Is Copyright Law Stifling Creativity?
by Chris ArledgeLast week, a federal judge in New York issued an injunction precluding the publication of a novel based on J.D. Salinger’s “The Catcher in the Rye.” The new novel, by Swedish author Fredrik Colting, describes the adventures of the elderly “Mr. C,” a not-so-veiled pseudonym for Salinger’s famous “Holden Caulfield.” The federal court enjoined publication of the book in the United States after finding that it is a likely copyright infringement. The Salinger lawsuit illuminates a weakness in copyright law that threatens to undermine copyright’s central purpose-promoting creativity.
J.D. Salinger
American law differs from law in Europe (and elsewhere) by not granting-except in limited cases-any “moral rights” to the creator of an artistic work. Moral rights are designed to protect the integrity of a work; for example, moral rights could stop a television station from editing a movie in ways the director believes undermine his artistic vision. Copyright law, however, has no such interest. The Copyright Act rests on Congress’ authority under the United States Constitution “to promote the Progress of Science and useful Arts, by securing for limited times to Authors and Inventors the exclusive Right to their respective Writings and Discoveries.” Thus, the purpose of copyright law is to encourage creativity by giving artists, authors, and others the exclusive right to benefit from their creative efforts for a limited period of time.
Copyright law, then, incentivizes the creation and dissemination of new works. Without copyright law, U2 might not make music. And even if they did, the band might not make any effort to disseminate the work publicly; there would be little or no economic incentive to do so since the songs could lawfully be copied and distributed by others for free. But with copyright law, U2 has reason to make its works available worldwide, and now the means to own half of Ireland.
There are, of course, limits to the temporary monopoly given to copyright authors. Some uses of a copyrighted work are deemed fair, and thus lawful, even without permission from or payment to the copyright author. Because of this “fair use” doctrine, I can sing “Happy Birthday”-a copyrighted musical composition-to my daughter without being liable for copyright infringement. The “fair use” doctrine makes copyright law workable-without it, we would all be engaged in a string of infringing acts every day of our lives-and it is the primary issue in most copyright lawsuits.
But in many cases, application of the “fair use” doctrine has become divorced from the purpose of copyright law. The Salinger case looks like the latest example. Because of case law, the parties there will focus a great deal on whether Colting’s work is a parody of Salinger’s work, because the Supreme Court has held that parody-using a copyrighted work to the extent necessary to criticize or mock it-is entitled to substantial First Amendment protection. But before a court even gets to that question, a more fundamental inquiry is in order: Does allowing novels like Colting’s undermine copyright’s goal of encouraging creative works? It is not clear that it would. Colting’s work would not harm the economic value of Salinger’s; it is hard to believe that people will see his work as a substitute for “The Catcher in the Rye” and buy the former instead of the latter. If anything, Colting’s work would likely increase Salinger’s sales. Thus, it is virtually impossible to imagine that allowing another author to borrow from Salinger’s work in a new novel would have dissuaded Salinger from writing and publishing “The Catcher in the Rye” in the first place. Applying copyright law to Colting’s novel appears unnecessary; Salinger would likely have written and disseminated “The Catcher in the Rye” regardless of whether the Copyright Act allows Colting’s work to be published.
We can sympathize with Salinger’s desire to keep other authors from using his characters and novels in ways he does not like. But copyright law is not supposed to have an interest in Salinger’s desire to shield his work from disrespectful treatment or use by artists that Salinger believes are unworthy of his masterpiece.
We are left, then, with an ironic and unfortunate result: a law that is designed to encourage creative works has been used to stifle one author’s creativity-to ban his book, at least temporarily-even while the decision would do nothing to encourage creative works by Salinger. In this case, it seems, copyright law has failed.




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83 Comments
What? No mention of Chuck DeVore here?!
'Without copyright law, U2 might not make music."
I think U2 does a great job of not making music even with copyright law…..
