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Re: ICSTI
- To: Multiple recipients of list <epc-l@iucr.org>
- Subject: Re: ICSTI
- From: Howard Flack <Howard.Flack@cryst.unige.ch>
- Date: Thu, 12 Nov 1998 10:33:51 GMT
MESSAGE FROM THE SECRETARIAT TO ALL ICSTI MEMBERS ************************************************* The following information sent by the CENDI secretariat is a variation of what was already posted to the CENDI listserv. >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>> UPDATE ON U.S. COPYRIGHT RELATED LEGISLATION ACTIVITIES Forwarded from the CENDI Listserv - CENDI Secretariat WIPO COPYRIGHT TREATY AND TERM EXTENSION BILLS CLEAR U.S. CONGRESS WITHOUT DATABASE PROTECTION The U.S. Congress in two separate voice votes approved the conference report on the Digital Millennium Copyright Act (H.R. 2281) (Oct. 12) and the identical versions of the Copyright Term Extension Act (S. 505) (Oct. 7). President Clinton has indicated that he will sign them. H.R. 2281's purpose was to update copyright law for the digital environment and to enact national legislation in compliance with the Copyright Treaties approved by WIPO last year. The conference report (based on compromise wording between committees of the House and Senate) excluded the controversial Collections of Information Antipiracy Act (S. 2291/H.R. 2652). Inclusion would have provided legal protection for collections that do not now warrant protection under U.S. copyright. The lack of inclusion puts the U.S. at odds with the European Directive, which has indicated that protection of databases would only be granted in the E.U. for those countries with reciprocal legislation. Database protection legislation is likely to return in the next session. The Copyright Term Extension extends the term of U.S. copyright protection by 20 years to "life +70 years" for individual authors and to 95 years from 75 years for corporate creators. It will apply to all future copyrights and to those works under copyright when the bill becomes effective. There are exceptions permitting libraries, archives and nonprofit educational institutions to treat copyrighted works during their last 20 years as if they were in the public domain for non-commercial purposes, with some additional restrictions if the work is being exploited for commercial use. >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>> -- Howard Flack http://www.unige.ch/crystal/ahdf/Howard.Flack.html Laboratoire de Cristallographie Phone: 41 (22) 702 62 49 24 quai Ernest-Ansermet mailto:Howard.Flack@cryst.unige.ch CH-1211 Geneva 4, Switzerland Fax: 41 (22) 702 61 08
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