Wow. Mr. Pinkus (it is alleged) took advantage of his own uncle's death by stealing the rights of an elderly woman to her award-winning, classic American novel. Then he tried to avoid paying his dead uncle's company or estate its due. Mr. Pinkus is a wonderful human being.
I'm no fan of copyright and this is why. The very fact that it can be transferred like property, even "accidentally," means it is essentially meaningless. It is not actually tied to the concept of an author's right to his or her own work, and if it is trying to protect that right, it is failing.
It isn't even supposed to be about protecting that 'right'. It was supposed to be an incentive to create for the public's benefit with the limited time monopoly being simply the means to do so.
So without copyright anyone can print To Kill a Mockingbird without paying royalties to Harper Lee. How would that be a better system. Should she make her money charging admission to public readings of her work, as is proposed for musicians (making income from giving concerts rather than selling recordings) in a copyrightless world?
Copyright is nearly useless in a world where there is an infinite supply of any given work for negligible cost. Anyone can print anything without paying royalties to anyone, with the only actual barrier between them and doing so being an unenforcable, obsolete law made for a world with a finite supply of a work.
But I read Harper Lee's work and enjoyed it. I want to pay her for it, so I don't just steal it without doing so. But I also don't want to pay a publisher for Harper Lee's work because I don't know how much the publisher is going to give Harper Lee directly. I'd much rather pay Harper Lee herself. I haven't been coerced into doing so - I do so because I enjoyed her work and want to pay her for it. This is particularly true if I acquired her work conveniently at a time of my choosing using an outlet on the Internet that I know she herself set up.
Louis CK, Radiohead, and Andrew Sullivan are all making a living on this model. They are still selling recordings. They know that people will probably still acquire their work without paying them, but make enough on the good people who don't so to offset the cost, especially since in doing so they pay middlemen nothing, or nearly nothing.
People will pay a lot for both convenience and the satisfaction of knowing they compensated the original author him- or herself for an enjoyable experience. Paraphrasing Jobs, stealing a work is only free if your time is worth nothing. I don't need copyright to know that.
>Copyright is nearly useless in a world where there is an infinite supply of any given work for negligible cost.
The entire point of copyright is that copies cost significantly less than the original. For example, no one has a copyright on a well cut diamond, because there would be no point. However, if after you put in however much work it takes to cut the diamond, people are able to make perfect duplicates at little to no cost, then you need copyright to protect your initial investment.
The only reason it is easier to buy works than pirate them is because copyright does exist, so there are additional barriers to getting the work in a way that the author does not want. As it is today, people buy books through publishers. If there was no copyrights, why should those publishers pay the author anything?
@droithomme
I was using Harper Lee as an example. I didn't actually take an ebook and read it without paying her. I read To Kill a Mockingbird from a print book I bought a long time ago, but will gladly send her a donation anyway to offset the thievery of Mr. Pinkus.
Substitute any of the other names I mentioned in there and my argument still holds. I have bought a subscription to Andrew Sullivan's blog, voluntarily paid substantially more than $0 for In Rainbows, and paid for Louis CK's latest online only comedy special. Gladly.
You're assuming that the only alternative to copyright is to have no incentive structure at all. There are other models with their own advantages and disadvantages. This is one particular weakness of copyright that an alternative system might avoid.
I think most people agree you should be able to "sell the rights" in the sense of licensing them to someone, and to allow others to sublicense, and to enter contracts that grant exclusivity for sublicensing.
What's somewhat bizarre is that you can permanently transfer ownership of the work, making it legally as if the other person was the original creator.
I don't think it's bizarre. If I'm a tailor and create a new suit, I can transfer ownership to someone else. If I create music then I should have a similar right to permanently transfer copyright ownership. To me that seems 'natural', and moreover it makes the copyright more valuable, providing a greater incentive to produce the music.
It's useless to try to compare physical goods to creative works. A tailor can't retain a suit while allowing me to have it. A musician can give you a song, but still have that song. These concepts of ownership just aren't compatible.
Because the law is recognizing something that didn't happen. If I transfer my copyright to someone else, the law then views that person as the originator, owner and creator of that work, legally speaking. But it is not true. I created the work, not the person to whom I transferred the copyright, and no legal formality can change that fact. The law is saying something that isn't true.
I suppose all ownership is this way. My answer, then, is that creating something is fundamentally different than owning it. Your creation of something isn't property that can be transferred.
If an author has a right to his or her own work, how does the author not have the right to transfer the legal benefits thereof in exchange for consideration?
I agree. I really dislike the fact that copyrights can be "transferred" to another person or entity. The music labels especially have been abusing this the most, and are basically coercing any many artists into giving them the full rights of their music, and then become their employees. The labels should be partners in promoting a song or an album, and nothing more. They shouldn't be entitled to the artists work, and then expect royalties for a century from it, while keeping extending the copyrigh term to infinity.
I agree. I really dislike the fact that copyrights can be "transferred" to another person or entity.
But you agree (I assume) that people should have copyrights over their books or music. So, I wrote this wonderful song but now I need upfront money to buy a house /pay for cancer treatment /daughter's college. Why shouldn't I be able to sell it? It's mine, isn't it?
You can still sell exclusive usage rights even if you cannot transfer ownership.
That's the idea behind German 'Urheberrecht' (literally creator's rights): As soon as you create something of sufficient originality, you gain moral rights that cannot be transferred except through inheritance (ie after death).
But that doesn't mean you have to "sell" it in a transfer-of-ownership way. You license it so particular people, who have paid you for this, get exclusive use of it.
Selling it in the usual sense is weird because it means that then people can then go and further sell it to people who might use it in ways you wouldn't have approved of. And maybe you're OK with that, or you really trust the people you're licensing it to, and you want it to be sublicensable.
But there's no inherent reason everything has to be sublicensable -- and the transfer-of-ownership paradigm is effectively, "everything is sublicensable". And not just sublicensable, but sublicensable to arbitrarily large degree. And yet this is what seems to have become customary.
It may be true that you're not a fan of copyright, but I'm not sure you know enough about copyright to have a properly informed opinion about an aspect like this.
For what it's worth, the transferability of copyrights was established in the 19th century to enable to creation and publication of encyclopedias. By allowing writers to transfer their copyrights to publishers, publishers could (a) aggregate a number of entries into a new type of work and (b) produce new editions of that work without having to submit to extortionate negotiating situations with writers who could use their control of one (possibly unchanged) part of the work to block development of the rest.
This principle underlies the genesis of the extensively collaborative forms of expression that defined culture in the 20th century, from recorded symphonies, to radio plays, televised broadcasts, and or course, the cinema. Indeed, it creates an entirely new class of authors (e.g. cinematographers and film editors) whose own work depends on massively collaborative forms of creation.
There are many, many reasons to be critical of the copyright system. But the basic transferability of copyrights isn't one of them.
I'm no fan of copyright and this is why. The very fact that it can be transferred like property, even "accidentally," means it is essentially meaningless. It is not actually tied to the concept of an author's right to his or her own work, and if it is trying to protect that right, it is failing.