Linked by Thom Holwerda on Sat 10th Apr 2010 21:19 UTC
Legal Happy birthday to you... Happy birthday to you... Happy birthday dear copyright law... Yeah, it's April 10, the birthday of copyright (thanks, Arnoud). In 1710, 300 years ago, England enacted the very first copyright law, cutely named the Statute of Anne, after then-reigning Queen Anne. When reading about those early days of copyright, one can't help but hope we will return to those days - the Statute of Anne has little to nothing to do with modern copyright.
Permalink for comment 418498
To read all comments associated with this story, please click here.
Karitku
Member since:
2006-01-12

The problem isn't that the whole concept of patents and copyrights are wrong but details. Actually originally patents and copyrights where made to protect the small person, not corporates, and they still work as such but there is questions that need to be dealt properly. How long does patents and copyrights last? Should they be monopolistic or always licensensable? How broad can they be? What can be patented or copyrighted? We work on global markets yet patents and copyrights aren't, why?

Reply Parent Score: 4