geni
Anti-homeopathy illuminati member
- Joined
- Oct 14, 2003
- Messages
- 28,209
http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/5d5a3132-cb17-11dd-87d7-000077b07658.html
Actualy in a digital world it is rather hard to profit from PD works.
Acutaly once you take out the big names the payouts tend to be pitiful.
An admision that moral rights are a total failure. I assume they will be removed as part of any change? No?
Gowers contained other elements. Still I suppose confirming it's death clears things up (unforunate there was some good stuff in there). I'm failing to see how extending copyright is going to help with people violateing it.
I think we have a problem. To be fair the extesion isn't his idea he is being leaned on by Charlie McCreevy from europe but thats how it goes.
in a digital world, radio stations, mobile phone operators and consumers ensure that music continues to generate revenue far into the future. Why should performers have to watch others profiting from their talent and creativity, especially at the time in their lives when many of them need it most?
Actualy in a digital world it is rather hard to profit from PD works.
Let us be clear, this is not about boosting the wealth of well-known entertainers. Behind those household names is an army of unsung heroes of the music business - the backing singers and session musicians, as well as the large number of featured artists who have never made a vast fortune, whose work continues to be played. Such artists deserve to benefit from others' use of their products during their lifetime.
Acutaly once you take out the big names the payouts tend to be pitiful.
Second, it should absolutely be the case that the person who creates a work has, within their lifetime, control over how their work is used. Should an artist who is a vegan, for example, have to put up with seeing their music used to promote fast food burgers? Or the music of an environmental campaigner being used to promote cars or airlines? I do not think so.
An admision that moral rights are a total failure. I assume they will be removed as part of any change? No?
faced with serious issues, such as on unlawful file-sharing, and other European countries are looking to us to lead the way. We need a workable system of copyright to underpin the long-term health of our creative industries. Mr Gowers's review was a thorough and thoughtful one and we have taken forward his recommendation on illegal file-sharing. But on copyright extension we take a different view.
Gowers contained other elements. Still I suppose confirming it's death clears things up (unforunate there was some good stuff in there). I'm failing to see how extending copyright is going to help with people violateing it.
The writer is secretary of state for culture, media and sport
I think we have a problem. To be fair the extesion isn't his idea he is being leaned on by Charlie McCreevy from europe but thats how it goes.