she didn't.

      Fortunately, as her father, Otto Frank possessed the necessary rights, so even if she had been alive, while she was a minor, he could have had her diary published, though it is possible that Dutch law has some equivalent to California Child Actor's Bill that would safeguard some funds for her, and of course, one hope he would have respected her wishes.

      Since she died, and intestate, then her father as closest surviving relative would inherit her rights though, even if she had been over the age of majority in the Netherlands.

      I suppose I could be wrong about Dutch Law, I've no great familiarity with it after WWII, but what I describe would be more or less the case.

      I'll ignore any Nazi laws as immaterial though.

    3. Re:Dutch version expires January 2016 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I dont know when Anne Frank died, but I'm pretty sure she did nazi it coming.

    4. Re:Dutch version expires January 2016 by stealth_finger · · Score: 1

      I dont know when Anne Frank died, but I'm pretty sure she did nazi it coming.

      Did jew?

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  5. Really? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Christ fuck this is goddamn history.

    1. Re:Really? by Zontar+The+Mindless · · Score: 1

      Christ fuck this is goddamn history.

      Indeed it is. Learn something from it, why don't you?

      --
      Il n'y a pas de Planet B.
    2. Re:Really? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I have it is all made up BS fed to children by the winners and losers as dictated by what the lawyers are paid to say.

  6. Yet more proof ... by UnknownSoldier · · Score: 5, Insightful

    ... greed destroys history.

    We already have this shenanigans with early 8-bit software lost to the annuls of time because of some bullshit copyright that we're not allowed to preserve for fear that someday, somewhere, some company will want to try to "leverage" archaic Imaginary Property.
     

    1. Re:Yet more proof ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I agree with your premise and example, but I somehow doubt we are in any danger of losing the diary of ann frank to the annuls of time.

      Personally, I think all copyright should have to be renewed (with a nominal fee) every 5 years and failure to renew should automatically put it in public domain. Really only the initial protection should be automatic. I would also say the fee should increase exponentially after about 15 years so only the most valuable works get extended.

    2. Re:Yet more proof ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I agree with your premise and example, but I somehow doubt we are in any danger of losing the diary of ann frank to the annuls of time.

      OK, since the unedited version is in public domain it should be fairly safe, shouldn't it? Or is it kept undistributed in a single place where it can be gone in a fire?

    3. Re:Yet more proof ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      LMAO nerd comes in, doesn't know the Anne Frank Foundation is a charity, immediately condemns them, and immediately uses Anne Frank's diary to justify his 8 bit 0-day video gamez and romz warez he downloaded and burned on DVD, and compares her story to his.

      Good thing you logged in to post that, it will stand an everlasting testament to your selfishness and idiocy.

  7. Editors are not authors by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The debate over whether editors have a copyright interest in a given work is not a new debate. What is different about this case is that the author could not have any say over how her works were edited or say over whether her writings should have been published in the first place. Most of the edits done were to remove personal family information or mundane aspects of Anne's life. Because most of the edits were removing information, I'd suggest that Otto could not be considered an author. Indeed, in all the copies I have seen published, none of them credit Otto or Mirjam as co-authors. While they may have some copyright claim previously, those copyrights ended with the life of the author plus 70 years, not editor plus 70 years, and not publisher plus 70 years.

    1. Re:Editors are not authors by AthanasiusKircher · · Score: 4, Informative

      The debate over whether editors have a copyright interest in a given work is not a new debate. What is different about this case is that the author could not have any say over how her works were edited or say over whether her writings should have been published in the first place.

      This is not a unique issue at all. Famous people of the past often have left behind hoards of unpublished papers, correspondence, etc. Many scholars create editions of such things, often long after those people have died -- sometimes centuries later.

      In these cases, it is generally standard that the editor/compiler holds copyright on that edition from the date of publication, rather than anything having to do with the death of the author. Of course the original documents may long ago have become public domain (and hence may be republished freely without permission), but the edition generally requires quite a bit of work to put together. (I admit I know very little about how much was done in the case Anne Frank, though.)

