[Wikipedia-l] Road to Hell [was Re: Dream a little...]
Roger Luethi
collector at hellgate.ch
Mon Oct 16 09:32:13 UTC 2006
On Mon, 16 Oct 2006 01:19:05 +0200, Lars Aronsson wrote:
> There are lots of contents that could (and should) be free, but is
> still under copyright. Some are in the hands of museums and
> archives, some in publishers, some in government agencies.
Many works are not even under copyright but locked up anyway.
> I think it would be a mistake to start pouring money into such
> institutions, which should instead be forced (by a change of
> copyright law or national policy) or encouraged to give it away.
> We'd run out of money much too soon, and we'd build expectations
> that old collections can bring profits.
That was exactly my first thought, too. This well-intentioned idea has a
great potential of being worse than useless by putting our long-term goals
further out of reach.
$100 million might be enough to make our lobbying efforts in Brussels and
Washington DC more effective for a decade or more. Large scale grass-roots
campaigns like the one over software patents in Europe succeed every now
and then as a one-time effort, but they are limited in their perseverance
against vested interests that have a lot more patience and money.
Unfortunately, lobbying is not as sexy as giving money to free a bunch of
pictures or texts. An alternative would be to carefully select and support
projects that don't create new, bad incentives. Project Gutenberg might be
a candidate.
Roger
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