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I'm asking for your help
September 27, 2008
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I'd like to ask our readers to help our cartoonists with an urgent problem. We are asking you to send an email on behalf of the cartoonists. The Senate just passed the "Orphan Works Bill," quickly, behind closed doors and without a vote, through a controversial practice known as "hotlining." The bill rewrites the copyright law in ways that are devastating to cartoonists, artists, writers, photographers and songwriters.

The two artists organizations I'm active in, the National Cartoonists Society and the Association of American Editorial Cartoonists, and dozens of other trade organizations, are urging their members to write to their congressmen at this hour, because there is a risk that the House will pass the Senate version of the bill, again without debate and without a vote, by adding it to a larger budget or bailout bill at the end of the current session, in the next few hours.

The Orphan Works bill is being pushed by Google, which plans to catalogue millions of images and doesn't want to deal with the rights of copyright holders. The bill will make it easy for anyone to reprint copyrighted work, without the permission of the copyright holder, and artists will find that it is difficult or impossible to control where their work is reprinted. The bill also imposes new costs and procedures on artists, all to benefit Google.

I'd like to ask everyone who reads my blog, or subscribes to my newsletter, to do the cartoonists a favor by emailing their congressman and asking him or her to oppose the Orphan Works Bill now, by visiting this web site, which helps you to send an automatic email to your congressman. It is quick and easy to send this email, and it would be much appreciated by the desperate cartoonists.

To learn more about the Orphan Works Bill, visit here.

I've never asked my readers for help before. I'd really appreciate your help now.

Many thanks,
Daryl


Posted By: dcplumer  on Monday, September 29, 2008

Peterk is right. The purpose of the bill is not to "make it easy for anyone to reprint copyrighted work, without the permission of the copyright holder," it is to take historical material and put it to work! The majority of work produced from 1923-1965 is probably in the public domain, but we don't know for sure because we don't know who the copyright holder is. Those are "orphan" works. The bill provides reasonable restrictions on how groups have to search for the copyright holder and allows for penalties for copyright infringement under existing law for groups that don't follow the restrictions, so, from a creator's point of view, things should not be any different with Orphan Works legislation in place than they are now.


Posted By: Peterk  on Sunday, September 28, 2008

While I can understand why cartoonists would be upset you might consider looking at the otherside of the coin. Many archives and libraries contain manuscripts, photographs and other materials that were donated to them over the last 50-75 years for which the copyright holder is unknown. These materials can not be reprinted or in some cases even be seen due to the lack of knowing who owns the copyright. I suggest you contact the Society of American Archivists to find out more about the issue from their point of view

http://www.archivists.org

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