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Public Domain Day!

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topic icon Author Topic: Public Domain Day!  (Read 2141 times)

crashryan

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Public Domain Day!
« on: January 03, 2022, 01:59:55 AM »

After a long dry period thanks to increasingly screwed-up copyright laws, works are at last entering the Public Domain again. This year such diverse works as the first Winnie-the-Pooh book, Hemingway's The Sun Also Rises, and hundreds of thousands of pre-1922 sound recordings (finally!) belong to the world. Here is a brief article, with links to more detailed ones, outlining the situation:

https://boingboing.net/2022/01/01/winnie-the-pooh-is-now-officially-public-domain.html

Agatha Christie fans will note they can finally adapt The Murder of Roger Ackroyd into a graphic novel. Provided they want to do such a thing, of course.

The Public Domain has been under relentless attack by corporate entities, led by the likes of Disney and Sony, who want to own everything forever (in many cases stuff they never owned in the first place). For any of you who are working with, or plan to work with, Public Domain characters and works, here is a link to an explainer by Duke University's Center for the Study of the Public Domain. This goldmine of information is a very long read but I urge you to follow it through. It sets out the limits of PD-derived works, details various strategies by the likes of Disney, Zorro, and the Conan Doyle Estate to circumvent the Public Domain using copyright and trademark tricks, and describes corporate attempts to create bogus interpretations of the law to maintain their hold over PD characters. It also clarifies the difference between copyright and trademark protection and what each can or cannot do.

https://web.law.duke.edu/cspd/publicdomainday/2022/bcvpd/

The Public Domain has won a number of important battles, but it's been an uphill fight. "Steamboat Willie" is scheduled for liberation in a couple of years, which means the film's version of The Mouse could be used by others without bowing before the Disney Machine. You can bet they'll deploy every lawyer they have to try extending its already over-extended copyright into eternity. The explainer's author writes, somewhat naively:

The original Winnie-the-Pooh book from 1926 is in the public domain. However, Disney still owns copyrights over later works, and trademark rights for ?Winnie the Pooh? on a variety of products. Hopefully they will not follow the example of the Sherlock Holmes, Tarzan, or Zorro rights holders and try to use residual rights to prevent what copyright expiation allows. This could lead to unnecessary litigation, and even the threat of lawsuits could chill the creative reuse the public domain is designed to promote.

That, of course, is precisely the idea. In battles like these the side with the deepest pockets usually wins. But not always. In the meantime, do your bit to keep the Public Domain humming. Get out there and collect, distribute, adapt, reanimate!
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The Australian Panther

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Re: Public Domain Day!
« Reply #1 on: January 03, 2022, 02:39:50 AM »

Good news, Crash,
re Disney, do we realize that Disney itself has always taken advantage of works that are PD. In particular, fairy tales. Cinderella, Snow White, The Robin Hood mythos, The Jungle Book, Pinocchio, Hell, Santa Claus and Rudolph the Red-nosed Reindeer? Did someone mention Charles Dickens or Jules Verne or HG Wells? Mary Shelly? H Rider Haggard? Robert Louis Stevenson?  Shakespeare?
How do you spell hypocrisy?
Actually, if Shakespeare had someone representing his creators rights, they could successfully sue most situation comedies and soaps for plagiarism.
So does this mean that there are more early comic strips and cartoons that should be available? Early animation? Cheers!
Where would you get a list of that material?     
Cheers!   
« Last Edit: January 03, 2022, 02:42:49 AM by The Australian Panther »
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SuperScrounge

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Re: Public Domain Day!
« Reply #2 on: January 02, 2023, 09:25:38 AM »

Well, I just heard that the last Arthur Conan Doyle Sherlock Holmes stories are now PD in the US.

Anything else of interest that's now PD?
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ComicMike

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Re: Public Domain Day!
« Reply #3 on: January 12, 2024, 04:16:48 PM »

Good news, I think:

Mickey, Disney, and the Public Domain: a 95-year Love Triangle

(c.2024) by Jennifer Jenkins, Director, Duke Center for the Study of the Public Domain

https://web.law.duke.edu/cspd/mickey/
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ComicMike

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Re: Public Domain Day!
« Reply #4 on: January 16, 2024, 03:13:42 PM »

Disney & Public Domain - this is worth an article in a major German weekly magazine.


https://www.zeit.de/kultur/film/2024-01/mickey-mouse-disney-urheberrecht-copyright
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Filbert

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Re: Public Domain Day!
« Reply #5 on: February 14, 2024, 12:17:45 AM »

When the first year of the Mickey Mouse comic strip is public domain, can it be posted in the Comic Strip section here?  Would the strips need to come from 1929 newspapers/microfilms, not reprints or restored versions?
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