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Saturday 22 May 2010

Shameless filler

Long time no blog, and for that I apologise.  I've some fantastic articles in the works, but reality intervened and my poor alter ego has finals to deal with.  Final essay deadlines are within spitting distance, so I'll be back on the blogwagon as soon as I've ensured I don't fail all my classes.  In the meantime, random net-hunting for one of my research papers led me to this, which I thought I'd share:

An Orphaned Work is any creative work of art where the artist or copyright owner has released their copyright, whether on purpose, by passage of time, or by lack of proper registration. In the same way that an orphaned child loses the protection of his or her parents, your creative work can become an orphan for others to use without your permission.
If you don't like to read long articles, you will miss incredibly important information that will affect the rest of your career as an artist. You should at least skip to the end to find the link for a fantastic interview with the Illustrators' Partnership about how you are about to lose ownership of your own artwork.
Currently, you don't have to register your artwork to own the copyright. You own a copyright as soon as you create something. International law also supports this. Right now, registration allows you to sue for damages, in addition to fair value.
What makes me so MAD about this new legislation is that it legalizes THEFT! The only people who benefit from this are those who want to make use of our creative works without paying for them and large companies who will run the new private copyright registries.
These registries are companies that you would be forced to pay in order to register every single image, photo, sketch or creative work.
It is currently against international law to coerce people to register their work for copyright because there are so many inherent problems with it. But because big business can push through laws in the United States, our country is about to break with the rest of the world, again, and take your rights away.
With the tens of millions of photos and pieces of artwork created each year, the bounty for forcing everyone to pay a registration fee would be enormous. We lose our rights and our creations, and someone else makes money at our expense.
Original work copyright Mark Simon, columnist for the Animation World Network, and full article available here.

What with the finals and all, I haven't had time to do the necessary research and read all the incredibly boring official text I need to to properly comment on Mr Simon's rant there.  Initial impressions: Mr Simon sounds a little conspiracy-theorist, and it's hard to take him completely seriously when I can't help imagining him writing the article muttering under his breath with eyes wild and rolling, but there's definitely food for thought there.  If he's got his facts straight - and as yet I don't know if he has - it sounds like the US has started to interfere with artists' rights to original ownership of their work (via the nice, convenient, "Oops, did we forget to tell you where and when to register?" loophole).  Well, if it's true, Mr Simon's foaming at the mouth is quite justifiable.  At the very least, it seems un-Constitutional.

Research and further comment to follow: but first, wish me luck on these research papers!  Until then, this is Copyright Cat, signing off.

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