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The first appearances of the classic cartoon and comic characters are among the pieces of intellectual property whose 95-year U.S. copyright maximum has been reached, putting them in the public domain on Jan. 1. That means creators can use and repurpose them without permission or payment.

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The 2026 batch of newly public artistic creations doesn’t quite have the sparkle of the recent first entries into the public domain of Mickey or Winnie. But ever since 2019 β€” the end of a 20-year IP drought brought on by congressional copyright extensions β€” every annual crop has been a bounty for advocates of more work belonging to the public.

β€œIt’s a big year,” said Jennifer Jenkins, law professor and director of Duke’s Center for the Study of the Public Domain, for whom New Year’s Day is celebrated as Public Domain Day. β€œIt’s just the sheer familiarity of all this culture.”

Jenkins said that, collectively, this year’s work shows β€œthe fragility that was between t

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