As just mentioned - includes details about the Republican Study Committee 
report and its subsequent retraction.

Tom.

From: [email protected] 
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Blogger
Sent: 19 November 2012 17:59
To: [email protected]
Subject: [The 1709 Blog] Is the term of protection of copyright too long?

Last Friday the Republican Study Committee<http://rsc.jordan.house.gov/> 
published a policy brief entitled "Three Myths About Copyright Law and Where to 
Start to Fix It", which Techdirt 
<http://www.techdirt.com/articles/20121117/16492521084/hollywood-lobbyists-have-busy-saturday-convince-gop-to-retract-copyright-reform-brief.shtml>
 labelled as "surprisingly awesome".
The brief analysed the "possible reforms to copyright law that will lead to 
more economic development for the private sector and to a copyright law that is 
more firmly based upon constitutional principles". It argued that the current 
US copyright regime has retarded the creation of a robust DJ/Remix industry, 
hampers scientific inquiry, stifles the creation of a public library, 
discourages added-value industries and penalises legitimate journalism and 
oversight.
The brief suggested the following four potential policy solutions: statutory 
damages reform, expansion of fair use, punishing false copyright claims and 
heavily limiting the terms for copyright and creating disincentives for renewal.
However, the day after the brief was published the RSC issued a statement 
retracting it. The Executive Director of the RSC, Paul Teller, sent an email 
saying:
"We at the RSC take pride in providing informative analysis of major policy 
issues and pending legislation that accounts for the range of perspectives held 
by RSC Members and within the conservative community. Yesterday you received a 
Policy Brief on copyright law that was published without adequate review within 
the RSC and failed to meet that standard. Copyright reform would have 
far-reaching impacts, so it is incredibly important that it be approached with 
all facts and viewpoints in hand. As the RSC's Executive Director, I apologize 
and take full responsibility for this oversight. Enjoy the rest of your weekend 
and a meaningful Thanksgiving holiday...."
It is hard to find any information on the RSC's website, neither the brief nor 
the statement retracting it are there, however you can access a copy of the 
brief here<http://infojustice.org/archives/27807> thanks to InfoJustice.
The suggestion by the RSC brief  to reduce the term of protection is 
particularly interesting and has already been much discussed. Article 7 of the 
Berne 
Convention<http://www.wipo.int/treaties/en/ip/berne/trtdocs_wo001.html#P127_22000>
 provides for minimum copyright protection of 50 years plus life, and current 
US law grants copyright protection for 70 years after the date of the author's 
death.
[http://3.bp.blogspot.com/-dgooKH8lsSE/UKpw87XdYxI/AAAAAAAAAnw/duBGbroi_hw/s320/int2F7C.PNG]<http://3.bp.blogspot.com/-dgooKH8lsSE/UKpw87XdYxI/AAAAAAAAAnw/duBGbroi_hw/s1600/int2F7C.PNG>Both
 seem relatively long, in particular compared with the limited protection 
granted to inventions by patents. As you can see from the graphic to the right, 
copyright term in the US has increased steadily over the years. Before 1978 
(which is when the US Copyright Act 1976 came into force), copyright was 
protected for an initial term of 28 years, renewable for a further 28 years, 
giving a maximum term of 56 years.
An interesting post by the Center for the Study of the Public 
Domain<http://web.law.duke.edu/cspd/publicdomainday/2012/pre-1976>, at Duke 
University, lists the works (published in 1955) that would have come into the 
public domain this year had the US Copyright Act of 1976 remained in force. 
These include:
- J.R.R. Tolkien's The Return of the King, the final installment in his Lord of 
Rings trilogy.
- Vladimir Nabokov's Lolita.
- Richard III, Laurence Olivier's film version of the Shakespeare play.
- Various scientific journal articles about the synthesis of DNA- and RNA-like 
molecules, the effect of placebos, the experimental confirmation of the 
existence of the antiproton, fibre optics, and the synthesis of mendelevium.

There is a certain irony that utility patents are currently protected for 20 
years from application whereas articles containing know-how required to make 
the products of the patents can be protected for 70 years.
In the US there is a registration requirement for copyright, which makes it 
possible to see how many rightsholders still rely on copyright in works 
published in 1955, by looking at how many of them renewed their copyright 
registrations after the first 28 year term. The Center for the Study of the 
Public Domain has done the maths: 85% of authors did not renew their copyright 
(for books 93% did not renew). This means that if the pre-1978 law were still 
in force, 85% of the works created in 1983 might have come into the public 
domain this year.
The Open Government 
Dialogue<http://opengov.ideascale.com/a/dtd/Reduce-copyright-terms-to-the-minimum-required-by-the-Berne-Convention/5603-4049>
 suggests that: "Life of the author plus 50 years is enough to take care of the 
author and his family, and that is really what copyright protection is all 
about. The corporations are not people and do not need such protection to be 
successful." The above evidence indicates that a term of protection of 28 years 
is sufficient.
The RSC's policy said that:
"It is difficult to argue that the life of the author plus 70 years is an 
appropriate copyright term for this purpose - what possible new incentive was 
given to the content producer for content protection for a term of life plus 70 
years vs. a term of life plus 50 years? Where we have reached a point of such 
diminishing returns we must be especially aware of the known and predictable 
impact upon the greater market that these policies have held, and we are left 
to wonder on the impact that we will never know until we restore a 
constitutional copyright system."

[http://3.bp.blogspot.com/-yziCPGoPOBQ/UKpxBDkdP8I/AAAAAAAAAn4/qZ3F26q-gN4/s320/int7228.PNG]<http://3.bp.blogspot.com/-yziCPGoPOBQ/UKpxBDkdP8I/AAAAAAAAAn4/qZ3F26q-gN4/s1600/int7228.PNG>The
 RSC's policy suggested that the term of copyright protection should be reduced 
to 12 years for all new works, with various renewal periods but with an upper 
limit of 46 years' copyright protection. This would contravene the Berne 
Convention however given the retraction of that policy we are unlikely to see 
any change in the US law any time soon.

I would be interested to hear what readers think: is the current US protection 
of 70 years plus life too long? Is the Berne Convention minimum of 50 years 
plus life too long? Given that copyright is more and more often used to protect 
technology, should the term of protection of copyright be aligned with that of 
of patents?


More legible versions of the above images can be accessed here:

Map showing copyright term 
worldwide<http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:World_copyright_terms.svg>
(c) Balfour Smith, Canuckguy, Badseed
Expansion of copyright term in the 
US<http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/2/2f/Copyright_term.svg>
(c) Vectorization: Clorox (diskussion), Original image: Tom Bell.

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Posted By Blogger to The 1709 
Blog<http://the1709blog.blogspot.com/2012/11/is-term-of-protection-of-copyright-too.html>
 on 11/19/2012 05:58:00 PM
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