Alkahest my heroes have always died at the end

January 9, 2007

Copyright advocacy

Filed under: Social — cec @ 8:49 pm

I had lunch yesterday with our scholarly communications officer – basically, copyright guru. We were meeting because I (and apparently a few other people in IT) had commented that we were looking for the scholarly communications officer to take the lead in positioning the university on different copyright issues. He thought that was interesting because that’s what he thought he had been doing.

We discussed a number of issues, only a few of which he had been working on. From memory, the following are the copyright concerns that I have and that I would like the university to take a position on:

  1. increasingly longer copyright terms that damage the growth of the public domain, becoming, essentially, permanent
  2. the Library of Congress’s exemption process which only grants exemptions for three years at a time (iirc, we lost a few exemptions this year)
  3. A loss of the initial focus of the purpose of copyright (“to promote the progress of science and the useful arts” by providing an incentive to create)
  4. the push to copyright databases and collections of facts
  5. the ratchet effect in copyright law where the U.S. tries to catch up with another country (e.g., the EU), but instead surpasses them; then they do the same to us
  6. meta-data: can it be copyrighted? should it? who should own it? is it a derivative work? etc.
  7. DMCA section 1201 on anti-circumvention may prevent the creation of software that would be legal to use
  8. the MPAA’s region codes (an example of the issue above)
  9. General problems with copyright law harming consumers (loss of fair-use).

I’m sure there were other things; but what else am I missing?  A question I used to ask students was, if you could rewrite copyright law, how would it look?

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