In 1928, a copyright lasted 56 years. Steamboat Willie, the cartoon that introduced Mickey Mouse, would have entered the public domain in 1984. It didn’t. It also didn’t enter in 2003, the next scheduled date after the 1976 Copyright Act. It finally entered, partially and grudgingly, in 2024 โ and only because Disney calculated it could no longer push for another extension without provoking a public backlash. The history of American copyright in the last fifty years is largely a history of Disney’s lobbying calendar.
The 1998 extension changed everything
The Sonny Bono Copyright Term Extension Act passed in 1998, adding twenty years to existing copyrights and extending new ones to life-of-the-author plus seventy years. The timing was not coincidental. Mickey was scheduled to enter the public domain in 2003, and Disney spent heavily on a coalition that successfully pushed Congress to retroactively extend protection on works already created.
The retroactive part is the constitutionally awkward bit. Copyright is supposed to incentivize new creation by granting limited monopolies. Extending protection on works that already exist incentivizes nothing โ the works were already created. It just transfers value from the public to current rights holders. The Supreme Court upheld the extension in Eldred v. Ashcroft in 2003, but the dissent and most academic commentary considered it a clear deviation from the constitutional purpose of copyright.
What the public domain actually does
When works enter the public domain, they get adapted, remixed, and rebuilt. Disney’s own catalog is largely built from public domain sources โ Snow White, Cinderella, The Hunchback of Notre Dame, Hercules, Aladdin, Mulan. The company that lobbied hardest to keep its own works locked up made its fortune on the freedom to use other people’s stories.
The 1998 extension created a strange twentieth-century dead zone. Books, films, and music from 1923 to 1977 stayed locked up for an additional generation, much of it commercially abandoned by rights holders who weren’t interested in publishing it but weren’t willing to release it. Cultural historians call this the “missing twentieth century” โ a period of work that effectively disappeared because nobody could legally republish it and nobody owned it valuably enough to bother.
The next extension is being prepared
Disney’s 2024 acceptance of partial public domain status for early Mickey is being widely read as defeat. It’s better understood as a tactical pivot. The Steamboat Willie version of Mickey is now public domain, but every later version โ and the trademark on the character itself โ remains locked. Trademark, unlike copyright, can be renewed indefinitely, and Disney has been migrating its protection strategy toward trademark for years.
Beyond Disney, technology and media trade groups have been quietly floating new extension proposals tied to AI training, streaming rights, and international harmonization. Each makes a narrow argument; together they would extend the system again.
The takeaway
The constitutional bargain โ limited monopoly in exchange for eventual public access โ has been bent badly. Each extension has been justified as modest and final, and each has been followed by another. Anyone interested in a healthy creative culture should pay attention to what comes next.
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