...James Madison explained that copyright is best viewed as 'a compensation for a benefit actually gained to the community.' There were good reasons, he wrote, to give authors a 'temporary monopoly' over their work, 'but it ought to be temporary' because the long-term goal is to enrich public knowledge, not private persons.
Madison honors the same beneficiaries found in the Statute of Anne [enacted in 1709, the first copyright act], the writer and the rest of us. In no case are third parties meant to profit, as the Google settlement would allow. To let them do so would be like letting an executor drain an estate whose rightful heirs cannot be found.
Hyde speaks approvingly of a recent proposal by the Department of Justice that would vest the authority to deal with orphan works in the court, just as we do with actual orphans.
...such a guardian would have to be charged with service to both the rights holders and the public good. He would have to try to find lost owners and pay them their due; should no oweners be found, he would have to devise a way to release these works to the public domain. (He could simply require that users who've been charged for orphans get their money back, or that the fees Google charges libraries be lowered in proportion to revenue collected in error.
Such an approach would ensure that orphan works "enrich public knowledge."
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