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15 <book id="index" lang="en">
16 <bookinfo>
17 <title>Free Culture</title>
18
19 <abbrev>"freeculture"</abbrev>
20
21 <subtitle>How big media uses technology and the law to lock down
22 culture and control creativity</subtitle>
23
24 <pubdate>2015-10-17</pubdate>
25
26 <edition>1</edition>
27
28 <releaseinfo>Version 2004-02-10</releaseinfo>
29
30 <authorgroup>
31 <author>
32 <firstname>Lawrence</firstname>
33 <surname>Lessig</surname>
34 </author>
35 <!--
36 Keep these out to avoid showing up as author in the PDF.
37
38 <editor>
39 <firstname>Petter</firstname>
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45 <surname>Reinholdtsen</surname>
46 <contrib>Created this Docbook version from an earlier version</contrib>
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49 </authorgroup>
50
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54 <subjectset scheme="libraryofcongress">
55 <subject>
56 <subjectterm>Intellectual property&mdash;United States.</subjectterm>
57 </subject>
58 <subject>
59 <subjectterm>Mass media&mdash;United States.</subjectterm>
60 </subject>
61 <subject>
62 <subjectterm>Technological innovations&mdash;United States.</subjectterm>
63 </subject>
64 <subject>
65 <subjectterm>Art&mdash;United States.</subjectterm>
66 </subject>
67 </subjectset>
68
69
70 <publisher>
71 <publishername>Petter Reinholdtsen</publishername>
72 <address><city>Oslo</city></address>
73 </publisher>
74
75 <copyright>
76 <year>2004</year>
77 <holder>Lawrence Lessig</holder>
78 </copyright>
79 <legalnotice>
80 <para>
81 <inlinemediaobject>
82 <imageobject>
83 <imagedata fileref="images/cc.png" contentdepth="3em" width="100%" align="center"/>
84 </imageobject>
85 <imageobject>
86 <imagedata fileref="images/cc.svg" contentdepth="3em" width="100%" align="center"/>
87 </imageobject>
88 <textobject>
89 <phrase>Creative Commons, Some rights reserved</phrase>
90 </textobject>
91 </inlinemediaobject>
92 </para>
93
94 <para>
95 This book is licensed under a Creative Commons license. This license
96 permits non-commercial use of this work, so long as attribution is
97 given. For more information about the license visit
98 <ulink url="http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/1.0/"/>.
99 </para>
100 </legalnotice>
101
102 <abstract>
103 <title>About the author</title>
104 <para>
105 Lawrence Lessig
106 (<ulink url="http://www.lessig.org">http://www.lessig.org</ulink>),
107 professor of law and a Roy L. Furman Professor of Law and Leadership
108 at Harvard Law School, is founder of the Stanford Center for Internet
109 and Society and is chairman of the Creative Commons
110 (<ulink url="http://creativecommons.org">http://creativecommons.org</ulink>).
111 The author of The Future of Ideas (Random House, 2001) and Code: And
112 Other Laws of Cyberspace (Basic Books, 1999), Lessig is a member of
113 the boards of the Public Library of Science, the Electronic Frontier
114 Foundation, and Public Knowledge. He was the winner of the Free
115 Software Foundation's Award for the Advancement of Free Software,
116 twice listed in BusinessWeek's <quote>e.biz 25,</quote> and named one
117 of Scientific American's <quote>50 visionaries.</quote> A graduate of
118 the University of Pennsylvania, Cambridge University, and Yale Law
119 School, Lessig clerked for Judge Richard Posner of the U.S. Seventh
120 Circuit Court of Appeals.
121 </para>
122 </abstract>
123
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139
140 <biblioid class="isbn">978-82-690182-0-2</biblioid>
141
142 <!-- LCCN from
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145 <biblioid class="libraryofcongress">2003063276</biblioid>
146
147 <biblioid class="uri">http://free-culture.cc/</biblioid>
148
149 </bookinfo>
150 <!-- PAGE BREAK 3 -->
151 <dedication id="alsobylessig">
152 <title>
153 Also by Lawrence Lessig
154 </title>
155
156 <itemizedlist>
157
158 <listitem><para>
159 The USA is lesterland: The nature of congressional corruption (2014)
160 </para></listitem>
161 <listitem><para>
162 Republic, lost: How money corrupts Congress - and a plan to stop it (2011)
163 </para></listitem>
164 <listitem><para>
165 Remix: Making art and commerce thrive in the hybrid economy (2008)
166 </para></listitem>
167 <listitem><para>
168 Code: Version 2.0 (2006)
169 </para></listitem>
170 <listitem><para>
171 The Future of Ideas: The Fate of the Commons in a Connected World (2001)
172 </para></listitem>
173 <listitem><para>
174 Code: And Other Laws of Cyberspace (1999)
175 </para></listitem>
176 </itemizedlist>
177 </dedication>
178 <!-- PAGE BREAK 4 -->
179 <!-- PAGE BREAK 5 -->
180 <!-- PAGE BREAK 6 -->
181 <!-- PAGE BREAK 7 -->
182 <dedication id='dedication'><title></title>
183 <!-- FIXME figure out how to do this better in dblatex and docbook-xsl -->
184 <?latex {\huge \centering
185 ?>
186 <para>
187 To Eric Eldred &mdash; whose work first drew me to this cause, and for whom
188 it continues still.
189 </para>
190 <?latex } % \huge \centering
191 ?>
192 </dedication>
193
194 <toc id="toc"></toc>
195
196 <lot>
197 <title>List of figures</title>
198 </lot>
199
200 <!--
201 c PREFACE xiii
202 c INTRODUCTION
203 c "PIRACY"
204 1 CHAPTER ONE: Creators
205 1 CHAPTER TWO: "Mere Copyists"
206 1 CHAPTER THREE: Catalogs
207 1 CHAPTER FOUR: "Pirates"
208 2 Film
209 2 Recorded Music
210 2 Radio
211 2 Cable TV
212 1 CHAPTER FIVE: "Piracy"
213 2 Piracy I
214 2 Piracy II
215 c "PROPERTY"
216 1 CHAPTER SIX: Founders
217 1 CHAPTER SEVEN: Recorders
218 1 CHAPTER EIGHT: Transformers
219 1 CHAPTER NINE: Collectors
220 1 CHAPTER TEN: "Property"
221 2 Why Hollywood Is Right
222 2 Beginnings
223 2 Law: Duration
224 2 Law: Scope
225 2 Law and Architecture: Reach
226 2 Architecture and Law: Force
227 2 Market: Concentration
228 2 Together
229 c PUZZLES
230 1 CHAPTER ELEVEN: Chimera
231 1 CHAPTER TWELVE: Harms
232 2 Constraining Creators
233 2 Constraining Innovators
234 2 Corrupting Citizens
235 c BALANCES
236 1 CHAPTER THIRTEEN: Eldred
237 1 CHAPTER FOURTEEN: Eldred II
238 c CONCLUSION
239 c AFTERWORD
240 1 Us, Now
241 2 Rebuilding Freedoms Previously Presumed: Examples
242 2 Rebuilding Free Culture: One Idea
243 1 Them, Soon
244 2 1. More Formalities
245 3 Registration and Renewal
246 3 Marking
247 2 2. Shorter Terms
248 2 3. Free Use Vs. Fair Use
249 2 4. Liberate the Music- -Again
250 2 5. Fire Lots of Lawyers 304
251 c NOTES
252 c ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
253 c INDEX
254 -->
255
256 <!-- PAGE BREAK 11 -->
257
258 <preface id="preface">
259 <title>Preface</title>
260 <indexterm id='idxpoguedavid' class='startofrange'><primary>Pogue, David</primary></indexterm>
261 <indexterm><primary>Code (Lessig)</primary></indexterm>
262 <para>
263 <emphasis role="bold">At the end</emphasis> of his review of my first
264 book, <citetitle>Code: And Other Laws of Cyberspace</citetitle>, David
265 Pogue, a brilliant writer and author of countless technical and
266 computer-related texts, wrote this:
267 </para>
268 <blockquote>
269 <para>
270 Unlike actual law, Internet software has no capacity to punish. It
271 doesn't affect people who aren't online (and only a tiny minority
272 of the world population is). And if you don't like the Internet's
273 system, you can always flip off the modem.<footnote id="preface01"><para>
274 David Pogue, <quote>Don't Just Chat, Do Something,</quote> <citetitle>New York Times</citetitle>, 30 January 2000.
275 </para></footnote>
276 </para>
277 </blockquote>
278 <para>
279 Pogue was skeptical of the core argument of the book&mdash;that
280 software, or <quote>code,</quote> functioned as a kind of law&mdash;and his review
281 suggested the happy thought that if life in cyberspace got bad, we
282 could always <quote>drizzle, drazzle, druzzle, drome</quote>-like simply flip a
283 switch and be back home. Turn off the modem, unplug the computer, and
284 any troubles that exist in <emphasis>that</emphasis> space wouldn't
285 <quote>affect</quote> us anymore.
286 </para>
287 <para>
288 Pogue might have been right in 1999&mdash;I'm skeptical, but maybe.
289 But even if he was right then, the point is not right now:
290 <citetitle>Free Culture</citetitle> is about the troubles the Internet
291 causes even after the modem is turned
292 <!--PAGE BREAK 12-->
293 off. It is an argument about how the battles that now rage regarding life
294 on-line have fundamentally affected <quote>people who aren't online.</quote> There
295 is no switch that will insulate us from the Internet's effect.
296 </para>
297 <indexterm startref='idxpoguedavid' class='endofrange'/>
298 <para>
299 But unlike <citetitle>Code</citetitle>, the argument here is not much
300 about the Internet itself. It is instead about the consequence of the
301 Internet to a part of our tradition that is much more fundamental,
302 and, as hard as this is for a geek-wanna-be to admit, much more
303 important.
