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Limitations and exceptions to copyright

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Limitations and exceptions to copyright are provisions, in local copyright law or the Berne Convention, which allow for copyrighted works to be used without a license from the copyright owner.

Limitations and exceptions to copyright relate to a number of important considerations such as market failure, freedom of speech,[1] education and equality of access (such as by the visually impaired). Some view limitations and exceptions as "user rights"—seeing user rights as providing an essential balance to the rights of the copyright owners. There is no consensus among copyright experts as to whether user rights are rights or simply limitations on copyright. The concept of user rights has been recognised by courts, including the Canadian Supreme Court,[2] which classed "fair dealing" as such a user right. These kinds of disagreements in philosophy are quite common in the philosophy of copyright, where debates about jurisprudential reasoning tend to act as proxies for more substantial disagreements about good policy.

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  • Copyright, Exceptions, and Fair Use: Crash Course Intellectual Property #3
  • The New Rules on Exception and Limitation to Copyright
  • Copyright Answers: Are There Exceptions to Copyright?
  • The First Sale Doctrine, Section 117 & Other Limitations & Exceptions
  • William Fisher, CopyrightX: Lecture 8.3, Distribution & Performance Rights: Exceptions & Limitations

Transcription

Hi I'm Stan Muller. This is Crash Course Intellectual Property and today we're continuing our discussion of copyright law. In his 2011 book, Infringement Nation, Professor John Tehranian conducts a thought experiment where he tracks a guy's encounter with copyright law through the course of an unremarkable day. Well we're going to try this experiment and I don't really think it will end up being a completely unremarkable day. I mean, in our version I end up getting a tattoo, which for me would be memorable. Look, I don't like to front-load the animation sequences like this, but since we're doing a thought experiment, we're going to have to do it in the Thought Bubble. As soon as I wake up, I check my Twitter feed. I spend the next thirty-five minutes or so retweeting everything One Direction posted while I was asleep and each retweet creates what might be an unauthorized reproduction of 1D's copyrighted text. The same thing happens with my email, and suddenly, I'm liable for millions in damages before I even get out of the bed. Once I'm at work, I spend the morning procrastinating and doodle pictures of Finn and Jake from Adventure Time TPing Frank Gehry's Jay Pritzker Pavilion, infringing on Time Warner's copyrights on the characters and on Frank Gehry's architectural rendering. After eight hours of work, my doodles are good enough to have them tattooed on my left shoulder. I commission this infringing work made for hire and then I head off to my water aerobics class sporting my fresh ink. When I hit the pool and Esther and Betty and Dorcus ooh and ahh over my fresh new tat, I've engaged in a public display of this infringing work. Beyond another few hundred thousand dollars in statutory liability, "The copyright act allows for the 'impounding' and 'destruction or other reasonable disposition' of any infringing work." That means Time Warner can either force me to have the tattoo removed or they can opt to destroy me. Later, I post a bunch of my friend's pictures to my Facebook timeline, and by posting those I'm making an unauthorized copy, distribution, and public display of her copyrighted photographs. I then head to another friend's birthday party where I use my phone to record everyone singing the Happy Birthday song, which still earns an estimated two million dollars per year and is actively enforced despite the fact that it likely isn't even protected by copyright law. At the same time I accidentally capture and make a copy of the artwork on the wall of the restaurant. So at the end of this hypothetical day, I could be liable for millions of dollars and I might be destroyed. By the end of the year, I'd be liable for more than 18 billion dollars, and if I hadn't been destroyed, I would have a wicked bunch of scars from all that tattoo removal. Thanks Thought Bubble. So, this story makes a few key assumptions. One, full enforcement by copyright owners. Two, a court assessing the maximum statutory damages per instance of infringement. And three, the absence of the mitigating effects of copyright exceptions and limitations. To me, the worrying thing about this scenario is that so much of our normal everyday behavior puts us at risk of infringing copyright, especially when so much of our life is digital. To quote Professor Ian Hargreaves: "The copyright regime cannot be considered fit for the digital age when millions of citizens are in daily breach of copyright, simply for shifting a piece of music or video from one device to another. People are confused about what is allowed and what is not, with the risk that the law falls into disrepute." In other words, when the law is so broad that pretty much everyone is a copyright infringer, people stop paying attention to those laws. When the laws fail to keep up with technology, it loses legitimacy, and