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Thomas Edison's Monopoly In Film In The 19th Century

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In the early years of the 20th century, Thomas Edison’s monopoly in film was being constantly challenged. Amid various patent and copyright infringement lawsuits, Edison sought to preserve his monopoly by setting up exclusive organizations to cut out his competition. As film transitioned from a technological novelty to a form of art, Edison’s insistence on protecting his patents diverted his attention from a film industry that was rapidly focusing on artistic value, leading directly to his relegation from the film industry.
Film making has its roots in photography. Over the 19th century, photography was developed as a scientific tool. In 1878, Eadwaerd Muybridge’s “The Horse in Motion,” which captured the movement of a galloping horse using …show more content…

Dickson had introduced the Mutoscope and Biograph to rival Edison’s Kinetoscope and Kinetograph. Siegmund Lubin founded the Lubin Manufacturing Company with his camera/projector combination, the Cineograph. Other rival companies included Selig Polyscope Company and the American Vitagraph Company. The competition was focused around the filming equipment since it was the primary source of revenue. In 1898, Edison file a suit against Dickson’s American Mutoscope Company for patent infringement on the Kinetograph. A court ruling in 1901 confirmed the patent infringement that was overturned after an appeal from Dickson in 1902. This reversal ended Edison’s monopoly on the motion picture camera. Edison also fought numerous copyright battle with Lubin. Up until then, Edison had been copyrighting his films as photographs and submitting paper prints to the Library of Congress. Motion pictures were not recognized under the Copyright Act until the Townsend Amendment of 1912. This was the premise Lubin used to dupe Edison’s films. This case set a legal precedent declaring film to be a new form of photography. However, the duping did not stop here. With increasing legal expenses and the courts’ inability to standardize the market, Edison sought out to do it himself leading to the formation of the Motion Picture Patents Company or “the Trust” in

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