[I am not a lawyer either but...]tommi28 wrote: ==============
I am not a lawyer but as somebody who publishes papers I know a bit about copyright here in Austria. According to Austrian law, copyright splits into two aspects:
1) The copyright for the work which ends death of author + 70
2) The copyright for the printed music which is also print date + 70 years, except the work is out of print and not available in used form
In order to be legally stored in the database, a work has to fulfill following criteria:
1) composer died before 1937 AND
2) the source of the print was published before 1937.
The cease and desist letter is very specific - there are only two demands:
1.
We therefore demand that you cease and desist from offering on your web site the musical scores and any other copyrighted works of the UE Authors.
[B . Bartok, A . Berg, l . Friedman, L . Janacek, G . Mahler, J .
Marx, O . Respighi, A. Schonberg, R. Strauss, K. Szymanowski and A. von Zemlinski]
These works should be removed by no later than October 19. 2007.
2.
We further demand that you institute a filtering system to the IMSLP that would prevent any further uploading of the UE Artists's scores until after the expiry of European and Canadian copyright in those works.
Further, we would expect other publishers to act similarly if there is breach of copyright.
Therefore the IMSLP is good to go *immediately* when:
A. Works of the UE Artists are removed.
B. Some system is in place to prevent addition of copyright works of UE Artists - immediately a notice that certain works are copyright and are not to be posted.
I wish I could see the site to check on what it says, but seems to me it could do with:
B1. a clear description of copyright law from each country - wiki contributors will fill that in
B2. A list of composers which indicates who died more than 70 years ago and who died more recently and flags when copyright will expire.
B3. A mechanism to prevent adding scores for composers still copyright
B4. A description of requirements for uploading scores which are not copyright
B5. Where copyright law is different in different countries, it could be feasible to implement country-specific behaviour by IP filtering. (eg for works with 50 year copyright in some countries)
Further, to permit legal protection of members/administrators, the site should perhaps be controlled by some legal body which limits liability - eg incorporated association. The body can collect donations to fund its work and individuals do not need to worry about losing their house if the organisation is sued.
It is not the stated intention of UE to shut down IMSLP. In fact UE would risk being sued if it did.
Go IMSLP......