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  • The origin of copyright law takes us back to the 1710 and Queen Anne, the Monarch who

  • had just overseen the Unification of England and Scotland into then, brand-new Great Britain.

  • Also on her busy schedule was the Statute of Anne: the very first copyright law. It

  • gave authors control over who could make copies of their books or build on their work a limited

  • time. Later a group of rebellious colonists, thought

  • the Statue of Anne was a good idea, and so copy/pasted it into their own constitution

  • giving congress the power: “To promote the Progress of Science and

  • useful Arts, by securing for limited Times to Authorsthe exclusive right to their

  • respective Writings”. Basically, copyright is a contract between

  • authors and society: if you promise to make more stuff, we promise not to copy it or build

  • on it for 28 years. Here’s an example from the modern day: let’s

  • say youre trying to be a director and youre looking for a project to get started.

  • Harry Potter is a story you’d love to remake. But since J. K. Rowling publishedThe Sorcerer’s

  • Stonein the United States in 1998 it still has copyright protection, so you can’t use

  • it. Instead you need find something from a long

  • time ago, like, for example: Star Wars: A New Hope!

  • George Lucas released Star Wars: A New Hope in 1977! That’s more than 28 years ago,

  • So great! Get filming! Alas, no.

  • While Star Wars should have lost copyright protection in 2005 it’s actually copyrighted

  • until 2072! That’s 95 years after publication, not 28!

  • So you can’t use it unless Lucas lets you. Why does his copyright last for ages?

  • Well, as long as there has been copyright there have been authors arguing that it’s

  • too short. And perhaps, theyre right. How’s a poor

  • guy like George Lucas supposed turn a profit in the mere 28 years between 1977 and 2005?

  • There was only the first theatrical release of ‘A New Hope’,

  • And the theatrical re-released in 1978 and 1979

  • and 1981 and 1982

  • and then there was the 1982 VHS and Betamax releases

  • the 1984 broadcast television release the 1985 Laser disc release

  • the 1989 widescreen Laser disc release the 1990 VHS re-release

  • the 1992 widescreen VHS release the 1993 Laserdisc re-release

  • the 1995 VHS re-re-release and the 1997 special edition theatrical release

  • Han shot first, you bastard. and the 1997 VHS special edition release

  • and the 2004 DVD release And now you, dear filmmaker, come along and

  • wantmake your own version of Star Wars: a New Hope? For shame!

  • That like stealing food right out of George’s Lucasmouth.

  • Four times Congress has agreed with authors that the length of copyright is too short

  • to turn a profit and so extended it: First in 1831 from 28 years to 42 years, then

  • again in 1909 to 56 years, in 1976 to the lifetime of the author plus 50 years, and

  • in1998 to the lifetime of the author plus 70 years.

  • That’s a great deal for authors who have already made stuff, but does it really help

  • society get more movies and books? It’s hard to imagine, for example, that

  • Edgar Rice Burroughs started writing ‘A Princess of MarsandTarzanin 1911

  • because the copyright laws had just been extended and would not have done so otherwise.

  • Or that J. K. Rowling, while living on benefits in Scotland, was busy doing the math and wouldn’t

  • have written Harry Potter if the copyright protection was just for her whole life and

  • not an additional seven decades thereafter. Because, exactly who needs incentives after

  • theyre dead? Dead is the point at which literally no incentives in the whole universe

  • can motivate you to write one more screenplay. Because youre dead.

  • If youre the kind of person who is only motivated by plans that unravel after your

  • demise, youre either amazingly awesome or deranged.

  • But so what? So what if every kindergartner’s macaroni artwork is protected by copyright

  • for 175 years? Why does it matter?

  • Because the main beneficiaries of copyright after death are not the authors, or society

  • but companies. Companies likeDisney. Remember all the good old Disney movies?

  • Yeah, all of them came from works no longer under copyright protection at the time.

  • The whole of the Disney Empire and all the childhood magic that it produces only exist

  • because there was copyright free work for Walt Disneyyou know the guy who actually

  • started the whole companyto rework and update.

  • But the corporate, Waltless Disney was the big pusher of the 1998 life +70 years copyright

  • extension. It made sure that no one could make more popular versions of their movies

  • in the same way they made a more popular version of Alice in Wonderland.

  • This near-infinite control subverts the whole purpose of copyright which is to promote the

  • creation of more books and movies, not to give companies the power to stop people making

  • new creative works based on the efforts on their long-dead founders.

  • New directors and authors need the freedom to take what came before to remake and remix

  • (romeo & juliet, emma). And they should be able to use creative material from their own

  • lifetime to do so, not just be limited to the work of previous generations.

  • At the turn of the century, George Lucas wrought upon civilization a new word: anticipointment.

  • The tremendous let-down that was the lazy, bland, and soulless new trilogy.

  • George Lucas’s was completely within his rights to make those movies into the sterile,

  • toy-marketing vehicles they were. He owned Darth Vader and could tell the origin story

  • as he wishedand that’s the only version youll ever get to see.

  • But, imagine for a moment, if copyright still worked as first intended.

  • In 2011 the whole of the original Star Wars trilogyall of its artwork, its characters,

  • its musicwould have left copyright protection and been available to aspiring directors and

  • writers to build upon and make their own versions of.

  • There would be a treasure trove of new Star Wars stories for fans to enjoy.

  • But as long as the current copyright laws remain as they are, no living person will

  • ever get to tell a Darth Vader story, or a Harry Potter Story, or a Hobbit Story or any

  • other story that matters to them, that the author or, when after their death, their company,

  • disagrees with.�

The origin of copyright law takes us back to the 1710 and Queen Anne, the Monarch who

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