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Copyright for original Mickey Mouse persona to run out 1 January 2024 (theguardian.com)
43 points by pseudolus on Dec 28, 2023 | hide | past | favorite | 10 comments



Related/recent discussions:

Mickey, Disney, and the public domain: A 95-year love triangle

https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=38678021

Public Domain Day 2024 Is Coming: Here's What to Know

https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=38586978


The original Mickey Mouse is no more interesting. What would be really fun, would be Bambi entering public domain.


Who wants to take bets on it getting extended?


What's the point of even talking about this? It's just gonna be a little bit of lobbying until the law gets amended and the copyright expiration gets extended


People are weirdly fatalistic about Disney managing to extend copyright again. I have no idea why. It's not happening, not this time anyway.


It’s possible to lobby the opposite too. Especially as elder politicians retire.

Electoral turnovers flush corruption, result in economic gains for general public: https://www.nber.org/papers/w29766


Too much effort to save a small percentage of their net worth, probably.


Disney isn't on great terms with the party of Sonny Bono at the moment.


Too late.


It is not too late to extend copyright on Mickey Mouse, even if Disney won't bother to try. Retroactively extending copyright terms to works whose copyright terms had already expired is constitutional according to the Supreme Court in the ruling Golan v. Holder (2012) [1].

The law at issue was the Uruguay Round Agreements Act [2] of 1994:

> 17 U.S.C. § 104A effectively copyrights many foreign works that were never before copyrighted in the U.S.[13] The works are subject to the normal U.S. copyright term, as if they had never entered the public domain.[14]

> The affected works are those which were in the public domain either due to a lack of international copyright agreements between the U.S. and the country of origin of the work, or due to a failure to meet U.S. copyright registration and notification formalities. Also affected are works which did have previous U.S. copyright, but which entered the public domain due to a failure to renew the copyright.

The Supreme Court affirmed 6-2 in Golan_v._Holder that the Uruguay Round Agreements Act did not violate the "limited time" condition of the Copyright Clause [1].

[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Golan_v._Holder

[2] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Uruguay_Round_Agreements_Act




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