- Joined
- Dec 28, 2014
I'm just posting this as a placeholder since the topic comes up a fair amount and sometimes threads go off on tangents about it.
In particular, just to get it started, there's a lot of salt about Atlus issuing DMCA strikes against Let's Players because of gameplay and cutscenes. Do you think Atlus or the LPers are right?
Also, to continue a tangent I was on with @SoapQueen1 on that thread:
Here, you're talking about the purpose of copyright, which the Framers felt important enough to include in the Constitution.
"To promote the progress of science and useful arts, by securing for limited times to authors and inventors the exclusive right to their respective writings and discoveries."
The argument is that the words "limited times" have been essentially rendered a nullity by simply continually extending the copyright term, an argument rejected (I believe incorrectly) by the Supreme Court in Eldred v. Ashcroft. The court found that so long as the term was "limited" at all, it comported with the Constitution. This is ridiculous, because by this logic, Congress could just pass a law extending the copyright term to a trillion years.
However, the U.S. Constitution wasn't the source of copyright as we currently know it. Arguably, it originated shortly after the first printing presses and was invented so the King could have the power to reward favored printers with the right to print the Bible. Additionally, it was to put limits on what was allowed to be printed at all.
The origins of copyright pretty much suck.
That's actually why the Framers thought it was important enough to put freedom of the press and limits on copyright directly into the Constitution itself. Back then, in Merrie Olde England, shutting up critics was pretty simple. You just went and took their press or sent a mob to smash it up.
In particular, just to get it started, there's a lot of salt about Atlus issuing DMCA strikes against Let's Players because of gameplay and cutscenes. Do you think Atlus or the LPers are right?
Also, to continue a tangent I was on with @SoapQueen1 on that thread:
Not originally. Originally copyright protection was to provide a limited time monopoly as an incentive for academics (history, math, technology, etc) to publish their work so other people could use it after the monopoly period was over.
Here, you're talking about the purpose of copyright, which the Framers felt important enough to include in the Constitution.
"To promote the progress of science and useful arts, by securing for limited times to authors and inventors the exclusive right to their respective writings and discoveries."
The argument is that the words "limited times" have been essentially rendered a nullity by simply continually extending the copyright term, an argument rejected (I believe incorrectly) by the Supreme Court in Eldred v. Ashcroft. The court found that so long as the term was "limited" at all, it comported with the Constitution. This is ridiculous, because by this logic, Congress could just pass a law extending the copyright term to a trillion years.
However, the U.S. Constitution wasn't the source of copyright as we currently know it. Arguably, it originated shortly after the first printing presses and was invented so the King could have the power to reward favored printers with the right to print the Bible. Additionally, it was to put limits on what was allowed to be printed at all.
The origins of copyright pretty much suck.
That's actually why the Framers thought it was important enough to put freedom of the press and limits on copyright directly into the Constitution itself. Back then, in Merrie Olde England, shutting up critics was pretty simple. You just went and took their press or sent a mob to smash it up.
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