we become a nation of scofflaws. So to make copyright laws work in the digital age, there have to be copyright exceptions and limitations. And there are. Fair use is the most famous exception; we'll get to that in a minute. But there are are also some more specific exceptions and limitations we should look at. These exceptions cover a lot of different uses, like reproduction of copyrighted works for blind and disabled persons. They allow libraries and archives to preserve, copy, and distribute protected works. It also limits libraries' liability when a patron uses the copy machine to photocopy protected materials. The first sale rule under Section 109 means that once a copyright owner sells you a legal copy of a book or something, they no longer control the distribution rights of that particular copy of the work. You, as the owner of a lawfully made copy may sell, rent, donate it, or whatever. This is why libraries can loan you a book and what allows you to sell your books and music to secondhand stores, if anyone does that anymore. It's also what allows the three remaining video stores in America to stay open. So this gives you the right to sell your books and CDs, but you probably can't sell the digital music and books that you buy from Apple or Amazon. The courts say that the first sale right applies only to the distribution right and not the reproduction right. Since selling your MP3 collection would require making a copy of those files, that is a no-no. As the law stands now, there is no legal secondary market for digital works of any type. When you click on that purchase or buy button you're really not "buying" a copy of the work, you're entering into a type of licensing arrangement. And that's fine. I mean that licensing agreement is in the Terms of Use, which I'm sure you read- No? Didn't read it? Well, I'm sure you clicked 'accept' or even 'I understand and accept' when you created your Apple or Google or Amazon account, so, you're in the agreement. Some types of works like musical compositions and sound recordings, for example, are subject to compulsory or statutory licenses for certain uses. These licenses provide legal authorization to use a copyrighted work in certain ways and for certain purposes, as long as the user pays the required fee and otherwise meets the conditions in the law. The copyright owner can't deny you permission as long as you pay up. This is how artists get away with covering other artist's songs. They just pay the fee to the original rights holders and they're free to release their version. You might have noticed that cover versions of popular songs are kind of a big deal on YouTube. Searching "Frozen cover" turns up about 2.8 million results. How does this work? Well, in 2011 YouTube entered into an agreement with several major music publishers to allow cover versions of songs to reside on the site, with part of the advertising revenue going to the original rights holders. So those are a few of the specialized exceptions and limitations to copyright enforcement. But by far, the broadest, most flexible, most controversial, and most famous copyright exception is fair use. Courts have said the fair use defense allows them to quote, "Avoid rigid application of the copyright statute when, on occasion, it would stifle the very creativity which that law is designed to foster." Fair use acts like a safety valve. It allows for certain socially beneficial uses that you might otherwise get in trouble for. To paraphrase an 1841 court decision: "The progress of learning advances when the law allows follow-on authors to bestow their intellectual labor and judgment in reworking selections from a prior work, without prejudicing the profits or prospects of that work." What? Who would say this? Y'know, Mark, I would love to advance the progress of learning by bestowing my intellectual labor and judgment on the reworking of this prior work, but uh, I just worry about prejudicing the profits of the prospects of that work. Anyway, fair use is an affirmative defense, which means the defendant must show and prove that the use was fair and not an infringement. The only way to definitively find out whether something is fair use is by having a judge tell you it is. And this is a problem when taking a copyright case through trial costs anywhere from $300,000 to a couple million dollars. Some courts have called the fair use exception the most troublesome in the whole law of copyright. And they are not wrong. I mean, the term fair use isn't defined in the Copyright Act and courts have a lot of leeway in how they decide if something is a fair use. Courts have to consider all the factual evidence at hand for each particular case. And every case is different thanks to the huge variety of copyrightable works and the many contexts in which these works can be used, like classroom lessons, blog posts, YouTube videos, or in a project where the entire contents of a university library are digitized. So how to decide. Courts use four factors to determine whether a use is fair. The first factor is the purpose and character of the use. Like whether the use is commercial or is for nonprofit educational purposes. Noncommercial or educational uses weigh in favor of fair use. In the last twenty years courts have expanded this factor to include consideration of whether the work is transformative. They look at whether the use actually