The implementation of true alternative rights schemes has attractive features. Moral rights could be disentangled from economic rights, and different moral rights could be disentangled from each other; these could be packaged together in ways that reflect the incentive needs of specific types of creators. Generally, a considerably higher percentage of creators would feel that the copyright system was addressing their specific needs. Duration could be limited for economically incentivized works, where extended protection provides little additional incentive, but could be lengthened for works whose creators are concerned only with the personality benefits of continued attribution. Blanket licensing schemes and broader derivative works exceptions could be imposed upon profit-maximizing creators, but left out for those who choose a more moral-rights-focused package. The result would be a narrower tailoring of the rights granted under copyright law to the incentives demanded by the creator of a given work, reducing the overprotection problem.