2012 in public domain
When a work's copyright expires, it enters the public domain. The following is a list of works that enter the public domain in 2012. Since laws vary globally, the copyright status of some works are not uniform. Not all works in the public domain have been expired, some works are deliberately donated into the collection for the public good or have been abandoned by their owners.[1][2]
Entering the public domain in Europe
In most European nations with the exception of Belarus, copyright law extends for the life of the author or artist, plus 70 years.[3]
Authors
- Sherwood Anderson
- Gabriel Alomar i Villalonga
- Elizabeth von Arnim
- Raffaello Bertieri
- Simon Dubnow
- Adriano Tilgher
- Marina Ivanovna Tsvetaeva
- Hugh Walpole
- Virginia Woolf
- James Joyce
- Tariro Musindo
Film
Music
- Frank Bridge
- Arkady Gaidar
- Amalia Guglielminetti
- Alter Kacyzne
- Gustav Gerson Kahn
- Jelly Roll Morton
Other notable figures
- Henri Bergson
- Frederick Banting
- Robert Baden-Powell
- John Gutzon de la Mothe Borglum
- Louis Brandeis
- August Cesarec
- Louis-Joseph Chevrolet
- Robert Delaunay
- James Frazer
- Tullio Levi-Civita
- Lazar Markovich Lissitzky
- George Minne
- Gaetano Mosca
- Ignacy Jan Paderewski
- Kole Nedelkovski
- Wilhelm II
- Petar Poparsov
- Giuseppe Rensi
- Rabindranath Tagore
- Santiago Rusiñol
Entering the public domain in the United States
In the United States, the copyright status of works extends for the life of the author or artists, plus 70 years.[4][5] If the work is owned by a corporation, then the copyright extends 95 years.[6]
Due to the passing of the Copyright Term Extension Act (Sonny Bono Copyright Term Extension Act) in 1998, no new works will enter the public domain in this jurisdiction until 2019.[7]
In January 2012, the Supreme Court in a 6-2 decision stated that works in the public domain can have their copyright status renewed.[8]
See also
External links
References
- "The Public Domain in Copyright Law".
- "Find the Best Free PC Games on These Sites!".
- "Billboard Business".
- "What Could Have Entered the Public Domain | Duke University School of Law".
- http://www.copyright.gov/legislation/s505.pdf
- http://copyright.cornell.edu/resources/publicdomain.cfm
- "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2014-08-01. Retrieved 2012-06-02.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
- Liptak, Adam (19 January 2012). "Public Domain Works Can be Copyrighted Anew, Supreme Court Rules". The New York Times.