Just back from a family vacation, too late to get in on the staff morale thread, dang!  Oh well, suffice to say we all work together well and I'm lucky to have a great staff.  Anyway, a couple more things about the "CleanFlicks" controversy--which is kind of a home-grown thang from the Pretty, Great State of Utah--that has, obviously, national implications.  The first is a TRIBUNE editorial agreeing with the court that said the practice had to stop; the other two are just articles by one of the entertainment editors about the latest news on it.  I had to agree with a comment by someone else, that this is yet another case of people thinking that their personal beliefs put them above the law.



7/12/06
The right to copy: So much time picking at maggots
Tribune Editorial

It's not, goodness knows, that Hollywood never makes a horrible hash out of someone else's creative work.
   But, unless motion picture producers want to reach back into the public domain to slime Shakespeare, demean Dickens or popularize Puccini, they have to buy the rights to any novel, play or old TV show they want to turn into a feature film.
   And the copyright-holder has the right, if not always the strength, to either refuse to sell it or to demand some creative control over the final product.
   That's the point that the owners of Utah-based CleanFlicks and similar outfits have not seemed to grasp. It's the point of a correctly reasoned federal court ruling last week that found the unauthorized editing of copyrighted films by people who turn around and sell or rent the altered versions to someone else is illegal. 
http://www.sltrib.com/search/ci_4054661


7/14/06
CleanFlicks gets more time to surrender doctored films
By Vince Horiuchi
The Salt Lake Tribune

Video companies that sanitize movies for rental have been given more time to hand over all their inventory to Hollywood attorneys as part of federal court judgment.
   CleanFlicks of American Fork and another Utah company, CleanFilms, were ordered to immediately shut down business and give up all of their stock of edited movies within five days after a U.S. District Court judge ruled July 6 that what they do violates U.S. copyright law.
   CleanFlicks Chief Executive Ray Lines said he has had to wait to receive all of his DVDs and VHS tapes from rental customers before he can comply with the order.
   He and the owners of CleanFilms, a party to the suit that also rents and sells edited videos to other stores and to customers over the Internet, have been meeting with their attorneys this week to determine whether they should appeal the ruling.
http://www.sltrib.com/search/ci_4049375



7/15/06 
CleanFlicks stores plan for the worst
By Vince Horiuchi
The Salt Lake Tribune

		
	John Dixon, right, and Ray Lines, chief executive for video distributor CleanFlicks, are seen at a Provo CleanFlicks store. (Paul Fraughton/Tribune file photo ) 	
Every week, Aaron Campbell and his family stop by the CleanFlicks video store in Orem to rent movies such as "The Pink Panther" or "The Matrix." But these videos have been scrubbed clean of foul language and violence.
   Tuesday, the 35-year-old Orem marketing manager stepped into the store again. But he wasn't renting videos; he was buying because CleanFlicks might have to close its doors. 
http://www.sltrib.com/search/ci_4039504 




Roy Webb, C.A.
Multimedia Archivist
Special Collections
J. Willard Marriott Library
295 South 1500 East
University of Utah
Salt Lake City, Utah  84112
office: (801) 585-3073
FAX: (801) 585-3976
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http://www.lib.utah.edu/spc/photo 

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