      Indeed, in all the copies I have seen published, none of them credit Otto or Mirjam as co-authors.

      This is the more interesting issue, to me. If these publications actually ascribed the work completely to Anne Frank, even if they were edited, then Otto Frank should be considered more as an editor in the sense of an internal copyeditor at a publishing house that cleans up a manuscript, rather than as a "scholarly" editor who has to make tough decisions about reconciling different versions of texts and how to turn an unedited mess into something comprehensible. The latter is generally entitled to be treated as an "editor" in the formal sense and perhaps granted copyright, but the former is not generally entitled to such protections.

    2. Re:Editors are not authors by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

      It's a stupid system, but an editor/publisher of a work after the author's death is considered the original author. At least for copyright. "Author" + 70 only applies to published works. Since the work wasn't published until after the author's death, the author isn't the author. Like I said, stupid, but always done in the manner that keeps works out of public domain as much as possible.

  8. hmmm by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    How is this story related to I.T. or tech?

    1. Re:hmmm by BancBoy · · Score: 1

      Go back and read the charter, troll...

      --
      [UID-HeinzIntel]
    2. Re:hmmm by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      -1 for trolling

    3. Re:hmmm by sir-gold · · Score: 1

      It's related to copyright, and everything in tech is controlled by either patents or copyrights.

    4. Re:hmmm by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > How is this story related to I.T. or tech?

      It isn't. The story of Anne Frank is fiction. Nothing more than holahoax propaganda.

  9. Cynical Question by ebonum · · Score: 5, Informative

    I've seen a lot of "charities" that are family controlled and pay amazingly high executive salaries. At the same time, the workers make near min. wage or volunteer their time. Another trick is to have the charity pay for meals, flights, leased cars, etc. for the executives.

    I would want to see the full, actual financials of this charity before I have an opinion.

    1. Re:Cynical Question by AchilleTalon · · Score: 1
      So, you may be interested in this I posted earlier in reply to another post.

      "The diary was first published in 1947 in Dutch and in 1952 in English (the American edition). In 1986 a commented version was edited and published and in 2001 5 missing pages were added and published again. The 5 missing pages were removed by Anne's father, Otto, because these pages were showing tension between Otto and his wife and they were showing Anne was not loving so much her mother. These pages were given by Otto before his death to Cornelis Suijk who finally sold them to Anne Frank's foundation for 300 000 USD. Cornelis Suijk was previously director at the Anne Frank's foundation."

      This Cornelis Suijk looks like some of these guys you described.

      --
      Achille Talon
      Hop!
    2. Re:Cynical Question by whoever57 · · Score: 2

      I've seen a lot of "charities" that are family controlled and pay amazingly high executive salaries

      Including a little company that trades under the name "Ikea". But one of Ikea's biggest costs: licensing the "Ikea" name from the Kamprad family.

      --
      The real "Libtards" are the Libertarians!
    3. Re:Cynical Question by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Leased cars? Hmmmph! Peanuts! The Clinton charity flies the Clintons around in private jets!

    4. Re:Cynical Question by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I've seen a lot of "charities" that are family controlled and pay amazingly high executive salaries

      Including a little company that trades under the name "Ikea". But one of Ikea's biggest costs: licensing the "Ikea" name from the Kamprad family.

      That's irrelevant. They are a family owned corporation. They get to dodge taxes like the mega-corps.

      The OP is specifically referring to charity. Something that was once seen as doing good, but today are little more than cottage industries unto themselves. People give them what little they have in the belief it goes to the charity's project, but that's rarely the case now that income is used to run the org and pay fat money to those at the top. In addition to hounding givers for more, selling their data to other orgs as "hot prospects", and phoning the elderly to guilt-trip them into giving away all they have.

