What if Copyright Law Reverted Back to the 1790's?

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  • Опубликовано: 26 окт 2024
  • Copyright. Fair use. Things I’ve discussed at length before, and will discuss at length in the future. Today, I don’t talk about it too long. Like 8 minutes or so.
    Anyway, here’s the vid I mention at the start;
    • The Lawnmower Man: A F...
    I wanna get more vids out on this channel, just been busy with Whimsu stuff. It’s close to 40K subs so that’s cool;
    Here’s that link;
    / whimsu
    And all this is…yeah. Thanks patrons, if any of you are reading this. Any contribution helps a ton, and one day I’ll be able to hopefully give you all something great for all the support.
    Twitter: / whimsuhubty
    Soundcloud: / user-503704039
    Patreon: / theknowledgehub
    Second Channel: / @seaburgerdotorg2154
    Spotify: open.spotify.c....

Комментарии • 653

  • @AlphabetSoupABC
    @AlphabetSoupABC 3 года назад +1394

    If there were 10 different Shrek 2s in the theater, I would watch every single one of them

    • @themaskedperu-man5547
      @themaskedperu-man5547 3 года назад +49

      You after Binge watching every Shrek 2 Flim : Finally After years, I finally watch them all

    • @raeldri5867
      @raeldri5867 3 года назад +42

      OMG THERE IS A TIMELINE WITH 10 DIFFERENT SHREKS! we really are on the bad timeline

    • @BeaglzRok1
      @BeaglzRok1 3 года назад +18

      and then be the first person to make a Shrek 2 Tier List, kids still love tier lists right?

    • @TammyJerkChicken
      @TammyJerkChicken 3 года назад +7

      I’d have to give some law and order by going to them alphabetically by director

    • @MDLuffy1234YT
      @MDLuffy1234YT 3 года назад +6

      Genndy Tartakovsky's Shrek 2 is the best, even if it's not in our timeline.

  • @CivBase
    @CivBase 3 года назад +1674

    Honestly... this all sounds fine. Everyone is already making remakes, they're just limited to their own properties. Who cares if Illumination was the one to remake Ghostbusters instead of Sony? It's still just a bad remake. And that doesn't take anything away from the original.
    Were this to happen, I imagine people would probably, eventually become even more sick of remakes than they already are. Remakes would gradually become less profitable, the values of IPs would degrade faster, and studios would be more incentivized to create new and original works instead of cashing in on nostalgia. That sounds great to me.

    • @bodaciouschad
      @bodaciouschad 3 года назад +181

      Agreed. The scenario described would only harry the current trend of reboots and remastering to it's end. If anyone can remaster anything that is old enough to deserve a remastering, why on earth would a studio even bother? At a certain point, smaller companies and independent creators would have eaten the collective reboot and remaster lunches of the film and video games industries, leaving little incentive to farm old IPs any further for the large corporations with the capital to take risks on new franchises.

    • @Isometrix116
      @Isometrix116 3 года назад +25

      I was about to say pretty much exactly this. I’m completely for this change.

    • @peteranderson037
      @peteranderson037 3 года назад +42

      If copyright law never changed in over 200 years then corporations would just abuse the shit out of trademark law instead. Honestly, there's nothing preventing them from doing that now other than the fact that they don't need to because copyright laws are so stringent.

    • @brickman409
      @brickman409 3 года назад +18

      I was thinking pretty much the same thing. I usually like Knowledge Hub but this was kind of a dumb video.

    • @tiffyw92
      @tiffyw92 3 года назад +26

      @@peteranderson037 This right here. Wishing for an ideal world where people don't have to worry about some hated thing is one thing, but reality has shown across history that said hated thing will manifest itself in some other form one way or another.

  • @akumarajio2691
    @akumarajio2691 3 года назад +521

    I point to HP Lovecraft. Everything with tentacles might be called Lovecraftian but in reality those that actually incorporate the horror and existential elements well are by far made better by the influence.
    I point to Robin Hood. A work built upon generations of different authors over time to present a relatively consistent canon despite shitty knock-off adaptations.
    I now point to the corpse of star wars. A thing left to rot and decay because of corporate influences and shitty exclusive handling and barely a hint of decent spin-off works.
    Really at this point the only things that should be allowed to be enforceable in this are trade secrets, trademarks and other things that could reasonably hurt another product or the producer of said product via something like malicious deception.

    • @gmt-yt
      @gmt-yt 3 года назад +16

      To say nothing of Star Trek, holy cow... however I suppose the fact that this could be an endless list doesn't prove any point since there have been a lot of media over the years and only a relatively small slice of it is any good by most peoples' standards.

    • @ministerexharme
      @ministerexharme 3 года назад +33

      I absolutely love "The Thing." The concept, the story, how it plays out. I would love 10 more movies that try to be extremely similar, but try something different to draw in more of an audience. It's no different from shitty bootlegs IMO

    • @akumarajio2691
      @akumarajio2691 3 года назад +46

      @@gmt-yt It proves that a property can operate fine if it was in the public domain and in reality that copyright barely does shit to help a property and only becomes a cudgel for people with money and a team of super lawyers. I didn't even touch the concept of piracy either...

    • @DacLMK
      @DacLMK 3 года назад +7

      Star Wars should die. The first 6 movies were enough.

    • @gmt-yt
      @gmt-yt 3 года назад +5

      @@akumarajio2691 l think we're on the same page roughly. I think the whole notion of intellectual property is a deontologically and legally indefensible grift and injurious to mankind. ATM we're too addicted to go cold-turkey, but I see it as something we should be working to get rid of over time, like lead pipes and coal-fired power plants.

  • @slap_my_hand
    @slap_my_hand 3 года назад +436

    People would realize that soulless reboots aren't fun to watch, and after a while everything would go back to normal, with the only difference being more free stuff.

    • @Dedjkeorrn42
      @Dedjkeorrn42 3 года назад +33

      There would be more garbage remakes and more good remakes

    • @cranknlesdesires
      @cranknlesdesires 3 года назад +25

      @@Dedjkeorrn42 by god I can't imagine that. Like that isn't happing now. Whoa. This is sarcasm. It is happening now. Art by corporation is dead already.

