Heh. I just tweeted
the article about that talk from
the blogger's own site.
It's rather thought-provoking. And by "thought-provoking," I mean "scary."
As far as copyright goes, I believe the current 70-year limit* is probably excessive, but I believe it could be justified by putting an end to 'hoarding.' If you don't offer your product for sale for at least 30 consecutive days AND you then suspend availability of your product for more than a year, then you don't deserve to keep the copyright. Windows 95? Theoretically this would mean you could now copy it all you want, nobody cares about it any more. To avoid this, Microsoft would either have to make it available for purchase online from their website and continue to support it, or else admit they're done with it and turn it over to the public domain if they don't want the hassle. CS3/CS4/CS5? Same thing.
Make changes to your thing? Each revision is covered separately, so if you release Death Touch: The Ultimate Director's Cut and you want to maintain copyright on the original Death Touch, then you need to continue to offer the
original Death Touch for sale. You can suspend sales of the original Death Touch for 364 days to promote the UDC version if you want, but you better have it back on the shelves by day 365 or else you lose the rights to the original presentation. This should cut down on all the Masterpiece Edition/Extended Edition/Comment edition/Limited Edition dilution nonsense that goes on now.
Format shift would not constitute an additional edition, so re-releasing a Blu-Ray version of Death Touch would not restart the clock unless that Blu-Ray version is in 3-D or something. Any new commentary or special features on that Blu-Ray disc would have their own, timer-starts-at-zero coverage, but the Feature Presentation's copyright expiration date would still be tied to the original release date of the DVD/VHS/Opening Day. Yes, you heard that right, that means the copyright timer starts on the Date Of First Sale. If it's a direct-to-DVD title, then fine, but otherwise your timer starts on first exhibition.
You hear me, Disney? No. More. Disney. Vault. You are either selling movies, or you are giving them away. Movies you regret...like
Song of the South? Too bad, you can only hide it away from The Public for one year before it goes public domain and can be freely shared. Orphan works? No longer an issue. If a company goes out of business or is acquired, the creditors/new owners need to make a decision regarding current product lineup: Either continue to offer the original product for sale, or kill it entirely, knowing that your control over that product will irrevocably end in one year. And no one-minute unannounced online sales to keep your claim going, per rule 1 you have to offer it for a minimum of 30 days in order to 'renew' for one more year.
And don't
even get me started on what this would mean for broadcast rights. Oh,
the problems it would solve...
EDIT: TL;DR: A company/creator shouldn't be allowed to complain that piracy is hurting their profits/income IF they are not currently marketing the item being pirated.
--Patrick
*or whatever it's up to now.