Jonathan_S wrote:Now cryogenic suspension might be a different was to screw with the rules. if your frozen your aren't dead, or at least can be revived. I'm sure the legal status of cryofrozen people had to get sorted out centuries ago in the honorverse but there's been no reason for RFC to cover it. But possibly evil corporate lawyers could convince an author to get cryofrozen before death to extend the copyright indefinitely. (And of course prolong itself screws things up on that front)
Well, the legal precedent in our world right now is that, since you have to be legally dead before cryogenic procedures can start, the person going into the freezer will have to set up a trust fund or something similar.
In the Honorverse, something similar has happened when STL colonization was a thing: The colonists basically handed their estate over to a colony trust (in return for guaranteed land plots on the new world etc), which then managed the accumulated holdings until such time as FTL contact could be reestablished.
That being said: Copyright loses meaning when it becomes unenforceable. Right now, the only reason copyright works is because we're all stuck on one planet, and it thus becomes possible to bind everyone to a set of common rules (which may or may not work out in practice; see for example China's notoriously lax enforcement of foreign copyrights). Once civilization goes interstellar, with the only point of contact being the occasional starship crossing the void, Copyright is only enforceable as an ancillary thing in a greater trade network. Assuming that a colony is self-sufficient, the usual incentives used today to force nations to agree to mutual copyright enforcement schemes fall away.
Now, once something like the Solarian League emerges, those instruments become available once more, but even then: The distances and time lags involved make it very hard to justify expending effort on off-world enforcement of copyright. Today's justification is that copyright circumvention constitutes theft, a loss of revenue for the rights holder, but what does, say, Montanan law enforcement care about damages inflicted on a producer of terran sitcoms?