  10. money goes to charity. Court ruled ends in 2036 by raymorris · · Score: 1

    > greed destroys history

    In this case, the dispute is between the Anne Frank Foundation, which gives all proceeds to charity, and someone who wants to publish it online at no charge. I guess if you call giving money away to UNICEF "greed" ...

    Last month, a court ruled on this case. Under Dutch copyright law, a work first published posthumously before 1995 remains protected for 50 years after the initial publication. It was first published in 1986, so protection ends 50 years later, in 2036.

    1. Re:money goes to charity. Court ruled ends in 2036 by Dereck1701 · · Score: 4, Informative

      "which gives all proceeds to charity"

      I don't think I've ever encountered a "charity" that didn't skim a fair amount of the money off of the top for someones personal enrichment. It should also be noted that there are apparently two "Anne Frank" charities, The "Anne Frank Foundation" and the "Anne Frank Fund" which have had their own little legal squabbles in the past over the "over-commercialization of Anne’s legacy".

      http://nonprofitquarterly.org/...

    2. Re:money goes to charity. Court ruled ends in 2036 by gl4ss · · Score: 1

      I guess if you define furthening the cause of paying more people salaries from the foundation as charity. they don't provide a financial statement to be easily found either(unlike some other anne frank related foundations).

      also the foundation seems to be rather.. weird in their reading of copyright law.

      in short, the foundation claims that " This is why the foundation owns and administers the rights to all writings of ANNE FRANK.". they claim that otto frank owned all copyrights of anne frank and otto transferred them to the foundation and that thus foundation owns the copyrights.

      the foundation cares about that so much because it pays their salaries. it's just a job.

      --
      world was created 5 seconds before this post as it is.
    3. Re:money goes to charity. Court ruled ends in 2036 by jrumney · · Score: 5, Informative

      I don't think I've ever encountered a "charity" that didn't skim a fair amount of the money off of the top for someones personal enrichment.

      Things like the former director of the charity selling 7 pages that were handed to him while he was director back to the charity for $300k, for example.

    4. Re:money goes to charity. Court ruled ends in 2036 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Yes. I've seen it personally many times. The number of charities that give 6-figure salaries to their management is eye-opening.

      The argument you will hear 100% of the time in these cases is: "If I worked in the for-profit sector, this is how much I'd make".

      Except for, that's pretty much never true. I work in the for-profit sector, but with many non-profit charities. And I know exactly how hard it is to work in the for-profit sector. These non-profit parasites deeply overvalue their abilities and their worth, raid the cookie jar, and then justify it with this flimsy argument.

      And the waste is unbelievable. I'm talking $500/night hotel rooms and loads and loads of "events", "dinners", fabulous "lunch meetings" and more.

      Be very wary of not-for-profits.... It's one of the biggest scams in the book.

    5. Re:money goes to charity. Court ruled ends in 2036 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Where I live there's an art charity that gives money to up and coming artists. The artists are almost all from rich families and attended private schools. They justify it by saying that it's really tough to make it as an artist today, and we have to support the arts.

      It's a non profit.

    6. Re:money goes to charity. Court ruled ends in 2036 by dbIII · · Score: 2

      I've encountered plenty that don't - you can spot them by looking for unpaid volunteers at the exec level instead of the scams with fatcats on the board leeching millions that you seem to think is the norm.
      Ironically some of the "non-profits" (not actually a charity) who have the task of collecting copyright royalties for artists fit the scam status, there was one in the UK that was a black hole taking money in, not letting it out and paying millions to the directors of the org.

    7. Re:money goes to charity. Court ruled ends in 2036 by Gojira+Shipi-Taro · · Score: 1

      "I guess if you call giving money away to UNICEF "greed" ..."

      No, I just call that a fucking waste of money.

      --
      "Oh my God. This is terrible. This is the end of my Presidency. I'm fucked."; ~ Donald J. Trump
    8. Re:money goes to charity. Court ruled ends in 2036 by pnutjam · · Score: 1

      I see this on the IT side. Non-profits like to pretend they are important and make up all kinds of justifications for why they need to waste money on this or that. It's tragic and hilarious at the same time.

