After a 20 year delay, works from 1923 will finally enter the public domain tomorrow

After a twenty year hiatus, tomorrow will finally see the 95 year long copyrights of works released in 1923 expire. These 1923 films, books and songs will effectively be the first to enter the public domain in the US since 1998, and Duke University notes that it will include such classics as Charlie Chaplin’s The Pilgrim, Jacob’s Room by Viginia Woolf, and the song Charleston (based on the popular dance of the same name).

Welcoming classic works to the public domain was an annual New Year’s Day tradition. Charlie Chaplin’s 1921 directorial debut, The Kid, became public on January 1st, 1997, and was joined by the 1922 German horror classic Nosferatu a year later. But in 1998, Congress extended the length of copyright from 75 years to…

Continue reading…

source https://www.theverge.com/2018/12/31/18162933/public-domain-day-2019-the-pilgrim-jacobs-room-charleston-copyright-expiration

from Blogger http://leadhackerdigital.blogspot.com/2018/12/after-20-year-delay-works-from-1923.html

The post After a 20 year delay, works from 1923 will finally enter the public domain tomorrow appeared first on Digital Marketing: SEO & SEM in Malaysia | Lead Hacker.

from WordPress http://bit.ly/2SsDznd

from Blogger http://leadhackerdigital.blogspot.com/2018/12/after-20-year-delay-works-from-1923_31.html

The post After a 20 year delay, works from 1923 will finally enter the public domain tomorrow appeared first on Digital Marketing: SEO & SEM in Malaysia | Lead Hacker.

from WordPress http://bit.ly/2F2dJDF

from Blogger http://leadhackerdigital.blogspot.com/2018/12/after-20-year-delay-works-from-1923_6.html

The post After a 20 year delay, works from 1923 will finally enter the public domain tomorrow appeared first on Digital Marketing: SEO & SEM in Malaysia | Lead Hacker.



from WordPress http://bit.ly/2SrWRcg

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

In a world first, China lands a spacecraft gently on the Moon’s far side

Snap suspends two anonymous messaging apps after cyberbullying lawsuit