Here
is the second post on copyrights, which takes the same position (in support of
copyrights) but looks at it from a different angle. Although I have made some
changes, this is basically a reprint of a rant that was last posted on this
blog on January 20, 2020.
Copyright
Bullies
The copyright
law’s fair use doctrine ensures that copyrighted works can be borrowed—within
limits—to promote knowledge. “Fair use” is a complicated concept designed to
ensure that information can be shared without impairing an author’s basic right
to control the use of his or her material. Additionally, certain materials are
in the public domain, which means there are no use restrictions whatsoever. Publishers
who try to deny you these uses are copyright bullies.
These days we hear a lot about children and teens who bully
their classmates. We also hear about the copyright police—the ones who remind
bloggers and middle school music pirates to honor copyrights. But we rarely
hear about the copyright bullies.
Copyright bullies are those publishers who try to scare us
out of using their materials for any purpose whatsoever (with the sometimes
exception of book reviews). The law reserves certain rights to the public, but
these copyright bullies and their lawyers don’t want us to know that.
Many books have this warning in the front: “No part of this
book may be reproduced in any form, except for brief quotations in printed
reviews, without permission in writing from the publisher.”
Wrong. There are a number of what the law calls “fair uses,”
and brief quotations in printed reviews is only one of them. To make a general
and far too simplistic statement, a fair use is one that takes a short excerpt
and uses it in a way that transforms or complements the copyrighted material
rather than replacing it. You can find a detailed discussion of fair use in my
book, Writers in Wonderland: Keeping Your
Words Legal (KP/PK Publishing 2013), which is available from Amazon and
other retailers.
Then there are those works that have been around so long
that copyright laws no longer protect them. These works are in the public
domain. People can use public domain materials any way they want, although they
should attribute the source.
I found the most flagrant attempt at copyright bullying in a
book that compiles several of Lewis Carroll’s works—all of which entered the
public domain decades ago. In that book the warning states: “No part of this
publication may be reproduced in any way or by any means electronic,
mechanical, photocopying, recording, or stored in an information retrieval
system of any kind, without the prior permission in writing from [Publisher],
except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical articles and
reviews.”
Huh? All the material in that book is in the public domain, which
is where the publisher got it from in the first place. The reader is free to
copy at will without worrying about copyright infringement.
Here is the language I use:
©[year] by
Kathryn Page Camp. All rights reserved. Copyright fair uses are encouraged, and
material in the public domain remains in the public domain. Send requests for
permission to . . .
We should all be careful not to violate copyrights, and some
warning is necessary.
But don’t be intimidated by copyright bullies.
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