Phil Pascoe
Established Member
Whether it is right to extend the time span for commercial reproduction or whether it makes sense to ban domestic copying surely is two separate arguments? Banning home copying is about as daft as telling us to take a dead AAA battery to a recycling centre - it might be a perfectly sensible thing on paper, but is 100% unpoliceable - how is anyone to know? Who has the will to prosecute for a single offence? You can imagine the headline - "Fred Bloggs was found guilty of two offences after the police searched his flat because of his suspected involvement in the disappearance of Miss Victim. While they were there, they found the body of Miss Victim, and also a crude copy of a Charles and Ray Eames chair. He was found guilty of both offences and gaoled for life and a month to run concurrently"
"I suspect that anything sold / bought before the extension of the period would not suddenly become illegal (the law is rarely retrospective) and therefore by extension anything bought in the transitional period would also be OK." Add made to that.
It may be possible to prove a sale after a certain date, but the manufacture?
How long ago did you copy copy that chair? Oh, that. I made it June 2016, officer. How are they to prove differently?
"I suspect that anything sold / bought before the extension of the period would not suddenly become illegal (the law is rarely retrospective) and therefore by extension anything bought in the transitional period would also be OK." Add made to that.
It may be possible to prove a sale after a certain date, but the manufacture?
How long ago did you copy copy that chair? Oh, that. I made it June 2016, officer. How are they to prove differently?