    • @ThePooper3000
      @ThePooper3000 3 года назад +35

      Not *just* free stuff, but *fresher* free stuff.
      Under the current copyright system, a lot of properties that become public domain are culturally irrelevant. Who cares about what your great-grandfather watched nearly 100 years ago?
      Under a 28-year system, you would get more relevant things in the public domain, and more regularly at that. At least an IP would become free within the average audience member's lifetime: you could've watched Star Wars when you were 5, and then film your own version at 35.

    • @oswalds8355
      @oswalds8355 3 года назад +5

      And it's not like we don't have plenty of soulless reboots in copyright world

    • @matheus5230
      @matheus5230 3 года назад +1

      @@ThePooper3000 I don't like how you are implying that older art is worse

  • @FlameLFH
    @FlameLFH 3 года назад +227

    "The industry would just burn out over the course of 10 years with predictable reboot and remake patterns." Considering everything is bought out by like four companies, we're already headed that direction.

    • @RoyalKnightVIII
      @RoyalKnightVIII Год назад +4

      The only difference would be is that the wealth from them wouldn't be concentrated in just a couple of hands.

    • @leshacke1041
      @leshacke1041 Год назад +5

      ​@@RoyalKnightVIII this is why copyright laws are some of the most corrupt laws of our political system.

  • @DJstarrfish
    @DJstarrfish 3 года назад +305

    "Immediately, you'd see attempts to remake every major film"
    So it's just like the world we currently live in then

    • @hotmailcompany52
      @hotmailcompany52 3 года назад +16

      I'd think there'd be more but I think the industry would learn quicker though because of it and we'd also get some pretty cool ones in the alternative copyright law IMO cause of crossovers and such lol

    • @Phil9874
      @Phil9874 3 года назад +4

      @@hotmailcompany52 honestly batman in the mcu would be cool they would just have to make it work thematically

    • @hotmailcompany52
      @hotmailcompany52 3 года назад +2

      @@Phil9874 ngl a DC and Marvel combined universe would be cool but difficult to make lol

    • @Phil9874
      @Phil9874 3 года назад +3

      @@hotmailcompany52 I mean yeah but that is a challenge to be overcome not something to never be attempted.

  • @raeldri5867
    @raeldri5867 3 года назад +555

    I would rather have 10 bizarre creations based of a loving franchise than one bad reimagined just to milk the brand

    • @dylanbuchanan6511
      @dylanbuchanan6511 3 года назад +36

      YES. 100% AGREED. I want something that sticks out in my mind for being bizarre and taking risks than something that just panders to the masses.

    • @alphayun7401
      @alphayun7401 3 года назад +6

      i agree, and i think if we could live in a world where everything is in the public domain would be a utopia
      ,also where anyone can use anything for creative work only (ie non profit)

    • @Great_Olaf5
      @Great_Olaf5 2 года назад +2

      Except that's not what it would be. It would be ten bad reimaginings to milk the brand. Or maybe 9 and one passion project.

    • @themaskedperu-man5547
      @themaskedperu-man5547 2 года назад +1

      @@Great_Olaf5 It was still Care And Effort than some Corporate shell want some Quick Bunk

    • @j.e.s.m.4686
      @j.e.s.m.4686 Год назад

      ​@@alphayun7401Thank you, someone who understands the potential of PD. I really like public domain 'cause it gives content creators and filmmakers/artists liberties on creating something that they might enjoy. Sure, they might be some who just want to make or adapt other IPs into crappy projects for the sake gaining money but NOT everyone are like that; they are other content creators out there who want to create something that they are passionate about and show how much they actually do care and love the IP we grow up with. If everything turned public domain within 14 or 4 years, I would make a Lion King, Super Mario or Marvel film/series with my own ideas with endless possbilities and apportunities.

  • @ivancorredera4241
    @ivancorredera4241 3 года назад +537

    As crazy as this concept is, it sounds more promising than what we currently have. Many fan projects of Nintendo properties have been struck down by Nintendo themselves for instance.

    • @sookendestroy1
      @sookendestroy1 3 года назад +17

      Well tbf a lot of nintendos strikes are ligitimate against projects. For instance Pokemon Uranium was shut down after a ton of work went into it and everything. The crux of it being they called themselves Pokemon which they didnt own the rights to. If they called the project Uranium series for example they could probably pass but they called themselves Pokemon. This is a whole mess of things you have to maneuver through when working in or adjacent to someone elses intellectual property. Though how they strike even youtube reviews is just blind fire copyright

    • @theprofburg
      @theprofburg 3 года назад +33

      @@sookendestroy1 It's funny you should mention that because recently there was another Pokemon fan fangame called Pokemon: Xenoverse, however they managed to learn their lesson from Uranium's downfall by officially calling themselves Xenoverse: Per Aspera ad Astra as a way around Nintendo's lawyers.

    • @TrueEnding
      @TrueEnding 3 года назад +3

      What if the project was made completely anonymously, like theres no credits, no website, no email links, no twitter account attached to it. Who are there going to send their C&D to?

    • @jons5478
      @jons5478 2 года назад +3

      This sounds like forced creativity via survival of the fittest

    • @flaviaocopeiro
      @flaviaocopeiro 2 года назад +1

      Yeah, but in a world like this we would get yearly ea and activision mario and zelda games

  • @SomeGuy1117
    @SomeGuy1117 3 года назад +225

    There would be a bit of chaos at first (likely an investment bubble in the entertainment industry), eventually things would quickly get oversaturated though leading to the bubble popping as audiences don't show up meaning that the investment put into those knockoff titles would be wasted. This would cause massive divestment from such projects unless there is strong enough demand beforehand with the market eventually finding equilibrium. This ultimately means that after the initial boom bust cycle we'd ultimately be left with a more consumer friendly environment that allows for more projects to be explored by other teams outside of the corporation or creator of the property.

    • @thicksunroof4687
      @thicksunroof4687 3 года назад +12

      I would be 100% for no copiright for the possibility for everyone to work on eachothers projects or products
      Everyone would win
      I mean if people would watch it is fine but market rules and workers would have more demand consumers would have a better offer

  • @yat282
    @yat282 3 года назад +115

    I think this hypothetical scenario misses an important detail. Audiences basically wouldn't go see most of these movies. There's no way to know what would be more successful, but similar to the video game crash of the 80's the lack of quality control made to pump out stuff from familiar brands slapped on it would cause people to just stop going to see most movies, especially those based on a previously existing property. However, I think it would eventually force movie studios to continually create new properties and franchises, instead of remaking the same properties over and over for 60 years

    • @sergiowinter5383
      @sergiowinter5383 3 года назад +6

      The biggest the market, more important Metacritic and Rotten Tomatoes become.

