Changing Copyright Law for the Better with Larry Lessig
Can a law professor be a lawyer's hero? I have just two words for you: Larry Lessig.
See Peter Black's Freedom to Differ post today on Lessig's WSJ editorial on changing copyright law for the better and for the good.
Just one of several suggestions below.
Deregulate "the copy": Copyright law is triggered every time there is a copy. In the digital age, where every use of a creative work produces a "copy," that makes as much sense as regulating breathing. The law should also give up its obsession with "the copy," and focus instead on uses -- like public distributions of copyrighted work -- that connect directly to the economic incentive copyright law was intended to foster.
Speaking of change .... what was the prevailing dispute resolution technology when Columbus sailed the ocean blue in 1492?

What's the prevailing dispute resolution technology today when we celebrate Columbus Day* more than 500 years later?
Trial by jury!
So I was just wondering ....... whether we might be able to convince Lessig to head up the LegalTED Conference Steering Committee for 2009. I'd like to sign Bruce McEwen of Adam Smith, Esq. for the Steering Committee as well, for his unbelievably great analysis of the Heller collapse (which I observed up close and personal) and for this:
Are, then, the 19th-Century notions of "conflicts" a barrier to globalizing and consolidating law firms? If you want my view, it's that clients seek concentrated--not dispersed--expertise, and that deep and long-standing industry knowledge is precisely where competitive advantage comes from. This stands "conflicts" on its head, and says that clients seek depth, not shallowness.
As well as for noting that, um, clients are adults!
From Clients are Extraordinarily Understanding (h/t to Diane Levin's brilliant and comprehensive Blawg Review # 181 here)
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