This forthright and provocative book offers a new perspective on copyright law and the legal rights of individuals to use copyrighted materials. Most Americans believe that the primary purpose of copyright is to protect authors against the theft of their property. They are wrong, say L. Ray Patterson and Stanley W. Lindberg. Guaranteeing certain rights to authors (and to the entrepreneurs who publish and market their creations) is only an incidental function of copyright; it exists ultimately for the public s benefit. The constitutionally ordained purpose of copyright, the authors remind...
This forthright and provocative book offers a new perspective on copyright law and the legal rights of individuals to use copyrighted materials. Mo...