  11. Re:Most Annoying Book of the Century! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Wow! Too bad no one cares.

  12. This seems like a no-brainer by davidwr · · Score: 5, Informative

    The original diary, and any direct quotations from it that show up in edited editions, are in the public domain (in Europe)

    Editions consisting only of quotations from the original, such as "censored" editions, are in the public domain.

    Editions which have copyright-able creative content added by someone else are the works of more than one author and the death of Anne Frank 70 years ago doesn't put the entire work in the public domain, just those parts that are direct quotations or non-copyright-able changes. These are similar to musical arrangements - the authorship of the arrangement is shared.

    Translations generally get a fresh copyright (well, at least those done by professional human translators - which is almost certainly true here), so they aren't automatically in the public domain. Short excerpts from a translation where there is only one reasonable way to translation the original probably are in the public domain, as there was no creativity involved in translating that short section. However, anything longer than a few sentences and excerpts longer than a few words can be translated multiple ways and the translator probably has a copyright interest. A machine-translation or an "algorithmic" translation done by a human which has only one possible outcome (basically, a "human computer" doing the translation) very likely does not have a fresh copyright.

    Here's the rub:

    I don't know if the actual original manuscripts are available for inspection. If they are not, then anyone re-publishing any published materials is taking a big legal gamble.

    Disclaimer: I am not a lawyer.

    --
    Knowledge is how to play a game, intelligence is how to win, wisdom is knowing what game to play.
  13. I blame Disney by AndyKron · · Score: 1

    I blame Disney, and anybody who gives them money like people going to see Star Wars.

    1. Re:I blame Disney by sir-gold · · Score: 1

      They don't called it the "Mickey Mouse Protection Act" for nothing.

    2. Re:I blame Disney by Buchenskjoll · · Score: 1

      We all know who Mel Gibson blames...

      --
      -- Make America hate again!
  14. Re:Most Annoying Book of the Century! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Where did you go to school? PCU?

  15. Re:Slashdot: News for SJW by Applehu+Akbar · · Score: 0

    This story is News for Nerds because...you can get Diary of Anne Frank in digital formats?

  16. Re: Most Annoying Book of the Century! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    There is something wrong with English Literature classes in Americans schools when you constantly do Ann Frank and Helen Keller every year. It's almost as bad as my 3 of the 4 American History classes (8th, 11th, Freshman University) I had that never touched on events like the Civil War, Spanish American War, or WW2 but focused and centered around civil rights for blacks and women... Come to think of it, I don't believe I've ever had a single class on the Civil War or WW2...

    Really? You are aware that American schools do not have a single nified curriculum, right?

    I don't even remember any bits with Helen Keller, and only one section on Anne Frank, with two much time wasted on the Civil War including way too much time with The Red Badge of Courage.

    I'm not saying your account is false, but it is possibly unique to you.

  17. Dammit, Slashdot! by jargonburn · · Score: 1

    The Diary of Anne Frank, a Jewish teenager killed by the Nazis whose writing survived in the Amsterdam building where she had hidden, is causing problems.

    Spoilers! T_T

    1. Re:Dammit, Slashdot! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah, I did Nazi that coming.

      Capcha: Skeletal

  18. Re: Slashdot: News for SJW by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Or more accurately because copyright law has been a part of geek culture since forever? Or have we all forgotten about that? You know, the EFF, the FSF, the DMCA, Lawrence Lessig, open source/free software, copyleft...

  19. Re:Slashdot: News for SJW by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Because nerds, at least of the type involved in Slashdot since its origin, have an interest in copyright laws. This is especially so for two groups interested in examples of harm and issues caused by copyright: a smaller group that has well thought out reasoning about why copyright law is broken, and another group that is looking for ways to superficially self-rationalize why they don't need to pay for anything they can download.

