Why such absurd prices? Copyright. Why does it last so long? Special interests. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tk862BbjWx4 … @KirkegaardEmil
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If it's 103yo, I'm fairly sure it's out of copyright. Almost everything pre-1922 in the US is now PD.
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they can maintain a new copyright from date of re-typesetting, for the digital version; we're SOL without an original
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Shouldn't that fall under a non-transformative 2D reproduction and so PD per Corel?
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I'm unsure - but if they re-type and re-layout the article, I'd think not simply based on what I've seen done.
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Ofc nothing stops'em from guessing/lying *claiming* to have a copyright, or making u agree to contract/license
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Nothing prevents them from selling a public domain article either. Pearson died in '36. Not sure which rule applies...
@gwern@davidmanheim -
But their site claims copyright from 1914 to Biometrika Trust. US law is... complicated. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Copyright_Term_Extension_Act …
@gwern@davidmanheim
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Try clicking that button.
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i did. just added it to my "shelf." can read it online for free now. (^_^)
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And you have 3 shelf spaces per profile, and so this is basically the same limitation as the ones newspapers use. For a >100 year old paper.
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three rotating shelf spaces. my point is just that paying $20 isn't the only option for access to this article via jstor.
End of conversation
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