From NYTimes to Wiki in Record Time
I was visiting New York this weekend, so I was out and around and didn't spend a couple of hours reading the NYTimes, so I glanced at Mark Helprin's Op-Ed called A Great Idea Lives Forever. Shouldn't Its Copyright? but didn't go over it, nor did I blog about it.
The statement that stuck in my mind was about how an author's family would seem to starve or something when copyright ran out. What Helprin says is:
Were I tomorrow to write the great American novel (again?), 70 years after my death the rights to it, though taxed at inheritance, would be stripped from my children and grandchildren.
Source: nytimes.com
I don't go for the argument, because the heirs have plenty of recompense from the idea in the 70 years. When I got home from NYC, I found the reaction to the piece has been quicker than I expected across web and blogosphere.
Slashdot had postings about reaction to the piece, including that a deconstruction of Helprin's argument is online on Larry Lessig's wiki. So, an Op-Ed that runs on Sunday morning generates a Wiki page by Sunday night on a topic that lots of people might have thought was dry and pedantic.
That is food for thought for copyrighters and copylefters.
Tags: forever | New York | Technology | article | copyright | enjoyed | Owners | perpetual | Revoke | Rights | suggests | Helprin
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