Any why shouldn't someone's creative work be protected in their own lifetime?
It
should be protected in their own lifetime, but not necessarily for their
entire lifetime.
If I were to invent a silly character called
Funny McBunny for the sake of a one-off children's story, is it really fair for for me to say "
Hey, I created Funny McBunny, so nobody else is allowed to write their own Funny McBunny stories without my permission for the rest of my life"?
I don't think that's fair. What
would be fair is to say "
Hey, I invented Funny McBunny, so at least give me a few decades to make some money off of him before you start diluting the customer base with your own Funny McBunny stories".
If they're the person who created something, why should anyone else be allowed to exploit their creativity with impunity?
I'm
not saying that anyone else should be allowed to exploit their creativity with impunity. I'm just saying that the product of their creativity shouldn't be overly protected via excessively long copyright durations.
I think you'll find that the work of fan fiction has generally long been tolerated by rights holders, precisely because it rarely impacts on them commercially, and in many way represents free publicity. In some fandoms, the relationship between the unofficial and the official is positively symbiotic, with fan writers graduating to professional authroised status.
Yes, posting fan-fiction is
tolerated, and for very good reasons.
But "tolerated" is different from "legal", which was my point.
In the case of the UK, Alice and Holmes have been in the public domain for 67 and 35 years respectively
That was my point. Holmes, Alice, Oz. All public domain works, which makes it easier for writers to create a new works based on these highly iconic works of fiction without having to worry about legal entanglements or getting permission from the copyright holders.
If The Wizard of Oz was still in copyright, Wicked would probably never have been written, because the author couldn't be sure that the copyright holders would approve of his radically different take on the Oz series.
The same with The Looking Glass Wars. There's a good chance that it would never have been written if the original Alice stories were still copyright protected.
With current copyright laws, people often have to wait more than a century before similar reworking of new fiction can be done without legal complications, which in my opinion is too long. It's stifling creativity.
(I'm not sure what public domain works Abraham Lincoln, Vampire Hunter might be based on).
My mistake. I was thinking of books like
Pride and Prejudice and Zombies, but then accidentally picked something in the same genre that wasn't really relevant to my point.
This seems very grounded in recentism. People should be able to rip off the recent ideas of others, not the really old stuff. Except the really old stuff that does actually get used as the basis for derivitive works. Bit of a contradiction there.
What?
First, I'm not saying that people shouldn't use old works as a basis for creating new works. I don't see how you could possibly get that impression from what I wrote.
Second, recent ideas? My proposal is that people would have to wait
60 years before they can use the characters and worlds of other authors without permission. How does 60 years old count as
recent in a rapidly changing world such as ours? Would you say "Lord of the Flies" was
recently written?
Consider past copyright laws. In Mark Twain's time, copyright only lasted for 40 years (assuming you remembered to renew it after 20). What I'm suggesting is that copyright should last 50% longer than it did under the old system, and with no renewal required.
Maybe you should rely on your own originality?
This isn't about "your own originality". Characters from well-known works of fiction acquire a prominent place in a culture, they become the focus of a wide variety of associations, expectations and emotions.
For example, if you write a story featuring Loki as the main character, straight away the readers have expectations and feelings about Loki based on how Loki is perceived within current culture.
This allows the author to subvert, challenge and explore the reader's perceptions and preconceptions of the character in a more meaningful way than they could if the story was about a freshly created trickster God with which the reader was entirely unfamiliar.
Overly-long copyright laws limits this type of creative exploration of existing characters to those created in the distant past.
Would you appropriate someone else's house or car, just because you can't acquire one on your own merits?
That's not a suitable analogy.
A closer analogy would be using some of the design ideas that someone else used in creating their house or car when creating your own house or car, because you thought they were good design features that would complement the completely original design features you're using to create your own house or car.
I think expecting a total abolition of posthumous terms simply isn't going to happen. I think 70 is too much, 50 is about right, but wouldn't lose much sleep if it went down to 30. Nullifying copyright with the creator's death is a bit akin to saying someone's ownership of property ceases when they die. Can't see many people voting for that.
How is saying "
property ownership ceases when 50 years has passed and the owner is dead" any more silly than saying "
property ownership ceases 50 years after death"?
They're both silly, which is why I'm suggesting a fixed-length duration for intellectual property rather than a death-based duration.
But it's slightly misleading to refer to it as property, (even though "intellectual property" is the correct term), because when people think of property they usually think of physical things, such as a TV or house, not a temporary monopoly on a creative work.
Surely what someone does with their own property is their own affair?
Yes, it's their own affair.
But once they've sold the copyright, it no longer has any connection to them, so basing the duration of the copyright on the length of their lifetime is rather absurd.
And what would happen if a writer sells their copyright at one point, but then somehow re-aquires it later?
The same thing that would happen if someone else acquires the copyright. I don't understand the point of this question.
That's a very binary view - there's actually a whole range of other sales patterns - and varying levels of income generated for the creator - inbetween.
Such as?
The possibilities for a fixed-length 60-year copyright are...
1. The work was profitable during the first 60 years, and so there's no need to enforce copyright any more, because the creator has already received sufficient compensation for the effort expended in creating it.
2. The work was unprofitable during the first 60 years, and this doesn't look like it's going to change, so there's no need to enforce copyright any more, because it's not going to produce any significant amount of money in what little time the creator has left to live.
3. The work was unprofitable during the first 60 years, but suddenly the money is about to start flooding in, so it's important to keep the copyright in place so that even though the creator is probably dead and his children have probably passed retirement age, they'll still be able to benefit from this unexpected windfall.
Are you seriously suggesting that this third possibility is something we should take into consideration when creating copyright law?
Or is there some other option that I haven't thought of? If so, please let me know.
That sort of overlooks the fact that some successful franchises do result in authorised new works. James Bond, James Bourne, and Sherlock Holmes, for example, have all had official sequels after the deaths of their creators.
I'm not overlooking that at all. All these things require getting permission from the new copyright holders (who will almost certainly want to charge a licensing fee), which is a huge disincentive for independent authors.
Is supporting the author's family really an issue here, given that his daughter is an adult with a writing career of her own? She'll be dead of old age before the copyright on those novels expires (she'll be 108 in 2085).
So again your judging the practicalities on the exceptions, rather than the rule.
Huh?
Are you living in a world where authors living to old age is the
exception rather than the rule?
Authors dying at a young age with dependant spouse and children who require royalties from their works in order to survive
is the exception, not the rule.
I'm just pointing out that saying copyright should continue to apply X years after the author's death in order to cater for this doesn't make much sense when this situation is uncommon. It especially doesn't make sense that this situation would be given as a reason for rejecting a fixed length copyright term when a fixed length copyright term would also ensure that any dependants could still live off the royalties after the creator dies.
But in the situation where the creator
doesn't die young (ie, most of the time), saying copyright should continue to apply X years after the author's death results in the copyright on the author's earlier works lasting for far too long.
For example, the death plus 70 year copyright rule popular in some countries would mean that if an author lives to 100, than a work he created at the age of 20 would be protected by copyright for a total of 150 years. In my opinion, that's far, far too long.
But if we had a fixed-length copyright of 60 years, the copyright on a work he created at 20 would expire when he turned 80, and by that point he'll have long since moved on to other projects, and so it won't matter in the slightest that it has expired.