Awesome. But the world would be even better if copyright expired after 60 years. That should be enough time for a 30-year old to get their share's worth of royalties until they're 90.
Probably a healthy dose of lead, arsenic, and all that other goodness.
brewdad 16 days ago [-]
2025: Everything old is new again
einpoklum 16 days ago [-]
> On January 1, 2025, we celebrate published works from 1929 and published sound recordings from 1924 entering the public domain!
We live in repressive societies in which the state forbids making copies of things for 100 years.
And it annoys me even more when I remember these restrictions can be traced back to the corrupt protectionist collusion between British Queen Anne and the printers' guild:
In the USA... In the UK, for instance, even old copyrights tend to run from the death of the creator. So it's still a long wait for a Hitchcock film.
anthk 16 days ago [-]
Connect to a USA server over RDP or SSH, read Gutenberg ebooks and watch movies there :D
tkgally 16 days ago [-]
I followed the link to The Opry House [1] and ended up watching it to the end. I had forgotten how much fun the early animators had with their versatile new tool.
Man, what was in the water in 1930.
¹ https://www.imdb.com/list/ls000050037/?sort=release_date%2Ca...
We live in repressive societies in which the state forbids making copies of things for 100 years.
And it annoys me even more when I remember these restrictions can be traced back to the corrupt protectionist collusion between British Queen Anne and the printers' guild:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Statute_of_Anne
... but even they did not presume to prohibit copying for more than 14 years. Now it's seven times longer than that.
What will enter the public domain in 2025?
https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=42290448
[1] https://archive.org/details/the-opry-house-1929_202412
> Singing in the Rain
> An American in Paris
Is anyone here in community theater? Does this open up possibilities for you?