[Commons-l] American non-acceptance of the rule of the shorter term of the Berne Convention is impeding our site developments

J JIH jus168jih at gmail.com
Fri Aug 24 10:05:35 UTC 2007


Please take a look at
http://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/American_non-acceptance_of_the_rule_of_the_shorter_term
to see how American non-acceptance of the rule of the shorter term of
the Berne Convention is impeding our site developments. The Meta page
says: "Current U.S. copyright laws, under 17 U.S.C. 104(c) and 17
U.S.C. §104A, seem not to accept the rule of the shorter term,
creating confusions for users wishing to post foreign works and
putting burdens on administrators who must verify if a work is in fact
copyrighted in the United States even if it has already been in the
public domain in the country of original publication."

17 U.S.C. §104A makes the restored copyright automatic. Filing with
the USA Copyright Office a notice of intent to enforce that person's
copyright is to show formal intention. If any users can contact
foreign authors or their successors to ask whether they will pursue
USA copyright even if they can no longer copyright their works at
home, please forward the message to permissions at wikimedia dot org,
but if they cannot be easily contacted, the works are orphaned.
British governmental works under Crown Copyright are known not
affected by American non-acceptance of the rule of the shorter term
when British Government does not pursue copyright beyond its home term
abroad.

Regards,

Jusjih as
Administrator in (same username in all of these sites)

1. Chinese Wikipedia
2. Multilingual Wikisource
3. Chinese Wiktionary
4. English Wikisource
5. Chinese Wikisource
6. Wikimedia Commons
7. English Wiktionary
8. English Wikipedia
9. Chinese Wikiquote
10. English Wikiquote



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