(Time to don my asbestos clothing…)
From what I can tell from this post, Colting's work is an unauthorized sequel. In this case, you are absolutely right that publishing it could only help J. D. Salinger's sales. But if we broaden the scope, we run into some big problems. Can anyone make Star Trek sequels? (People do, but Paramount allows this so long as they're not sold.) I thought The Incredibles was a great movie, and am astonished that there hasn't been a sequel. Should I be able to make one?
In this instance, it's unfortunate, but (without being an expert) I don't see any way to change it to allow exceptions like this but stop my Incredibles sequel.
From what I can tell from this post, Colting's work is an unauthorized sequel. In this case, you are absolutely right that publishing it could only help J. D. Salinger's sales. But if we broaden the scope, we run into some big problems. Can anyone make Star Trek sequels? (People do, but Paramount allows this so long as they're not sold.) I thought The Incredibles was a great movie, and am astonished that there hasn't been a sequel. Should I be able to make one?
In this instance, it's unfortunate, but (and I'm not an expert) I don't see any way to change it to allow exceptions like this but stop my Incredibles sequel.
One wonders what Jane Austen would have made of _Pride and Prejudice and Zombies_ given that it makes use of her characters and story with liberal amounts of zombies and ninjas thrown into the fray. Also given the advent of the internet, what do we do with the huge universe of fanfic that exists in internet publication?
Interesting, but if what you say is true, I don't understand why a Federal Judge would grant an injunction for probable infringement. If our laws don't grant "moral rights" but only protect productive creativity, and this book clearly does not infringe on that, then it sounds more like a bad decision by the judge rather than an inherent flaw in the copyright law. Maybe, I just don't understand copyright law well enough
+1 for you! Another +1 for replacing U2 with Green Day.
If its a parody, then yes.
If you make the 'Indorkables' about a Red State family of suburban nerds with superpowered pocket protectors, and a female fashion designer named 'Annie Ranty', and it picks up where the Incredibles left off, then yeah, it should be fine.
I am not a lawyer.
I do think copyright needs to be revised in favor of more help to creativity, and less 'The Foundation for taking care of Famous Author's Grandchildren'.
I agree with you, particularly where modern electronic media are concerned. I think the line needs to be drawn at where the money is made.
Excellent Post. I agree w/Tennessee Jed – this is more about an imperfect court ruling rather than imperfect copywrite protection. What is keeping this author and his publisher from publishing outside of the US? And in the event they do, how could this become as some comments suggest, a creative highjack? After all, the publicity of the suit clearly establishes that the Author was 'riffing' on a great work – not claiming to be Salinger.
Salingers personal quirks as a stubbornly reclusive retired writer are well established. I have long been a fan of out libel and copywrite protections – witness the venue shopping of dubious claims to Britian for libel – a way to 'leverage' free speech by way of bleeding to bankruptcy those you disagree with.
It seems the Judge who granted this ruling is the one who needs a critical review.
A certain part of me has always had a certain amount of respect for Salinger.
After all, after writing "Catcher in the Rye," he had the simple decency to never show his face in public again.
Yep! Gotta +1 for that gem!
Yep! Gotta +1 you for that gem!
Yep! Gotta plus1 you for that gem!
This whole issue has no easy answers. If you say that people can't copy someone's work in any way, then we end up with massive amounts of litigation trying to stifle anything even remotely similar.
But if you say that you can only copyright the exact work or something very close, then you might as well throw out the copyright because knock-off artists will start turning out very similar, but slightly different movies.
The big issue that is coming down the pike is the issue of fan fiction. The net crawls with fan fiction. And most of it may violate copyrights, or it may not — no one knows for sure. On the one hand, I think fan fiction is harmless and should be viewed as positive publicity for the author. But on the other hand, some people start turning it into po.rnographic material. Others have even tried to sell their fan fiction.
P.S. Any sympathy I may have had for recording artists vanished when they started suing people for downloads. Those were shakedown lawsuits, that's it. And the fact that Congress would change the law to let them sue people was despicable.
Actually, it doesn't matter what Jane Austen would have thought. Pride and Prejudice is in Public Domain now.
It's funny that a previous poster mentioned U2. Does anybody remember what happened to a band named Negativeland that dared to mock U2 and Kasey Kasem?
