This article proposes a modest common law solution to the orphan works problem: works that are still under copyright but whose owners cannot be easily located. Most discussions on the orphan works problem focus on the demand side: on users’ inability to locate owners. However, looking also at the supply side reveals that the problem of orphan works arises not only because users find it prohibitively costly to locate owners, but also because under a strict permission-first rule copyright owners, who do not internalize the full social cost of forgone uses, face suboptimal incentives to maintain themselves locatable. However, in many cases copyright owners are usually the least-cost avoiders of the orphan works problem, and like in many other ...
If we start with the assumption that copyright law creates a system of property rights, to what exte...
After months of negotiations, Congress is addressing a bill to deal with orphan works, which are sti...
Copyright law protects orphan and parented works equally--but it shouldn\u27t. Consequently, current...
This article proposes a modest common law solution to the orphan works problem: works that are still...
This Note addresses the problems in copyright law created by orphan works. The Author identifies thr...
Laurence Peter once said that [o]riginality is the fine art of remembering what you hear but forget...
Copyright has traditionally been considered as a right that has a social function. Thus, among the v...
Orphan works are works that are protected by copyright but whose right holders are not known or cann...
In recent decades, Congress has elongated the term of copyright protection and eliminated the requir...
The US Copyright Office in the Library of Congress defines orphan works as “copyrighted works whose ...
Orphan works, in which copyright owners are either missing or not locatable, present a significant p...
This article examines the problem of "orphan works" against the background of various projects for m...
Copyright law seeks to find a balance between opposing interests. On the one side are the interests ...
Currently, lawmakers on both sides of the Atlantic are struggling with the problem of orphan works. ...
Used in Foundational Copyright (Dec. 1 Boston; Dec. 15 Amherst) Many works that libraries, archives,...
If we start with the assumption that copyright law creates a system of property rights, to what exte...
After months of negotiations, Congress is addressing a bill to deal with orphan works, which are sti...
Copyright law protects orphan and parented works equally--but it shouldn\u27t. Consequently, current...
This article proposes a modest common law solution to the orphan works problem: works that are still...
This Note addresses the problems in copyright law created by orphan works. The Author identifies thr...
Laurence Peter once said that [o]riginality is the fine art of remembering what you hear but forget...
Copyright has traditionally been considered as a right that has a social function. Thus, among the v...
Orphan works are works that are protected by copyright but whose right holders are not known or cann...
In recent decades, Congress has elongated the term of copyright protection and eliminated the requir...
The US Copyright Office in the Library of Congress defines orphan works as “copyrighted works whose ...
Orphan works, in which copyright owners are either missing or not locatable, present a significant p...
This article examines the problem of "orphan works" against the background of various projects for m...
Copyright law seeks to find a balance between opposing interests. On the one side are the interests ...
Currently, lawmakers on both sides of the Atlantic are struggling with the problem of orphan works. ...
Used in Foundational Copyright (Dec. 1 Boston; Dec. 15 Amherst) Many works that libraries, archives,...
If we start with the assumption that copyright law creates a system of property rights, to what exte...
After months of negotiations, Congress is addressing a bill to deal with orphan works, which are sti...
Copyright law protects orphan and parented works equally--but it shouldn\u27t. Consequently, current...