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Re: Obsolete legal concepts? (RE: Fair-Use/Schmair-Use...)
On Sun, 12 Aug 2007, Rick Anderson wrote:
No, Sandy, in science I would not; but in the case of these
legal terms and concepts -- applied to a new medium that
lawyers neither understand, nor one to which their obsolescent
terms and concepts are even coherently applicable -- it is the
"technical terms" that are the confused ones, and what is
needed is some common sense in their stead, to dispel the
confusion they create in the public mind.
Stevan, could you give us, say, five examples of legal terms
and concepts that are currently being used in this debate, and
whose meanings are obsolete or otherwise inapplicable in the
new medium?
Sure. And I am referring specifically to the OA debate, and the
2.5M annual peer-reviewed journal articles that are OA's target
content. (I have no imperial designs or interests insofar as the
digital domain Writ Large is concerned.)
(1) Fair Use
(2) Intellectual Property
(3) Copyright
(4) Copy
(5) Publish
There may eventually be ways to squeeze sense out of these terms
again, in the online era, for the specific case of OA's target
content. But no one I've heard so far (legal or lay) is coming
anywhere near finding those sensible, defensible reconstruals.
It's all mostly incoherent, anachronistic, pedantic, Procrustean
prattle, often alarmingly, even grotesquely, arbitrary, and
transparently dysfunctional. The only reason it gets any credence
at all is because no one has any deeper ideas.
So I just steer clear of the juridical jargon altogether, taking
it to be moot until and unless someone comes up with something
sensible that really fits the new (online) medium as well as the
needs of the new (online) research community.
But I will definitely continue to use "Fair Use" as the
descriptor for "the Button." Not because I think there is a crisp
legal issue at issue, but simply because people *understand* what
the button is for, and how to use it, when it is put that way.
("Eprint Request Button" was not nearly as effective or
comprehensible.)
Just pragmatism, not jurisprudence...
Chrs, Stevan