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Negativland#The_U2_r...
Personally, I think the flood of post-modern re-inventions, re-imaginings and re-boots is a great way to parade the ignorance taught in our school systems these days. Should it be stopped in a court of law? No. Is it tragic that literary vandalism is the new creativity? Yes. Even more tragic is that the audience has no foundation of artistic experience with which to judge these works.
Andrew,
The next thing is to charge for ring tones on every use.
Ugh. I completely agree about the fan fiction bit. Slash and porn fanfics just completely ruin things for me…*headdesk*
Ah, fair use.
When E. T. came out, a friend and I decided to make an E.T. parody T-shirt. E. T. was an OK movie, but people worshiped that thing as though it were the greatest movie ever made anywhere by anyone. It just wasn't that great. It was the 80s, so we felt we were being gagged with a spoon.
Our T-Shirt slightly altered the image of E.T.'s finger reaching out to touch a young boy's finger. All we did was select a different finger. We put an ad for the T-shirt in Rolling Stone. The Spielberg legal department was on us within about a week of the ad running. We were shut down by the man!
At the same time, Entertainment Tonight was proudly calling itself "E T" whenever it could. Complaints from Spielberg? None.
And I still don't like E.T.
As an aspiring writer, I have to respectfully disagree with this article. I think things such as fan fiction, fan-made remixes or videos, things of that nature, should be allowed – unless and until they start trying to charge money for their work. Or if something is in the public domain, then by all means, allow it.
However, when you've got a book written entirely from the point of view of a copyrighted character, that assumedly makes some reference to events that happened in a copyrighted book, there should be a line drawn. Most parodies change things: names, plot points, story arc, etc., and that's why they're allowed by law. If Mr. Salinger didn't want his character used this way, then it's his right to decline its use in this new book.
A couple of high profile recent cases not mentioned in the post: there was a "Gone With The WInd" parody/satire/sequel called "The Wind Done Gone" novel a few years back, told, I believe, from the point of view of Scarlet's enslaved black half-sister(!) It was briefly held up, then published. And then there was J.K. Rowling's squelching of a Harry Potter Lexicon that she approved of on the web, but she didn't want sold. Salinger has famously not sold "Catcher" to be made into a movie after all these years; Sue Grafton likewise has apparently said she'll never let her detective Kinsey Milhone ("A is For Alibi," etc.) be adapted. Agatha Christie and Arthur Conan Doyle's estates retain strict control of their sleuths, and the estate of Wonder Woman's creator retains rights to her–if DC comics stops publishing her amazonian exploits, they lose the rights to the character. I think creators have every right to control their creations when money's involved. If the author is using a character created by someone else in a way that an intelligent person can easily draw the comparison, well, then it is an infringement. What gets crazy is if it's a parody, it's ok, but if not..it's infringement. Oy. It sounds flip to tell an author to make up their own stuff to avoid this problem, but…make up your own stuff!
I've got mixed feelings on this topic as well. As another aspiring writer, I look forward to the copyright protections offered by the USA. At the same time, I think in many ways Copyright has been abused.
It should be noted that in the past, authors would write a book, publish it, and distribute it for profit. Back then a rival publisher could come along, republish the manuscript, and make a killing, without the original author getting a dime.
In other words, Copyrights were originally meant to protect artists from publishers who'd steal their work. Nowadays, the publishing industry uses copyrights to prevent creativity, a complete inversion of their original intent.
Then there's the complex issue of length of copyrights. Presently, the length of a copyright is Life of the Author + X, where X is defined as however long it needs to be to let Disney maintain it's copyright on Mickey Mouse. Alright, alright, I jest (sort of), but the present time on copyrights is ridiculously long and basically prevents usable creative material from entering the public domain. This also means that many old books that could be reprinted are not, because their copyrights have no expired.
To me, at the end of the day, the copyright should exist to protect the livelihood of the creative individuals. Derivative works should be up to the creator of the original work, so long as they live, but beyond that, I think things should be fair game.