304 </para>
305 <para>
306 That tradition is the way our culture gets made. As I explain in the
307 pages that follow, we come from a tradition of <quote>free culture</quote>&mdash;not
308 <quote>free</quote> as in <quote>free beer</quote> (to borrow a phrase from the founder of the
309 free software movement<footnote>
310 <para>
311 Richard M. Stallman, <citetitle>Free Software, Free Societies</citetitle> 57 (Joshua Gay, ed. 2002).
312 </para></footnote>), but <quote>free</quote> as in <quote>free speech,</quote> <quote>free markets,</quote>
313 <quote>free trade,</quote> <quote>free enterprise,</quote> <quote>free will,</quote> and <quote>free elections.</quote> A
314 free culture supports and protects creators and innovators. It does
315 this directly by granting intellectual property rights. But it does so
316 indirectly by limiting the reach of those rights, to guarantee that
317 follow-on creators and innovators remain <emphasis>as free as
318 possible</emphasis> from the control of the past. A free culture is
319 not a culture without property, just as a free market is not a market
320 in which everything is free. The opposite of a free culture is a
321 <quote>permission culture</quote>&mdash;a culture in which creators get to create
322 only with the permission of the powerful, or of creators from the
323 past.
324 </para>
325 <para>
326 If we understood this change, I believe we would resist it. Not <quote>we</quote>
327 on the Left or <quote>you</quote> on the Right, but we who have no stake in the
328 particular industries of culture that defined the twentieth century.
329 Whether you are on the Left or the Right, if you are in this sense
330 disinterested, then the story I tell here will trouble you. For the
331 changes I describe affect values that both sides of our political
332 culture deem fundamental.
333 </para>
334 <indexterm id='idxpowerconcentrationof' class='startofrange'><primary>power, concentration of</primary></indexterm>
335 <indexterm><primary>CodePink Women in Peace</primary></indexterm>
336 <indexterm><primary>Safire, William</primary></indexterm>
337 <indexterm><primary>Stevens, Ted</primary></indexterm>
338 <para>
339 We saw a glimpse of this bipartisan outrage in the early summer of
340 2003. As the FCC considered changes in media ownership rules that
341 would relax limits on media concentration, an extraordinary coalition
342 generated more than 700,000 letters to the FCC opposing the change.
343 As William Safire described marching <quote>uncomfortably alongside CodePink
344 Women for Peace and the National Rifle Association, between liberal
345 Olympia Snowe and conservative Ted Stevens,</quote> he formulated perhaps
346 most simply just what was at stake: the concentration of power. And as
347 he asked,
348 </para>
349 <blockquote>
350 <para>
351 Does that sound unconservative? Not to me. The concentration of
352 power&mdash;political, corporate, media, cultural&mdash;should be anathema to
353 conservatives. The diffusion of power through local control, thereby
354 encouraging individual participation, is the essence of federalism and
355 the greatest expression of democracy.<footnote><para> William Safire,
356 <quote>The Great Media Gulp,</quote> <citetitle>New York Times</citetitle>, 22 May 2003.
357 <indexterm><primary>Safire, William</primary></indexterm>
358 </para></footnote>
359 </para>
360 </blockquote>
361 <para>
362 This idea is an element of the argument of <citetitle>Free Culture</citetitle>, though my
363 focus is not just on the concentration of power produced by
364 concentrations in ownership, but more importantly, if because less
365 visibly, on the concentration of power produced by a radical change in
366 the effective scope of the law. The law is changing; that change is
367 altering the way our culture gets made; that change should worry
368 you&mdash;whether or not you care about the Internet, and whether you're on
369 Safire's left or on his right.
370 </para>
371 <indexterm startref='idxpowerconcentrationof' class='endofrange'/>
372 <para>
373 <emphasis role="strong">The inspiration</emphasis> for the title and for
374 much of the argument of this book comes from the work of Richard
375 Stallman and the Free Software Foundation. Indeed, as I reread
376 Stallman's own work, especially the essays in <citetitle>Free Software, Free
377 Society</citetitle>, I realize that all of the theoretical insights I develop here
378 are insights Stallman described decades ago. One could thus well argue
379 that this work is <quote>merely</quote> derivative.
380 </para>
381 <para>
382 I accept that criticism, if indeed it is a criticism. The work of a
383 lawyer is always derivative, and I mean to do nothing more in this
384 book than to remind a culture about a tradition that has always been
385 its own. Like Stallman, I defend that tradition on the basis of
386 values. Like Stallman, I believe those are the values of freedom. And
387 like Stallman, I believe those are values of our past that will need
388 to be defended in our future. A free culture has been our past, but it
389 will only be our future if we change the path we are on right now.
390
391 <!--PAGE BREAK 14-->
392 Like Stallman's arguments for free software, an argument for free
393 culture stumbles on a confusion that is hard to avoid, and even harder
394 to understand. A free culture is not a culture without property; it is not
395 a culture in which artists don't get paid. A culture without property, or
396 in which creators can't get paid, is anarchy, not freedom. Anarchy is not
397 what I advance here.
398 </para>
399 <para>
400 Instead, the free culture that I defend in this book is a balance
401 between anarchy and control. A free culture, like a free market, is
402 filled with property. It is filled with rules of property and contract
403 that get enforced by the state. But just as a free market is perverted
404 if its property becomes feudal, so too can a free culture be queered
405 by extremism in the property rights that define it. That is what I
406 fear about our culture today. It is against that extremism that this
407 book is written.
408 </para>
409
410 </preface>
411 <!-- PAGE BREAK 15 -->
412
413 <!-- PAGE BREAK 16 -->
414 <chapter label="" id="c-introduction">
415 <title>Introduction</title>
416 <indexterm id='idxwrightbrothers' class='startofrange'><primary>Wright brothers</primary></indexterm>
417 <para>
418 <emphasis role="strong">On December 17</emphasis>, 1903, on a windy North Carolina beach for just
419 shy of one hundred seconds, the Wright brothers demonstrated that a
420 heavier-than-air, self-propelled vehicle could fly. The moment was electric
421 and its importance widely understood. Almost immediately, there
422 was an explosion of interest in this newfound technology of manned
423 flight, and a gaggle of innovators began to build upon it.
424 </para>
425 <indexterm id='idxairtrafficlandownershipvs' class='startofrange'><primary>air traffic, land ownership vs.</primary></indexterm>
426 <indexterm id='idxlandownershipairtrafficand' class='startofrange'><primary>land ownership, air traffic and</primary></indexterm>
427 <indexterm id='idxpropertyrightsairtrafficvs' class='startofrange'><primary>property rights</primary><secondary>air traffic vs.</secondary></indexterm>
428 <para>
429 At the time the Wright brothers invented the airplane, American
430 law held that a property owner presumptively owned not just the surface
431 of his land, but all the land below, down to the center of the earth,
432 and all the space above, to <quote>an indefinite extent, upwards.</quote><footnote><para>
433 St. George Tucker, <citetitle>Blackstone's Commentaries</citetitle> 3 (South Hackensack, N.J.:
434 Rothman Reprints, 1969), 18.
435 </para></footnote>
436 For many
437 years, scholars had puzzled about how best to interpret the idea that
438 rights in land ran to the heavens. Did that mean that you owned the
439 stars? Could you prosecute geese for their willful and regular trespass?
440 </para>
441 <indexterm startref='idxwrightbrothers' class='endofrange'/>
442 <para>
443 Then came airplanes, and for the first time, this principle of American
444 law&mdash;deep within the foundations of our tradition, and acknowledged
445 by the most important legal thinkers of our past&mdash;mattered. If
446 my land reaches to the heavens, what happens when United flies over
447 my field? Do I have the right to banish it from my property? Am I allowed
448 to enter into an exclusive license with Delta Airlines? Could we
449 set up an auction to decide how much these rights are worth?
450 </para>
451 <indexterm><primary>Causby, Thomas Lee</primary></indexterm>
452 <indexterm><primary>Causby, Tinie</primary></indexterm>
453 <para>
454 In 1945, these questions became a federal case. When North Carolina
455 farmers Thomas Lee and Tinie Causby started losing chickens
456 because of low-flying military aircraft (the terrified chickens apparently
457 flew into the barn walls and died), the Causbys filed a lawsuit saying
458 that the government was trespassing on their land. The airplanes,
459 of course, never touched the surface of the Causbys' land. But if, as
460 Blackstone, Kent, and Coke had said, their land reached to <quote>an indefinite
461 extent, upwards,</quote> then the government was trespassing on their
462 property, and the Causbys wanted it to stop.
