Alex Volkov wrote:

AFAIK, in US the copyright expires 25 years after the original copyright
holder (author, recording artist, but not sure about an assignee) dies, or
after ~70 years from the date of creation (in cases where a corporation
holds a copyright for sure), but do not hold your breath, as the companies
like Disney constantly lobby to extend this period, otherwise you would
certainly see Mickey Mouse cartoons in public domain by now.
As far as royalties are concerned, I suppose MOH in US  for some company
could be considered on par with a bar, which translates to pennies per
played song, as long as no more than ~100 people are listening to it at
once.
But please do not take this a as sound law advice, as I am no lawyer ;-).

Cheers!
Alex.



Unfortunately, it's much more heinous: 70 years *from the death of the last remaining creator*, if not a work for hire, anonymous, or pseudonymonous work. If it is a work for hire, 95 from first publication, or 120 from creation, whichever ends first. Whether is the work was in the first or second period of copyright (first 28 years) before 1978 changes some things.....I don't know - it takes a lawyer or a bought-and-paid-for politian to read this crap. Too many words, not enough equations :)


http://www.copyright.gov/title17/92chap3.html#302


Bob



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