  20. Re:Slashdot: News for SJW by Applehu+Akbar · · Score: 1

    But-but-but...this story does not add anything new to our innumerable discussions of copyright affecting digital content. Okay, yet another tricky ploy by peripheral descendants (as in, not even of Anne Frank herself) to glean income from a work they had no part in creating. We all wish the laws of the world could be amended to force these parasites to go out and get a real job, but how are they different from those Hollywood middlemen we already love to hate?

  21. Re: Most Annoying Book of the Century! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I call bullshit. Public-school history classes in the US tend to concentrate on the Revolution, the Civil War, and WW2, to the exclusion of much else.

  22. Re:Slashdot: News for SJW by Barlo_Mung_42 · · Score: 1

    Some of us are history nerds.

  23. Re:Slashdot: News for SJW by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You keep trying to make this specific to "digital content" when the replies to your comments are not talking about specifically the digital domain.

  24. Typhus by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Didn't she die of Typhus after Nazis marched her back into Germany as they were retreating?

  25. Bible translations are copyrighted by tepples · · Score: 4, Interesting

    If that were the case, numerous people would be able to claim copyright on all biblical manuscripts

    Bible translators routinely enforce copyright in their translations. This is why the World English Bible (WEB) project exists, to produce a revision of the pre-1923 ASV into contemporary English and license it under CC0.

    1. Re:Bible translations are copyrighted by laie_techie · · Score: 2

      Bible translators routinely enforce copyright in their translations. This is why the World English Bible (WEB) project exists, to produce a revision of the pre-1923 ASV into contemporary English and license it under CC0.

      I am not a lawyer, but have done some research into the matter. Each translation of the Bible (or other ancient manuscripts) can be copyrighted by the translator. Additionally, each new edition can copyright certain non-textual changes (such as headers, footers, page layout, etc) as well as textual changes (correcting spelling, grammar, punctuation). The 1830 edition of the Book of Mormon is in the public domain, but the LdS Church (under the name Intellectual Reserves, if I remember correctly) has a copyright of the current (2013) edition.

  26. On a sidenote... by Elledan · · Score: 2

    As a sidenote: Hitler's Mein Kampf has passed into the public domain last year without too much of a fuss.

    That Anne Frank's diary is currently mired in copyright disputes thus could be seen as a kind of very painful irony.

    --
    Site & blog: http://www.mayaposch.com
    1. Re:On a sidenote... by sir-gold · · Score: 1

      There wasn't an Adolf Hilter Children's Fund to pay for a lawsuit to keep it out of the public domain, like there is for most famous literary works.

    2. Re:On a sidenote... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Mein Kampf was released first time while author was alive and that version was not modified by other people after his death. However, if you take Mein Kampf and create edited version of it, you will hold copyright over edited version.

    3. Re:On a sidenote... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well, there's always this, an organisation so good even the pope joined!

  27. Re:Most Annoying Book of the Century! by narcc · · Score: 1

    So ... you're saying that you didn't pay attention in school?

    Color me surprised...

  28. Re: Slashdot: News for SJW by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    All nerds are nazis.

  29. Re:Jews by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Shame on you

  30. Re:Slashdot: News for SJW by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    More likely, it is because nerds are not primary slashdot demographic anymore. Slashdot primary demographic nowdays are people who are more interested in culture and everything around, but want to feel like cool kind of nerd.

  31. Pirates to the rescue by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Just let them argue. While we wait for them to decide who should own the world, here are links to the diary.

    http://c3jemx2ube5v5zpg.onion/?document=view&id=899 (dutch)
    http://c3jemx2ube5v5zpg.onion/?document=view&id=903 (german)
    http://c3jemx2ube5v5zpg.onion/?document=view&id=900 (english)

    u are welcome.

  32. Re:Jews by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Jews (and Slavic and French for that matter) were persecuted because Germans wanted all Eastern and Western European land and resources for themselves irrationally seeing Jews as threat to that plan. Living space and stab in the back myth things. Before that, they were persecuted because they were immigrants competing for business and locals could not handle concurrence.