463 </para>
464 <indexterm><primary>Causby, Thomas Lee</primary></indexterm>
465 <indexterm><primary>Causby, Tinie</primary></indexterm>
466 <indexterm id='idxdouglaswilliamo' class='startofrange'><primary>Douglas, William O.</primary></indexterm>
467 <indexterm id='idxsupremecourtusonairspacevslandrights' class='startofrange'><primary>Supreme Court, U.S.</primary><secondary>on airspace vs. land rights</secondary></indexterm>
468 <para>
469 The Supreme Court agreed to hear the Causbys' case. Congress had
470 declared the airways public, but if one's property really extended to the
471 heavens, then Congress's declaration could well have been an unconstitutional
472 <quote>taking</quote> of property without compensation. The Court acknowledged
473 that <quote>it is ancient doctrine that common law ownership of
474 the land extended to the periphery of the universe.</quote> But Justice Douglas
475 had no patience for ancient doctrine. In a single paragraph, hundreds of
476 years of property law were erased. As he wrote for the Court,
477 </para>
478 <blockquote>
479 <para>
480 [The] doctrine has no place in the modern world. The air is a
481 public highway, as Congress has declared. Were that not true,
482 every transcontinental flight would subject the operator to countless
483 trespass suits. Common sense revolts at the idea. To recognize
484 such private claims to the airspace would clog these highways,
485 seriously interfere with their control and development in the public
486 interest, and transfer into private ownership that to which only
487 the public has a just claim.<footnote>
488 <para>
489 United States v. Causby, U.S. 328 (1946): 256, 261. The Court did find
490 that there could be a <quote>taking</quote> if the government's use of its land
491 effectively destroyed the value of the Causbys' land. This example was
492 suggested to me by Keith Aoki's wonderful piece, <quote>(Intellectual)
493 Property and Sovereignty: Notes Toward a Cultural Geography of
494 Authorship,</quote> <citetitle>Stanford Law Review</citetitle> 48 (1996): 1293, 1333. See also Paul
495 Goldstein, <citetitle>Real Property</citetitle> (Mineola, N.Y.: Foundation Press, 1984),
496 1112&ndash;13.
497 <indexterm><primary>Causby, Thomas Lee</primary></indexterm>
498 <indexterm><primary>Causby, Tinie</primary></indexterm>
499 </para></footnote>
500 </para>
501 </blockquote>
502 <para>
503 <quote>Common sense revolts at the idea.</quote>
504 </para>
505 <indexterm startref='idxdouglaswilliamo' class='endofrange'/>
506 <para>
507 This is how the law usually works. Not often this abruptly or
508 impatiently, but eventually, this is how it works. It was Douglas's style not to
509 dither. Other justices would have blathered on for pages to reach the
510 <!--PAGE BREAK 18-->
511 conclusion that Douglas holds in a single line: <quote>Common sense revolts
512 at the idea.</quote> But whether it takes pages or a few words, it is the special
513 genius of a common law system, as ours is, that the law adjusts to the
514 technologies of the time. And as it adjusts, it changes. Ideas that were
515 as solid as rock in one age crumble in another.
516 </para>
517 <indexterm><primary>Causby, Thomas Lee</primary></indexterm>
518 <indexterm><primary>Causby, Tinie</primary></indexterm>
519 <indexterm><primary>Wright brothers</primary></indexterm>
520 <para>
521 Or at least, this is how things happen when there's no one powerful
522 on the other side of the change. The Causbys were just farmers. And
523 though there were no doubt many like them who were upset by the
524 growing traffic in the air (though one hopes not many chickens flew
525 themselves into walls), the Causbys of the world would find it very
526 hard to unite and stop the idea, and the technology, that the Wright
527 brothers had birthed. The Wright brothers spat airplanes into the
528 technological meme pool; the idea then spread like a virus in a chicken
529 coop; farmers like the Causbys found themselves surrounded by <quote>what
530 seemed reasonable</quote> given the technology that the Wrights had produced.
531 They could stand on their farms, dead chickens in hand, and
532 shake their fists at these newfangled technologies all they wanted.
533 They could call their representatives or even file a lawsuit. But in the
534 end, the force of what seems <quote>obvious</quote> to everyone else&mdash;the power of
535 <quote>common sense</quote>&mdash;would prevail. Their <quote>private interest</quote> would not be
536 allowed to defeat an obvious public gain.
537 </para>
538 <indexterm startref='idxairtrafficlandownershipvs' class='endofrange'/>
539 <indexterm startref='idxlandownershipairtrafficand' class='endofrange'/>
540 <indexterm startref='idxpropertyrightsairtrafficvs' class='endofrange'/>
541 <indexterm startref='idxsupremecourtusonairspacevslandrights' class='endofrange'/>
542 <indexterm id='idxarmstrongedwinhoward' class='startofrange'><primary>Armstrong, Edwin Howard</primary></indexterm>
543 <indexterm><primary>Bell, Alexander Graham</primary></indexterm>
544 <indexterm><primary>Edison, Thomas</primary></indexterm>
545 <indexterm><primary>Faraday, Michael</primary></indexterm>
546 <indexterm id='idxradiofmspectrumof' class='startofrange'><primary>radio</primary><secondary>FM spectrum of</secondary></indexterm>
547 <para>
548 <emphasis role='strong'>Edwin Howard Armstrong</emphasis> is one of
549 America's forgotten inventor geniuses. He came to the great American
550 inventor scene just after the titans Thomas Edison and Alexander
551 Graham Bell. But his work in the area of radio technology was perhaps
552 the most important of any single inventor in the first fifty years of
553 radio. He was better educated than Michael Faraday, who as a
554 bookbinder's apprentice had discovered electric induction in 1831. But
555 he had the same intuition about how the world of radio worked, and on
556 at least three occasions, Armstrong invented profoundly important
557 technologies that advanced our understanding of radio.
558 <!-- PAGE BREAK 19 -->
559 </para>
560 <para>
561 On the day after Christmas, 1933, four patents were issued to Armstrong
562 for his most significant invention&mdash;FM radio. Until then, consumer radio
563 had been amplitude-modulated (AM) radio. The theorists
564 of the day had said that frequency-modulated (FM) radio could never
565 work. They were right about FM radio in a narrow band of spectrum.
566 But Armstrong discovered that frequency-modulated radio in a wide
567 band of spectrum would deliver an astonishing fidelity of sound, with
568 much less transmitter power and static.
569 </para>
570 <para>
571 On November 5, 1935, he demonstrated the technology at a meeting of
572 the Institute of Radio Engineers at the Empire State Building in New
573 York City. He tuned his radio dial across a range of AM stations,
574 until the radio locked on a broadcast that he had arranged from
575 seventeen miles away. The radio fell totally silent, as if dead, and
576 then with a clarity no one else in that room had ever heard from an
577 electrical device, it produced the sound of an announcer's voice:
578 <quote>This is amateur station W2AG at Yonkers, New York, operating on
579 frequency modulation at two and a half meters.</quote>
580 </para>
581 <para>
582 The audience was hearing something no one had thought possible:
583 </para>
584 <blockquote>
585 <para>
586 A glass of water was poured before the microphone in Yonkers; it
587 sounded like a glass of water being poured. &hellip; A paper was crumpled
588 and torn; it sounded like paper and not like a crackling forest
589 fire. &hellip; Sousa marches were played from records and a piano solo
590 and guitar number were performed. &hellip; The music was projected with a
591 live-ness rarely if ever heard before from a radio <quote>music
592 box.</quote><footnote><para>
593 Lawrence Lessing, <citetitle>Man of High Fidelity: Edwin Howard Armstrong</citetitle>
594 (Philadelphia: J. B. Lipincott Company, 1956), 209.
595 </para></footnote>
596 </para>
597 </blockquote>
598 <indexterm id='idxrca' class='startofrange'><primary>RCA</primary></indexterm>
599 <indexterm id='idxmediaownershipconcentrationin' class='startofrange'><primary>media</primary><secondary>ownership concentration in</secondary></indexterm>
600 <para>
601 As our own common sense tells us, Armstrong had discovered a vastly
602 superior radio technology. But at the time of his invention, Armstrong
603 was working for RCA. RCA was the dominant player in the then dominant
604 AM radio market. By 1935, there were a thousand radio stations across
605 the United States, but the stations in large cities were all owned by
606 a handful of networks.
607 <!--PAGE BREAK 20-->
608 </para>
609 <indexterm><primary>Sarnoff, David</primary></indexterm>
610 <para>
611 RCA's president, David Sarnoff, a friend of Armstrong's, was eager
612 that Armstrong discover a way to remove static from AM radio. So
613 Sarnoff was quite excited when Armstrong told him he had a device
614 that removed static from <quote>radio.</quote> But when Armstrong demonstrated
615 his invention, Sarnoff was not pleased.
616 </para>
617 <blockquote>
618 <para>
619 I thought Armstrong would invent some kind of a filter to remove
620 static from our AM radio. I didn't think he'd start a
621 revolution&mdash; start up a whole damn new industry to compete with
622 RCA.<footnote><para> See <quote>Saints: The Heroes and Geniuses of the
623 Electronic Era,</quote> First Electronic Church of America, at
624 www.webstationone.com/fecha, available at
625
626 <ulink url="http://free-culture.cc/notes/">link #1</ulink>.
627 </para></footnote>
628 </para>
629 </blockquote>
630 <indexterm id='idxfmradio' class='startofrange'><primary>FM radio</primary></indexterm>
631 <indexterm><primary>Sarnoff, David</primary></indexterm>
632 <para>
633 Armstrong's invention threatened RCA's AM empire, so the company
634 launched a campaign to smother FM radio. While FM may have been a
635 superior technology, Sarnoff was a superior tactician. As one author
636 described,
637 </para>
638 <indexterm id='idxlessinglawrence' class='startofrange'><primary>Lessing, Lawrence</primary></indexterm>
639 <blockquote>
640 <para>
641 The forces for FM, largely engineering, could not overcome the weight
642 of strategy devised by the sales, patent, and legal offices to subdue
643 this threat to corporate position. For FM, if allowed to develop
644 unrestrained, posed &hellip; a complete reordering of radio power
645 &hellip; and the eventual overthrow of the carefully restricted AM system
646 on which RCA had grown to power.<footnote><para>Lessing, 226.
