Copyright: Difference between revisions

41 bytes added ,  24 November 2003
clarify a bit
(20 years of history jammed on one page)
 
(clarify a bit)
 
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A '''copyright''' is a [[monopoly]] on some [[content]] produced originally by [[individual capital]] (creativity) and intended to reward that creator for their willingness to share it.
A '''copyright''' is a transferable right to control copying of some content (replicatable work) produced originally by [[individual capital]] (creativity) and intended to reward that creator for their willingness to share it.


Today it is also used to monopolize other [[instructional capital]], creating some overlap with [[patent]]s.  An issue with this overlap is that patents do require very detailed descriptions and are quite expensive to get, and are only good for a limited time (usually one generation or 17-20 years).  While copyrights can last much longer, 75 or more years.
Today it is also used to monopolize other [[instructional capital]], creating some overlap with [[patent]]s.  An issue with this overlap is that patents do require very detailed descriptions and are quite expensive to get, and are only good for a limited time (usually one generation or 17-20 years).  While copyrights can last much longer, 75 or more years.
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