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From: | Thomas HARDING |
Subject: | Re: [libreplanet-discuss] Fwd: The FSF Allows No Derivatives] |
Date: | Thu, 28 May 2015 20:25:05 +0200 |
User-agent: | Mozilla/5.0 (X11; Linux i686; rv:31.0) Gecko/20100101 Icedove/31.6.0 |
On 28/05/2015 14:41, Logan Streondj wrote:
There is copyright expiration regarding money (and that's less to less true regarding Mickey Mouse's act),Also, the evolution of language and Shakespeare etc. is a false argument because, while it is a long time, 70 years after author's death is not enough time for language to evolve that greatly. It does make older works have a different character, but not the extreme level you were implying. We still, in principle, have a time when all works will be public domain.yes, that is correct, I forgot about copyright expiration.
There is no copyright expiration regarding "moral rights".That's practical to keep intact a "work" until language has so evolved that a "work" is not understandable.
Fortunately, while human beings has the rights during generations, there were nobody to claim 10 hundred years later.
Unfortunately, it will not applies soon because of tracability.And more, with DRM, no one would soon have a working unscrambled copy "at time" except (*with chance*,
if still exists) the copyright holder. (France situation). Best regards, TSFH.
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