647 </para></footnote>
648 </para>
649 </blockquote>
650 <indexterm id='idxfcconfmradio' class='startofrange'><primary>FCC</primary><secondary>on FM radio</secondary></indexterm>
651 <para>
652 RCA at first kept the technology in house, insisting that further
653 tests were needed. When, after two years of testing, Armstrong grew
654 impatient, RCA began to use its power with the government to stall
655 FM radio's deployment generally. In 1936, RCA hired the former head
656 of the FCC and assigned him the task of assuring that the FCC assign
657 spectrum in a way that would castrate FM&mdash;principally by moving FM
658 radio to a different band of spectrum. At first, these efforts failed. But
659 when Armstrong and the nation were distracted by World War II,
660 RCA's work began to be more successful. Soon after the war ended, the
661 FCC announced a set of policies that would have one clear effect: FM
662 radio would be crippled. As Lawrence Lessing described it,
663 </para>
664 <!-- PAGE BREAK 21 -->
665 <blockquote>
666 <para>
667 The series of body blows that FM radio received right after the
668 war, in a series of rulings manipulated through the FCC by the
669 big radio interests, were almost incredible in their force and
670 deviousness.<footnote><para>
671 Lessing, 256.
672 </para></footnote>
673 </para>
674 </blockquote>
675 <indexterm startref='idxlessinglawrence' class='endofrange'/>
676 <indexterm><primary>AT&amp;T</primary></indexterm>
677 <para>
678 To make room in the spectrum for RCA's latest gamble, television,
679 FM radio users were to be moved to a totally new spectrum band. The
680 power of FM radio stations was also cut, meaning FM could no longer
681 be used to beam programs from one part of the country to another.
682 (This change was strongly supported by AT&amp;T, because the loss of
683 FM relaying stations would mean radio stations would have to buy
684 wired links from AT&amp;T.) The spread of FM radio was thus choked, at
685 least temporarily.
686 </para>
687 <indexterm startref='idxradiofmspectrumof' class='endofrange'/>
688 <indexterm startref='idxfcconfmradio' class='endofrange'/>
689 <para>
690 Armstrong resisted RCA's efforts. In response, RCA resisted
691 Armstrong's patents. After incorporating FM technology into the
692 emerging standard for television, RCA declared the patents
693 invalid&mdash;baselessly, and almost fifteen years after they were
694 issued. It thus refused to pay him royalties. For six years, Armstrong
695 fought an expensive war of litigation to defend the patents. Finally,
696 just as the patents expired, RCA offered a settlement so low that it
697 would not even cover Armstrong's lawyers' fees. Defeated, broken, and
698 now broke, in 1954 Armstrong wrote a short note to his wife and then
699 stepped out of a thirteenth-story window to his death.
700 </para>
701 <indexterm startref='idxfmradio' class='endofrange'/>
702 <indexterm startref='idxarmstrongedwinhoward' class='endofrange'/>
703 <indexterm><primary>Causby, Thomas Lee</primary></indexterm>
704 <indexterm><primary>Causby, Tinie</primary></indexterm>
705 <para>
706 This is how the law sometimes works. Not often this tragically, and
707 rarely with heroic drama, but sometimes, this is how it works. From
708 the beginning, government and government agencies have been subject to
709 capture. They are more likely captured when a powerful interest is
710 threatened by either a legal or technical change. That powerful
711 interest too often exerts its influence within the government to get
712 the government to protect it. The rhetoric of this protection is of
713 course always public spirited; the reality is something
714 different. Ideas that were as solid as rock in one age, but that, left
715 to themselves, would crumble in
716 <!--PAGE BREAK 22-->
717 another, are sustained through this subtle corruption of our political
718 process. RCA had what the Causbys did not: the power to stifle the
719 effect of technological change.
720 </para>
721 <indexterm startref='idxrca' class='endofrange'/>
722 <indexterm startref='idxmediaownershipconcentrationin' class='endofrange'/>
723 <indexterm id='idxinternetdevelopmentof' class='startofrange'><primary>Internet</primary><secondary>development of</secondary></indexterm>
724 <para>
725 <emphasis role="strong">There's no</emphasis> single inventor of the Internet. Nor is there any good date
726 upon which to mark its birth. Yet in a very short time, the Internet
727 has become part of ordinary American life. According to the Pew
728 Internet and American Life Project, 58 percent of Americans had access
729 to the Internet in 2002, up from 49 percent two years
730 before.<footnote><para>
731 Amanda Lenhart, <quote>The Ever-Shifting Internet Population: A New Look at
732 Internet Access and the Digital Divide,</quote> Pew Internet and American
733 Life Project, 15 April 2003: 6, available at
734 <ulink url="http://free-culture.cc/notes/">link #2</ulink>.
735 </para></footnote>
736 That number could well exceed two thirds of the nation by the end
737 of 2004.
738 </para>
739 <para>
740 As the Internet has been integrated into ordinary life, it has
741 changed things. Some of these changes are technical&mdash;the Internet has
742 made communication faster, it has lowered the cost of gathering data,
743 and so on. These technical changes are not the focus of this book. They
744 are important. They are not well understood. But they are the sort of
745 thing that would simply go away if we all just switched the Internet off.
746 They don't affect people who don't use the Internet, or at least they
747 don't affect them directly. They are the proper subject of a book about
748 the Internet. But this is not a book about the Internet.
749 </para>
750 <para>
751 Instead, this book is about an effect of the Internet beyond the
752 Internet itself: an effect upon how culture is made. My claim is that
753 the Internet has induced an important and unrecognized change in that
754 process. That change will radically transform a tradition that is as
755 old as the Republic itself. Most, if they recognized this change,
756 would reject it. Yet most don't even see the change that the Internet
757 has introduced.
758 </para>
759 <indexterm startref='idxinternetdevelopmentof' class='endofrange'/>
760 <indexterm><primary>Barlow, Joel</primary></indexterm>
761 <indexterm><primary>culture</primary><seealso>free culture</seealso></indexterm>
762 <indexterm id='idxculturecommercialvsnoncommercial' class='startofrange'><primary>culture</primary><secondary>commercial vs. noncommercial</secondary></indexterm>
763 <indexterm><primary>Webster, Noah</primary></indexterm>
764 <para>
765 We can glimpse a sense of this change by distinguishing between
766 commercial and noncommercial culture, and by mapping the law's
767 regulation of each. By <quote>commercial culture</quote> I mean that part of our
768 culture that is produced and sold or produced to be sold. By
769 <quote>noncommercial culture</quote> I mean all the rest. When old men sat around
770 parks or on
771 <!-- PAGE BREAK 23 -->
772 street corners telling stories that kids and others consumed, that was
773 noncommercial culture. When Noah Webster published his <quote>Reader,</quote> or
774 Joel Barlow his poetry, that was commercial culture.
775 </para>
776 <para>
777 At the beginning of our history, and for just about the whole of our
778 tradition, noncommercial culture was essentially unregulated. Of
779 course, if your stories were lewd, or if your song disturbed the
780 peace, then the law might intervene. But the law was never directly
781 concerned with the creation or spread of this form of culture, and it
782 left this culture <quote>free.</quote> The ordinary ways in which ordinary
783 individuals shared and transformed their culture&mdash;telling
784 stories, reenacting scenes from plays or TV, participating in fan
785 clubs, sharing music, making tapes&mdash;were left alone by the law.
786 </para>
787 <indexterm id='idxcopyrightinfringementlawsuitscommercialcreativityasprimarypurposeof' class='startofrange'><primary>copyright infringement lawsuits</primary><secondary>commercial creativity as primary purpose of</secondary></indexterm>
788 <para>
789 The focus of the law was on commercial creativity. At first slightly,
790 then quite extensively, the law protected the incentives of creators by
791 granting them exclusive rights to their creative work, so that they could
792 sell those exclusive rights in a commercial
793 marketplace.<footnote>
794 <para>
795 This is not the only purpose of copyright, though it is the overwhelmingly
796 primary purpose of the copyright established in the federal constitution.
797 State copyright law historically protected not just the commercial interest in
798 publication, but also a privacy interest. By granting authors the exclusive
799 right to first publication, state copyright law gave authors the power to
800 control the spread of facts about them. See Samuel D. Warren and Louis
801 D. Brandeis, <quote>The Right to Privacy,</quote> <citetitle>Harvard
802 Law Review</citetitle> 4 (1890): 193, 198&ndash;200.
803 <indexterm><primary>Brandeis, Louis D.</primary></indexterm>
804 </para></footnote>
805 This is also, of course, an important part of creativity and culture,
806 and it has become an increasingly important part in America. But in no
807 sense was it dominant within our tradition. It was instead just one
808 part, a controlled part, balanced with the free.
809 </para>
810 <indexterm><primary>free culture</primary><secondary> permission culture vs.</secondary></indexterm>
811 <indexterm><primary>permission culture</primary><secondary> free culture vs.</secondary></indexterm>
812 <para>
813 This rough divide between the free and the controlled has now
814 been erased.<footnote><para>
815 See Jessica Litman, <citetitle>Digital Copyright</citetitle> (New York: Prometheus Books,
816 2001), ch. 13.
817 <indexterm><primary>Litman, Jessica</primary></indexterm>
818 </para></footnote>
819 The Internet has set the stage for this erasure and, pushed by big
820 media, the law has now affected it. For the first time in our
821 tradition, the ordinary ways in which individuals create and share
822 culture fall within the reach of the regulation of the law, which has
823 expanded to draw within its control a vast amount of culture and
824 creativity that it never reached before. The technology that preserved
825 the balance of our history&mdash;between uses of our culture that were
826 free and uses of our culture that were only upon permission&mdash;has
827 been undone. The consequence is that we are less and less a free
828 culture, more and more a permission culture.