You've got it, Sarah. As I read the copyright laws, anything you write, even your post above, belongs to you and only you, from the moment you put it in any tangible form, with or without a copyright notice on it.
I read up and also took a class in copyright law. However some things stink about the way it is enforced.
As a victim of people stealing my copyright works and putting them on ebay, I was forced to quit the business I was in. I got tired of working for some stealing cheat who ripped off my original pieces and sold them. According to copyright law, I had 3 years to find and prosecute the person who copied my works — which meant I would have to hire a lawyer I couldn't afford. Three years later, I found one or two more products that were reproduced illegally. I couldn't sue for the first but could still sue for the second infringement. I would still need an expensive lawyer and lengthy process to win an unknown amount award. I eventually gave up.
Copyright laws are great if you can afford to find and pursue the culprits who disregard the law.
This is what I meant when it comes the net and fanfic. There is a ton of finfic for all kinds of things. I've been guilty of a piece or two in the distant past myself.
Most fanfic is horrible, but some if it is actually quite good. I think the opinion of the copyright owner generally seems to come down to what their medium is. MMOs seem to thrive on and encourage their fan base to generate fansites, fanfics, tribute vids for example using the franchise characters even; it represents a lot of free marketing they generally can't afford to purchase themselves.
I'm trying to think of a play by William Shakespeare that would not have violated copyright law if it existed then as it does now in America. "As You Like It?" "Love's Labors Lost?" Most of his greatest plays were rip-offs and the world is much richer for that.
I agree completly. The artists and recording industry disgraced itself with their extortionists lawsuits. They should have from the begining embraced this new technology instead of fighting it.
But aren't there only 7 plots? And Bill must have used them all! (Unless you're of the Edward de Vere camp)
But will the world be much richer for any incarnation of Salinger's bilge?
Interesting Andrew – that may be an interesting topic sometime to tap more of your thoughts (history going back to the hey day of napster.) I have particular vitriol for Sony who illegally imbedded spyware on some of their CD's that were legally purchased and then downloaded. At the same time, I do respect the rights of musicians. I used to remember telling myself back in those days that if I had worn out two l.p. albums and maybe a cassette, then doggone it, I had payed my dues and shouldn't feel bad about a download. Of course, the problem was always that it was a two-way street.
I know what you're saying, and yet…downloads are the only way to make money these days. If they don't protect the downloads, music isn't a profession anymore…it's a hobby.
Some friends of mine once referred me to a Harry Potter site where they let their kids go. The very first piece of fan fiction I hit was slash fiction! No rating, no warning. . . and this was supposed to be a kiddie friendly site. Unbelievable!
But he stole very specific elements from particular sources. The description of Cleopatra's barge, the whole plot of Hamlet and Othello. Passages from well-known histories in his History plays. King Lear from a fairy tale.
And that's a good thing, because he did very good things with them.
I too struggle with this. I was just notified of a Google settlement, where they provided written excerpts wiithout permission, and are now settling with the writers. Ya Hoo! Ninety bucks!!!! Copyright enforcement on written material works, but more times not. There is no way you can monitor everything and it just slips through the cracks. In my craft, there is nothing you can do about it, and even the libraries do affect sales. Conversely, I'm happy that people read my works, and I hope they enjoy it – that is reward enough in itself.
But, I've got to hand it to the music publishers, as they are so totalitarian in their enforcement, they make nickels cry. From downloads to broadcast media to bar music, they scan the globe looking for infringements, and they know how to use the legal system for maximum effect.
Oh, absolutely. And if he lived today, the heirs of Holinshed's Chronicles would have him tied up in court forever.
That entirely depends on whether Mr. C is subjected to well-deserved ridicule in the new book.
Jed, surprisingly, I do indeed have mucho opinions about copy rights!
At this point though, suffice it to say that I am all in favor of copyrights, though for limited periods of time, but I have serious problems with the RIAA suits. They are basically extortion.