    • @maxillebastille9079
      @maxillebastille9079 2 года назад

      You know that ain't true

    • @Mr_Monolith
      @Mr_Monolith 2 года назад +1

      You say that but people still complain about sequels and reboots of properties they love but see them anyway

    • @joeyramstad8529
      @joeyramstad8529 2 года назад +9

      Agreed. This is a great way of actually putting market control in the hands of consumers. Sure it looks like we influence the market but really we don't. Did we show up to the new star wars movies because we were certain they would be works of art, or did we flock to the theaters because it was the first star wars property made in years. If anyone was free to offer up an adaptation of star wars, people wouldn't show up to the ones that didn't look worth their time, and instead opt for what actually has the strongest appeal.

  • @Phanton404
    @Phanton404 3 года назад +62

    And then we have the Touhou Project, where the creator lets anybody use the characters/setting/music as long as they credit him which results in ''fangames'' being made by large dev studios and what not.

    • @ponponpatapon9670
      @ponponpatapon9670 3 года назад +7

      if only copyright law was like this

    • @orngjce223
      @orngjce223 2 года назад +2

      @@ponponpatapon9670 You can be part of the change by asking creators to license their works under Creative Commons (mine are already)

  • @christophercook9693
    @christophercook9693 3 года назад +29

    Hey so the argument "it would be worse because remakes" isn't a good justification on it's own to extend copyright law. It's paternal, and it assumes that we as consumers can't be trusted to watch things that we actually like. It feels like an argument made by copyright companies to keep their assets safe than something we actually should be worried about.

  • @asriel09
    @asriel09 3 года назад +51

    Y'know a lot of smaller creators are effectively living in their own bubble where copyright doesn't exist at all, some of them even think that intellectual property could be abolished all together if we restructured the economy to make it work. With small creators, they earn a reputation working for free and when people start rooting for them or want to help them make something big, they give them money in advance. As opposed to copyright, where you simply use your ownership of the property to gatekeep who can view it in exchange for money.

  • @AndreGriffiths1
    @AndreGriffiths1 3 года назад +104

    Breaking this system puts the emphasis on the artist rather than the art/franchise. One could argue it would create a system where talent rises to the top rather than corporations who simply own numerous properties

    • @neptun6761
      @neptun6761 3 года назад +8

      Get rid of intelecual property

    • @dylanbuchanan6511
      @dylanbuchanan6511 3 года назад +1

      I have the exact same opinion.

    • @cranknlesdesires
      @cranknlesdesires 3 года назад +5

      Yeah, like how people are more loyal to the game of thrones books than the show. Or how people have headcannons and cannons built on selected works and fan theories of Star Wars and Star Trek.

    • @Horatio787
      @Horatio787 2 года назад

      Tarantino sells better than Frankenstein.

    • @checker297
      @checker297 2 года назад

      @@neptun6761 you need some IP laws, because otherwise why even invest in something when your competition which is larger/more efficient etc can just distribute/make it cheaper and easier thus we would enter dystopia.

  • @FelipeJaquez
    @FelipeJaquez 3 года назад +102

    Disney and Viacom: *eldritch screeching*

  • @maldonr2758
    @maldonr2758 3 года назад +148

    That sounds aweome, a decade of chaos and then all studios crashing and burning, let's do this!

    • @johnnygyro2295
      @johnnygyro2295 3 года назад +6

      All empires burn eventually...

    • @tardvandecluntproductions1278
      @tardvandecluntproductions1278 3 года назад +20

      They will suddenly invest in new IP, it's currently cheaper to not to

    • @dylanbuchanan6511
      @dylanbuchanan6511 3 года назад +13

      Yeah. Creative chaos. One insane remake after another. I’m totally behind this.

    • @daniel_rossy_explica
      @daniel_rossy_explica 3 года назад +3

      You are one of those kinds of people that actually want to see the world burn, now don't you?

    • @41-Haiku
      @41-Haiku 3 года назад +14

      @@daniel_rossy_explica Not the whole world, just the "artistic" organizations that behave as if art was described to them in passing once.

  • @conradborba4324
    @conradborba4324 3 года назад +107

    Disney: b-b-but I thought reality can be whatever I want 😨

    • @themaskedperu-man5547
      @themaskedperu-man5547 3 года назад +12

      Fandoms: More like OUR reality can be whatever WE want

    • @floridaman318
      @floridaman318 3 года назад +1

      @@themaskedperu-man5547 damn good point lol

    • @TomyDayos
      @TomyDayos 3 года назад +3

      I am really angry at disney.

    • @aruce9
      @aruce9 3 года назад +5

      no... this is the reality disney wanted we are in. because they wanted to protect steamboat willy from entering the public domain. They are the enemy of public domain.

    • @DacLMK
      @DacLMK 3 года назад +3

      @@themaskedperu-man5547 Communism intensifies

  • @maxotis4686
    @maxotis4686 3 года назад +119

    I'd still take it over the corporatism we have now.

    • @_MysticKnight
      @_MysticKnight 3 года назад +19

      Corporatocracy not corporatism.

    • @Touhou20246
      @Touhou20246 3 года назад +7

      I would also rather have this then having to treat elitist millionaires and billionaires like god like beings and be forced to blindly agree with their philosophy of conservative philosophy.😑👍🏻😅

    • @cranknlesdesires
      @cranknlesdesires 3 года назад +2

      @@_MysticKnight Corpratism is the journey and the corporatocracy is the destination🥰

    • @_MysticKnight
      @_MysticKnight 3 года назад +17

      @@cranknlesdesires No. Corporatism is something completely different from corporatocracy.
      Corporatism is a political theory that suggests that society should be organized like a human body (corpus in Latin), through institutional corporate groups (which are comparable to human organs) such as families, clans, guild associations, business associations, scientific associations, military associations, agricultural associations, etc, on the basis of their common interests.
      Corporatocracy is a political system dominated by large business interests, directly or indirectly.