  33. Copywrite is forever? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If they win the copyright case then copyright is forever.
    Just add a comma somewhere in the text every 69 years or take it back out after another 69 years etc. etc.

  34. Re:Jews by mlw4428 · · Score: 2

    Except that stereotype was started hundreds of years ago. Jews were fighting persecution from a religious basis when the Holy Roman Empire was around. That stereotype likely came out of "thin air" as just a "reason" (deserved or not) to continue the ongoing dislike of the Jews. It wasn't like one day some people noticed a lot of Jews were greedy bankers and something clicked. It was more like some king probably came up with that idea when they were asked why the Jews continually kept getting slaughtered, he looked around, saw a Jew with two loaves of bread, and said "LOOK AT HOW GREEDY THEY ARE, KILL HIM."

    Hatred often predates stereotypes and allows for easier consumption of the stereotype as it requires close inspection of the hated party without subsequent reflection on your "side's" own similarities.

  35. Re:Jews by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Love that stereotype. For several centuries Jewish people were excluded from every guild and profession with damn few options being left open apart from money lending. So hey, lets hold that against them just because they weren't considerate enough to starve to death in a gutter instead.

  36. Re:Jews by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    There is a certain irony to this.

    A bunch of Jews are being greedy, about a diary written about persecution of Jews, for being greedy.

    Is your thinking that nobody but Jews would fight about inheritances? Really?

    (it may have been more scapegoat-ism than anything else, but stereotypes don't come out of thin air)

    If that is true, than I guess we know you have a little dick, can't jump, have a drinking problem, and are out-performed in school by Asians.

    Please don't contribute to the problem.

    Rising Anti-Semitism in Europe: History Repeating Once Again

  37. Re:Jews by drinkypoo · · Score: 1, Interesting

    Jews were fighting persecution from a religious basis when the Holy Roman Empire was around.

    The Jews were a convenient scapegoat because they didn't have any allies... but they were also killing one another in the streets over the nature of their God, which doesn't really tend to make people popular. Someone else always has to clean up the blood and corpses.

    It wasn't like one day some people noticed a lot of Jews were greedy bankers and something clicked.

    No. It was like one day people noticed that a lot of Jews owned a lot of good stuff because banking was considered to be a disreputable business, and nobody else was willing to do it, and oh by the way it's quite profitable. And then they attacked the Jews so they could take their stuff, because the Jews didn't have anyone to stand up for them.

    Now, don't get me wrong, the reason the Jews didn't have allies is because they were genocidal sheepherders who claimed to have an exclusive lease on God... but they were also just convenient targets.

    --
    "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
  38. Greedy people by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If anything that needs to be in the public domain for the sake of the public, it is Anne Frank's Diary. Shame on these greedy people!

  39. Re:Jews by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Jews invented wire. Two of them were fighting over a penny.

  40. Re:Jews by JackieBrown · · Score: 2

    It's because Christians were not allowed to charge interest on loans so they hired Jews to do it for them. It got them around the Rome issue and gave the rich a race of people to hate simply for doing their job.

  41. Re:Who cares? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Shhhhh, you aren't supposed to mention that here, or the fact that every single TV movie, miniseries or book about "escaping" or "surviving" the nazis is pure fiction, right up to Oprahs favorite fake victim. Not to say the horrors didn't take place, they clearly and demonstrably did. But there seems to be a small, rabbid, group that is intent on cashing in on this tragedy. Posted as AC because I've been on the internet a few times.

  42. Re:Jews by dyeazel · · Score: 1

    Don't forget the diamond trade. Lucrative and no guild, so who wouldn't want to get into that? Beyond that, the stereotype of the old Jew with a cart that collected scrap metal and fabric prior to the industrial revolution left those individuals in a unique situation with better connections for raw materials when factories were being built. Jews persevered in the areas that the "good" Christians forced them into. Then they are persecuted for prospering.

