A
april32010
Guest
source ?Mark Twain is still in print. And, well, he’s dead.
Peace,
Ed
source ?Mark Twain is still in print. And, well, he’s dead.
Peace,
Ed
My lawyers and USPTO disagreeYes, its fine to put in legislation that says that no one else can use it without your permission because you copyrighted it, and thats totally fine, but that doesn’t make it actually your property.![]()
My point is that whille they use the word property, the reality underneath the language used is fundamentally different than that of a house or clothing etc. It really doesn’t matter what language is used, or by whom, intellectual ‘property’ is not property in the same sense that private propperty is, and it never can be. Thats why copyright laws can be debated in a way that laws against stealing private property cannot, they are dealing with two fundamentally different realities.My lawyers and USPTO disagree
Sarah x![]()
A change in the law would not deprive anyone of legitimate income. Rather it redefines what is legitimate (legal) income. Phamaceutical companies pour far more into drug development than any artist, yet their patents are only allowed to last for 20 years, of which much of that time is testing and approval.Since many of them are planning to live longer than the 28 years mentioned, why would providing cultural continuity be more beneficial than depriving people of legitimate income?
I get around paying for others’ work in the most efficient way possible. I utilize the public library system!I am shocked.
I am shocked at the number of people who think they have a “right” to other people’s work. It’s amazing.
It’s all good.I get around paying for others’ work in the most efficient way possible. I utilize the public library system!
I don’t know that speculating about people’s motives necessarily furthers the discussion.Please do not take this personally… I am using your example.
Is the problem most people have with the copyright laws is that they limit access to the creative works of others … or … is it sour grapes because they didn’t get a Harry Potter-like character copyrighted first??
I’m sorry if this sounds sarcastic, but I have seen for myself and heard comments by “also-rans” in the arts whose protestations about copyright injustices seems to masquerade professional jealousy?
Sorry, Ed, I thought people would catch the reference. It’s a quote attributed to Picasso, I think. It don’t mean the quote in the modern “let’s pirate stuff” sense of stealing. Many great artists “steal” from those who have gone before them by building on their work and making it their own (as a “thief” does). For an artist to simply “borrow” means making reference to the other work without making it their own.Joe,
I’m surprised at you. “…great artists steal.”? Just feel lucky that Michaelangelo is still not around because I think he’d have a few words to say to you, not just about his art but the inventions he created.
Who was George Lucas before Star Wars? Just some rich guy with nothing better to do?
Peace,
Ed
:ehh:I don’t believe intellectual property is legitimate. Only real property is legitimate. While there are arguments for why it is socially beneficial for the government to enforce intellectual property rights, I don’t think it’s legitimate that I am not allowed to use my own typewriter and paper in the way I want because someone I’ve never met and won’t physically hurt in any way says he has ownership over a certain grouping of words.
Including this information in your first post might have made your thinking clearer; instead it came off like an ad hominem attack.It was not my intention to shut down discussion. My question was based on my personal experiences and comments** made by individuals who are not artists themselves, or artists who have not been overly successful towards myself, artists I have worked with, student/artists I teach, etc. Again, I am only thinking aloud on the motivation for someone’s opinion on an issue so I can be *open to learning *how and why certain positions are important to him or her.
I don’t care if Walt Disney CORP, which will never die, is able to renew its copyright on Mickey Mouse. I just disagree with their getting the whole country to make such a major change in so many areas.I’m sure the lawyers at the Walt Disney Company would be glad to explain it to you.
Peace,
Ed
Your library system must be a lot different from ours, where they seem to cull books like crazy.Very wrong. Libraries retain copies as well as used book dealers. I have been in the book business for decades. I think you’ll need to back up your statement. Most major publishing companies earn a significant income on their backlist - that is, books the public wants to stay in print. “A lot of money?” Really? You’ll have to back that up too.
Mark Twain is still in print. And, well, he’s dead.
Peace,
Ed
If a book stays in print, it is because a lot of people bought or are still buying it. The author has made money on the book that way, no? If an author does not make money on a book, it is because no one buys it, and if no one buys it, it goes out of print.Very wrong. Libraries retain copies as well as used book dealers. I have been in the book business for decades. I think you’ll need to back up your statement. Most major publishing companies earn a significant income on their backlist - that is, books the public wants to stay in print. “A lot of money?” Really? You’ll have to back that up too.
Mark Twain is still in print. And, well, he’s dead.
Peace,
Ed
Nope. Even if you are giving it away. Only the copyright owner decides how it is sold and how it gets distributed.here is another one from this thread forums.catholic-questions.org/showthread.php?p=9628605#post9628605
Stealing other people’s ideas and work and generating you own versions? That helps who?The question that many people have, including myself, is whether or not it is actually correct to talk about ‘intellectual property’. In other words, we question whether or not thoughts themselves are the kind of things that can be owned by a single person. I say they are not. Just because someone slaps the name ‘property’ on it doesn’t make it such. Now, that does not mean I am against having copyright rules as such, they serve a purpose, and an important purpose, but the question is still open as to what is the best way to acheive the end desired, that is, more creativity.
I work in publishing and that statement is a lie. If you want to pass culture on to your children, go to a library or get out of print books from a used book dealer. Don’t drag the kids into this.It’s a kind of crummy way to argue, to use a *possible *flaw in the person making the argument. It’s kinda designed to shut down all discussion, isn’t it?
I am not a writer; I have no problem with authors making money.
However, this is usually not the case. What often happens is that publishers will squash older books in favor of newer books which they can sell more of. This is a manipulation of our culure and of our ability to pass our culture along to our children.
A few words from J.K. Rowling:Words are like raw material and writers shape into a literary work. This is work, and the worker is worthy of his hire. He should be paid for his work.
One is permitted to do what one will with a book or cd, but one cannot have two copies, one of which is in circulation and one of which is not.
If I buy a cd, copy it to my hard drive, and give my copy away to someone, then there are two copies each with a separate owner, but the band who made the cd originally only got paid for one copy. This may not be a big problem on a small scale, but imagine if a group made a cd and the first person who bought it put it on the internet and everyone got it free, then the band and everyone else who worked on it would only have $16 to split among them. That hardly seems fair, does it?
That was not his point. There are professional photographers who:This makes me upset. You pay to have pictures taken of you and they have a copyright on your image?
I wouldn’t be to opposed to that but then you have a picture handed down by relatives who you cannot get a copy of because it is copyrighted by an unknown photographer who whent out of buisness fifity years ago.