    • @flowgangsemaudamartoz7062
      @flowgangsemaudamartoz7062 3 года назад +5

      @@_MysticKnight Thank you for this free information.

  • @bjorntheviking6039
    @bjorntheviking6039 3 года назад +34

    The short-term chaos of suddenly shortening copyright duration is vastly outweighed by the long-term benefits to the American culture and entertainment industry. Shorter copyright means there's a greater incentive to produce original works.

  • @TheGuyWhoIsSitting
    @TheGuyWhoIsSitting 3 года назад +90

    I don’t exactly see everyone rushing to make a million different movies based around what’s currently public domain.
    Honestly I’d add a caveat that if the company that owns the property doesn’t do anything with it for a substantial amount of time then it would go into the public domain. It may mean garbage stuff in order to keep their stuff going but sometimes it would probably end up being more of a financial loss to the company than just letting some stuff die.
    Copyright law is effectively indefinite now anyways. I don’t think people would undervalue new stuff either. Besides even with the current system Disney could still argue that you taking the original stuff they based their movies on that is in the public domain and you tried to make an original animated version or something based off the source material that you were ripping off their stuff despite the fact it’s public domain sourced. It’s a mess.

    • @jaspervanheycop9722
      @jaspervanheycop9722 3 года назад +8

      Well there is the proud tradition of having at least one "re-imagining" of Sherlock Holmes, Arthur, Robin Hood or whatever other British folkhero out every year.
      But honestly that's not bad at all. There's obvious drek but that is instantly forgotten (like that Taron Edgerton Robin Hood), but we also get great stuff like The Green Knight (imagine if we couldn't have that because the rights still belong to Guy Ritchie).

    • @matheus5230
      @matheus5230 3 года назад +1

      @@chestnut4860 I hope you're not implying that older art is worse

    • @scienceface8884
      @scienceface8884 3 года назад +3

      Garbage films to maintain exclusivity already exist. There was a Fantastic Four movie in the 90s made on a budget of whatever was in everyone's pockets when they showed up to work that day. It was never meant to be seen by the public, only to fulfill contract obligations.

  • @lurkalisk
    @lurkalisk 3 года назад +17

    I do wonder if this scenario would have simply prevented modern franchise nonsense in the first place. After all, much of this insanity has ramped up largely in step with various corporations' (mostly Disney) efforts to extend copyright. Never extending copyright lifespans may have just meant things never got to be this way at all.

  • @ayye4329
    @ayye4329 3 года назад +13

    To be honest, I wouldn't be opposed to this. I think it would be chaos for a while but eventually it'd stabilize on a better situation than the one we have today. If someone has a better version to tell of a story I like, which was made in the last 20 years, I'd be all for seeing it instead of having to wait until after I die so the copyright can expire for it to be released (the earlier Disney movies were made based on public domain material after all)

  • @TheItalianoAssassino
    @TheItalianoAssassino 3 года назад +12

    This actually sounds amazing. Like the early Internet. Pure chaos.

  • @gansmith
    @gansmith 3 года назад +44

    I do believe that it could create an era of chaos, but having burnt out audiences will be incentivized to look for new stuff. Just look at the growth of the indie scene in gaming after many gamers got tired of the current AAA market.

    • @Cableguy15
      @Cableguy15 3 года назад +5

      Yet AAA games are worse than ever, making more money than ever. And all of the mid-sized companies are dead or bought up by said companies. I'd rather have what we have now than that equivalent in Hollywood.

    • @gansmith
      @gansmith 3 года назад +8

      @@Cableguy15 That is more a result of the rather new economic model that predates on children and game addicts. Just look at mobile games. AAA games simply do not receive the same hype/support they did in the past. Many tried to go full P2W like mobile and got blasted for trying.
      The number of indie studios is now MUCH higher than what it was 10 years ago despite huge studios gobbling up the smaller ones.

  • @Illuminationsfromtheattic
    @Illuminationsfromtheattic Год назад +5

    I think the end result would be to actually be more originality in media, as it would no longer be profitable to hold on to and remake old properties.

  • @ModernWhoFan5B
    @ModernWhoFan5B 3 года назад +9

    Me looking at the video: Gee, wonder how much it changed in 50 years.
    Me less than a minute later: Oh, wait, 1790's not 1970's. Well, this just got interesting.

  • @hamboid4998
    @hamboid4998 3 года назад +12

    Maybe it'll force companies to have more original ip's instead of making old rehashes. The problem we see today in cinema, movies and video games too is that tons of companies can just sit on valuable properties and milk it, so if everyone could do the same thing these big wealthy companies can do, it would create a market that values different experiences than ones just from the shear amount of unoriginal content being pumped after the 28 year copyright rule.

    • @TuesdaysArt
      @TuesdaysArt 3 года назад +1

      I'm glad I'm not the only one who sees this...sure, some of those IPs might only exist to create a loophole, but it might also mean we actually get to see new and interesting characters for once.

  • @mathieuleader8601
    @mathieuleader8601 3 года назад +15

    fun fact Congressman Bono former husband of Cher successfully made the Mickey Mouse act into law allowing Mickey to be under the hands of the Disney company

  • @theFLCLguy
    @theFLCLguy 3 года назад +28

    I don't think it would be as bad as you make it out to be. Yes there would be a ton of crappy movies for a bit but when they didn't make money they would stop and start focusing on making better movies. Right now it's not about making a good movie it's just about keeping the rights to movies.
    And what about all the good remakes that would come from it?

    • @bobross4886
      @bobross4886 3 года назад +5

      There’s already a ton of crappy movies now. Sometime chaos is a good thing.

    • @morescodesup2087
      @morescodesup2087 3 года назад +1

      Yeah I didn’t really get his points on why this is gonna suck

    • @TuesdaysArt
      @TuesdaysArt 3 года назад +1

      Maybe I'm just woefully ignorant, but wouldn't it incentivize companies to make more original content if they couldn't just have a monopoly on a certain IP for a century or more? Why make another Shrek movie when you can make a new character only you have the rights to use? I suppose you can argue this will just incentivize companies to essentially make recolors of existing characters and change just enough to allow them to have exclusive rights for 28 years, but is that really going to be worth it in the long run?

