Quizzes & Puzzles30 mins ago
Copyright held by now defunct organisation
4 Answers
Couldn't think of a meaningful heading, but basically I have VHS video produced in 1993 by Visionsport International of Littlewick Green in Bucks. I would like this copied to DVD.
The company appears to have gone out of business, but all the companies I find on Google that offer VHS to DVD copying won't touch copyrighted property and I can't get the copyright holders written permission.
If a company goes out of business is the property still copyrighted?
Any ideas what I can do to get a copy?
The company appears to have gone out of business, but all the companies I find on Google that offer VHS to DVD copying won't touch copyrighted property and I can't get the copyright holders written permission.
If a company goes out of business is the property still copyrighted?
Any ideas what I can do to get a copy?
Answers
Best Answer
No best answer has yet been selected by Kos. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Even if the company has gone out of business, they could well have sold their rights to various productions.
That said: VHS + DVD recorder + SCART = DVD copy. You may need a video stabiliser if the original has copy protection, and if you wanted you could then use various bits of software to "tidy up" and re-burn a "neat" DVD. You could also go VHS to PC, though PCs with the correct connections aren't common so you'd probably need another bit of hardware (and in both cases, quite a good PC) - so the DVD recorder method is much easier.
P.S. I would only recommend this method for otherwise unavailable titles, as (especially if you do the "tidying up") it is quite time-consuming and a lot of faff and the quality often isn't great (depending on the source material and your equipment). Not to mention that copying copyrighted material is illegal!
That said: VHS + DVD recorder + SCART = DVD copy. You may need a video stabiliser if the original has copy protection, and if you wanted you could then use various bits of software to "tidy up" and re-burn a "neat" DVD. You could also go VHS to PC, though PCs with the correct connections aren't common so you'd probably need another bit of hardware (and in both cases, quite a good PC) - so the DVD recorder method is much easier.
P.S. I would only recommend this method for otherwise unavailable titles, as (especially if you do the "tidying up") it is quite time-consuming and a lot of faff and the quality often isn't great (depending on the source material and your equipment). Not to mention that copying copyrighted material is illegal!
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