This was originally posted to LBO by Doug Henwood.  I thought PEN-L
folks might like this brief account.  I'll follow up with a few
comments of my own.


Bill
------- start of forwarded message -------

[from TheStreet.com]

Disney Poised to Win Copyright Battle

By Alex Berenson
Senior Writer

Walt Disney (DIS:NYSE) can breathe easy.

Sometime in the next week, President Clinton is almost certain to sign a
bill that will extend U.S. copyright protection by 20 years, keeping Mickey
Mouse out of the public domain until at least 2024. Passage of the
copyright extension legislation will mark a major victory for Hollywood,
which waged a low-key lobbying campaign this year to make sure Congress
would pass the bill without much public attention.

That's just what happened. After sitting in the Senate Judiciary Committee
for months, the bill was discharged to the Senate floor on Oct. 7. The
Senate and House passed the legislation the same day and delivered it to
the President a week later. The White House hasn't indicated any objection
to the bill, which is all but certain to become law.

The bill's passage was briefly in doubt, as Democratic Sen. Edward Kennedy
from Massachusetts threatened to insert language forcing movie studios to
share any profits they made from copyright extension with the
screenwriters, actors and directors who created the films. But in a display
of Hollywood's lobbying power, Jack Valenti, who heads the Motion Picture
Association of America, personally promised Kennedy that the studios would
negotiate in good faith with the guilds representing the industry's
creative professionals. The word of Valenti, who has represented the movie
industry in Washington for 30 years, convinced Kennedy to drop his
opposition to the legislation.

"It was helpful to the endgame for Jack to make very clear that intention
[to negotiate] ... even though we had pledged that before to the guild,"
MPAA vice president Rich Taylor says.

The new law will lengthen both corporate and individually owned copyrights
by 20 years, so corporate-owned copyrights now last 95 years and
individually owned ones for the life of the author plus and an additional
70 years. While the amount of money immediately at stake was slight, had
Congress not extended the copyright term, a vast trove of movies and
cartoons that were created in the late 1920s would have begun entering the
public domain in the next few years. Disney, whose animated characters are
at the core of its business, faced especially serious risks. (An earlier
TSC story took a longer look at the legislation.)

"They did what I feared they would do, which was keep the thing low profile
and slide it through at the end of the session when hardly anybody was
looking," says Arizona State University law professor Dennis Karjala, who
led the ragtag coalition of academics and librarians opposed to copyright
extension. Karjala says that indefinite expansions of copyright protection
distort the U.S. Constitution, which specifically mandates that
intellectual property be protected for only a "limited" time before it
enters the public domain and becomes freely available to everyone.

"It all happened without public discussion," Karjala says. "I'm sorry that
our supposed democratic system works that way, but there you have it."

Not surprisingly, Taylor disagrees. "We're very pleased. It was one of our
legislative priorities -- we think it was good for the industry as well as
good for the nation as a whole."

------- end of forwarded message -------



Reply via email to