Archive for the ‘copyright’ tag

Disney is Stealing Ze Frank’s Life #

November 1st, 2008 | In Worth Distraction 

Though he’s not dramatic enough to say it, the case could undeniably be made.

The Feta Precedent #

October 8th, 2008 | In Worth Knowing 

Lebanon has announced plans to sue Israel over the food copyright for tabouleh, kubbeh, hummus, falafel and fattoush. The suit relies on the absurdly named feta precedent; as David Kenner describes:

Six years ago, Greece was able to win a monopoly on the production of feta cheese from the European Parliament by proving that the cheese and had been produced in Greece under that name for several millennia.

Copyright Creep #

June 11th, 2008 | In Worth Considering 

This month, the libertarian Cato Unbound is discussing copyright. The first two (of four — the others haven’t been posted) essays are rather interesting reading. Rasmus Fliecher kicked off with a rather bleak vision of the future:

The real dispute, once again, is not between proponents and opponents of copyright as a whole. It is between believers and non-believers. Believers in copyright keep dreaming about building a digital simulation of a 20th-century copyright economy, based on scarcity and with distinct limits between broadcasting and unit sales. I don’t believe such a stabilization will ever occur, but I fear that this vision of copyright utopia is triggering an escalation of technology regulations running out of control and ruining civil liberties. Accepting a laissez-faire attitude regarding software development and communication infrastructure can prevent such an escalation.

More optimistically, Timothy Lee offers a (radical-sounding) new paradigm:

The starkness with which the copyright debate is often framed reflects a misunderstanding of the function copyright served in the 20th century. Copyright is commonly conceived as a system of restrictions on the copying of creative works. But until recently, it would have been more accurate to describe copyright as governing the commercial exploitation of creative works. From this perspective, the inevitable legalization of non-commercial file sharing looks less like a radical departure from copyright’s past, and more like an incremental adjustment to technological change. It will require the rejection of some misguided policy developments of the last decade, to be sure, but in a sense it will simply restore the common-sense principles of 20th-century copyright law.

(via Matt Yglesias)

Larry Lessig on the Orphan Works Bill #

May 20th, 2008 | In Worth Reading 

His argument:

Congress is considering a major reform of copyright law intended to solve the problem of “orphan works” — those works whose owner cannot be found. This “reform” would be an amazingly onerous and inefficient change, which would unfairly and unnecessarily burden copyright holders with little return to the public.

Ford Claims Right to Pictures of its Cars #

January 14th, 2008 | In Worth Knowing 

I’ll just give you Slashdot’s summary:

“In a move that can only be described as ‘Copyright Insanity’, Ford Motor Company now claims that they hold the rights to any image of a Ford vehicle, even if it’s a picture you took of your own car. The Black Mustang Club wanted to put together a calendar featuring member’s cars and print it through CafePress, but an attorney from Ford nixed the project, stating that the calendar pics and ‘anything with one of (member’s) cars in it infringes on Ford’s trademarks which include the use of images of their vehicles.’