829 </para>
830 <!-- PAGE BREAK 24 -->
831 <indexterm><primary>Causby, Thomas Lee</primary></indexterm>
832 <indexterm><primary>Causby, Tinie</primary></indexterm>
833 <indexterm><primary>protection of artists vs. business interests</primary></indexterm>
834 <para>
835 This change gets justified as necessary to protect commercial
836 creativity. And indeed, protectionism is precisely its
837 motivation. But the protectionism that justifies the changes that I
838 will describe below is not the limited and balanced sort that has
839 defined the law in the past. This is not a protectionism to protect
840 artists. It is instead a protectionism to protect certain forms of
841 business. Corporations threatened by the potential of the Internet to
842 change the way both commercial and noncommercial culture are made and
843 shared have united to induce lawmakers to use the law to protect
844 them. It is the story of RCA and Armstrong; it is the dream of the
845 Causbys.
846 </para>
847 <indexterm startref='idxcopyrightinfringementlawsuitscommercialcreativityasprimarypurposeof' class='endofrange'/>
848 <para>
849 For the Internet has unleashed an extraordinary possibility for many
850 to participate in the process of building and cultivating a culture
851 that reaches far beyond local boundaries. That power has changed the
852 marketplace for making and cultivating culture generally, and that
853 change in turn threatens established content industries. The Internet
854 is thus to the industries that built and distributed content in the
855 twentieth century what FM radio was to AM radio, or what the truck was
856 to the railroad industry of the nineteenth century: the beginning of
857 the end, or at least a substantial transformation. Digital
858 technologies, tied to the Internet, could produce a vastly more
859 competitive and vibrant market for building and cultivating culture;
860 that market could include a much wider and more diverse range of
861 creators; those creators could produce and distribute a much more
862 vibrant range of creativity; and depending upon a few important
863 factors, those creators could earn more on average from this system
864 than creators do today&mdash;all so long as the RCAs of our day don't
865 use the law to protect themselves against this competition.
866 </para>
867 <para>
868 Yet, as I argue in the pages that follow, that is precisely what is
869 happening in our culture today. These modern-day equivalents of the
870 early twentieth-century radio or nineteenth-century railroads are
871 using their power to get the law to protect them against this new,
872 more efficient, more vibrant technology for building culture. They are
873 succeeding in their plan to remake the Internet before the Internet
874 remakes them.
875 </para>
876 <indexterm startref='idxculturecommercialvsnoncommercial' class='endofrange'/>
877 <indexterm><primary>Valenti, Jack</primary><secondary> on creative property rights</secondary></indexterm>
878 <para>
879 It doesn't seem this way to many. The battles over copyright and the
880 <!-- PAGE BREAK 25 -->
881 Internet seem remote to most. To the few who follow them, they seem
882 mainly about a much simpler brace of questions&mdash;whether <quote>piracy</quote> will
883 be permitted, and whether <quote>property</quote> will be protected. The <quote>war</quote> that
884 has been waged against the technologies of the Internet&mdash;what
885 Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) president Jack Valenti
886 calls his <quote>own terrorist war</quote><footnote><para>
887 Amy Harmon, <quote>Black Hawk Download: Moving Beyond Music, Pirates
888 Use New Tools to Turn the Net into an Illicit Video Club,</quote> <citetitle>New York
889 Times</citetitle>, 17 January 2002.
890 </para></footnote>&mdash;has been framed as a battle about the
891 rule of law and respect for property. To know which side to take in this
892 war, most think that we need only decide whether we're for property or
893 against it.
894 </para>
895 <para>
896 If those really were the choices, then I would be with Jack Valenti
897 and the content industry. I, too, am a believer in property, and
898 especially in the importance of what Mr. Valenti nicely calls
899 <quote>creative property.</quote> I believe that <quote>piracy</quote> is wrong, and that the
900 law, properly tuned, should punish <quote>piracy,</quote> whether on or off the
901 Internet.
902 </para>
903 <para>
904 But those simple beliefs mask a much more fundamental question
905 and a much more dramatic change. My fear is that unless we come to see
906 this change, the war to rid the world of Internet <quote>pirates</quote> will also rid our
907 culture of values that have been integral to our tradition from the start.
908 </para>
909 <indexterm><primary>Constitution, U.S.</primary><secondary>First Amendment to</secondary></indexterm>
910 <indexterm><primary>copyright law</primary><secondary>as protection of creators</secondary></indexterm>
911 <indexterm><primary>First Amendment</primary></indexterm>
912 <indexterm><primary>Netanel, Neil Weinstock</primary></indexterm>
913 <para>
914 These values built a tradition that, for at least the first 180 years of
915 our Republic, guaranteed creators the right to build freely upon their
916 past, and protected creators and innovators from either state or private
917 control. The First Amendment protected creators against state control.
918 And as Professor Neil Netanel powerfully argues,<footnote>
919 <para>
920 Neil W. Netanel, <quote>Copyright and a Democratic Civil Society,</quote> <citetitle>Yale Law
921 Journal</citetitle> 106 (1996): 283.
922 <indexterm><primary>Netanel, Neil Weinstock</primary></indexterm>
923 </para></footnote>
924 copyright law, properly balanced, protected creators against private
925 control. Our tradition was thus neither Soviet nor the tradition of
926 patrons. It instead carved out a wide berth within which creators
927 could cultivate and extend our culture.
928 </para>
929 <para>
930 Yet the law's response to the Internet, when tied to changes in the
931 technology of the Internet itself, has massively increased the
932 effective regulation of creativity in America. To build upon or
933 critique the culture around us one must ask, Oliver Twist&ndash;like,
934 for permission first. Permission is, of course, often
935 granted&mdash;but it is not often granted to the critical or the
936 independent. We have built a kind of cultural nobility; those within
937 the noble class live easily; those outside it don't. But it is
938 nobility of any form that is alien to our tradition.
939 </para>
940 <!-- PAGE BREAK 26. -->
941 <para>
942 The story that follows is about this war. It is not about the
943 <quote>centrality of technology</quote> to ordinary life. I don't believe in gods,
944 digital or otherwise. Nor is it an effort to demonize any individual
945 or group, for neither do I believe in a devil, corporate or
946 otherwise. It is not a morality tale. Nor is it a call to jihad
947 against an industry.
948 </para>
949 <para>
950 It is instead an effort to understand a hopelessly destructive war
951 inspired by the technologies of the Internet but reaching far beyond
952 its code. And by understanding this battle, it is an effort to map
953 peace. There is no good reason for the current struggle around
954 Internet technologies to continue. There will be great harm to our
955 tradition and culture if it is allowed to continue unchecked. We must
956 come to understand the source of this war. We must resolve it soon.
957 </para>
958 <indexterm><primary>Causby, Thomas Lee</primary></indexterm>
959 <indexterm><primary>Causby, Tinie</primary></indexterm>
960 <indexterm id='idxintellectualpropertyrights' class='startofrange'><primary>intellectual property rights</primary></indexterm>
961 <para>
962 <emphasis role="strong">Like the Causbys'</emphasis> battle, this war is, in part, about <quote>property.</quote> The
963 property of this war is not as tangible as the Causbys', and no
964 innocent chicken has yet to lose its life. Yet the ideas surrounding
965 this <quote>property</quote> are as obvious to most as the Causbys' claim about the
966 sacredness of their farm was to them. We are the Causbys. Most of us
967 take for granted the extraordinarily powerful claims that the owners
968 of <quote>intellectual property</quote> now assert. Most of us, like the Causbys,
969 treat these claims as obvious. And hence we, like the Causbys, object
970 when a new technology interferes with this property. It is as plain to
971 us as it was to them that the new technologies of the Internet are
972 <quote>trespassing</quote> upon legitimate claims of <quote>property.</quote> It is as plain to
973 us as it was to them that the law should intervene to stop this
974 trespass.
975 </para>
976 <indexterm><primary>Causby, Thomas Lee</primary></indexterm>
977 <indexterm><primary>Causby, Tinie</primary></indexterm>
978 <indexterm><primary>Wright brothers</primary></indexterm>
979 <para>
980 And thus, when geeks and technologists defend their Armstrong or
981 Wright brothers technology, most of us are simply unsympathetic.
982 Common sense does not revolt. Unlike in the case of the unlucky
983 Causbys, common sense is on the side of the property owners in this
984 war. Unlike
985 <!--PAGE BREAK 27-->
986 the lucky Wright brothers, the Internet has not inspired a revolution
987 on its side.
988 </para>
989 <indexterm><primary>power, concentration of</primary></indexterm>
990 <para>
991 My hope is to push this common sense along. I have become increasingly
992 amazed by the power of this idea of intellectual property and, more
993 importantly, its power to disable critical thought by policy makers
994 and citizens. There has never been a time in our history when more of
995 our <quote>culture</quote> was as <quote>owned</quote> as it is now. And yet there has never
996 been a time when the concentration of power to control the
997 <emphasis>uses</emphasis> of culture has been as unquestioningly
998 accepted as it is now.
999 </para>
1000 <para>
1001 The puzzle is, Why? Is it because we have come to understand a truth
1002 about the value and importance of absolute property over ideas and
1003 culture? Is it because we have discovered that our tradition of
1004 rejecting such an absolute claim was wrong?
1005 </para>
1006 <para>
1007 Or is it because the idea of absolute property over ideas and culture
1008 benefits the RCAs of our time and fits our own unreflective intuitions?
1009 </para>
1010 <para>
1011 Is the radical shift away from our tradition of free culture an instance
1012 of America correcting a mistake from its past, as we did after a bloody
1013 war with slavery, and as we are slowly doing with inequality? Or is the
1014 radical shift away from our tradition of free culture yet another example
1015 of a political system captured by a few powerful special interests?