Congress set a huge per song penalty that let the RIAA threaten people with potential verdicts in the hundreds of thousands of dollar, which they would then offer to drop if the target agreed to buy them off for an amount between $3,000 and $10,000. This is the corporate version of what is called a strike suit — like when someone walks into a grocery store and says, "I fell down yesterday and I'm going to sue you for a million bucks. . . or you can pay me a couple thousand to go away."
I don't think the statistics bear that out.
Message <DIV>Thank you! I couldn't remember the history book he cribbed from.</DIV> <DIV></DIV> <DIV dir=ltr lang=en-us>
WHAT?! That's awful especially considering it was a kid friendly website! (I have found that Harry Potter is the worst "fandom" for slash…)
I was pretty shocked myself, especially since the site had been mentioned by Rowlings in an interview — which is what got my friends to let their kids go there in the first place.
I've found that too about Harry Potter. I don't know why though.
You know, the other place I run into a lot of un-marked inappropirate stuff is flikr. I am always at flikr looking to see what people are coming up with (there is some great stuff there). But it seems to happen all the time that a seemingly normal search turns up something. . . odd.
Of course, the counter is that even if you are not making money yourself, does your actions dilute the ability of the first creator to make money on his/her project? It would be nice if it was a simplistic "I'm not making money so it's kosher" answer, but reality is unfortunately a little more complex.
However, I have to point out that there are tons of people who use Creative Commons Licenses for this exact reason. And when it comes to electronic media, there's enough out there that you can find with CCL that are "clones" of high-end stuff, and royalty free to boot, that it's not as big of a deal. Sure, you can't use a Woody mesh from Toy Story in your own cartoon–but you can get a stock cowboy that works just as well for story telling without any of the hassle or worries of legality.
This is a bunny trail leading slightly off the current topic….
I cringe at copyright laws just because I have made several fan-videos (music videos for like TV programs and movies) and Youtube (and others) usually takes them down without notice or strips the audio from the video. Those who make the videos are not making money and spend several hours of their time to make them. The makers are promoting the music (often encouraging the purchasing of the song) and telling others to watch the movie/tv program.
Copyright laws almost squelched a brilliant fan-made Harry Potter Musical Parody from being posted on You Tube. (It was up for a few weeks but then was removed because it "infringed copyright laws".) Now that they changed the title they were able to post it…hopefully this time it won't be removed: <a href=”http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wmwM_AKeMCk” target=”_blank”>http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wmwM_AKeMCk (Warning: Some crude humor and language but if you're a fan of the books/movies it will tickle your funny bone!)
I completely understand the point behind copyright laws and also the author's original work and characters being tampered with. However with the progression of fan made books, fan fictions (Where Anne Rice has prohibited her characters being used in fan fiction), fan videos, etc. Perhaps the laws need to be revisited and modified?
Copyright laws are great if you can afford to find and pursue the culprits who disregard the law.
And even when you do shut them down, some other creep steals the idea. Witness the innumerable bootleggers producing P_ssing Calvin bumper stickers (which are an outright epidemic here in Phoenix, or were for a couple of years).
My understanding was that "Mr C" was held up to ridicule in the original book — the author paints his narrator as an obvious hypocrite and an absurdly dedicated cynic who can't see the forest for all the trees with "f__k you" scrawled on them. Salinger was hoping for us to empathize with Holden on some level, yes, but he didn't want to paint him as a helpless, blameless victim. When I read the book, Holden came off to me as a kid who'd like to be nice, who could be nice if he wanted, but who is just too cynical (and prematurely so) to stop being an @$$hole.
I knew plenty of @$$holes like that in high school.
Yes, and paychecks stifle work?
MikeO, where there is money to be made they will do it. Just be glad they can't charge you for the number of times you hum something in your head!
you touch on an excellent point. while patents (of which i hold several), no matter how "important"- i.e. a cure for cancer- expire 20 yrs after filing the application, as they should, any inconsequential bit of mildly entertaining frippery can keep its creator's ne'er-do-well descendants fat & happy for generations to come.
"knock-off artists will start turning out very similar, but slightly different movies. "
how would this be different from how Hollywood operates now?
