Happy Birthday to You, Copyright
Today is the 300th birthday of the Statute of Anne 1710, the grandmother of all copyright laws.
The tricentennial of the Statute of Anne is a suitable occasion for looking back at the law’s influence on the history and evolution of the Anglo-American copyright tradition. It is also an opportunity to look forward—to explore how the lessons from this history might help us surmount the challenges that lie ahead for copyright law in the twenty-first century.
That's what they're doing today, at a copyright conference hosted by the UC Berkeley School of Law and attended by an outstanding array of scholars and other experts from various disciplines, including Berkeley alum Cathy Gellis, who coincidentally hosted this week's Blawg Review #258 dedicated to the 300th anniversary of the Statute of Anne.
If the Berkeley crowd gathered to mark the 300th anniversary of the Statute of Anne were to sing "Happy Birthday to You" and post the video of the performance on YouTube, would they have to pay a license fee?
What might Bill Patry, author of Moral Panics and the Copyright Wars, have to say about that?


