This article still pissess me off, mostly as it doesn't list sources, or explain any of its points. The whole things seems to be written only to inflame those who read it.
To be honest, it seems this guy read Larry Lessig's proposal for Orphaned Works and then misunderstood everything. Considering I can't bring up pages 2 or 3 of his article I can't verify this.
This is Lessig's proposal,
"In response to the report issued by the Copyright Office, Larry Lessig, a law professor at Stanford University, clarified that “The Copyright Office’s report is brilliant...Its proposal is less brilliant." He considered his option as "a kind of copyright maintenance procedure." It differed from the Copyright Office’s proposal in three critical ways:
* It would apply only to old works, not to new works. For works after enactment, copyright owners would get a 14-year grace period where they need not worry at all about any orphan work requirement. For work published between 1978 and today, there would be no orphan work requirement until 2021. And for work published before 1978, (in a time when formalities were the norm), there would be no requirement until 2012. [5]
* It would apply to published “United States works” only, not to foreign works or unpublished work. [6]
* The requirement it would impose after the 14-year delay is registration. The registration would not be with the Copyright Office, but rather a private registrar approved by the office."
That last line, "private registrar" being the one that seems to have gotten him on the Big Business kick. Anyone familar with Lessig, Creative Commons and the like would know he is rather far from being a shill for those types of groups.
If thats good or not, I'm not going to say. What it doesn't seem to do though is advocate the removal of all your copyrights unless you register. It would give you 14 years in fact to go and do so.
Yeah, I can understand why he's upset, and I don't have anything against him if he thinks Lessig's proposal is wrong. What pissess me off, is the way in which the article is written.
[Edit]
Here is a link that gives more information on Lessig's view.
Copyright Blog