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RE: [dvd-discuss] Eldred v. Ashcroft Accepted forReviewbySCOTUS
- To: dvd-discuss(at)cyber.law.harvard.edu
- Subject: RE: [dvd-discuss] Eldred v. Ashcroft Accepted forReviewbySCOTUS
- From: microlenz(at)earthlink.net
- Date: Thu, 21 Feb 2002 19:54:03 -0800
- Cc: "'dvd-discuss(at)cyber.law.harvard.edu'" <dvd-discuss(at)cyber.law.harvard.edu>
- In-reply-to: <[email protected]>
- References: <[email protected]>
- Reply-to: dvd-discuss(at)cyber.law.harvard.edu
- Sender: owner-dvd-discuss(at)cyber.law.harvard.edu
WOOOOWWWWW....this is getting serious! If the copyright can be
retroactively extended to Santa Claus then royalities have to paid for every
shopping season for copyright infringment-some percentage of the sales
that were generated as a consequence of the infringement. Well...there
goes the GNP for the next century! I couldn't care less about Mickey Mouse
but Santa Claus? While as an adult I know there is no Tooth Fairy or Easter
Bunny but no Santa Claus! Who could doubt that he exists on Christmas
morning!
All :-) and hehe aside....that's a good observation. "Be careful what you
ask for. You just might get it." Maybe Golan v Ashcroft may want to make
that point about retroactive copyrights.
Date sent: Thu, 21 Feb 2002 22:21:16 -0500 (EST)
From: Scott A Crosby <[email protected]>
To: Richard Hartman <[email protected]>
Copies to: "'[email protected]'" <dvd-
[email protected]>
Subject: RE: [dvd-discuss] Eldred v. Ashcroft Accepted
forReviewbySCOTUS
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> On Thu, 21 Feb 2002, Richard Hartman wrote:
>
> > Perversion it may be, and yet, it would cover the DisneyCo's
> > concerns re. "The Mouse" without having to go to the even
> > greater perversion of infinite extension of copyright, which
> > is what they have to pursue right now.
> >
>
> Sure, They can trademark one or several images.. For example, the ears or
> a single sillouette, or whatever.
>
> > Which then is the lesser of two evils? Stretching trademark
> > protection over the image of a cartoon character who is very
> > strongly identified with the owning corporation, or playing
> > the "copyright lasts as long as we say it lasts" game?
>
> Neither.. Walt Disney knew what he wsa getting into when he started
> playing the game. This is just changing the rules after the fact.
>
> (BTW, what right does disney have *at all* to Mickey Mouse nowadays? Why
> must any 'solution' seem to require that there's some exception that
> allows Disney to control Mickey Mouse forever?
>
> Why is Mickey Mouse infinitely more important than Santa Clause, seemingly
> even for us? Both are a fundamental part of our culture, except out
> culture never did get Mickey Mouse in 42 years, as promised.
>
> (I'm trying to imagine Santa under the current copyright regime... He'd
> have been copyrighted until I was 4 years old. (I believe Thomas Nast died
> in 1906.)
>
>
> Scott
>
>