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GeneralRe: What's mine is yours? Pin
Slow Eddie24-Dec-21 6:36
professionalSlow Eddie24-Dec-21 6:36 
GeneralRe: What's mine is yours? Pin
Gerry Schmitz24-Dec-21 6:44
mveGerry Schmitz24-Dec-21 6:44 
GeneralRe: What's mine is yours? Pin
honey the codewitch24-Dec-21 7:18
mvahoney the codewitch24-Dec-21 7:18 
GeneralRe: What's mine is yours? Pin
David O'Neil24-Dec-21 6:48
professionalDavid O'Neil24-Dec-21 6:48 
GeneralRe: What's mine is yours? Pin
Gerry Schmitz24-Dec-21 8:46
mveGerry Schmitz24-Dec-21 8:46 
GeneralRe: What's mine is yours? Pin
David O'Neil24-Dec-21 9:43
professionalDavid O'Neil24-Dec-21 9:43 
GeneralRe: What's mine is yours? Pin
jschell29-Dec-21 8:21
jschell29-Dec-21 8:21 
GeneralRe: What's mine is yours? Pin
trønderen24-Dec-21 15:42
trønderen24-Dec-21 15:42 
Patents expire after 20 years in most/all of the Western world. If you make less money on exploiting the patent yourself than the fee you pay to uphold it, why would you hold onto it? If those companies who want to profit from it are unwilling to pay you license fees covering your patent fees, then they do not consider it that essential for their activities. Demand a higher license, and if they are not willing to pay, then your (father's) invention is not that much worth. If you still think it is, no matter what others say: Keep paying the patent fees, even if you can't recover it from licenses.

Copyright: Even a poor author retains the right to his works. He may, for a pay, allow a publisher to take the cost of producing and marketing copies of his works - and he should certainly be aware of the details of the contract. Any author is free to ignore established publishing houses and do the work himself: Contact companies doing the typesetting, graphical artists doing the cover and illustrations, marketing companies and book stores. Or paying for an established publishing house doing it. It often pays to hire in someone professional to take care of your rights when making a contract with a large publisher. In most cases, it pays back.

In technology, 20 years of patent validity usually (there are exceptions!) means that the technology is rather aged when the patent expires. If the patent owner has made real profit on it for that long, it is about time to let others in on it. In lots of cases, new sub-technologies have been added. Look at MP3: The format and decoding was protected for 20 years, but over those years, a whole crop of improved encoding techniques were developed, under their own patents. Today, you may use the original MP3 patents freely. Unless you pay the license fees for the highly improved encoding patents, those MP3 files you encode will have inferior quality compared to state of the art. (Nowadays, we see the same development with AAC files: If you pay for access to the best encoders, you will hear better sound quality at lower bit rates.)

Copyright usually relates to artistic works, not technological progress. You can rarely argue that giving the author the exclusive right to profit on his novel will constrain literary creativity. In major parts of the Western world there is an understanding that not even when the author dies are his novels (and poems and songs and whatever) free for the vultures to take; they are part of the heritage, owned by the heirs, for 70 years.

Honestly, I am not getting what you are driving at. It seems like you both complain about your father's patents expiring after 20 years, and complain about Disney retaining their intellectual rights for 20 years. And you appear unclear about the distinction between technical innovation (patents) and artistic creations (copyright). Well ... Such confusion is common!
GeneralRe: What's mine is yours? Pin
David O'Neil24-Dec-21 16:27
professionalDavid O'Neil24-Dec-21 16:27 
GeneralRe: What's mine is yours? Pin
trønderen24-Dec-21 17:59
trønderen24-Dec-21 17:59 
GeneralRe: What's mine is yours? Pin
David O'Neil24-Dec-21 7:36
professionalDavid O'Neil24-Dec-21 7:36 
GeneralRe: What's mine is yours? Pin
jschell29-Dec-21 8:27
jschell29-Dec-21 8:27 
GeneralRe: What's mine is yours? Pin
David O'Neil29-Dec-21 8:49
professionalDavid O'Neil29-Dec-21 8:49 
GeneralRe: What's mine is yours? Pin
Franc Morales24-Dec-21 11:22
Franc Morales24-Dec-21 11:22 
GeneralRe: What's mine is yours? Pin
honey the codewitch24-Dec-21 13:40
mvahoney the codewitch24-Dec-21 13:40 
GeneralRe: What's mine is yours? Pin
Franc Morales24-Dec-21 13:42
Franc Morales24-Dec-21 13:42 
GeneralRe: What's mine is yours? Pin
honey the codewitch24-Dec-21 13:50
mvahoney the codewitch24-Dec-21 13:50 
GeneralRe: What's mine is yours? Pin
charlieg24-Dec-21 12:59
charlieg24-Dec-21 12:59 
GeneralRe: What's mine is yours? Pin
honey the codewitch24-Dec-21 13:01
mvahoney the codewitch24-Dec-21 13:01 
GeneralRe: What's mine is yours? Pin
trønderen24-Dec-21 14:51
trønderen24-Dec-21 14:51 
GeneralRe: What's mine is yours? Pin
honey the codewitch24-Dec-21 15:03
mvahoney the codewitch24-Dec-21 15:03 
GeneralRe: What's mine is yours? Pin
trønderen24-Dec-21 15:47
trønderen24-Dec-21 15:47 
GeneralRe: What's mine is yours? Pin
honey the codewitch24-Dec-21 16:48
mvahoney the codewitch24-Dec-21 16:48 
GeneralRe: What's mine is yours? Pin
jschell29-Dec-21 8:43
jschell29-Dec-21 8:43 
GeneralRe: What's mine is yours? Pin
trønderen29-Dec-21 14:19
trønderen29-Dec-21 14:19 

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