I'm in complete agreement with your mixed feelings
The only thing I would add, is that while copyright law is provided for in the constitution so are the words "limited time". I may be confusing this number with patents, as I'm going by articles I read years ago, but I think the original time limit was 17 years after publication. Regardless of the number, it was plenty of time for an author/creator to reap a financial reward if his work was going to be successful. As it is defined now, I find it hard to believe the founders ever envisioned a work being "protected" for the life of the author plus 70 years (and for works of corporate authorship to 120 years after creation)!
What's funny is, if trademark law then was like it is now, you STILL couldn't do it. because trademarks last forever (as long as you defend them.) They would have trademarked all the major characters and defended them in perpetuity. it's a loophole way (in my opinion) of controlling derivative works way past the copyright expiration.
They keep extending copyrights, that's the problem. It's unConstitutional. It's supposed to be for "limited terms". Several generations receiving royalties from a long dead artist's work is in no way reasonable or limited terms. Let these copyright owners create their OWN works and copyright them. Let the older works pass into the public domain. A healthy public domain spurs on creativity, for old works are the building blocks for new works.
I think that's awful, Sam. I wouldn't be able to afford a lawyer in that case, either. It's unfortunate that there's nothing that can really be done in those types of situations.
There are definitely some problems with copyright laws as currently written. They're outdated in the world of rampant technology that we live in, and they only get moreso each day. It should be easier to go after somebody for stealing your work, but it should also be clear that silly stuff, sharing music or video clips on p2p programs, youtube users, fanfiction writers, etc., should be allowed by law, so long as nobody is selling the products. I also agree with another poster who said that authorship laws should cease as soon as the author dies out. Anything after the author's death should be public domain.
The laws need a major rewrite, as far as I'm concerned.
I absolutely agree that copyrights should end as soon as the author of the original work dies. The only reason to keep something out of public domain after you die is greed. I certainly understand the need for your characters to do what you want for them, and not to go down another road that somebody else envisioned. Authors should absolutely have a say in that… but after they die, why should their children and grandchildren be in charge? Who's to say that they have any better idea than the next person what the author wanted?
FYI.
While there has not been a movie sequel to The Incredibles, a comic book sequel is published by BOOM! Studios.
Give then a chance and they will find a way to charge for that.
Robert Howard created Conan in the early 1930's. He committed suicide in 1936 when his mother died. No children. No wife. So 73 years after his death can I write a Conan story? NO. What I don't get is liberals hate to see anyone inherit money, but they love copyright laws. Supposedly Howards heirs are receiving money. Well he didn't have any kids so are these second cousins or great nephews?
Copyright laws need fixing. But dem congressmen only care about their California contributers.
Private property is the cornerstone of our freedoms. Remove it, like in the case of Chrysler stockholders, and lawlessness prevails that unravels civilization.
If I buy a hammer, I have the right to pass it on to my children or anyone else that I want. It is none of your business what I do with it.
Since I have created something, it would seem to me that my right to protect what happens to it should be even more important that what happens to a hammer that I paid money for.
Meant Daniel Craig.
Creatively, no one but the original author truly knows what is going on with their characters; however, many authors use their works to provide for their families after they die. Writing especially is not lucrative unless you hit it really big.
I honestly think a fair time to maintain a copyright is life of the author + 25 years. This amount of times allows for the family to collect a bit of inheritance on the author's work, but then gives it over to the public domain.
"Inspired" by, Mike! Inspired by!! Much less litigeous!
Like most legal issues, this has become a complicated one. The type of work created here is known as a derivative work, a new copyrightable work based on previous work. Absent a fair use or parody exception, the derivative work is subject to rights of the previous work. I think a key will be how the defense is able to apply a case involving a story called "A Wind Done Gone" which was a "Gone With The Wind" from the perspective of Miss Scarlett's servants. It has helped set the grounds on which a derivative work can be considered a parody. The larger issue is one that has been mentioned and that is Congress' propensity to expand the copyright duration every 20 years (The Disney/Warner Brothers rule). Realize that we have gone from a term of twenty years (renewable once) to life plus 70 years and you can see that the original intent has been greatly distorted. However, I don't think anything will change because of the new avenues available to exploit a copyright and the money involved.
