My point is that there are tons of great stories in the public domain and we're better off for that. What about the Brother's Grimm? Hansel and Gretel should be off limits?
Well, they
are underage.
Not comparable. Only a limited number of people can use the house.
It's a matter of principle. For the sake of discussion, the house is a TARDIS.
Right, and that's why copyright infringement and theft are legally different.
But, no, that's why copyright infringement and theft should be legally the same.
I don't follow. That implies no copyright/patent protection at all, which I certainly do not favor.
I wasn't implying that; just making the point that somebody's livelihood or physical property would not be treated so shabbily as their intellectual property. The "greater good of society" is not a valid argument for taking somebody's property (in most cases-- sure, there's eminent domain and so on, but that has to be justified and compensated, not just "you've had your stuff long enough").
Nobody's saying it is. Stealing deprives someone of physical property. Intellectual property, again, is different, and has the potential to benefit great numbers of people, not just a few lucky inheritors. Few people disagree with the principle of IP eventually becoming public domain. There are reasonable disagreements over periods and mechanisms, but "there should be no copyright" and "there should be eternal copyright" are extreme positions that have no realistic chance of enactment. In the US, "for limited times" is right there in the Constitution.
The Constitution also has an Amendment process, which has been used before (and needs to be used again, for a couple of reasons). Intellectual property only
seems different, because it's more abstract than physical property. And I don't consider acknowledging creator's rights to be an extreme position, but you are right that perpetual copyright will not be something we see for a long while.
However, I've patented the process for filing for a copyright. You owe me money for filing for that copyright.
I've patented language. I win.
To take it back to Trek fan films, let's say I write a hypothetical screenplay. The screenplay tells a story that has never been told before in the Trek universe, or perhaps in any fictional universe. Did I not create this? That I based it in the Trek universe is immaterial; I told a new story. I created a new thing for people to watch that they haven't seen before.
If you can write a story, you can create characters and a setting. That's generally how it's done. One work inspires another. But the new creator makes the work their own. If
Star Trek gives me ideas for stories (which it does), then all I have to do is create my own Space Opera universe (which I've done) and write them. Of course, when I read a story or watch something on TV, I have a tendency to say, "That was pretty good, but I'd do it this way...."
Honestly, freedom of speech is, if not a legal fiction, then a legal construct - it requires that it be acknowledged by society and protected by society's laws in order to be real. Without that being true, your "freedom of speech" goes about as far as my ability to beat you with a tubesock full of wood screws if I don't like what you say. (Rule of might, in other words.)
Freedom of speech is a Natural Right (i.e. inalienable). Of course, like anything else, it requires that it be acknowledged and protected by society because people are imperfect. But the right of a creator to their own creation should also be acknowledged as a Natural Right.
And implying that a reasonable limit on the duration of copyright for the general good (something the Constitution was supposed to provide for) is akin to Marxist Communism is absurd.
As Dogbert says, "Sometimes sarcasm makes us think more clearly."
Just like the above freedom of speech, the natural state of things would be that you would write/record/sing/etc something, and everybody would copy the crap out of it right away if it was any good.
The natural state of things
in a perfect world would be that you would create something and everyone would respect that it is yours. But we don't live in a perfect world and thus we have laws.
But there has to be a limit for the good of us all - and it is unacceptable that almost nothing enters the public domain each Jan 1st, anymore.
Why do you think so? What bad things will happen to destroy society if intellectual property is treated equally with physical property.