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RE: [dvd-discuss] Eldred Amicus
- To: "'dvd-discuss(at)cyber.law.harvard.edu'" <dvd-discuss(at)cyber.law.harvard.edu>
- Subject: RE: [dvd-discuss] Eldred Amicus
- From: Richard Hartman <hartman(at)onetouch.com>
- Date: Wed, 29 May 2002 16:40:30 -0700
- Reply-to: dvd-discuss(at)cyber.law.harvard.edu
- Sender: owner-dvd-discuss(at)cyber.law.harvard.edu
> -----Original Message-----
> From: Roy Murphy [mailto:murphy@panix.com]
> Sent: Wednesday, May 29, 2002 11:35 AM
> To: dvd-discuss@eon.law.harvard.edu
> Subject: Re: [dvd-discuss] Eldred Amicus
>
>
> 'Twas brillig when Steve Hosgood scrobe:
> > Jolley <tjolley@swbell.net> wrote:
> > > The answer for an upper limit could be in the constitution.
> > > ...by securing for limited Times to Authors...
> > > Anything granted beyond an author's lifetime
> > > is being granted to someone else.
> > ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
> >
> > That's the neatest observation I've seen for a while! There must be
> > some way to draw the court's attention to it.
>
> It's a doomed argument. SCOTUS gives special consideration
> to the acts
> of the First Congress. Since the members of that Congress
> were largely
> the same people who wrote the Constitution, the Court presumes that
> their actions were constitutional. Since the First Congress
> passed the
> 1790 Copyright act with a 14 year term (and a 14 year extension upon
> renewal if the author is still alive and renews), terms exceeding the
> lifespan of the author are presumptively constitutional.
>
_Fixed_ terms that _happen_ to exceed the lifespan of the
author (because he died before the term expired). Not terms
based upon "life of the author + X". Note also that the
renewal was contingent upon the author still being alive
at the time the first term expired.
--
-Richard M. Hartman
hartman@onetouch.com
186,000 mi./sec ... not just a good idea, it's the LAW!