transforms the underlying purpose of the work by adding a new meaning or message. Courts often hold that parody as a transformative fair use. Parody functions as a critical commentary of the original work. Courts have also recently held that a project to digitize large collections of works and the making available of small segments of texts from those works are transformative uses. That makes the Google Books project a fair use. That Google Books decision is currently in the appeals process though, so it might not hold up. Publishers and authors will argue that merely copying all these books without adding expression or value other than placing the work within a highly commercialized digital ecosystem in a crass attempt to attract users, is not transformative. Google tells a slightly different story. They'd say the project makes these works searchable, discoverable, and universally accessible, and that that is a transformative use with significant public benefit. The second factor has to do with the nature of the copyrighted work. Courts have consistently held that the more original and creative a work is, the more protection it's given from copying and it's less likely that a court will find fair use. On the other hand, the more informational or functional the plaintiff's work, the broader the scope of the fair use defense. In practice, this means that fictional works tend to have a stronger copyright protection as they're works of imagination. They're basically pure expression. Nonfiction works like news, biographies, and encyclopedias are filled with uncopyrightable facts. This means they require less creativity to make and they're granted less protection under copyright law. The third factor basically looks at how much of the work you use, and there are two parts to this factor. The first is quantitative substantiality. That looks at the amount of work you use, like how much of the video or how many pages of the book. So wait a minute. How did we get so far into an episode about exceptions without rolling the Mongol-tage? Hit it! (Music plays) The Mongol-tage, besides being awesome, is an excellent example of this factor. We use three clips for a total of three seconds out of a ninety minute film. I think we have a pretty good case that this use isn't quantitatively substantial. The other part of this is qualitative substantiality. This refers to a use that borrows only the most valuable part of the source work. While I would argue that the clips that comprise the Mongol-tage are the most important and valuable parts of 1963's Hercules vs. the Mongols, a court would probably find that these clips aren't the heart of the film. Spoiler Alert! The heart of the film is when Hercules kills Genghis Khan. The fourth factor addresses the effect of the use on the potential market for, or value of the copyrighted work. What we're looking at here is whether the derivative work has harmed the copyright owner's ability to make money from the original. Courts try to weigh any public benefit derived from the new use with the personal gain the original owner will receive if the use is prohibited. If your use doesn't damage the original copyright owner's ability to make money, you don't have to show a whole lot of public benefit. It's just hard to argue that you uploading Interstellar to your YouTube channel has any public benefit. While these four factors are most often used to determine fair use, courts can use any other factors that they deem relevant, including broad considerations of whether the use will advance the public interest and the goals of the Copyright Act. Unfortunately, this means that there is no clear formula for how courts determine fair use. Fair use is designed to be a flexible tool, and any rule that's flexible is necessarily unpredictable. Yet many people have argued that fair use has become predictable in recent years. A string of court decisions have expanded the meaning of what is considered to be a transformative fair use. Courts are carving out policy-specific areas, like education where uses are pretty likely to be allowed. User groups have published Best Practices documents, many of which are available online; we've got some links down below. Authors and publishers argue the courts have expanded the breadth of fair use too far, and that these best practices guides are biased in favor of expanding fair use. In the Supreme Court case Harper & Row v The Nation, the majority opinion coined what I like to call the Copyright Golden Rule. Take not from others to such an extent and in such a manner that you would be resentful if they so took from you. Thanks for watching. I'll see you next week. Crash Course: Intellectual Property is filmed at the Chad and Stacy Emigholz Studio in Indianapolis, Indiana and it's made by all of these nice workers for hire. If you'd like to keep Crash Course freely available for everyone forever, you can support the series at Patreon a crowdfunding platform that allows you to support the content you love. Speaking of Patreon, we'd like to thank our Headmaster of Learning: Thomas Frank and our vice principals Kathy and Tim Philip and Linnea Boyev. Thank you so much for supporting Crash Course. You can get awesome rewards for your support but you don't get ownership of our Crash Course copyright. You do however get to help people learn. Thanks for watching, and we'll see you next week.

