I apologize for butting into this interesting situation:
but I would like to know a few things about the issues involved here:
1. how does either the unauthorized publication of a private authors
private work
"promote either the arts or the sciences". 2. what public interests are prevented or served by denying the publisher the right to publish
these articles.
3. The plight of the author in this situation is the same as the plight of
most authors who
somehow believe the copyright laws protect their private interests. 4. Assuming the publisher is a mega giant, with deep pockets, the author of the works whose
rights may have been offended, may have a pocket with a hole in it. So, under no
circumstances can that human person expect to have rights against that mega giant non
human person.
5. the most basic of rights requires money.
the effect of a legal monopoly is to deny the essence of a free democracy.
monopoly promotes human exploitation
copyright rarely serves the interests of the author.
At 09:15 AM 9/27/2002 -0700, Keith Tabor wrote:
>First, find a different attorney. You will need an
>experienced copyright litigator for this. Furthermore,
>you will want someone who will know how to use the
>evil DMCA to your advantage, if appropriate. Even if
>it is just to get the publisher to pay attention and
>start to negotiate.
>
>Second, be prepared to spend a lot of money to get
>this worked out. A LOT of money. The $30 times 250
>works ($7500) would not cover the retainer for most of
>the attorneys who have enough experience to handle
>this matter for you. Hopefully you can find one who is
>more reasonably priced. Depending on your market, an
>attorney will charge from between $150 to over $400
>per hour to work on this sort of matter. By the way,
>you want to make sure the publisher is solvent enough
>to be worth going after. Spend your hard earned money
>simply to push them over the line into bankruptcy does
>you no good.
>
>Third, do what your attorney says, not what a list of
>well intentioned, very experienced professionals, who
>are nonetheless ignorant of your specific situation,
>tell you to do. There are many factors to consider and
>you need someone to consider all of them before you
>move forward.
>
>Relatively speaking your question is a simple one and
>you may want to use what you learn from this list as
>background knowledge as you interview prospective
>attorneys. Do their explanations of what you should do
>make sense in light of what you know about copyright
>law? If they can't convince you of what needs to be
>done how are they going to convince a judge, jury, or
>the publishers?
>
>Best of luck,
>
>Keith
>
>--- jimnorcross[_at_]popmail.com wrote:
> > I have a question about copyright registrations and
> > whether I should register my material as a
> > collection or individually.
> >
> > Background - For several years I wrote music reviews
> > for a magazine, about 250 in all. I sold only
> > one-time print rights, which they acknowledge, but I
> > never registered the pieces. Last month I found they
> > had resold/redistributed my content to 10 other
> > publications, plus resold copies of my reviews off
> > their own web site. I've sent a cease and desist,
> > plus pay up letter, but both have been ignored.
> > Filing a case is inevitable.
> >
> > I know I will have to register before I can take it
> > to court. But at $30 a piece, and over 250 pieces,
> > that gets expensive. I want to make sure I do the
> > right thing because, at least on their site, DMCA
> > violations are involved where they placed their
> > copyright on my pieces.
> >
> > My question is - can I register each year (about 6
> > years of 40 reviews per year) as a
> > collection/collective, and still be able to sue for
> > each individual piece? Or do I have to register each
> > individual piece? Have there been any cases that
> > brought up this issue? Even the attorney I
> > approached was unsure about which direction to take.
> > Thanks for any info someone might have on this
> > issue.
> >
> > ....................................
> > Get your own free email account from
> > http://www.popmail.com
> >
>
>
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Received on Mon Sep 30 2002 - 15:32:58 GMT
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