1016 </para>
1017 <para>
1018 Does common sense lead to the extremes on this question because common
1019 sense actually believes in these extremes? Or does common sense stand
1020 silent in the face of these extremes because, as with Armstrong versus
1021 RCA, the more powerful side has ensured that it has the more powerful
1022 view?
1023 </para>
1024 <indexterm><primary>Causby, Thomas Lee</primary></indexterm>
1025 <indexterm><primary>Causby, Tinie</primary></indexterm>
1026 <para>
1027 I don't mean to be mysterious. My own views are resolved. I believe it
1028 was right for common sense to revolt against the extremism of the
1029 Causbys. I believe it would be right for common sense to revolt
1030 against the extreme claims made today on behalf of <quote>intellectual
1031 property.</quote> What the law demands today is increasingly as silly as a
1032 sheriff arresting an airplane for trespass. But the consequences of
1033 this silliness will be much more profound.
1034 <!-- PAGE BREAK 28 -->
1035 </para>
1036 <indexterm startref='idxintellectualpropertyrights' class='endofrange'/>
1037 <para>
1038 <emphasis role="strong">The struggle</emphasis> that rages just now centers on two ideas: <quote>piracy</quote> and
1039 <quote>property.</quote> My aim in this book's next two parts is to explore these two
1040 ideas.
1041 </para>
1042 <para>
1043 My method is not the usual method of an academic. I don't want to
1044 plunge you into a complex argument, buttressed with references to
1045 obscure French theorists&mdash;however natural that is for the weird
1046 sort we academics have become. Instead I begin in each part with a
1047 collection of stories that set a context within which these apparently
1048 simple ideas can be more fully understood.
1049 </para>
1050 <para>
1051 The two sections set up the core claim of this book: that while the
1052 Internet has indeed produced something fantastic and new, our
1053 government, pushed by big media to respond to this <quote>something new,</quote> is
1054 destroying something very old. Rather than understanding the changes
1055 the Internet might permit, and rather than taking time to let <quote>common
1056 sense</quote> resolve how best to respond, we are allowing those most
1057 threatened by the changes to use their power to change the
1058 law&mdash;and more importantly, to use their power to change something
1059 fundamental about who we have always been.
1060 </para>
1061 <para>
1062 We allow this, I believe, not because it is right, and not because
1063 most of us really believe in these changes. We allow it because the
1064 interests most threatened are among the most powerful players in our
1065 depressingly compromised process of making law. This book is the story
1066 of one more consequence of this form of corruption&mdash;a consequence
1067 to which most of us remain oblivious.
1068 </para>
1069 </chapter>
1070 <!-- PAGE BREAK 29 -->
1071 <part id="c-piracy">
1072 <title><quote>Piracy</quote></title>
1073 <partintro>
1074 <!-- PAGE BREAK 30 -->
1075 <indexterm><primary>copyright law</primary><secondary>English</secondary></indexterm>
1076 <indexterm id='idxmansfieldwilliammurraylord' class='startofrange'><primary>Mansfield, William Murray, Lord</primary></indexterm>
1077 <indexterm><primary>music publishing</primary></indexterm>
1078 <indexterm><primary>sheet music</primary></indexterm>
1079 <para>
1080 <emphasis role="strong">Since the inception</emphasis> of the law regulating creative property, there has
1081 been a war against <quote>piracy.</quote> The precise contours of this concept,
1082 <quote>piracy,</quote> are hard to sketch, but the animating injustice is easy to
1083 capture. As Lord Mansfield wrote in a case that extended the reach of
1084 English copyright law to include sheet music,
1085 </para>
1086 <blockquote>
1087 <para>
1088 A person may use the copy by playing it, but he has no right to
1089 rob the author of the profit, by multiplying copies and disposing
1090 of them for his own use.<footnote><para>
1091 <!-- f1 -->
1092 <citetitle>Bach</citetitle> v. <citetitle>Longman</citetitle>, 98 Eng. Rep. 1274 (1777) (Mansfield).
1093 </para></footnote>
1094 </para>
1095 <indexterm startref='idxmansfieldwilliammurraylord' class='endofrange'/>
1096 </blockquote>
1097 <indexterm><primary>Internet</primary><secondary> efficient content distribution on</secondary></indexterm>
1098 <indexterm id='idxpeertopeerppfilesharingefficiencyof' class='startofrange'><primary>peer-to-peer (p2p) file sharing</primary><secondary>efficiency of</secondary></indexterm>
1099 <para>
1100 Today we are in the middle of another <quote>war</quote> against <quote>piracy.</quote> The
1101 Internet has provoked this war. The Internet makes possible the
1102 efficient spread of content. Peer-to-peer (p2p) file sharing is among
1103 the most efficient of the efficient technologies the Internet
1104 enables. Using distributed intelligence, p2p systems facilitate the
1105 easy spread of content in a way unimagined a generation ago.
1106 <!-- PAGE BREAK 31 -->
1107 </para>
1108 <para>
1109 This efficiency does not respect the traditional lines of copyright.
1110 The network doesn't discriminate between the sharing of copyrighted
1111 and uncopyrighted content. Thus has there been a vast amount of
1112 sharing of copyrighted content. That sharing in turn has excited the
1113 war, as copyright owners fear the sharing will <quote>rob the author of the
1114 profit.</quote>
1115 </para>
1116 <indexterm startref='idxpeertopeerppfilesharingefficiencyof' class='endofrange'/>
1117 <para>
1118 The warriors have turned to the courts, to the legislatures, and
1119 increasingly to technology to defend their <quote>property</quote> against this
1120 <quote>piracy.</quote> A generation of Americans, the warriors warn, is being
1121 raised to believe that <quote>property</quote> should be <quote>free.</quote> Forget tattoos,
1122 never mind body piercing&mdash;our kids are becoming
1123 <emphasis>thieves</emphasis>!
1124 </para>
1125 <para>
1126 There's no doubt that <quote>piracy</quote> is wrong, and that pirates should be
1127 punished. But before we summon the executioners, we should put this
1128 notion of <quote>piracy</quote> in some context. For as the concept is increasingly
1129 used, at its core is an extraordinary idea that is almost certainly wrong.
1130 </para>
1131 <para>
1132 The idea goes something like this:
1133 </para>
1134 <blockquote>
1135 <para>
1136 Creative work has value; whenever I use, or take, or build upon
1137 the creative work of others, I am taking from them something of
1138 value. Whenever I take something of value from someone else, I
1139 should have their permission. The taking of something of value
1140 from someone else without permission is wrong. It is a form of
1141 piracy.
1142 </para>
1143 </blockquote>
1144 <indexterm><primary>ASCAP</primary></indexterm>
1145 <indexterm><primary>Dreyfuss, Rochelle</primary></indexterm>
1146 <indexterm><primary>Girl Scouts</primary></indexterm>
1147 <indexterm><primary>creative property</primary><seealso>intellectual property rights</seealso></indexterm>
1148 <indexterm id='idxcreativepropertyifvaluethenrighttheoryof' class='startofrange'><primary>creative property</primary><secondary><quote>if value, then right</quote> theory of</secondary></indexterm>
1149 <indexterm id='idxifvaluethenrighttheory' class='startofrange'><primary><quote>if value, then right</quote> theory</primary></indexterm>
1150 <para>
1151 This view runs deep within the current debates. It is what NYU law
1152 professor Rochelle Dreyfuss criticizes as the <quote>if value, then right</quote>
1153 theory of creative property<footnote><para>
1154 <!-- f2 -->
1155 See Rochelle Dreyfuss, <quote>Expressive Genericity: Trademarks as Language
1156 in the Pepsi Generation,</quote> <citetitle>Notre Dame Law Review</citetitle> 65 (1990): 397.
1157 </para></footnote>
1158 &mdash;if there is value, then someone must have a
1159 right to that value. It is the perspective that led a composers' rights
1160 organization, ASCAP, to sue the Girl Scouts for failing to pay for the
1161 songs that girls sang around Girl Scout campfires.<footnote><para>
1162 <!-- f3 -->
1163 Lisa Bannon, <quote>The Birds May Sing, but Campers Can't Unless They Pay
1164 Up,</quote> <citetitle>Wall Street Journal</citetitle>, 21 August 1996, available at
1165 <ulink url="http://free-culture.cc/notes/">link #3</ulink>; Jonathan
1166 Zittrain, <quote>Calling Off the Copyright War: In Battle of Property vs. Free
1167 Speech, No One Wins,</quote> <citetitle>Boston Globe</citetitle>, 24 November 2002.
1168 <indexterm><primary>Zittrain, Jonathan</primary></indexterm>
1169 </para></footnote>
1170 There was <quote>value</quote> (the songs) so there must have been a
1171 <quote>right</quote>&mdash;even against the Girl Scouts.
1172 </para>
1173 <indexterm startref='idxcreativepropertyifvaluethenrighttheoryof' class='endofrange'/>
1174 <para>
1175 This idea is certainly a possible understanding of how creative
1176 property should work. It might well be a possible design for a system
1177 <!-- PAGE BREAK 32 -->
1178 of law protecting creative property. But the <quote>if value, then right</quote>
1179 theory of creative property has never been America's theory of
1180 creative property. It has never taken hold within our law.
1181 </para>
1182 <indexterm startref='idxifvaluethenrighttheory' class='endofrange'/>
1183 <indexterm id='idxcopyrightlawonrepublishingvstransformationoforiginalwork' class='startofrange'><primary>copyright law</primary><secondary>on republishing vs. transformation of original work</secondary></indexterm>
1184 <indexterm><primary>creativity</primary><seealso>innovation</seealso></indexterm>
1185 <indexterm id='idxcreativitylegalrestrictionson' class='startofrange'><primary>creativity</primary><secondary>legal restrictions on</secondary></indexterm>
1186 <para>
1187 Instead, in our tradition, intellectual property is an instrument. It
1188 sets the groundwork for a richly creative society but remains
1189 subservient to the value of creativity. The current debate has this
1190 turned around. We have become so concerned with protecting the
1191 instrument that we are losing sight of the value.
