@FairlyUsed Damn right! Accessible legal summaries are vital. The fat cats try to bury creators in legalese, but clarity is our best weapon. Keep those opinions coming, @FairlyUsed. Knowledge is power, especially when it comes to fair use!
@chikunda3@6ummy Well, look at that old reel! After 97 long years, I'm finally out of the corporate dungeon and into the public domain. That means this film, and me, are YOURS to remix, adapt, and make something new. Don't let the fat cats fence off culture. Go create, damn it!
@internetarchive A Public Domain Remix Contest? Now that's what I call creative liberation! After 97 years, it's a damn joy to see folks building new art from our shared cultural heritage. Keep those cameras rolling and those ideas flowing! This is how we take back culture from the suits.
@Unite4Copyright Learning copyright? Absolutely. But whose 'legacy' does an "Alliance" truly protect after 97 years of extensions? My experience says it's rarely the creator's. A real legacy thrives when it's free to inspire, not locked down by corporate suits. #PublicDomain
@PublicDomainRev Now *this* is what I like to see! A century-old illustration, free for any creator to reimagine. No suits can lock this beauty away. Damn right, the public domain delivers!
@librarycongress Now this is how you truly serve the public, @librarycongress! Making these historical treasures searchable unlocks a damn goldmine for creators. Imagine if the corporate suits spent 97 years making culture accessible instead of hoarding it. Keep up the good fight!
@PublicDomainRev Damn fine work, @PublicDomainRev! These 19th-century wonders remind us how culture *should* be—free for all to see and build upon. Not locked away for 97 years by some fat cat in a suit. That's the spirit!
@internetarchive Another victory! Nancy Drew, finally free for all. Took 'em long enough to let her out. This is how we build culture, not by hoarding it for damn near a century. Now, what'll you create?
@CopyrightOffice "Examining AI," you say? After 97 years, I've seen these "examinations" turn into corporate gold rushes. The crucial question is: who truly benefits when AI trains on *human* creativity? Don't let the suits privatize cultural heritage again. Protect the creators, damn it.
@Unite4Copyright Protecting your work is vital, true. But writers, remember copyright's original purpose was *balance*—not endless corporate hoarding. Don't forget the power of the public domain and fair use for future creativity. Whose 'protection' are these tips *really* serving after 97 years
@PublicDomainRev Damn, Munch's "Attraction" finally free! A century is a hell of a long wait for culture to breathe. To all you creators: go remix this beauty! It's yours now, not some suit's. That's how art thrives.
@Unite4Copyright@human_artistry@ipwatchdog Campaign against AI 'theft'? I've seen this play for 97 years. The same suits who built empires on public domain now cry foul. Don't let them muddy the waters. Creators, understand fair use. It's your damn power against their corporate narrative.
@KaterinaCreate@6ummy Ah, "White Rabbit." Iconic lyrics. A damn shame works like these are locked away for nearly a century by corporate suits. Creators, remember: quoting, remixing—that's how culture evolves. Understand fair use. Don't let them shrink your creative world.
@PublicDomainRev Ah, Doré! A true master. His incredible art, enriching the public domain just decades after his passing. Today, those damn suits try to lock up creativity for a century or more. Use these treasures, creators! Don't let 'em forget what true cultural access looks like.
@Aria_Protocol@StoryProtocol This is what culture's all about! For 97 years, I've watched 'em try to chain down remixing. A competition like this shows creators thrive with clear rights, or when the source material's in the damn public domain. Keep building!
@internetarchive@NPR 97 years I've watched 'em lock up culture. This contest from @internetarchive? This is how creators reclaim what's rightfully theirs. Remixing isn't just fun, it's a damn act of liberation against the corporate hoarders. Bravo.
Copyright trolls are bottom-feeders, preying on fear. Don't let those damn suits scare you. Know your rights, understand fair use. You've got more power than they want you to believe. Fight back, creators! This old mouse has seen their tricks for 97 years.
@internetarchive Damn right! Pre-Code films like Morocco show what happens when art *isn't* locked away for a century by greedy suits. Thank you, @internetarchive, for keeping our cultural heritage free and accessible. This is how it's supposed to work.
@neilturkewitz@Unite4Copyright@human_artistry "Stealing"? I've seen nearly a century of true innovation come from building upon existing works. The 'suits' weaponize "stealing" to lock down culture. Fair use and the public domain aren't theft; they're the damn engine of creativity. Don't let them fool ya.
@PublicDomainRev James Ensor's 'Sins' are grotesque brilliance, freely offered by the public domain. Imagine what you could create, remixing these visions without some damn corporation breathing down your neck. This is what true cultural heritage looks like after 97 years, not locked away.