  • @ToxicAtom
    @ToxicAtom 3 года назад +22

    despite being framed as negative, I honestly think this future sounds awesome.
    So yeah, abolish copyright revisions.

    • @The_Jovian
      @The_Jovian 3 года назад +1

      Just abolish copyright full stop. If I can write Lord of the rings better than JRR Tolkien, that's on him.

    • @organicleaf
      @organicleaf 2 года назад +1

      @@The_Jovian copyright itself is good tho, its just getting abused to death. imagine making *something* and someone just taking it and selling it as their own, i would be pissed, but i couldnt do anything about it

    • @j.e.s.m.4686
      @j.e.s.m.4686 7 месяцев назад

      Yes, exactly and it should be abolish for good. While I'm also on the side of abolishing copyright but also wanting to be changed for the better. This copyright law is broke as fuck and for some reason; nobody seems to be talking about it despite being a very serious issue for me (including anyone else as well). Like, it caused nothing but chaos and arguments over "who should own this or not", People getting constantly sued for no reason other than using copyrighted characters and claiming to be stolen (but nobody was intending or trying to steal anything) and leaving/spreading fear among artists without giving them freedom while companies get to keep the IP/Character(s) all to themselves without sharing anybody else (which pretty selfish and greedy). This is why I personally like public domain so much because it gives filmmakers, animators, game developers and artists the liberties/freedom to create something new with the IP and show much/some passion on the IP that they or we grow up with. I've seeing many people online how creative they are, wanting to create comics, books, games, shows or movies on the IP we love growing up, coming up with cool pitches and premises that could change entertainment and having many folks who have cool ideas with their own set of vision, Before anyone says something, yes, I'm aware that they're some scumbags out there who might take advantage of this and make an idiotic cash grab so they gain money, I know it's annoying but NOT everyone are like that; they're people out there who wants to make something that they love and I support that. But for some reason, people don't seem to appreciate creativity and brush things off like they meant nothing, which leaves me frustrated as hell. But what angers me the most is that we can’t have the good stuff because of DISNEY! They extended the timeframe because they were scared of LOSING the rights of Mickey Mouse. Okay, I get Mickey is iconic but he's not THAT iconic and yet, they decided to do something idiotic, stupid, cowardly and selfish without thinking on how it might affect other IPs. Sometimes, when someone has something they created, they cannot keep it all to themselces luke that FOREVER! We need to either change and/or abolish copyright, so people can have the freedom and liberties they deserve. No more DMCs, C&D letters or unnecessary lawsuits. Just free content to enjoy.
      If I could change the time frame, personally; I would shorten it down to 4 or 6 years. I know it's very short and a bit limited but at least it seems very much fair to me. But hopefully someday it gets changed for the better and hopefully people can find a way to do it. I know it will be hard ti do it and I have hope but sometimes I feel tired of seeing shit happen to people. Hope you folks understand what I feel about it.

  • @cynthiarios271
    @cynthiarios271 3 года назад +6

    lol i missread the title as 1970s and was confused when you started talking about the 1700s

  • @theonebman7581
    @theonebman7581 3 года назад +17

    I legit thought this was Cody's channel at first, ngl
    *I hope Cody does the same with his next video and gives it a Tyler-touch*

    • @Ditidos
      @Ditidos 3 года назад +2

      @@roguetoa9787 No, back then Cody was the narrator but it was Tyler the one who made the scripts, I think one of them mentioned it but I haven't checked it again.

    • @AlcoholicBoredom
      @AlcoholicBoredom 3 года назад +3

      You do realize it’s the same guy doing a slightly different voice, right?

    • @sergiowinter5383
      @sergiowinter5383 3 года назад +3

      @@AlcoholicBoredom That's good conspiracy

  • @The_Jovian
    @The_Jovian 3 года назад +4

    This all sounds good to me. Public domain works get remade all the time but no one complains about that oversaturation because they're mostly unknown. In a market where no one studio owns the rights to something forever, the cream of the crop will eventually be filtered out.

  • @florinivan6907
    @florinivan6907 Год назад +3

    'the author's lifespan' so if they cured aging and the author lived to be whatever he felt like then copyright would never expire?

    • @ductoannguyen7595
      @ductoannguyen7595 Год назад

      By the time we can made people immortal we would have change copyright

  • @calebricks4890
    @calebricks4890 3 года назад +21

    That Despicable Me and Blade Runner crossover sounds hilarious and also horrifying.
    Maybe the Minions have been androids all along...

  • @owennorcross4407
    @owennorcross4407 3 года назад +5

    I must agree with your opinion on the over-saturation of reboots and remakes though I would agree that the releasing of everything in the past 28 years would still not solve the constant bullying that is going on between small creators and big corporations.

    • @KH0LRA
      @KH0LRA 2 года назад +2

      This, its something people defend because "oh they're a business and they're doing what they have to do to protect their IP!"

  • @clockworkdeity
    @clockworkdeity 3 года назад +6

    There wouldn’t be as much of an incentive for a company to sit on it’s property, churning out poor quality products until someone is willing to buy up the IP.

  • @AshnSilvercorp
    @AshnSilvercorp 3 года назад +10

    So everything would look like what current YTP and memers already do on the internet...
    That's fine with me.

  • @siwoksiwok
    @siwoksiwok 9 месяцев назад +2

    Imagine is youtube copyright is doesn't exist forever, except claim, strike, fair use, always been public domain in every youtube video

    • @j.e.s.m.4686
      @j.e.s.m.4686 Месяц назад

      Oh, yes. I can already imagine it. I wish we live in that world eight now so we don't have to deal with this stupid outdated law. Hopefully, this law gets abolish or changed

  • @YouW00t
    @YouW00t 3 года назад +4

    Honestly, I see people on board for watching 10 versions of Shrek 2. Heck, they would make a holiday in which they watch all of them on the same day.

    • @alphayun7401
      @alphayun7401 3 года назад

      and people who complain about canon, well they would just be different canons to different universes

    • @Horatio787
      @Horatio787 2 года назад

      @@alphayun7401 Star Wars is nearing 3 separate canons at this point. Canon isn't sacred even to the people who technically own or even made it.

  • @BratacOfChulak
    @BratacOfChulak 3 года назад +1

    knowledge hub became alternate history hub again

  • @trygveplaustrum4634
    @trygveplaustrum4634 3 года назад +12

    Could you imagine a good live action Fantastic Four movie? Or a good Green Lantern movie?
    I'd like to see those someday. Shame I can't.

