If you’re the creative type and you’re struggling to come up with your next idea, do not fear: some big works, including the original version of Mickey Mouse, are entering the public domain on Jan. 1 in the United States.

And if, on the other hand, you prefer your Disney characters to be cute, cuddly and never-changing, well … you might want to stop reading.

In 2024, thousands of copyrighted works published in 1928 are entering the public domain, after their 95-year term expires.

. . .

The New York Times reached out to some writers, producers and directors to give you a taste of what might be unleashed in this strange new world.

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  • @cmoney
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    611 months ago

    Disney helped to raise the copyright time. Mickey mouse protection act of 1998. Disney benefited from works in the public domain to create many of its stories and characters, while lobbying to increase the time before its works entered the public domain preventing anyone else from doing what they have been doing all along.