Public Domain Day 2015

Credit - Duke Law School - CC-BY-SA

Credit – Duke Law School – CC-BY-SA

“What is the ‘public domain’?

The public domain is the realm of material — ideas, images, sounds, discoveries, facts, texts — that is unprotected by intellectual property rights and free for all to use or build upon. It includes our collective cultural and scientific heritage, and the raw materials for future expression, research, democratic dialogue and education.” – Duke Law School – Center for the Study of the Public Domain

January 1st is chosen as Public Domain Day because of the way copyright law works. When copyright expires on a work, it enters the public domain on January 1st of the following year. So this day is when we should be able to list all the books and songs and movies that have been freed this year, and in some jurisdictions they will be able to do that. Unfortunately for people living in the United States, this is another year when nothing will be entering the public domain. Because of retroactive changes to their copyright law, nothing will be freed until at least 2019. Given their track record, they most likely won’t be freed then either, as they will probably extend the term yet again.

Follow this link to a list of things that would be free now if US copyright hadn’t been extended in 1978, and made retroactive. It’s one thing if a jurisdiction thinks it’s best to extend the term of copyright, but quite another to apply the extension to existing works. Wouldn’t it be more reasonable for the new law to only apply to new works? Here’s just a sample of some books that could have been in the public domain today: Truman Capote, Breakfast at Tiffany’s, Agatha Christie, Ordeal by Innocence and Graham Greene, Our Man in Havana.

Credit - Duke Law School - CC-BY-SA

Credit – Duke Law School – CC-BY-SA

Well, what’s wrong with that? Why shouldn’t the author’s descendants, or the corporations that now own these copyrights be able to continue to control the publication of these works? You should follow this link if you want a proper explanation, but I can provide a few meager hints here. First, it’s supposed to be part of the deal. Copyright is provided by law to give the creator of a work a temporary monopoly on its publication. In return, the creator agrees to release it into the public domain after a reasonable time. When that time becomes unreasonably long, it betrays the intent of the law, and the bargain that was made. It deprives other creators of the raw material that was supposed to be there. It results in orphan works that no one is getting any value from, but which are still locked away. It makes education more expensive.

I can’t say happy Public Domain Day this year, at least not for Americans. Their pursuit of ever-longer copyright terms has made that a hollow greeting. But I’ll say it anyway because I’m an optimist. I’m optimistic that people will see the harm being done to their public domain by unreasonable copyrights. I’m optimistic that there will be no more extensions to copyright terms. I’m optimistic that the current overlong terms will be rolled back eventually. I’m optimistic that reason will prevail and that copyright will one day fulfill its intended role of feeding the public domain. You might think I’m too optimistic, even naive. I don’t mind. That’s just how we optimists are. So, Happy Public Domain Day 2015.

rjb

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Best of 2014

Credit - Ltikorea CC-BY-SA

Credit – Ltikorea CC-BY-SA

Leaving out the home, contact, downloads and welcome pages, these posts are the best of 2014 by visit.

14. Near Death Experience – Part Three
What happened to parts One and Two? How does the third one outrank the others?

13. Flesch Reading Ease
This surprises me. Why is there so much interest in a method for rating how easy it is to read text?

12. Yawning
Of things our bodies do, including Synesthesia, Smell (1, 2 & 3), Earworms and Handedness, yawning is the most popular.

11. Ball Lightning – Part Three
Again part three is first.

10. Ball Lightning
And it appears readers jumped right over Part Two to read these.

9. BitTorrent Bundles
Good. I’m glad people are interested in my BitTorrent Bundle. No idea how this fits in with the rest, though.

8. Gecko Feet
I’m glad to see this. I have a soft spot for these little guys.

7. Altocumulus Castellanus
This is the only entry from the Cloud of the Day series. Maybe because it sounds so grand?

6. Collective Nouns
I like this series. It’s a lot of fun. Even Part Two.

5. Aquatic Ape – The Theory Evolves
The Bipedal series did well, taking three of the top five spots.

4. Whispering Galleries
This is no surprise. There’s something intrinsically interesting about whispering galleries.

3. Spanking for Love
This is no surprise either. Humans, eh?

2. Bipedal – The Aquatic Ape Theory
The Aquatic Ape is popular, but the Savanna Ape is even more so.

1. Bipedal – The Savanna Theory
This post got more than twice the number of views of the two Aquatic Ape posts combined.

That’s what you were looking at in 2014. Thank you for your interest, and thank you for keeping it interesting for me. Without you, it could be a pretty bleak job maintaining Green Comet’s home on the Internet. You encourage me to carry on, both with this site and with the sequel to the novel, which should be ready in the middle of 2015.

That was the best of 2014. See you in the new year.

rjb

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Getting Better

Credit - Jenny - CC-BY

Credit – Jenny – CC-BY

We’ve never lived in such peaceful times – from a Slate article by Steven Pinker (The Better Angels of Our Nature) and Andrew Mack (The Human Security Report Project)

The numbers show that things are getting better, so why do we think they’re getting worse? Journalists have better access to news than ever, so they have more to report. Naturally, they’re going to report on what is happening, not on what is not happening. More reports of violence, and no reports of no violence. That, put simply, is why things look worse than ever. And it’s a fact of our primitive brains that we assess risk based on the number of times we hear about something.

Quoting Slate

“The world is not falling apart. The kinds of violence to which most people are vulnerable – homicide, rape, battering, child abuse – have been in steady decline in most of the world. Autocracy is giving way to democracy. Wars between states – by far the most destructive of all conflicts – are all but obsolete. The increase in the number and deadliness of civil wars since 2010 is circumscribed, puny in comparison with the decline that preceded it, and unlikely to escalate.”

Image from Slate

Image from Slate

More Slate

“Why is the world always “more dangerous than it has ever been” – even as a greater and greater majority of humanity lives in peace and dies of old age?

Too much of our impression of the world comes from a misleading formula of journalistic narration. Reporters give lavish coverage to gun bursts, explosions, and viral videos, oblivious to how representative they are and apparently innocent of the fact that many were contrived as journalist bait. Then come sound bites from “experts” with vested interests in maximizing the impression of mayhem: generals, politicians, security officials, moral activists. The talking heads on cable news filibuster about the event, desperately hoping to avoid dead air. Newspaper columnists instruct their readers on what emotions to feel.”

Read the Slate story to see that things really are getting better.

Merry Christmas

rjb

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