uugers,

i wrote this letter to the daily universe.  before i send it in i'd appreciate 
comments and corrections (since i know that intellectual property is a hot topic).  
also, have there been similar letters in recent history?

thanks,
ben jensen


I am astonished by the turn our society has taken with respects to intellectual 
property.  Over the past twenty five years, we the American public have lost our 
rights to the hands of corporations.
What rights have we lost?  A copyright is not a inalienable right.  Here's how 
copyrights work: the public grants artists the right to control the distribution of 
their own creative works for a limited period of time.  This system works to reward 
the artists for their work.  This reward system theoretically encourages more works to 
be produced.  The system works, and everybody is happy.
Key ideas have been lost in recent years.  People seem to forget that the American 
Government (read: American People) grants copyrights to artists.  Artists don't have 
copyrights by default.  Now, we're lucky if something enters the public domain.  
Here's what I mean: before 1978, copyrights expired after twenty eight years.  Sounds 
fair to me.  Artists have enough time to make some solid cash on their creation.  In 
recent years, with the Sonny Bono Copyright Term Extension Act, new copyrights (those 
issued after 1978) last for 70 years after the death of the author.  In the case of 
corporations, copyrights can last as long as 95 years.  Even copyrights which haven't 
yet expired, but were issued before 1978 can be renewed by their owners for another 67 
years.
The life of a copyright isn't even the most important issue.  The DMCA (Digital 
Millenium Copyright Act), passed in 1998, reminds me of the Fourteenth Amendment: 
unnecessarily vague.  You can be prosecuted for watching a DVD you legally purchased 
(http://cyber.law.harvard.edu/openlaw/DVD/).  Corporations (most notably the RIAA) are 
authorized to issue subpoenas against copyright violators.
Don't allow your rights to be violated.  Learn more (http://anti-dmca.org/).  Write to 
your senator.  Let them know that you feel disenfranchised.



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