Copy? Right!
The debate will be a bitter one. Steven Gillers, vice dean of New York University, told the Los Angeles Times (2/21/2002) that: "This case is sexy because it's about money and the arts at the same time. Probably billions of dollars ride on this decision, so millions will be spent on lawyers and amicus briefs and research on the history of copyright going back to King James." In the same article, Los Angeles lawyer Neville Johnson was more specific: "It's Mickey Mouse, is why they're all freaked out." Disney marketing expert Kevin Lane Keller concurred: "In the case of Mickey Mouse this is a huge issue. Mickey still has huge symbolic value and he still has a lot of commercial value." It should be pointed out at this time that even if early depictions of Mickey Mouse fall into public domain, the character still enjoys formidable protection as a Disney trademark. Those who try to develop new cartoons, stories or venues for the Mouse will undoubtedly be hit with the legal equivalent of the daisycutter bomb by Disney's crack team of lawyers.
Is This What Was Meant?
If the nation is indeed on its way to becoming a "corporatocracy," then we don't need a Constitution; well-defined business regulations and a Standard Operating Policy will do fine. If, however, the Constitution is indeed the founding protocol of all our existing laws, it is time for the Supreme Court to acknowledge it as such. This august body must issue a call for legislators to draw up a binding and definitive copyright law, one that ensures the release of intellectual property into the public domain after a just and reasonable amount of time. That law should then be given permanence. As for Mickey Mouse, that supreme synecdoche of the copyright controversy, even he must bow to the law. Walt Disney passed away nearly forty years ago. Virtually everyone who originally worked on Mickey has followed Walt to the grave, and the few who have not are close to joining the choir invisible. They have profited from the Mouse, as have their heirs, and it is now time for their creation to be turned over to the people, just as the Constitution allows.
Should a few daycare centers now paint off-model Mickeys, Donalds and Goofys on their walls, or some six-year old don a Plane Crazy T-shirt that did not come from a Disney Store, it is doubtful that Eisner's empire will crack into a billion pieces. Those most aggrieved will likely be our elected representatives, particularly those who are already most threatened by campaign finance reform. I believe that the public will serve as competent custodians of any animated films and characters released by law into their care. Copy? Right!
Martin "Dr. Toon" Goodman is a longtime student and fan of animation. He lives in Anderson, Indiana.
It seems that the copyright laws, as presently construed, represent the victory of corporate interests over the people. I am not anti-Disney; free-market capitalism is the economic theory that underpins our culture, and few companies have done a better job under its tenets. I am also not anti-government; for the most part, Congress does a passing fair job of negotiating between two increasingly contentious parties in the greater interest of the country. What I most vehemently decry is the fact that major corporations can, in their own best interests, overstep the bounds of economic competition by influencing the political process with self-serving contributions. Dr. Karjala is only partly correct; the current copyright flap is less a problem of democracy than a tortured distortion of that ideal. Attorney Gerry Margolis, who represents some of the mightiest copyright holders, also spoke with the Los Angeles Times on the subject of public domain entrepreneurs: "We're not talking about people who want to make intellectual property available to the free world, we're talking about people who want to go into business...and make a profit on what yesterday was someone else's property." That may be, but isn't that what the Constitution intended in the first place?

























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