  43. Re:Slashdot: News for SJW by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Because 'Climatedot' is now a sickening, Bolshevik mouthpiece of the very people who have taken over our countries and are now lording it over us, aided and abetted by the 'useful idiots' among us, who believe everything the JEWISH media tells them...
    How typical of Jews to be money grubbing over something like this.

  44. I'm from central Amsterdam by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    And I say Anne Frank estate is greedily milking gullible folks with whatever it lifts from her sad history. They even openly admit her diary is not authentic but rather spruced up by her very uncle. Her aura of holiness has been irreparably tarnished by greed, money, and outright lies.

  45. What about common content? by davidwr · · Score: 1

    Would content that was common (verbatim copy) to both the 1947 and 1983 editions be considered "first published" in 1947?

    Assuming yes, then copyrights on the common content would likely expire based on either the 1944 authorship under 1944 laws or 1947 publication under 1947 posthumous-publication laws, probably whichever one gave a later expiration.

    Disclaimer: I am not a lawyer and I don't play one on the Internet.

    --
    Knowledge is how to play a game, intelligence is how to win, wisdom is knowing what game to play.
  46. Translations are different by davidwr · · Score: 1

    A translation almost always requires human creative input (computer and "by-the-numbers" algorithmic translations and translations where there is only 1 reasonable translation are likely exceptions).

    A typeset letter-for-letter re-publication of ancient manuscripts should have no additional copyright, at least not in any sane copyright regime. Bear in mind that adding punctuation marks and spaces is, in many cases, a creative endeavor.

    Disclaimers:
    * I am not a lawyer.
    * I am not claiming that any modern copyright regime is sane.

    --
    Knowledge is how to play a game, intelligence is how to win, wisdom is knowing what game to play.
  47. Hoarding manuscripts; posthumous publication by tepples · · Score: 1

    A typeset letter-for-letter re-publication of ancient manuscripts should have no additional copyright

    A publisher doesn't have to publish the manuscripts at all; it can instead hoard them as trade secrets and publish only edited versions. Or it can take advantage of extended copyright terms that some countries apply to posthumous first publication, as AthanasiusKircher suggests.

    1. Re:Hoarding manuscripts; posthumous publication by davidwr · · Score: 1

      A publisher doesn't have to publish the manuscripts at all; it can instead hoard them as trade secrets and publish only edited versions.

      True, however almost all ancient Biblical manuscripts that were found before WWII saw the light of day long enough ago that they are in the public domain.

      I will concede that if new manuscripts were found today, those finding them would probably only publish them in full if it was in their financial or political interest to do so. That is, they would either have to make more money through publication than through hoarding or the political pressure (read: pressure from academics, the general public, governments, etc.) to publish would have to make up the expected financial loss.

      --
      Knowledge is how to play a game, intelligence is how to win, wisdom is knowing what game to play.
  48. Re: Slashdot: News for SJW by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Heil Calculator!

  49. Not automatic by davidwr · · Score: 1

    I can't speak for Europe, but in the USA, copyright was not automatic until relatively recent times.

    For awhile in the 20th century, US copyright was "almost automatic" - you had to either mark it (c) or register it within a few years of first publication or it would fall into the public domain.

    I assume something similar is/was true for the country or countries in Europe where the diary was published in its various editions.

    --
    Knowledge is how to play a game, intelligence is how to win, wisdom is knowing what game to play.
  50. Re:Jews by N3wsByt3 · · Score: 2

    Sometimes, but mostly not.

    Stereotypes usually DO have some truth to it. These stereotypes can be negative or positive, but there is always a cause for it, and mostly that cause is a trait or behaviour of a certain populace which is - while not done by *everyone* - done by enough people of that group to link the behaviour to that group.

    It's a generalisation (especially if one wants to convey the idea that every last individual of a certain group or populace is exhibiting that behaviour), but one that is not without some element of truth in it, in most cases.

