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DETROIT
Taking a cue from the RIAA campaign against audio file-sharing,
lawyers for deceased German wunderkind Johannes Gutenberg today
announced a 6.5 billion-count indictment against all of humanity, charging
that nearly every man, woman, and child in advanced Western society has
illegally benefited in some way from the invention of the printing press
over the past five hundred and fifty years without paying a dime to its
benefactor. Gutenberg, who testified via séance before a federal
grand jury in Detroit, claimed that the unchecked, rampant abuse of literary
piracy has significantly impacted his quality of rapture in
the after-life, and further robbed his legacy of uncountable trillions
in worldwide currency.
Mr.
Gutenberg waited patiently for justice, explained Gutenberg attorney
Morris Hardwick, but there was none to be had. For five and half
centuries, humanity has engaged in the reprehensible practice of document
sharing, and we are simply prepared to settle all outstanding accounts,
thank you very much.
The 18,000
page indictment, which was lovingly produced by the monks of St. Gertrude
Abbey, Salzburg, Austria took nearly three years to print and then copy
for public dissemination, and names several well-known international pirates,
including Xerox, Simon and Schuster, Kinkos, and Benjamin Franklin.
There
was a little known provision in German patent law, said Hardwick,
which provided for perpetual protection of all rights under governing
jurisdictions. By my perspective, thats lost income for every page
copied, every book shared, every single document printed on any device
descended from said printing press as conceived and designed by my client.
Gutenberg,
who was born in 1400, made his home in Strasbourg, Germany, where he trained
as a goldsmith, but experimented with techniques that led to the world-transforming
ability to print from movable type.
Without
the printing press, there is no mass distribution of the Holy Bible, there
is no Renaissance, no greeting card industry, no fortune cookies, no Im
With Stupid tee-shirts, stated Gutenberg at the hearing. The
world would have remained in utter darkness, and I am here to collect.
Monetary
damages could amount in the thousands of trillions, according to some
observers, with litigation beginning as early as December.
"The
after-life will not be an obstacle," assured Gutenberg. "I have
all the time in the world to see this through."
Expect
a circus, beginning with jury selection, warned criminal trial expert
Jennifer DiMarco. Finding twelve people not listed in the indictment
will be nothing short of a miracle. One possible remedy, however, would
be to move the trial to Appalachia. Its an option Im afraid
theyll have to consider.
Meanwhile,
Americas most famous printer, Benjamin Franklin, is reportedly ready
to fight extradition efforts as a named defendant.
Mr.
Franklin is currently enjoying the rewards of a virtuous life on an eight-hundred
acre, tropical estate in Paradise, explained Franklin family attorney
Simon Walsh. We feel it would be a gross and unnecessary inconvenience
to require his presence in Detroit, of all places, for a case which has
already been decided in Eternity. Mr. Gutenberg needs to find a way to
move on, in our opinion.
In related
news, Three Men and a Baby star Steve Guttenberg has learned that geneaological
researchers have declared him "un-related" to Johannes Gutenberg,
and will not be eligible for reparations.
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