By krisnelson on Jul 6, 2010 in business / copyright / law / technology
So, the AP has in the past made a big deal about holding on to the rights to every tiny little bit of what they right (essentially denying that fair use even exists). Who better than those snarky peeps at Woot to call them on the implications of such a scheme?
Posted in business, copyright, law, technology | Tagged AP, copyright, EFF, fair use, law, licensing, news, Woot |
By krisnelson on Aug 4, 2009 in business / copyright / history / intellectual property / law
The AP has begin trying to license content through a payment scheme. Some of the content — as recently demonstrated by James Grimmelmann “purchasing” a Thomas Jefferson quote — is in the public domain. Does the AP have the right to sell/license this public-domain content? What does it mean to be in the public domain?
Posted in business, copyright, history, intellectual property, law | Tagged AP, blog, contracts, copyright, free, intellectual property, law, law school, lawyer, licensing, open source, Public domain |
By krisnelson on Jul 25, 2009 in business / copyright / intellectual property / technology
The AP wants to apply DRM to the news. It won’t work.
I get the frustration on the AP’s part. The world is changing, and they haven’t figured out to prevent that. They can try for legal changes, try DRM, or adapt. Adapting is hardest, but the only way to succeed long term.
Posted in business, copyright, intellectual property, technology | Tagged AP, business, copyright, DRM, intellectual property, law, newspapers, NPR, Techdirt |