    --
    --- "To pee or not to pee, that is the question." ---
  51. Re:Jews by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    > For several centuries Jewish people were excluded from every guild and profession

    Why? Rampant anti-semitism? No.

    This was not "done" to the Jews. They reap what they sow.
     

  52. Re:Jews by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    > Christians were not allowed to charge interest on loans

    Not allowed? For fuck sakes...

    Charging interest - aka usury - is considered immoral to Christians.

    And the Jews willingly and knowingly engage in this immoral behavior - but the Christians forced them out of all professions and into banking?

    Fuck off with your lies.

  53. Copyright term by CanEHdian · · Score: 1

    Change the copyright term retroactively to 10 years with two possible 10-year extensions (the first one quite reasonably priced, the second quite expensive to prevent frivolous extensions) and this won't be a problem. Remember, since people holding copyrighted works saw their investments diminished in value because of retroactive copyright extensions, in many cases delaying public domain status until after their own deaths, a retroactive copyright term reduction should also be without compensation.

    --
    When the copyright term is "forever minus a day", live every day like it's the last.
  54. Re:Who cares? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    > Not to say the horrors didn't take place, they clearly and demonstrably did

    Yes, people died in WWII - Jews and others.

    But there has never been ANY evidence that "6 million Jews were gassed". That is complete bullshit.

    Revisionist history tells a much different tale than Zionist spin doctors.

  55. Re:Jews by JackieBrown · · Score: 1

    And the Jews willingly and knowingly engage in this immoral behavior

    They didn't think the behavior was immoral
    the Christians forced them out of all professions and into banking?

    Not sure if that reply was meant for my post but I didn't write that

  56. Re:Slashdot: News for SJW by CauseBy · · Score: 1

    wut? how is this a diversity story? and would two per week be too much, that's like 1%?

  57. Re:Jews by MoarSauce123 · · Score: 1

    That is exactly how it happened and not a lie. Jews were excluded from craftsmen unions and were relegated to what centuries ago were unspectacular professions: trade and banking. That those rose to utmost importance throughout history is only testament to how ridiculous the restrictions on people based on religion are. By now there are plenty of Christians charging immoral interest on loans, I bet more so than Jews.

  58. Re:Jews by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    (it may have been more scapegoat-ism than anything else, but stereotypes don't come out of thin air)

    If that is true, than I guess we know you have a little dick, can't jump, have a drinking problem, and are out-performed in school by Asians.

    Please don't contribute to the problem.

    Guilty on all counts. What was your point again?

  59. Re:Jews by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Jews invented wire. Two of them were fighting over a penny.

    I thought it was a Scot and a Jew fighting over a penny ...

  60. Re:Jews by nobodie · · Score: 1

    Kings in the Dark and Middle ages were all Roman Catholic. The Church followed a teaching/verse from the bible that said that you cannot charge interest on money ("Neither a borrower nor a lender be" was taken to be a rule that people should actually follow!). As Kings began various wars, battles or land grabs they found themselves running short of gold and silver so they turned to the jewelers of the time (the Jews) who had the stuff in ingots and were willing to lend it for 2% interest. They also set very restrictive rules for repayment, since they didn't feel they could trust the kings and especially their descendants to pay off these debts, especially if they weren't successful.

    SO, imagine the hilarity that would ensue when the Jewish "bankers" went to get their gold and silver back and it wasn't there. Imagine what the king's easy way out would be (Hmmm: filthy Jews are always telling lies and stealing gold from us!) Jews became the butt of not just jokes and ill-will, but it was encouraged into serious hatred and persecution over and over again. You would think the Jews would learn, but 2% of a bunch of gold was a lot of profit those days. Look at your credit card debt today to see what happened when the Pope stopped enforcing the "Neither a" rule. Bring back the Jews I say.

    --
    Subversion of spatial scale luxury decoration ideas.