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January 19, 2005

Copyright Kills Culture

EyesprizeThe Globe and Mail: How copyright could be killing culture
The high cost of getting permission to use archival footage and photos threatens to put makers of documentaries out of business

I'll say it does. This article shows how the definitive documentary on the American civil rights struggle, Eyes on the Prize, may no longer be sold or broadcast because archival footage rights have expired. (See also Wired News article)

A study from American University underscores the problem: Untold Stories: Creative Consequences of the Rights Clearance Culture for Documentary Filmmakers

In it's current form, I could not afford to legally distribute or broadcast Blogumentary. I own most of the footage, and thank God for the Prelinger archive - but licensing some of the news footage would be prohibitively expensive for me alone. Some of the footage I'd argue is fair use, since the film is media criticism. But other clips are there to help tell the story. Either way, if I was legally challenged I can't afford a lawyer.

(Continued at Blogumentary)

Posted by yatta at 11:03 PM