This was almost a post in another thread related to the Axanar mess, but I didn't want to derail it with this tangent. The subject is an alternative system to the current copyright system used in the US.
To establish a copyright, you pay a filing fee of like $25 - something reasonable. After 10 years, you have to pay $2 to keep it. You then pay double the amount from the previous year, every year, to maintain it. After 20 years, that's about a grand - probably not too much for someone to manage, even a small business or individual that is making money off of it. After 30, it's around a million - so you'd better really be making dough off of it to want to keep it. And at 40 years, it's a billion - you've probably given up by then, but if you're still somehow making enough and want to keep it, go for it. When you stop paying, it goes into public domain.
Thoughts?
To establish a copyright, you pay a filing fee of like $25 - something reasonable. After 10 years, you have to pay $2 to keep it. You then pay double the amount from the previous year, every year, to maintain it. After 20 years, that's about a grand - probably not too much for someone to manage, even a small business or individual that is making money off of it. After 30, it's around a million - so you'd better really be making dough off of it to want to keep it. And at 40 years, it's a billion - you've probably given up by then, but if you're still somehow making enough and want to keep it, go for it. When you stop paying, it goes into public domain.
Thoughts?