Linked by Thom Holwerda on Sat 7th Apr 2012 17:52 UTC
Legal Rage-inducing and despicable. As The Chronicle of Higher Education reports, three major textbook publishers, Pearson, Cengage Learning, and Macmillan Higher Education, are suing a small startup company that produces open and free alternative textbooks. This startup, Boundless Learning, builds textbooks using creative commons licensed and otherwise freely available material - and this poses a threat to the three large textbook publishers. So, what do you do when you feel threatened? Well, file a copyright infringement lawsuit, of course.
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RE[4]: An analogy
by shotsman on Sun 8th Apr 2012 06:31 UTC in reply to "RE[3]: An analogy"
shotsman
Member since:
2005-07-22

Copyright in the USA is a mess because of Digney and that rodent. When was the last piece of work featusing that creature released? Pah!

They clearly want everything under copyright for
infinity.

Move to the world of printed works.
I have a few Engineering Textbook that date from the early 1900's(1901-1934). Under US law, none of them are out of copyright until at least 2021 (death + 75 years rule).

I'd like nothing better to digitise them and release them for the wider world to see. One of them contains a description of the work that went into the development of the Scheering Bridge. Since the inventor died in 1959, the volume is in Copyright until 2034. How sily is that.
I had the good luck to handle the original device of his in 1972. It was beautifully made.

Patently(soc) silly laws are keeping a lot information secret.

Back on Topic, I do think that there might be a bit of 'baiting' going on here. Use a small company to get the matter sorted out once and for all. I can't decide if it is the big pubs who are behind this or the freedom movement. Either way, there are some boundaries that need to be drawn. Once that is done (via a legal runling in 10 years by the USSC) the whole area will be able to move on.

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