Changing technology

The scope of copyright limitations and exceptions became a subject of societal and political debate within various nations in the late 1990s and early 2000s, largely due to the impact of digital technology, the changes in national copyright legislations for compliance with TRIPS, and the enactment of anti-circumvention rules in response to the WIPO Copyright Treaty.[3] The European People's Party concluded that international instruments for the protection of copyright no longer seem capable of guaranteeing creators and investors a fair return on their activities while ensuring the public's access to information and respect for privacy.

Defenders of copyright exceptions fear that technology, contract law undermining copyright law and copyright law not being amended, is reducing the scope of important exceptions and therefore harming creativity.

In May 2010 a declaration entitled Copyright for Creativity[4] was launched, stating: "While exclusive rights have been adapted and harmonised to meet the challenges of the knowledge economy, copyright's exceptions are radically out of line with the needs of the modern information society. The lack of harmonisation of exceptions hinders the circulation of knowledge based goods and services across Europe. The lack of flexibility within the current European exceptions regime also prevents us from adapting to a constantly changing technological environment." This ad-hoc coalition is being registered at the official EU Transparency Register in the section In-house lobbyists.[5] Coordinator of this project runs a Brussels-based public affairs & government relations firm specialised in the online environment, that mainly mentions Industry (a.o. Google) and Trade Associations as its clients.[6]

Attempts at expansion of copyright limitations and exceptions are sometimes regarded as a threat by publishers.[7][8]

Competition law / antitrust law

Copyright is typically thought of as a limited, legally sanctioned monopoly.[9] Because of this, copyright licensing may sometimes interfere too much in free and competitive markets.[10] These concerns are governed by legal doctrines such as competition law in the European Union, antitrust law in the United States, and anti-monopoly law in Russia and Japan.[10] Competition issues may arise when the licensing party unfairly leverages market power, engages in price discrimination through its licensing terms, or otherwise uses a licensing agreement in a discriminatory or unfair manner.[9][10] Attempts to extend the copyright term granted by law – for example, by collecting royalties for use of the work after its copyright term has expired and it has passed into the public domain – raise such competition concerns.[9]

In April 1995, the US published "Antitrust Guidelines for the licensing of Intellectual Property" which apply to patents, copyright, and trade secrets. In January 1996, the European Union published Commission Regulation No. 240/96 which applies to patents, copyright, and other intellectual property rights, especially regarding licenses. The guidelines apply mutatis mutandis to the extent possible.[11]

The interplay of copyright law and competition law is increasingly important in the digital world, as most countries' laws allow private contracts to over-ride copyright law. Given that copyright law creates a legally sanctioned monopoly, balanced by "limitations and exceptions" that allow access without the permission of the copyright holder the over-riding of copyright law by private contracts can create monopoly activity. Well known limitations and exceptions include fair dealing in the UK and Canada, as well as the fair use doctrine in the US. The undermining of copyright law, and in particular limitations and exceptions to copyright by contract law is an issue frequently raised by libraries, and library groups such as International Federation of Library Associations and Institutions. As a result of this, this issue is increasingly being looked at and discussed at a national governmental level e.g. UK[12] as well as international level such as WIPO – as part of the Development Agenda.

International legal instruments

Limitations and exceptions are also the subject of significant regulation by global treaties. These treaties have harmonized the exclusive rights which must be provided by copyright laws, and the Berne three-step test operates to constrain the kinds of copyright exceptions and limitations which individual nations can enact.

On the other hand, there are very few requirements in international copyright treaties placed on national governments to provide any exemptions from exclusive rights. One such case is Article 10(1) of the Berne Convention, which guarantees a limited right to make quotations from copyrighted works.

Because of the lack of balance in international treaties in October 2004, WIPO agreed to adopt a significant proposal offered by Argentina and Brazil, the "Proposal for the Establishment of a Development Agenda for WIPO" also known simply as the "Development Agenda" - from the Geneva Declaration on the Future of the World Intellectual Property Organization.[13] This proposal was well supported by developing countries. A number of civil society bodies have been working on a draft Access to Knowledge,[14] or A2K, Treaty which they would like to see introduced.

National laws

Two important examples of limitations and exceptions to copyright are the fair use doctrine found in the United States, and the fair dealing doctrine found in many other common law countries. Other more fundamental boundaries of copyright are caused by thresholds of originalities l, a threshold below which objects cease to be copyrightable, the idea-expression dichotomy, the public domain and the effect of Crown copyright. Even copyright maximalists might interpret these as defining copyright, rather than being "limitations" or "exceptions" to it. In addition copyright can only protect the artist's expression of his/her work and not the ideas, systems, or factual information conveyed in it.[15] Likewise, the U.S. courts have determined that stock characters are also uncopyrightable.[16][17]

While fair use in the United States is popularly understood as the only limitation to an author's exclusive rights, it is only one of several important limitations. Section 106 of the U.S. copyright law, which defines the exclusive rights in copyrighted works, is subject to sections 107 through 122, which limit the copyright holder's exclusive rights.

