download adobe acrobat reader 6.02 Download Adobe InCopy CS5 for Mac OEM - Top Software 4 Download adobe acrobat reader printing problems adobe acrobat conference Download Adobe Photoshop Lightroom 3 OEM - Top Software 4 Download install adobe creative suite photoshop system acrobat adobe approval Download Adobe InCopy CS5 OEM - Top Software 4 Download adobe acrobat viewer free download adobe acrobat 4.5 Download Adobe Soundbooth CS5 OEM - Top Software 4 Download adobe acrobat 7.0 trial air education pdf acrobat adobe training Download Adobe Creative Suite 5 Master Collection OEM - Top Software 4 Download adobe acrobat for windows me adobe creative suite 2 premium software Download Adobe Acrobat 9 Pro Extended OEM - Top Software 4 Download adobe acrobat version 7 upgrade

Audio Interview with Author and Copyright Expert Bill Patry: On Orphans and Pirates

In 1841 Thomas Babington Macaulay observed that “it is good that authors should be remunerated; and the least exceptionable way of remunerating them is by a monopoly. Yet monopoly is an evil. For the sake of the good we must submit to the evil; but the evil ought not to last a day longer than is necessary for the purpose of securing the good.”

In his new book Moral Panics and the Copyright Wars, highly regarded copyright lawyer Bill Patry

 

concurs with Macaulay, arguing that ‘copyright should last only as long as is necessary to ensure that works that would not have been created but for the incentive of copyright are created.’

The book at once demonstrates how copyright is a utilitarian government program–not a property or moral right, and deplores the manner in which debate has deteriorated into a battle between oversimplified metaphors; language which demonizes everyone involved – pirates and orphans alike. This has led to bad business and bad policy decisions. "Unless we recognize that the debates over copyright are debates over business models, says Patry, we will never be able to make the correct business and policy decisions

A former copyright counsel to the U.S. House of Representatives, policy adviser to the Register of Copyright, law professor and author of the definitive Patry on Copyright, the man, currently copyright counsel to Google, is a centrist and advocate of balanced copyright laws, and, perhaps most significantly, the owner of a kickin’ pair of running shoes

Moral Panic concludes with a call not for strong or weak copyright laws but more effective ones, designed to maximize the creation of new works and learning, and minimize obstacles which prevent others from accessing and building upon them.

Listen here as Patry, speaking as a concerned, informed citizen, not as a Google employee, works his way out from Macaulay’s lucidity, a sampling of which I cite to start off our conversation:

Subscribe to the Biblio File Podcast here

 
  • Share/Bookmark

Leave a Reply