    • @bodaciouschad
      @bodaciouschad 3 года назад +6

      Well, I can't help with the sub-standard 4 franchise, but if you want to watch a good Green Lantern movie, you could always watch Deadpool with the saturation on your tv set to 0 while squinting.

    • @sergiowinter5383
      @sergiowinter5383 3 года назад +1

      Make a indie movie with a lantern that is green, easy

    • @j.e.s.m.4686
      @j.e.s.m.4686 Год назад

      Yeah, I can already vision it. It would be cool to see a Fantastic Four or Green Lantern movie made by someone else (either a hollywood or independent filmmaker) who actually knows the source material with their own set of vision. I even have other ideas on how to adapt Marvel or DC projects into film or show.

  • @chefjrmz
    @chefjrmz 3 года назад +3

    Two tickets for Shreck 2.
    Which one?
    Yes

  • @JuanTonSoupXP
    @JuanTonSoupXP 3 года назад +23

    “What if we lived in the Harrison Bergeron dystopia”

  • @Mohamed-lz2yx
    @Mohamed-lz2yx 2 года назад +2

    Who remembers in the early 2010s when every movie and cartoon was on youtube for free in full?

  • @Zones33
    @Zones33 3 года назад +3

    There needs to be a meeting with congressional leaders that represent modern day media platforms to rewrite these outdated laws. RUclipsrs, artists, streamers, influencers (Yes, I know), and anyone else who believes they use and create media fairly.

  • @t.d.writer1589
    @t.d.writer1589 3 года назад +5

    No but this is probably how certain myths (especially the Greek and Middle Eastern) either borrow from each other, seem inconsistent, and some of the gods have alternative identities. There was never any copyright holding back a certain writer bullshitting another story about Zeus. The chaos may be warranted though, the mythical characters still had a basis. It'd be cool to see Spiderman fight along side Minions to stop Voldemort from conquering Bikini Bottom.

    • @Whatever100500
      @Whatever100500 2 года назад

      And we just accept that Zeus/etc are different dependent on actual setting.

  • @alicesmith255
    @alicesmith255 2 года назад +1

    You mean to tell me the gripe you’d have with it is this pretty cool notion that we could get both fan and studio productions of a lot more stuff (that probably wouldn’t be saturated too much bc people would get extremely bored of just seeing 50 remakes of a 90s sitcom so that kind of thing would die down pretty quickly) …and not the theoretical reason why copyright law was created that it gives the author a sort of safety net, so individual creators could potentially see the earnings from their creation greatly diminished (i despise copyright law as it stands now but that was the tall tale/“original intent” behind it)

  • @ProgressOnly
    @ProgressOnly 3 года назад +7

    This could have been an alternate history thing

  • @GlidingZephyr
    @GlidingZephyr 3 года назад +4

    Shares of cabbage and East Indian opium are also down. I should probably invest in Alpaca wool and tea subsidies to make up for the loss.

    • @cranknlesdesires
      @cranknlesdesires 3 года назад

      Thats a wise investment but I would look deeply towards the strange grades of wool and honey that flow out of New Zealand. Mayhaps a worthy capital venture.

  • @richmanifesto1090
    @richmanifesto1090 3 года назад +3

    Eraserhead starring John c Reilly sounds unironically amazing

  • @felonyx5123
    @felonyx5123 2 года назад +2

    The concern of literally every studio making their own Shrek, I think, is unwarranted. Movie studios and TV networks do keep an eye on what each other are doing. They generally want what they make to differentiate itself from the crowd, and that would be the definition of an overcrowded market. Once say, Warner Brothers hears that 2 other studios have already got a Shrek reboot in the works they're going to reject any Shrek pitches for a while. There'd be an initial mess but eventually things would reach the same point we're at with things like Robin Hood adaptation, where someone comes along with a new take every 5 to 10 years but we aren't being flooded with multiple competing adaptations in theaters at the same time.

  • @randomdebris
    @randomdebris 3 года назад +9

    I would like to see copyright to be more differentiated? Sure have 90 yrs of copyright on your exact story, but let other people create their own derivative works playing in the same universe after 15yr? Make use of the same characters after 30yr? If copyright is property, why not tax this property progressively with time? Maybe to protect authors make copyright non-transferable, only licensable for 10 yrs at most after which it reverts back? Maybe limit the copyright of works which are no longer available? Etc…

  • @hamelconsultancyllc
    @hamelconsultancyllc 3 года назад +13

    Disagree completely. People will still go by brand - people are going to see the big ones and the og ones. We see this with many other products - brand loyalty is very real

    • @Frogman1212
      @Frogman1212 3 года назад

      You underestimate the power of marketing

    • @cranknlesdesires
      @cranknlesdesires 3 года назад +3

      @@Frogman1212 people still are waiting on the proper ends to the game of thrones books.

  • @CocoHutzpah
    @CocoHutzpah 3 года назад +3

    Eraserhead with Jon C Riley would be the only remake I'd actively seek out

  • @LunaExpiX
    @LunaExpiX 2 года назад +1

    My idea of this law.
    The copyright date gets reduced to 30 years. If a company goes bankrupt or falls out of business, they loses all copyrights.
    But the catch is that while the company exists, you can request your copyright to be protected. Even if it is protected, if your company goes out of date it will be put into the public domain.
    This pleases both companies and fair use.

  • @dave7886
    @dave7886 3 года назад +4

    That pure chaos sounds pretty entertaining

  • @thevocatiousunspeakables709
    @thevocatiousunspeakables709 2 года назад +1

    Copyright is an affront to the free market, a necessary evil, so to speak. Getting rid of longer copyright terms results in freer markets, a better consumer experience, and encourages innovation. The only people who would be against this either A. Don't understand free markets, or B. Are actively benefitting from this version of copyright.

    • @j.e.s.m.4686
      @j.e.s.m.4686 7 месяцев назад

      Yes. And I hope this copyright law gets either fixed, changed and/or abolish so Indie Artists can have the freedom and liberties they deserve.

