RIAA writing Iraq copyright laws by Copy:cult Friday May 02, 2003 at 12:39 PM |
Under Iraqi copyright legislation, passed by The Revolution Leadership Council in 1971, a copyright lapses 25 years after the death of the author, but no more then fifty years after the publication of the work. It's shorter for private works, and there are several public interest exemptions.
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Under Iraqi copyright legislation, passed by The Revolution Leadership Council in 1971, a copyright lapses 25 years after the death of the author, but no more then fifty years after the publication of the work. It's shorter for private works, and there are several public interest exemptions.
We wonder which member of The Revolution Leadership Council penned this, or whether someone wrote it for them, but the real author of this enlightened document ought to step forward. Maybe they could help liberate the USA - which extended copyright to seventy years after the author's
death - from Hollywood.
(Do we sense a campaign coming on?)
But if true, and Palast has a good record for trade politics, Rosen's dash for Baghdad isn't hard to explain.
Iraq does not have a reciprocal copyright agreement with the United States, which means that US works are not protected.
Hilary will almost certainly be setting to work on the current law's Article 13:- "The author may not prevent a person making one copy of a published work for his own use."
And she will want to stiffen the penalties for infringement:- one hundred dinars, or three hundred for repeat offenders. Maybe she will shoot for something closer to the $97 trillion the RIAA has claimed as damages from
the file-sharing students back in the Homeland.
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read more online:
http://www.theregister.co.uk/content/6/30441.html