That is what is referred to as a common law copyright. However, it is very difficult to defend using just that which is why most people will attempt to get a federal copyright which is what triggers the time periods and give the holder a greater bundle of rights and better mechanisms with which to prosecute (for example proof of ownership is easily dispensed with) because it is then up to the offender to search and make sure that their idea/work is not already copyrighted.
Further, if I create a character with an ideology, if not protected they both could be easy to pervert and erode.
David Craig has stated that in his opinion it is time for James Bond to take it up the ass on screen. Fortunately, the owners of the Bond franchise have so far disagreed. So what about Superman? Would you mind if 20 other versions were produced to compete with truth, justice and the American way – possibly each one figuratively and literally shoving it up his ass also?
If you are so creative, you should be able to find your own context to express it, rather than trying to piggy-back on my success.
I am surprised that this article and most of the replies seem to be from "conservative" students of the Communist Manifesto.
However Kevin, if you are not the person who wrote it, invented it, or produced it in any tangible way, you have absolutely no right whatsoever to reproduce it, legally (or federally, if you prefer) copyrighted or not. Although it is commonly thought that if you change a certain percent of the works that you have a right to reproduce it, but that is not true either. I have legal (federal) copyrights, and I would still have to get a lawyer to prove the product was mine; a very difficult thing to do when you’ve had a monstrous computer crash that wiped out most of your records.
And due to the way the government does things, if I didn’t have the copyright papers in a safe, it would be almost impossible to search for my own products, let alone for anyone who illegally copyrighted them.
BTW, if a person can leave jewelry, homes, cash, antiques or anything of that sort to their survivors, they should be able to leave legal copyrights as well.
Now I know how I'm spending my evening!
You *have* to let me know your thoughts! (Good or bad!)
Who are you to call slash "odd"? What, do you have standards or something? Do you prefer it when fanfics DON'T change the sexual orientation of the characters? (Come on, we all KNOW that even though there is absolutely no hint of Harry being gay, and a whole book's worth of his Ginny fantasies, he's really in a love triangle with Snape and Dumbledore!).
It's pretty funny so far. Best line so far is Hermione's "He just happens to pick your name out of the house cup out of hundreds if not five possible Gryffindors?"
Just wait until you get to the Voldemore Quirrell BFF scenes! Also Draco is extremely hilarious (at least to me) as well. Harry who?
Just wait until you get to the Voldemore Quirrell BFF scenes! Also Draco is extremely hilarious (at least to me) as well. Harry who? The bad guys really did "steal" the show.
I love Draco! Never knew he was so flexible. I think I need to keep a list of the spells ("unjellify!").
Yeah, I sensed that throughout the series, especially when they fought the Alternato LyfeStyle Dragon.
PFFFFFT! "I'll have… SNAKES!" "Jane Austen novels!"
Copyright laws in the US have gone way beyond incentivization. They now are simply government granted perpetual monopolies. Mickey Mouse was created 80 years ago, and his creator is dead. But… the copyright protection is owned by a big corporation for at least another 50 years – and that's before they bribe congressmen (like they have in the past) to extend the period even longer.
An inventor of a lifesaving device or a wonderful new energy source gets 17 years protection. Why should an author or artist get life plus 75 years of protection?
It's wrong and it violates the clearly stated intent of Copyright in the US Constitution.
Draco only gets funnier as the play progresses!
Who knew Voldemort was such a neat freak?
So, 2 hours later… That was pretty great. I loved the Horcrux. I missed Luna, but I suppose she wouldn't have worked as the "weird" one, as all the characters were a bit off (as in, silly). I also think they should have done a Quidditch match (they pulled off the dragon, quidditch would have been no big, right?) But yeah, Draco was amazing, as was Voldie ("Voldie! Voldie!"). Thanks for linking!
Oh, so THAT's what she meant by Hungarian Horntail!
you can never go wrong with liberal amounts of Zombies and Ninjas!
ok, will definitely be checking this one out tonight! cant spend too much time on such things at work *lol*
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