Title.
Should be X years after publication, lifespan should not matter.
A person at age 200 (I mean in the future when they find anti-aging tech) should not be able to gatekeep the stuff they wrote when they were 25.
A person publishing a book at age 30 then dies next day in a car accident should not lose the right to pass on profits made from the book to his/her children.
Copyright should be fixed-length, fuck lifelong copyright, fuck “corporate personhood”.
SnotFlickerman@lemmy.blahaj.zone 1 day ago
rufuspollock.com/…/optimal_copyright_term.pdf
Research by mathematician Rufus Pollock in 2009 pegged optimal copyright length at 15 years, regardless of time of authorial death. So if I copyrighted something at 30, I would lose the copyright automatically at 45, even if I lived to 90.
FaceDeer@fedia.io 1 day ago
So glad to see another reference to this guy's work in the wild.
As an amusing side note, the original term of copyright in the first law that established it (the British Copyright Act of 1710) was a flat 14 years, with a mechanism that allowed you to apply for only one extension of an additional 14 years. So most things would be 14 years, and whatever select things were particularly valuable or important could have 28 years. Under Pollock's analysis this is just about the perfect possible system. So by sheer coincidence this is something that we got right the first time and ever since then we've been "correcting" it to be less and less optimal.
NoneOfUrBusiness@fedia.io 1 day ago
This estimate is also an overestimate according to the paper.
This means that the real number is significantly less than 15, maybe more like 12.
chilicheeselies@lemmy.world 1 day ago
Whats the TL;DR on why?
kn33@lemmy.world 1 day ago
I wish the abstract had information on what factor they’re optimizing for when deriving the optimal length.