| SUPREME
COURT KEEPS COPYRIGHT PROTECTIONS
Wed Jan 15,10:21 AM ET
WASHINGTON
- The Supreme Court on Wednesday upheld longstanding copyrights
designed to protect the profits of songs, books and cartoon characters,
a huge victory for Disney and other companies.
The
7-2 ruling, while not unexpected, was a blow to Internet publishers
and others who wanted to make old books available online and use
the likenesses of a Mickey Mouse cartoon and other old creations
without paying high royalties.
Hundreds
of thousands of books, movies and songs were close to being released
into the public domain when Congress extended the copyright by 20
years in 1998.
Justices
said the copyright extension, named for the late Rep. Sonny Bono,
R-Calif., was not unconstitutional.
The
Constitution "gives Congress wide leeway to prescribe `limited
times' for copyright protection and allows Congress to secure the
same level and duration of protection for all copyright holders,
present and future," Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg (news - web
sites) said from the bench.
A
contrary ruling would have cost entertainment giants like The Walt
Disney Co. and AOL Time Warner Inc. hundreds of millions of dollars.
AOL Time Warner had said that would threaten copyrights for such
movies as "Casablanca," "The Wizard of Oz" and
"Gone With the Wind."
Also
at risk of expiration was protection for the version of Mickey Mouse
portrayed in Disney's earliest films, such as 1928's "Steamboat
Willie."
Congress passed the copyright law after heavy lobbying from companies
with lucrative copyrights.
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