I know Florida, Texas, and other counties have tried and succeeded to ban books, I wonder how that is even legal since we have the first amendment. I tried doing research on this since Huntington Beach is banning books and people were petitioning against that at the main library.

I made a little post asking people to petition on the Orange County sub.

  • @ozymandias117
    link
    English
    57 months ago

    The Netherlands use the same copyright laws?

    I always assumed that was just the US copyright system

    • @[email protected]
      link
      fedilink
      77 months ago

      European copyright laws are different from US ones in many ways, but “life of the author plus 70 years” is definitely a thing in Europe.

    • @Alexstarfire
      link
      17 months ago

      I really hope there isn’t a more generous system than what the US has. It’s stupid long as-is.

      • @ozymandias117
        link
        English
        17 months ago

        My assumption is that because “the state claimed the rights” for that specific book makes me think this is a special case in their laws

        Can a US state or the federal government claim the right to someone else’s writing?

        • @[email protected]
          link
          fedilink
          2
          edit-2
          7 months ago

          It was not directly the state claiming ownership of that book just because. After WWII ended, the alliites confiscated all assets of those who were deemed most responsible for the war including Adolf Hitler and his rights on Mein Kampf. This yielded later, as Munich officially was Hitler’s last place of residence, to the state of Bavaria owning the rights on that book.