this post was submitted on 10 Jun 2022
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Sure, but I bring it up to highlight when even dread copyright law can be excepted, as the many legal cases tackle the questions of where the line between theft and quotation lies.
@erpicht i thought i made it clear that theft doesn't exist in art?
It's still an interesting question to know where to draw the line about reusing other works of art.
Is taking a picture of a drawing and selling it with a filter fair? Our without filter? Is a recording of a recording where you tweak really little things fair?
Where do you draw the line?
Copyright started when French composers noticed people were using their music and they didn't get anything from it. Are you ready as a professional musician to accept people monetising your work without your knowledge, consent and without you getting anything?
What would be a good system? A system that can realistically be implemented as of today.
@Openmastering
i don't know where you got that information from. according to University of Georgia School of Law professor L. Ray Patterson's "Copyright and 'the Exclusive Right' of Authors" (link), the first copyright law was the Charter of the Stationers' Company, created in 1556. it granted the Stationers' Company the power to seize and burn presses and books, thus implementing a powerful tool for the government to censor subversive literature. the first copyright law was not about credit or getting paid, it was an authoritarian crackdown on literature
You're entirely right, I mixed things up. It's the SACEM, the french royalties collecting company which has been started this way.