←back to thread

451 points croes | 2 comments | | HN request time: 0s | source
Show context
brador ◴[] No.43962450[source]
Lifetime for human copyright, 20 years for corporate copyright. That’s the golden zone.
replies(2): >>43962626 #>>43962923 #
Zambyte ◴[] No.43962626[source]
Zero (0) years for corporate copyright, zero (0) years for human copyright is the golden zone in my book.
replies(2): >>43962681 #>>43963025 #
umanwizard ◴[] No.43962681[source]
Why?
replies(2): >>43962773 #>>43962937 #
Zambyte ◴[] No.43962773[source]
It took me a while to be convinced that copyright is strictly a bad idea, but these two articles were very convincing to me.

https://drewdevault.com/2020/08/24/Alice-in-Wonderland.html

https://drewdevault.com/2021/12/23/Sustainable-creativity-po...

replies(2): >>43962953 #>>43963511 #
SketchySeaBeast ◴[] No.43962953[source]
The first article is saying that "Copyright is bad because of corporations", and I can kind of get behind that, especially the very long term copyrights that have lost the intent, but the second article says that artists will be happier without copyright if we just solve capitalism first. I don't know about you, but that reads to me like "If you wish to make an apple pie from scratch you must first invent the universe".

If an artist produces a work they should have the rights to that work. If I self-publish a novel and then penguin decides that novel is really good and they want to publish it, without copyright they'd just do that, totally swamping me with their clout and punishing my ever putting the work out. That's a bad thing.

replies(3): >>43963451 #>>43963590 #>>43963819 #
1. jasonjayr ◴[] No.43963590{3}[source]
But in this idealized copyright-free world, those self-publishing companies could just as easily take Penguin's top sellers and reproduce those.

The thing that'd set apart these companies are the services + quality of their work.

replies(1): >>43963654 #
2. SketchySeaBeast ◴[] No.43963654[source]
Is not part of the quality of the work the contents of the book? What are these companies putting within the pages? We've taken the greatest and longest part of the effort and made it meaningless.