[emphasis mine:]

________________________________


[Library of Congress]

U.S. Copyright Office, NewsNet Issue 583

06/01/2015


[Copyright Newsnet]

NewsNet 583
June 1, 2015

U.S. Copyright Office Commemorates 225th Anniversary of the First Federal 
Copyright Act

Yesterday was the 225th anniversary of the nation’s first federal copyright 
law. It was enacted on May 31, 1790—less than two years after the ratification 
of the U.S. Constitution. It was signed into law by President George Washington 
and was one of the major accomplishments of the First Congress (along with 
legislation establishing the Department of State, the Department of the 
Treasury, and the federal judiciary, among other institutions).

The law was called “An Act for the encouragement of learning,” and it protected 
“maps, Charts, and books.” The decision to protect maps and charts indicates 
that the First Congress wanted to encourage exploration of the American 
continent, including its lakes, rivers, and harbors. The decision to protect 
books confirms that the First Congress also valued the creation and 
distribution of authorship, both for informational and artistic purposes. These 
objectives are reflected in the works that were registered in the first month 
after enactment, which included an atlas, a spelling book, a collection of 
court decisions, and a “comedy in five acts.”

The first federal copyright law established many of the fundamental principles 
that are a vital part of the law today. It stated that copyright initially 
belongs to the author—the person who conceived and created the work— rather 
than the publisher or the state. At the same time, it recognized that an 
author’s rights are not perpetual but instead should be limited in time. And it 
recognized that authors are part of a larger economic ecosystem, and that they 
often transfer their rights to publishers, retailers, or other parties. The 
first federal copyright law established the principle that authors should have 
rights to control the use of their works, such as how they are printed, 
reprinted, published, and sold. It recognized that authors should have 
meaningful remedies to encourage others to respect these rights and to provide 
appropriate compensation when those rights are infringed. And it recognized the 
central role a registration system plays in documenting a public record of 
creativity, ownership, term, and other legal facts.

Much has changed in the past 225 years. The copyright law today protects not 
only books, maps, and charts, but also movies, sound recordings, software, and 
other works that contribute to the knowledge economy and global marketplace. 
But the fundamental principles reflected in the first federal copyright law 
continue to inspire the Copyright Office in its work today.

Read<https://lnks.gd/l/eyJhbGciOiJIUzI1NiJ9.eyJlbWFpbCI6ImFrZXNoZXRAaW1qLm9yZy5pbCIsImJ1bGxldGluX2xpbmtfaWQiOiIxMDAiLCJzdWJzY3JpYmVyX2lkIjoiNDY2MDc0MTMzIiwibGlua19pZCI6IjI5MTIzODg2IiwidXJpIjoiYnAyOmRpZ2VzdCIsInVybCI6Imh0dHA6Ly9jb3B5cmlnaHQuZ292L2Fib3V0LzE3OTAtY29weXJpZ2h0LWFjdC5odG1sIiwiYnVsbGV0aW5faWQiOiIyMDE1MDYwMS40NTQ5MzAwMSJ9.9nTWPu864mjCD8XmVt_HpcHn8W83NPI2OK_N06zhe3M>
 the original copy of the law.





































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