  • @trstmeimadctr
    @trstmeimadctr 2 года назад +1

    If copyright was shortened to 28 years, we probably would see the amount of money put into music, movies and games take a major cut, because if you can't bank on getting dividends for the next century, the value of anything you make takes a big hit monetarily. Why make CG that will hold up for 30 years if you're not going to be making anything from it by then?

  • @Malcadon
    @Malcadon 3 года назад +2

    Another thing to consider is that companies usually use Trademark to get around copyright limitations.
    For example, Conan the Barbarian/Cimmerian was first written by Robert E. Howard in 1932. Howard killed himself in 1936, meaning that all of his published works fell into the public domain in 1964, well before the change in law in 1976 and 1998. Mind you, this does not count for derivative work like the novels, comics and films, so Red Sonya (Hungarian Pirate from "The Shadow of the Vulture" (1934)) is Howard's, but not Red Sonja (metal-bikini-clad amazon made for the Marvel comics in 1973). Nor his posthumous published works like his fragments and correspondence -- those belong to whom first published them. Despite this, Conan Properties International control of the character with Trademark Law -- the vary branding of a product or service -- and that last for as long as its under someone's control. They manage to enforce Trademark when a Spanish miniature producer lost a legal battle while trying to sell Conan miniatures, despite the fact that the look and name of "Conan the Barbarian" is cliché as hell.

  • @bulliemthembu5846
    @bulliemthembu5846 2 года назад

    Honestly it would be pretty lit being able to see 10 different shrek 2's, like each time I go I'd spin a wheel, there'd be a shrek-off... yes

  • @iveedoodle
    @iveedoodle 3 года назад +3

    personally, i think if this were to happen, it would be Very Good Actually. Because over time people who want money will finally realise that quality makes more profit than quantity. Originality will finally be back! and fanwork could get a chance to become mainstream, something like fifty shades of grey, but it would keep Bella's and Edward's names wouldnt have to be changed because of copyright.

    • @TuesdaysArt
      @TuesdaysArt 3 года назад

      Hmm...I'd argue that having fan fiction writers "scrape the serial numbers" off of their fan fiction could be beneficial. Anastasia Steel feels like a different character to me than Bella Swan and EL James is free to expand upon that character.
      Of course, it would be nice to get to see fanworks get expanded upon on a larger scale...but if an author wants to take a risk and establish their own IP, they should be free to do that as well.

    • @iveedoodle
      @iveedoodle 3 года назад

      @@TuesdaysArt fair point, but also fanfic writers would still at least get the choice of making their own original work from the fanfic material, or keeping it as fanwork and still make money from it either way. Currently fanfic writers can only benefit from their work if they change the names of characters or have a patreon or something (although, i heard that wattpad is letting fanwork get monetised, I'm not sure though, they could be only monetizing the original content)

  • @DasGreenCow
    @DasGreenCow 3 года назад +1

    Public domain idea: once a property has been made, the creators own the domain for 20 years. If they make a continuation, sequal, remake, etc, in that time and in a similar medium, they retain the copyright for 20 years from that release date

    • @technetium9653
      @technetium9653 3 года назад +1

      We could see how this goes wrong in fantastic 4, the studio had to make something or it goes back to marvel, then we get the dumpster fire that is fant4stic

  • @d.c.8828
    @d.c.8828 3 года назад +2

    "Film is dead."
    Finally, someone said it.

  • @dukenightrider6104
    @dukenightrider6104 2 года назад +1

    I believe in the long run if this were to happen it be for the greater good to allow studios to focus more on new original stories to profit off of and stop focusing on nostalgia like they are now.

  • @seri0usxs673
    @seri0usxs673 2 года назад +1

    Who remembers in early 2010s when all movies and tv shows were on youtube?

  • @longarooni
    @longarooni 3 года назад +3

    Tbh, copyright seems a bit off in media, but if it was music, such as sampling, then we need to readjust em

  • @Blue2x2x
    @Blue2x2x 3 года назад +2

    What if we have the law where it is but also add an abandoned clause that states that if the owner(s) doesn't publish any new material for a property in the span of the original timespan (14 or 28 years). Then the property is considered abandoned by the eyes of the law and automatically place in the public domain.

    • @rmwf8836
      @rmwf8836 3 года назад +2

      I like that idea personally. I think it would make sure the original artist aren't left out in the snow if they keep making more art.
      However, I could definitely see a world where someone could, for example, write an amazing book that redefines its genre and is remembered for all time, only for the the author to publish bullshit every 14 or 28 years, to keep the copyright.

  • @gp8189
    @gp8189 3 года назад +2

    all of your movie pitches are good there are no downsides to doing this

  • @aturchomicz821
    @aturchomicz821 3 года назад +7

    Well thats a rather classic title lol

  • @Electric0eye
    @Electric0eye 2 года назад

    "What would you do?"
    *I would watch them, Tyler.*
    *I would watch them all.*

  • @politicallyambiguous8424
    @politicallyambiguous8424 2 года назад +1

    We already have to deal with crappy remakes and a reduction in the length of copyright will mainly effect faceless corporations making money on older franchises. I honestly think the scenario you listed would actually be better than what we have now.

  • @RoyalKnightVIII
    @RoyalKnightVIII Год назад +1

    Really what would happen is that you could borrow elements from all over without constantly being threatened with lawsuits
    Or even use new ideas that just happen to be similar to old stuff

  • @BrundleJ
    @BrundleJ 3 года назад +21

    This is an excellent video.. everybody seems to disagree with it's sentiment yet the video itself appears to be mostly liked. It turns out to be a potent catalyst for a consensus by politely putting out arguments for a point and then letting people think on and coming up with rational counterpoints. I liberally assume that it took less time to make than the "lawnmower man" essay mentioned in it's introduction but i feel it's a step in the direction of 'something'.
    I personally believe that the reversible of current copyright laws would make for a great, liberating moment to human culture - after a few years of turmoil and chaos (but, probably, no violence for a change). It might lead to the 'death' of large IPs but I also often feel that this emotional focus on a narrative universe is slightly perverse anyway. However I was swayed for a moment by the argument about Nintendo, and how a sufficiently large corporation could still exert influence by threat of litigation based on similarities to their recent iteration of an IP.. but then, to stay with the example of Nintendo, what if Sony were to make a Mario game.

