Intellectual Thievery

by on July 26, 2010 @ 2:31 pm · 0 comments

in IP Law, Science

Statism + legislation = destruction and unintended consequences:

… Jon “Maddog” Hall wanted to try to preserve some deteriorating piano rolls, but discovered (much to his annoyance) that copyright may be getting in the way. He points out that many old player piano rolls are deteriorating, and the small group of remaining collectors are hoping to preserve the music by digitizing them. Easier said than done… turns out that Hall got confused about the difference between the copyright on the composition and the copyright on the performance, and his attempt to save a more modern recording of a public domain song — even though that piano roll was deteriorating — was not allowed. After contacting one company that still makes piano rolls, he was told that he was better off not preserving the rolls in his collection:

We ended up agreeing that if I made an mp3 recording of less than 30 seconds, off an old roll, from a company that was completely out of business, kept it completely for my own use and locked up so no one else could hear it, that I probably would not be sued. He also begged me not to use any of his company rolls in this task, as he really did not want to have to sue me. I thanked him for his time.

It only took 100 years, but it looks like copyright law in the US is finally doing what it originally intended to do: destroying piano rolls.

Intellectual property legislation is outright theft. A judge could one day order a famine by declaring certain farming methods and genetic patterns to be “owned” by someone else (probably some corporatist entity backed by the full “faith and credit” of the US–that is, anything from machine guns to nukes.) Great!

About Manuel Lora  (32 Posts)

Austro-libertarian market anarchist, photographer, husband & father, tech geek.


Related Posts

  1. Tom W. Bell on Intellectual Property
  2. “But without intellectual property . . .”
  3. Article: Intellectual Freedom and Learning Versus Patent and Copyright
  4. IP As Intellectual Laziness, Skewed Business Models
  5. James Bond, Plagiarism, and Intellectual Property
Print This Post
Share

Leave a Comment

Read This Before Leaving a Comment

Please keep the following in mind when commenting:

  • Real names preferred but not required.
  • If your comment contains several links, your comment may be held up for a while in moderation; please, be patient.
  • Strive for the ideal speech situation: civility, mutual understanding, no eristic debating tactics, no ad hominems, no foul language.

Comments that do not adhere to the last item above will be deleted or marked as SPAM at our discretion.

 

» Comments RSS Feed

Anti-Spam Protection by WP-SpamFree

{ 1 trackback }

  • Stop Those Piano Rolls! | syntech finance blog

    [...] Lora gave me this idea for this post. I &#115&#116&#111le it from him. Oddly and inexplicably, he blogged&#32&#116&#104e item too, strongly suggesting that ideas are inf&#105&#110&#105tely reproduceable and, [...]

    July 26, 2010

Previous post:

Next post: