SANTA CLARA, Calif. -- Computer book publisher O'Reilly & Associates is taking a dramatic stand against automatic extensions
of U.S. copyrights by voluntarily limiting its own copyright protection on hundreds of technical titles--and promising they'll
enter the public domain after that.
The publisher is the first to adopt the Founders' Copyright program of the Silicon Valley-based nonprofit Creative Commons.
O'Reilly is shortening its books' copyright term from life of author plus 70 years--the period allowed in the Sonny Bono Copyright
Term Extension Act of 1998. Rather, O'Reilly's titles will retain copyright for 14 years with an option for another 14 years,
which copyright law originally allowed in 1790.
Tim O'Reilly, chief executive officer, announced the stance at the company's Emerging Technology Conference here this week.
"I made a vow at last year's ETech to honor Founders' Copyright," said O'Reilly, referring to the promise he made after a presentation by Creative Commons Chair
Lawrence Lessig at the 2002 conference.
Extending copyrights for long periods causes books to be lost to the public because of "fuzzy" copyrights and the difficulty
of tracking licenses, O'Reilly says. But he suggests that small communities can give a forgotten work new life. "We have a
moral obligation to make books available for others to use," O'Reilly says.
Books published by O'Reilly & Associates will be released only after their authors approve. They include 157 out-of-print
titles under an attribution license, and 394 volumes currently in print that are now under the Founders' Copyright. Creative
Commons will announce online the books' availability when the Founders Copyrights expire. Once cleared by their authors, the
books will be downloadable for free.
Among the titles that will be in that first round of Founders' Copyright releases include Lessig's Code and Other Laws of Cyberspace, The Future of Ideas, and a new book to be published in spring 2004. Also featured will
be books from veteran technology journalists Dan Gillmor and Andy Kessler.
Creative Commons is also accepting submissions from authors for Founders' Copyrights to replace the U.S. Copyright registration
process.
Applications are accepted online. The contributor sells the copyright to the organization for $1, and then Creative Commons
gives them an exclusive license to the work for 14 or 28 years rather than the
U.S.
standard of their lifetime plus 70 years.
All works under Founders' Copyrights will be listed in an online registry that includes the date they are expected to be released
into the public domain.
Creative Commons licenses give authors and artists several options for sharing their work. They can choose to require attribution, restrict
commercial use, or allow modifications under specified circumstances.
Licenses are expressed in a human-readable commons deed, lawyer-readable legal code, and machine-readable digital code. Artists
put the digital code into the HTML of their Web sites to provide a link to the licenses. Creators can allow or block works
derived from their own, or they can specify that derivative work can only be distributed under licenses identical to those
of the original.