From the 
Duke University Law School Center for the Study of the Public Domain:
Current US law extends copyright protections for 70 years from the date 
of the author’s death. (Corporate “works-for-hire” are copyrighted for 
95 years.) But prior to the 1976 Copyright Act (which became effective 
in 1978), the maximum copyright term was 56 years (an initial term of 28
 years, renewable for another 28 years). Under those laws, works 
published in 1953 would be passing into the public domain on January 1, 
2010.
Under
 the old law, Fahrenheit 451 would have entered the public domain in 
2010.  That means we could print it online, copy it, quote it in as much
 length as we like, etc. etc.  Sadly, now we won't legally be able to do
 that with works published in 1953 until 2049.
For many r
easons, I
 don't want to bre
ak the law.  I think 
Ray Bradbury, his 
estate, and 
whomever he designated after his death should earn whatever's right 
under the law.  And I don't need the headache.  So I'm not posting a 
page with the full text.  At the same time, I firml
y believe that if Mr.
 Bradbury were t
o take part in this conversation, he wo
uld sup
port 
sharing the book with Santa Maria High Schoo
l students who don't have 
enough copies or the money to go out and buy their own.  So here is 
a link
 to the full text online (it is not nearl
y as well-formatted or 
flammable as a phys
ical book, which I still encourage you to fi
nd).  Please join us in readin
g a book that changed m
y life.  I hop
e i
t will change yours.
 
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