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LRB Article PDF: The Great Copyright Disaster (<i>LRB</i> volume 17 number 01, 12 January 1995) 

LRB Article PDF: The Great Copyright Disaster (LRB volume 17 number 01, 12 January 1995)

John Sutherland

Momentous changes in copyright law, such as those of 1710, 1842, 1890 and 1911, are preceded by periods of turmoil and radical uncertainty about the rights and wrongs of intellectual property. We are in such a period now. The problem, in the short term, is how the British Government will implement the 'harmonising' of the latest EU regulations on copyright. The decision to accept Brussels' instruction (EC Directive 93/98/EEC) was taken in October 1993. A consultation document has been issued by the Intellectual Property Policy Directorate in the DTI and a final decision is expected in July 1995. Ominously, as Eurosceptics will think, it looks inevitable that harmonisation will mean Britain and its European partners (a word which has become as double-edged as 'harmony') falling into step with Germany. Germany has a 70-year post-mortem rule, as opposed to 50 years in the UK, and a greater reverence for authors' 'moral rights'; whereas the Anglo-Saxon, Brito-American book trade has traditionally been petty bourgeois about the sale of literary property, assuming authors to surrender all claims when the rights are sold to the publisher. A principal justification for the longer term of protection in Germany is the interruption to booktrade activity caused by the Second World War. Mein Kampf, to be tasteless about it, was unsaleable for two decades after hostilities, thus robbing the author's estate of the full value of its property. The European-wide extension next summer will mean that Mein Kampf - and its author's speeches, which have a healthy sale in the audio market - will be protected beyond 1995 (when, by the old law, they would have entered the public domain in the UK and some other European countries) and will continue to remunerate Hitler's heirs and assignees until 2015.

LRB 12 January 1995 | PDF Download

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