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| Benjamin Geer on Sun, 14 May 2000 19:10:01 +0200 (CEST) |
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| <nettime> Copyright and forgery |
On Fri, May 12, 2000 at 07:30:54PM -0400, Decklin Foster wrote:
> We need to ask ourselves two things: (1) Does our government still
> represent the public? and (2) Is copyright still a good trade?
>
> Do note that (2) is not an all-or-nothing issue. It may be that case
> that trading away the right to copy benefits society up to a certain
> point, but things like authors-life-plus-70-years and the DMCA are far
> into the land where the costs outweigh the benefits.
I tend to agree, but there's one possibility that bothers me.
Consider what happened to James Joyce's novel, _Ulysses_, when his
estate allowed the copyright to lapse for a few years. Random House
published a `reader's edition', in which they simply changed all the
parts that they thought were difficult to understand. The result is a
novel which is not Joyce's _Ulysses_, but which is being sold under
that name. I was horrified at the thought that unuspecting readers
would believe that this was _Ulysses_. It seems to me that, in the
absence of copyright protection, there ought to be some protection
against what you might call `forgery of existing works'. Random House
should be allowed to publish their novel, but they shouldn't be
allowed to use Joyce's name or the title _Ulysses_.
Benjamin Geer
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