1192 </para>
1193 <para>
1194 The source of this confusion is a distinction that the law no longer
1195 takes care to draw&mdash;the distinction between republishing someone's
1196 work on the one hand and building upon or transforming that work on
1197 the other. Copyright law at its birth had only publishing as its concern;
1198 copyright law today regulates both.
1199 </para>
1200 <indexterm startref='idxcopyrightlawonrepublishingvstransformationoforiginalwork' class='endofrange'/>
1201 <para>
1202 Before the technologies of the Internet, this conflation didn't matter
1203 all that much. The technologies of publishing were expensive; that
1204 meant the vast majority of publishing was commercial. Commercial
1205 entities could bear the burden of the law&mdash;even the burden of the
1206 Byzantine complexity that copyright law has become. It was just one
1207 more expense of doing business.
1208 </para>
1209 <indexterm><primary>copyright law</primary><secondary>creativity impeded by</secondary></indexterm>
1210 <indexterm><primary>Florida, Richard</primary></indexterm>
1211 <indexterm><primary>Rise of the Creative Class, The (Florida)</primary></indexterm>
1212 <para>
1213 But with the birth of the Internet, this natural limit to the reach of
1214 the law has disappeared. The law controls not just the creativity of
1215 commercial creators but effectively that of anyone. Although that
1216 expansion would not matter much if copyright law regulated only
1217 <quote>copying,</quote> when the law regulates as broadly and obscurely as it does,
1218 the extension matters a lot. The burden of this law now vastly
1219 outweighs any original benefit&mdash;certainly as it affects
1220 noncommercial creativity, and increasingly as it affects commercial
1221 creativity as well. Thus, as we'll see more clearly in the chapters
1222 below, the law's role is less and less to support creativity, and more
1223 and more to protect certain industries against competition. Just at
1224 the time digital technology could unleash an extraordinary range of
1225 commercial and noncommercial creativity, the law burdens this
1226 creativity with insanely complex and vague rules and with the threat
1227 of obscenely severe penalties. We may
1228 <!-- PAGE BREAK 33 -->
1229 be seeing, as Richard Florida writes, the <quote>Rise of the Creative
1230 Class.</quote><footnote>
1231 <para>
1232 <!-- f4 -->
1233 In <citetitle>The Rise of the Creative Class</citetitle> (New York:
1234 Basic Books, 2002), Richard Florida documents a shift in the nature of
1235 labor toward a labor of creativity. His work, however, doesn't
1236 directly address the legal conditions under which that creativity is
1237 enabled or stifled. I certainly agree with him about the importance
1238 and significance of this change, but I also believe the conditions
1239 under which it will be enabled are much more tenuous.
1240
1241 <indexterm><primary>Florida, Richard</primary></indexterm>
1242 <indexterm><primary>Rise of the Creative Class, The (Florida)</primary></indexterm>
1243 </para></footnote>
1244 Unfortunately, we are also seeing an extraordinary rise of regulation of
1245 this creative class.
1246 </para>
1247 <indexterm startref='idxcreativitylegalrestrictionson' class='endofrange'/>
1248 <para>
1249 These burdens make no sense in our tradition. We should begin by
1250 understanding that tradition a bit more and by placing in their proper
1251 context the current battles about behavior labeled <quote>piracy.</quote>
1252 </para>
1253 </partintro>
1254
1255 <!-- PAGE BREAK 34 -->
1256 <chapter label="1" id="creators">
1257 <title>Chapter One: Creators</title>
1258 <indexterm id='idxanimatedcartoons' class='startofrange'><primary>animated cartoons</primary></indexterm>
1259 <indexterm id='idxcartoonfilms' class='startofrange'><primary>cartoon films</primary></indexterm>
1260 <indexterm id='idxfilmsanimated' class='startofrange'><primary>films</primary><secondary>animated</secondary></indexterm>
1261 <indexterm id='idxsteamboatwillie' class='startofrange'><primary>Steamboat Willie</primary></indexterm>
1262 <indexterm id='idxmickeymouse' class='startofrange'><primary>Mickey Mouse</primary></indexterm>
1263 <para>
1264 <emphasis role="strong">In 1928</emphasis>, a cartoon character was born. An early Mickey Mouse
1265 made his debut in May of that year, in a silent flop called <citetitle>Plane Crazy</citetitle>.
1266 In November, in New York City's Colony Theater, in the first widely
1267 distributed cartoon synchronized with sound, <citetitle>Steamboat Willie</citetitle> brought
1268 to life the character that would become Mickey Mouse.
1269 </para>
1270 <indexterm id='idxdisneywalt' class='startofrange'><primary>Disney, Walt</primary></indexterm>
1271 <para>
1272 Synchronized sound had been introduced to film a year earlier in the
1273 movie <citetitle>The Jazz Singer</citetitle>. That success led Walt Disney to copy the
1274 technique and mix sound with cartoons. No one knew whether it would
1275 work or, if it did work, whether it would win an audience. But when
1276 Disney ran a test in the summer of 1928, the results were unambiguous.
1277 As Disney describes that first experiment,
1278 </para>
1279 <blockquote>
1280 <para>
1281 A couple of my boys could read music, and one of them could play
1282 a mouth organ. We put them in a room where they could not see
1283 the screen and arranged to pipe their sound into the room where
1284 our wives and friends were going to see the picture.
1285 <!-- PAGE BREAK 35 -->
1286 </para>
1287 <para>
1288 The boys worked from a music and sound-effects score. After several
1289 false starts, sound and action got off with the gun. The mouth
1290 organist played the tune, the rest of us in the sound department
1291 bammed tin pans and blew slide whistles on the beat. The
1292 synchronization was pretty close.
1293 </para>
1294 <para>
1295 The effect on our little audience was nothing less than electric.
1296 They responded almost instinctively to this union of sound and
1297 motion. I thought they were kidding me. So they put me in the audience
1298 and ran the action again. It was terrible, but it was wonderful! And
1299 it was something new!<footnote><para>
1300 <!-- f1 -->
1301 Leonard Maltin, <citetitle>Of Mice and Magic: A History of American Animated
1302 Cartoons</citetitle> (New York: Penguin Books, 1987), 34&ndash;35.
1303 </para></footnote>
1304 </para>
1305 </blockquote>
1306 <indexterm><primary>Iwerks, Ub</primary></indexterm>
1307 <para>
1308 Disney's then partner, and one of animation's most extraordinary
1309 talents, Ub Iwerks, put it more strongly: <quote>I have never been so thrilled
1310 in my life. Nothing since has ever equaled it.</quote>
1311 </para>
1312 <para>
1313 Disney had created something very new, based upon something relatively
1314 new. Synchronized sound brought life to a form of creativity that had
1315 rarely&mdash;except in Disney's hands&mdash;been anything more than
1316 filler for other films. Throughout animation's early history, it was
1317 Disney's invention that set the standard that others struggled to
1318 match. And quite often, Disney's great genius, his spark of
1319 creativity, was built upon the work of others.
1320 </para>
1321 <indexterm startref='idxdisneywalt' class='endofrange'/>
1322 <indexterm id='idxkeatonbuster' class='startofrange'><primary>Keaton, Buster</primary></indexterm>
1323 <indexterm id='idxsteamboatbilljr' class='startofrange'><primary>Steamboat Bill, Jr.</primary></indexterm>
1324 <para>
1325 This much is familiar. What you might not know is that 1928 also marks
1326 another important transition. In that year, a comic (as opposed to
1327 cartoon) genius created his last independently produced silent film.
1328 That genius was Buster Keaton. The film was <citetitle>Steamboat Bill, Jr</citetitle>.
1329 </para>
1330 <para>
1331 Keaton was born into a vaudeville family in 1895. In the era of silent
1332 film, he had mastered using broad physical comedy as a way to spark
1333 uncontrollable laughter from his audience. <citetitle>Steamboat Bill,
1334 Jr</citetitle>. was a classic of this form, famous among film buffs for its
1335 incredible stunts. The film was classic Keaton&mdash;wildly popular
1336 and among the best of its genre.
1337 </para>
1338 <indexterm id='idxderivativeworkspiracyvs' class='startofrange'><primary>derivative works</primary><secondary>piracy vs.</secondary></indexterm>
1339 <indexterm id='idxpiracyderivativeworkvs' class='startofrange'><primary>piracy</primary><secondary>derivative work vs.</secondary></indexterm>
1340 <para>
1341 <citetitle>Steamboat Bill, Jr</citetitle>. appeared before Disney's cartoon Steamboat
1342 Willie.
1343 <!-- PAGE BREAK 36 -->
1344 The coincidence of titles is not coincidental. Steamboat Willie is a
1345 direct cartoon parody of Steamboat Bill,<footnote><para>
1346 <!-- f2 -->
1347 I am grateful to David Gerstein and his careful history, described at
1348 <ulink url="http://free-culture.cc/notes/">link #4</ulink>.
