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by michael_dorfman
5773 days ago
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Right now, if you were to buy a CD of Beethoven's 9th symphony, you would not be legally allowed to do anything but listen to it. You wouldn't be able to share it, upload it, or use it as a soundtrack to your indie film- yet Beethoven has been dead for 183 years and his music is no longer copyrighted. Wow, talk about missing the point: Beethoven has been dead for 183 years, but the musicians in the orchestra that recorded it certainly haven't been. Having one random orchestra (even one with international renown) record the works of Beethoven, and releasing those to the public domain will only help people who want to re-use that single interpretation of the works in their indie film. The whole project seems to me to be of minimal value; what they're really doing is hiring one orchestra to produce a very low budget version of some classic works, so that some future group of people can avoid paying the license costs for those (likely mediocre) versions. |
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So lets look at the other side e.g. schools can easily download these works. It's not just the initial purchase money, though that would be enough for many poorer schools to simply not bother, it's dealing with physical CDs, or DRM'd downloads or accounting for licences when the licence holders group comes knocking, giving copies to the kids to use at home or on their iPods, letting them score an animated movie or documentary they are making. Once things are "free" options open up that are difficult to imagine when there is a fee, no matter how small.