In the U.S. in stark contrast to those copyright laws which have developed from English law, edicts of government are not subject to copyright, including edicts of foreign governments.

In Canada, items deemed useful articles such as clothing designs are exempted from copyright protection under the Copyright Act if reproduced more than 50 times.[18] Fast fashion brands may reproduce clothing designs from smaller companies without violating copyright protections.[19]

See also

References

  1. ^ P. Bernt Hugenholtz. Copyright And Freedom Of Expression In Europe (2001) Published in: Rochelle Cooper Dreyfuss, Harry First and Diane Leenheer Zimmerman (eds.), Expanding the Boundaries of Intellectual Property, Oxford University Press; Stavroula Karapapa, Defences to Copyright Infringement: Creativity, Innovation and Freedom on the Internet. (2020) Oxford University Press.
  2. ^ Canada, Supreme Court of (1 January 2001). "Supreme Court of Canada - SCC Case Information - Search". scc-csc.lexum.com. Retrieved 7 March 2021.
  3. ^ "Council of Europe Parliamentary Assembly". assembly.coe.int. Archived from the original on 11 September 2010.
  4. ^ Copyright for Creativity.Broad coalition calls for European copyright to support digital creativity and innovation Archived 6 July 2011 at archive.today 5 May 2010.
  5. ^ "EU Transparency Register - Display Lobbyist". European Union. Retrieved 25 June 2018.
  6. ^ "N-square". YEP Foundation, C. De Cock. Retrieved 25 June 2018.
  7. ^ Masnick, Mike (23 July 2012). "We Should Stop Calling Fair Use A 'Limitation & Exception' To Copyright; It's A Right Of The Public". Techdirt. Retrieved 12 February 2013.
  8. ^ An open letter to the Russian President Dmitry Medvedev, prepared by publishers and signed by 20 people, including writers (at least one of whom regretted it), a translator and an heir, and sent to mass media in December 2010; which demanded to stop a bill allowing libraries to create, without a permission, single digital copies of works, and stating the limitations on liability of ISPs and hosters.Vladimir Kharitonov. Издатели подставляют писателей. Chastny Korrespondent (in Russian). Archived from the original on 25 April 2013.
  9. ^ a b c WIPO Guide on the Licensing of Copyright and Related Rights. World Intellectual Property Organization. 2004. p. 7. ISBN 978-92-805-1271-7.
  10. ^ a b c Kenneth L. Port (2005). Licensing Intellectual Property in the Information Age (2nd ed.). Carolina Academic Press. pp. 425–566. ISBN 0-89089-890-1.
  11. ^ WIPO Guide on the Licensing of Copyright and Related Rights. World Intellectual Property Organization. 2004. p. 78. ISBN 978-92-805-1271-7.
  12. ^ "The Relationship Between Copyright Law and Contract Law" (PDF). October 2010.
  13. ^ Consumer Project on Technology web site, Geneva Declaration on the Future of the World Intellectual Property Organization
  14. ^ Consumer Project on Technology web site, Access to Knowledge (A2K)
  15. ^ The Wrinkle in Your Research and Teaching: Copyright, DMCA, Guidelines, and Public Domain Archived 18 September 2006 at the Wayback Machine
  16. ^ Nichols v. Universal Pictures Corp., 45 F.2d 119 (2d Cir. 1930).
  17. ^ Capcom U.S.A. Inc. v. Data East Corp. 1994 WL 1751482 (N.D. Cal. 1994). Analysis at Patent Arcade accessed June 18, 2009.
  18. ^ Monastero, Alessia. "More Than Just a Trend: The Copyright Protection of Fashion Designs". Ontario Bar Association. Retrieved 31 August 2023.
  19. ^ Moran, Padraig. "Dupes offer cheap fashion to Canadians, but small businesses say they're paying the price". CBC Radio. Retrieved 31 August 2023.

Further reading

This page was last edited on 23 January 2024, at 12:27
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