Posted by David Post:
Copyright's Problems:
http://volokh.com/archives/archive_2006_11_19-2006_11_25.shtml#1164212000


   An article in the Oct. 19th issue of the journal [1]Nature
   [subscription only, I'm afraid] pointed to the proliferation of online
   archives collecting together the papers of a number of well-known
   scientists, both historical (Einstein, Darwin, Lamarck, Newton,
   Lavoisier) and more recent (Pauling, Crick). One small item caught my
   eye; some of the archivists dealing with recent material were quoted
   as saying that their fears of copyright liability led them to omit
   incoming letters from the material that they were making publicly
   available; their reasoning was that copyright in those letters belongs
   to the authors, not the recipients, of the letters, that it would be
   prohibitively costly to try to obtain permissions from, say, everyone
   who ever wrote a letter to Francis Crick, and that without obtaining
   permission they were afraid of lawsuits and liability if they went
   ahead and put that material online.

   It's a perfectly rational and reasonable decision on their part -- and
   a sad commentary on the current state of copyright law. Surely the
   overwhelming majority of authors of letters to Linus Pauling, say, or
   to Francis Crick, have absolutely zero interest in asserting their
   copyright in those letters to prevent re-publication -- indeed, the
   overwhelming majority of those letter-writers probably are not even
   aware that they own the copyright in those letters. And yet the
   possibility that there may be a few authors out there who would claim
   infringement keeps this trove of wonderful material, in its entirety,
   out of the hands of scholars and the public at large.

   It's unfortunate and entirely perverse; this is not what copyright is
   supposed to be about or the purpose it is supposed to be serving. It
   is also entirely avoidable. In the "old days," (before 1976) U.S.
   copyright holders had to take certain affirmative steps -- placing a
   notice of copyright on documents, for example, or renewing the
   copyright when the initial 14- or 28-year period of protection was
   expiring -- to protect their works. The presence or absence of these
   steps signaled to the world at large whether the author had any
   interest in protecting his/her copyright and, in turn, made it
   relatively easy to determine which works could, and which works could
   not, be duplicated by others without the authors' permission.

   Alas, we have, over the past several decades, eliminated all of those
   requirements, and this situation points out the cost that imposes upon
   us as a result. Larry Lessig (among others) has suggested bringing
   these requirements back -- his proposal calls for a short (5 or 10
   years) initial term of copyright, after which copyright holders would
   be required to pay a very small fee (say $5) to renew their copyright.
   The vast majority of authors, having no interest whatsoever in
   enforcing their copyrights going forward, would allow their material
   to fall out of copyright; at the same time, those authors who wanted
   to continue to exploit their copyrighted works would be able easily to
   do so. The more I think about it, the better the idea looks to me.

References

   1. http://www.nature.com/

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