Nate (post: 1216688) wrote:My statement is what it is. My point was that every time some idiot rants ridiculously about some topic, people just latch onto it, without checking the facts for themselves. This can be VERY harmful. Imagine if people read that article and did what the guy said, started writing all sorts of letters to Congress and encouraged others to do the same. Congressmen would be literally flooded with letters on a bill that doesn't even exist! This would be very irritating and annoying, don't you think?
People who read the other articles shouldn't feel dumb. Rather, they should feel angry, angry and irritated that someone decided to lie about something like this.
What good do I think I'm doing? I don't know that I personally can do much good but what I'd LIKE to see is people taking the time to go, "Hmm, this sounds very fishy and weird, I should go do some research to see if what this guy is saying is true." And sometimes, it is true. In this case, it turned out to not be. There's not a lot of shame in falling for this. Heck, I admit fully that I've been a sheep who bought things at face value because of ranty articles.
So yeah. Take that as you will.
Raiden no Kishi (post: 1216709) wrote:Dude. Did we just . . . settle a disagreement peaceably and civilly . . . on the Internet?
I think a market just opened up for ice skates in Hell. XD
.rai//
Raiden no Kishi (post: 1218170) wrote:Also, I hope never to hear "Nate" and "prance" in the same sentence again . . .
If you learn nothing else from this article, you must learn this: the mail-yourself-the-manuscript-and-then-you’ll-be-protected belief is a myth. It is simply not true and we do not want anyone who reads this article to perpetuate this myth for one more moment. Rest assured, the only thing you will prove when you mail your work to yourself is that the post office is still in the business of delivering mail.
The Mail Myth evolved in the days before the 1989 amendment to the Copyright Act. Under prior Copyright law, authors were required to include a copyright symbol on their work in order to create a copyright. Many rights were lost under the old law because of the strict copyright symbol requirement (as well as other formalities). Writers believed that the only way to prove the existence of that work on a particular date was to mail a copy to themselves. However, these days this is neither necessary nor helpful when it comes to actually registering your work.
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