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For works created after Jan. 1, 1978, the copyright lasts for the life of the author, plus 70 years.

If the author of a work is a corporation (which can exist into perpetuity), copyright protection lasts for 95 years from the date of publication, or 120 years from the date of creation, whichever would expire first.

For works created before 1978, things get significantly more complicated. Under the 1909 Copyright Act, which governed until the 1976 Copyright Act went into effect on Jan. 1, 1978, the work had to be registered with the copyright office in order to be protected, and protection started at the date of publication (now, registration is not required, and protection begins when the work is created, whether it's ever published or not).

Copyright protection lasted for 28 years, and it could be renewed at the end of that period for an additional 28 years, creating 56 years of possible protection. So, a work published and registered in 1910 would have 28 years of protection, lasting until 1938. If the author renewed the copyright, it would be extended another 28 years, lasting until 1966, after which it would fall into the public domain.

However, in 1976, as part of the new Copyright Act, Congress added another 19 years to works that were protected under the 1909 Act, creating a total of 75 possible years of protection for works created before 1978.

Of course, it doesn't end there. In 1998, Congress added an additional 20 years of copyright protection for works that were still protected under the 1909 Act, and the 1976 extension. This created a total of 95 years of possible protection for works created before 1978.

However, the 1998 extension went into effect on October 27, 1998, and only extended the copyrights of works that hadn't fallen into the public domain by that point. Because, before then, works created before 1978 had 75 years of protection, any work made before October 27, 1923 would have already fallen into the public domain by the time the 1998 extension went into effect. These works were not effected by the extension, it only applies to works made on or after 10/27/1923.

For example, suppose a work is published on 10/27/1923. Under the 1909 Act, it gets a maximum of 56 years of protection. Let's assume that the author renewed after the expiration of the first 28 year term - it would have expired in 1979. However, under the 1976 extension, an additional 19 years were automatically tacked on to its copyright - keeping it valid until October 27, 1998.

On that date, the 1998 extension went into effect, giving it an additional 20 years of copyright protection, so now its copyright will not expire until October 27, 2018.

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