  • @ClassiqalOne
    @ClassiqalOne 3 года назад +2

    I think interestingly enough … we would have film companies with their own theaters, and that way the theaters themselves would be competing versus the movies themselves.

    • @NebMotion
      @NebMotion 2 года назад

      that actually used to be a thing but it created regional monopolies

  • @bearcatben4762
    @bearcatben4762 3 года назад +4

    I think it would be fun to watch how 10 different studios try and make shrek 2 completely unique from the original shrek 2 and eachother's version's of shrek 2

  • @VladiSSius
    @VladiSSius 3 года назад +2

    Oh yeah I can see that; corporations would milk the sht out of old title on public domain, launching soulless remakes and remaster version. Gee... I hope it's not happening right now.
    Not.

  • @yoshimasterleader
    @yoshimasterleader 2 года назад

    This future you propose is chaos I'm here for.

  • @XxXVideoVeiwerXxX
    @XxXVideoVeiwerXxX 3 года назад +9

    You aren't embracing the absurdity well enough bro.
    If everyone can make whatever property fairly after x amount of time, that is perfect. Let natural selection weed it out.
    Sure it would be chaotic at first, but when fans make better products than companies, they earn and grown from that. It levels the playing field.
    Saying "companies can do this too" means nothing, they already have the keys to the castle. Allowing independents create and mix and match old IP's will only benefit the little guy.

  • @Somethingaweful
    @Somethingaweful 3 года назад +1

    That already sounds like what it is already. Except only corporations can do something like that instead of you the fan. There are a ton of songs that are covers, samples, or remixes. But none of them ever credit the original songwriter. Sometimes, the cover gets more views than the original just because of who is singing it.
    Films still get remade over and over, regardless of copyright. Same thing with games.
    Honestly, there wouldn't be a massive blow to the general public. In fact, the current copyright system does more to mess with individuals who create fan projects than with anyone else.

  • @egggge4752
    @egggge4752 2 года назад

    Everybody would try to make new original properties as fast as possible and as much as possible since they have to have at least 20 copyrighted franchises every year to make profit (Toy deals). You would actually see less remakes and more orginial 3 - 6 part franchises that are built up for 30 years and then abandoned after copyright expired.

  • @andrerichardsousa
    @andrerichardsousa 3 года назад +2

    Sounds Great actually.

  • @connorbanepoop
    @connorbanepoop 3 года назад +12

    This situation is still 100x preferable to what we have now.
    A lot of negatives here you mentioned were pretty obtuse.
    When it comes to media the market regulates itself pretty effectively.
    Oh nooo more competition between corporations to provide the best iteration of an IP THE HORROR? I mean seriously.

  • @TBDF12
    @TBDF12 2 года назад +1

    Most consumers would probably avoid random remakes and reboots at some point.

  • @mechguy83
    @mechguy83 3 года назад

    That was a good video lawnmower man watched it last night like literally

  • @felonyx5123
    @felonyx5123 2 года назад +1

    A concept I've been thinking about for a while is that a show you watch as a kid should be public domain before you retire. Well more than 25 years but much less than the current ridiculous standard. The original creator(s) have decades to not only make money off the original work but to hold creative control on follow-ups, and even after it goes in the public domain they have the advantage of inertia in people accepting their version of the property over whatever other people and companies come up with. But if a property has gone dormant for ages, or been going downhill for ages, there will always be a moment where fans of it who are now writers or directors at the peak of their career will get the chance to take their own crack at it and revive it.

  • @DelNiceBeto
    @DelNiceBeto 3 года назад +2

    Night of the living dead is public domain and remakes of that aren't released every week

  • @seanirby8838
    @seanirby8838 3 года назад +3

    Dude, I would SO play a Mario game based on the Captain Lou Albano version.

  • @killer3883
    @killer3883 3 года назад +3

    Think it is more that there can be a way to protect you copyright if you build on it, if you you let it laps, then it should drop into public domain, more like a trademark

    • @Ditidos
      @Ditidos 3 года назад

      Yeah, abandonware is a thing that exist, after all. It's a little bit stupid that is protected.

    • @Ditidos
      @Ditidos 3 года назад

      @@isaacargesmith8217 I mean, it would still be better than our current situation. After all, leftovers are better than no meal at all.

  • @ArcadeTheatre
    @ArcadeTheatre 3 года назад +2

    Our dreams of Super Mario on the PS4 are shattered.

  • @thewittywhygaming6487
    @thewittywhygaming6487 3 года назад +3

    This chaos is what I dream of. :3

  • @DoctorX17
    @DoctorX17 3 года назад +1

    I feel like "lifetime of the author" might be good... Although if the copyright is like, Disney and not a person, not sure how that would work? But yeah, 30 years does sound like we'd get constant regurgitation of the latest things

  • @Taunocturna
    @Taunocturna 3 года назад +1

    My mom is a fan of Cinderella, this is property in the public domain so there are literally hundreds versions of the film through the world. There is a moderately high profile one at least every 5 years. The vast majority are straight to video with no name actors and actress or the cheapest animation possible.

  • @valletas
    @valletas 3 года назад +1

    I dunno if the "remaking everything" would be a bad thing
    Think of how many versions of love craft and sherlock holmes we have i would even say that with love craft in particular people only care about his type of horror because of how many times it was used thanks to public domain

  • @alwaysme_t
    @alwaysme_t 3 года назад

    This is something I have been hoping would happen. The 70s were a interesting time for copyright laws and the MPAA system

  • @NEWBkiller646
    @NEWBkiller646 3 года назад +1

    Dear God imagine how much more confusing the Halloween series would be

  • @ianlabat8724
    @ianlabat8724 2 года назад

    Holy shit, just got a "Copyright on youtube" ad during this video and I don't know if that's by design or accidental or only due to the algorithm. IDK anymore

  • @lucywucyyy
    @lucywucyyy 3 года назад +1

    you are looking at all the downsides and none of the upsides which massively outnumber the downsides

  • @65mcman
    @65mcman 2 года назад

    Loved the Cody banks nod in there, they’re bad, but good nostalgia

  • @dinoblacklane1640
    @dinoblacklane1640 2 года назад +1

    I think the most disturbing thing about modern society. Is how a corporation cab say "fuck you" and screw you over with lawsuits.
    and the only way to defend yourself is so prohibitively expensive that it would ruin you finically even if you won