Justice and Rule
Legend
Curious what you found interesting about it.
I thought it was notable that she mentions in footnote 4 that "there does not appear to be evidence of actual protection of literary property" but then she proceeds to build a substantial argument on contractual inference. This concession, buried in the footnote, should have been front and center.
Ha! I lied. That was part of Claude's analysis. He (she? it? they? Cthuhlu?) had a bunch of other interesting things to say, but I'll bet you aren't interested because it's just "AI slop".
I mean, if you read the footnote, she points out that the concept of "literary property" and "copyright" are different, but also often used interchangeably?
There does not appear to be evidence of actual protection of literary property, but the term has often been used interchangeably with copyright to signify some proprietary or ownership right to the work. Mark Rose, for example, refers to the early copyright struggle between booksellers in England as “the question of literary property.” See ROSE, supra note 1, at 4. Lyman Ray Patterson and Stanley Lindberg, on the other hand, suggest that literary property and copyright are essentially different things. See L. RAY PATTERSON &STANLEY W. LINDBERG, THE NATURE OF COPYRIGHT: A LAW OF USERS’ RIGHTS 122 (1991). To them, the rights of authors should not be treated as copyright but as a “companion body of law.” See id.
I mean, the section itself does a good job of making the distinction if you actually read it yourself and didn't just try to get it summarized by an AI.
The full extent to which literary property can be said to safeguard an author’s natural right over his own work may be a matter of pure academic speculation.4 What appears certain, however, is that literary property predates statutory copyright and protects an author’s personal interest and individuality to a greater extent than an industry-based entitlement intended to control the mass production and publication of the work. Authors produced literature before the invention of the printing press made copying cheap and easy, and, while plagiarists were often severely admonished for representing someone else’s work as their own,5pirates, who reproduced works in their totality, were often praised for preserving the integrity of the original work.6 Thus, even before copyright existed to protect commercial rights to print, publish, and distribute, noneconomic incentives motivated authors to express themselves through poetry, songs, and literature, expecting the community to respect the personal integrity of authors.
Perhaps if you read it yourself, you could actually make that distinction that Claude failed to do. I suppose this is why people shouldn't use it for reading legal texts and such. But I personally enjoyed reading the take of an expert in its completion, given the background and depth they gave to things.