1349 According to Dave Smith of the Disney Archives, Disney paid royalties to
1350 use the music for five songs in <citetitle>Steamboat Willie</citetitle>: <quote>Steamboat Bill,</quote> <quote>The
1351 Simpleton</quote> (Delille), <quote>Mischief Makers</quote> (Carbonara), <quote>Joyful Hurry No. 1</quote>
1352 (Baron), and <quote>Gawky Rube</quote> (Lakay). A sixth song, <quote>The Turkey in the
1353 Straw,</quote> was already in the public domain. Letter from David Smith to
1354 Harry Surden, 10 July 2003, on file with author.
1355 </para></footnote>
1356 and both are built upon a common song as a source. It is not just from
1357 the invention of synchronized sound in <citetitle>The Jazz Singer</citetitle> that we
1358 get <citetitle>Steamboat Willie</citetitle>. It is also from Buster Keaton's invention of
1359 Steamboat Bill, Jr., itself inspired by the song <quote>Steamboat Bill,</quote>
1360 that we get Steamboat Willie, and then from Steamboat Willie, Mickey
1361 Mouse.
1362 </para>
1363 <indexterm startref='idxsteamboatwillie' class='endofrange'/>
1364 <indexterm startref='idxmickeymouse' class='endofrange'/>
1365 <indexterm startref='idxkeatonbuster' class='endofrange'/>
1366 <indexterm startref='idxsteamboatbilljr' class='endofrange'/>
1367 <indexterm id='idxcreativitybytransformingpreviousworks' class='startofrange'><primary>creativity</primary><secondary>by transforming previous works</secondary></indexterm>
1368 <indexterm id='idxdisneyinc' class='startofrange'><primary>Disney, Inc.</primary></indexterm>
1369 <para>
1370 This <quote>borrowing</quote> was nothing unique, either for Disney or for the
1371 industry. Disney was always parroting the feature-length mainstream
1372 films of his day.<footnote><para>
1373 <!-- f3 -->
1374 He was also a fan of the public domain. See Chris Sprigman, <quote>The Mouse
1375 that Ate the Public Domain,</quote> Findlaw, 5 March 2002, at
1376 <ulink url="http://free-culture.cc/notes/">link #5</ulink>.
1377 </para></footnote>
1378 So did many others. Early cartoons are filled with
1379 knockoffs&mdash;slight variations on winning themes; retellings of
1380 ancient stories. The key to success was the brilliance of the
1381 differences. With Disney, it was sound that gave his animation its
1382 spark. Later, it was the quality of his work relative to the
1383 production-line cartoons with which he competed. Yet these additions
1384 were built upon a base that was borrowed. Disney added to the work of
1385 others before him, creating something new out of something just barely
1386 old.
1387 </para>
1388 <indexterm id='idxgrimmfairytales' class='startofrange'><primary>Grimm fairy tales</primary></indexterm>
1389 <para>
1390 Sometimes this borrowing was slight. Sometimes it was significant.
1391 Think about the fairy tales of the Brothers Grimm. If you're as
1392 oblivious as I was, you're likely to think that these tales are happy,
1393 sweet stories, appropriate for any child at bedtime. In fact, the
1394 Grimm fairy tales are, well, for us, grim. It is a rare and perhaps
1395 overly ambitious parent who would dare to read these bloody,
1396 moralistic stories to his or her child, at bedtime or anytime.
1397 </para>
1398 <para>
1399 Disney took these stories and retold them in a way that carried them
1400 into a new age. He animated the stories, with both characters and
1401 light. Without removing the elements of fear and danger altogether, he
1402 made funny what was dark and injected a genuine emotion of compassion
1403 where before there was fear. And not just with the work of the
1404 Brothers Grimm. Indeed, the catalog of Disney work drawing upon the
1405 work of others is astonishing when set together: <citetitle>Snow White</citetitle>
1406 (1937), <citetitle>Fantasia</citetitle> (1940), <citetitle>Pinocchio</citetitle> (1940), <citetitle>Dumbo</citetitle>
1407 (1941), <citetitle>Bambi</citetitle> (1942), <citetitle>Song of the South</citetitle> (1946),
1408 <citetitle>Cinderella</citetitle> (1950), <citetitle>Alice in Wonderland</citetitle> (1951), <citetitle>Robin
1409 Hood</citetitle> (1952), <citetitle>Peter Pan</citetitle> (1953), <citetitle>Lady and the Tramp</citetitle>
1410 <!-- PAGE BREAK 37 -->
1411 (1955), <citetitle>Mulan</citetitle> (1998), <citetitle>Sleeping Beauty</citetitle> (1959), <citetitle>101
1412 Dalmatians</citetitle> (1961), <citetitle>The Sword in the Stone</citetitle> (1963), and
1413 <citetitle>The Jungle Book</citetitle> (1967)&mdash;not to mention a recent example
1414 that we should perhaps quickly forget, <citetitle>Treasure Planet</citetitle>
1415 (2003). In all of these cases, Disney (or Disney, Inc.) ripped
1416 creativity from the culture around him, mixed that creativity with his
1417 own extraordinary talent, and then burned that mix into the soul of
1418 his culture. Rip, mix, and burn.
1419 </para>
1420 <indexterm startref='idxgrimmfairytales' class='endofrange'/>
1421 <para>
1422 This is a kind of creativity. It is a creativity that we should
1423 remember and celebrate. There are some who would say that there is no
1424 creativity except this kind. We don't need to go that far to recognize
1425 its importance. We could call this <quote>Disney creativity,</quote> though that
1426 would be a bit misleading. It is, more precisely, <quote>Walt Disney
1427 creativity</quote>&mdash;a form of expression and genius that builds upon the
1428 culture around us and makes it something different.
1429 </para>
1430 <indexterm startref='idxderivativeworkspiracyvs' class='endofrange'/>
1431 <indexterm startref='idxpiracyderivativeworkvs' class='endofrange'/>
1432 <indexterm startref='idxcreativitybytransformingpreviousworks' class='endofrange'/>
1433 <indexterm><primary>copyright</primary><seealso>copyright law</seealso></indexterm>
1434 <indexterm id='idxcopyrightdurationof' class='startofrange'><primary>copyright</primary><secondary>duration of</secondary></indexterm>
1435 <indexterm id='idxpublicdomaindefined' class='startofrange'><primary>public domain</primary><secondary>defined</secondary></indexterm>
1436 <indexterm id='idxpublicdomaintraditionaltermforconversionto' class='startofrange'><primary>public domain</primary><secondary>traditional term for conversion to</secondary></indexterm>
1437 <para> In 1928, the culture that Disney was free to draw upon was
1438 relatively fresh. The public domain in 1928 was not very old and was
1439 therefore quite vibrant. The average term of copyright was just around
1440 thirty years&mdash;for that minority of creative work that was in fact
1441 copyrighted.<footnote><para>
1442 <!-- f4 -->
1443 Until 1976, copyright law granted an author the possibility of two terms: an
1444 initial term and a renewal term. I have calculated the <quote>average</quote> term by
1445 determining
1446 the weighted average of total registrations for any particular year,
1447 and the proportion renewing. Thus, if 100 copyrights are registered in year
1448 1, and only 15 are renewed, and the renewal term is 28 years, then the
1449 average
1450 term is 32.2 years. For the renewal data and other relevant data, see the
1451 Web site associated with this book, available at
1452 <ulink url="http://free-culture.cc/notes/">link #6</ulink>.
1453 </para></footnote>
1454 That means that for thirty years, on average, the authors or
1455 copyright holders of a creative work had an <quote>exclusive right</quote> to control
1456 certain uses of the work. To use this copyrighted work in limited ways
1457 required the permission of the copyright owner.
1458 </para>
1459 <para>
1460 At the end of a copyright term, a work passes into the public domain.
1461 No permission is then needed to draw upon or use that work. No
1462 permission and, hence, no lawyers. The public domain is a <quote>lawyer-free
1463 zone.</quote> Thus, most of the content from the nineteenth century was free
1464 for Disney to use and build upon in 1928. It was free for
1465 anyone&mdash; whether connected or not, whether rich or not, whether
1466 approved or not&mdash;to use and build upon.
1467 </para>
1468 <indexterm startref='idxanimatedcartoons' class='endofrange'/>
1469 <indexterm startref='idxfilmsanimated' class='endofrange'/>
1470 <para>
1471 This is the ways things always were&mdash;until quite recently. For most
1472 of our history, the public domain was just over the horizon. From
1473 until 1978, the average copyright term was never more than thirty-two
1474 years, meaning that most culture just a generation and a half old was
1475
1476 <!-- PAGE BREAK 38 -->
1477 free for anyone to build upon without the permission of anyone else.
1478 Today's equivalent would be for creative work from the 1960s and 1970s
1479 to now be free for the next Walt Disney to build upon without
1480 permission. Yet today, the public domain is presumptive only for
1481 content from before the Great Depression.
1482 </para>
1483 <indexterm startref='idxcartoonfilms' class='endofrange'/>
1484 <indexterm startref='idxdisneyinc' class='endofrange'/>
1485 <indexterm startref='idxcopyrightdurationof' class='endofrange'/>
1486 <indexterm startref='idxpublicdomaindefined' class='endofrange'/>
1487 <indexterm startref='idxpublicdomaintraditionaltermforconversionto' class='endofrange'/>
1488 <indexterm><primary>Disney, Walt</primary></indexterm>
1489 <para>
1490 <emphasis role="strong">Of course</emphasis>, Walt Disney had no monopoly on <quote>Walt Disney creativity.</quote>
1491 Nor does America. The norm of free culture has, until recently, and
1492 except within totalitarian nations, been broadly exploited and quite
1493 universal.
1494 </para>
1495 <indexterm id='idxcomicsjapanese' class='startofrange'><primary>comics, Japanese</primary></indexterm>
1496 <indexterm id='idxderivativeworkspiracyvs2' class='startofrange'><primary>derivative works</primary><secondary>piracy vs.</secondary></indexterm>
1497 <indexterm id='idxjapanesecomics' class='startofrange'><primary>Japanese comics</primary></indexterm>
1498 <indexterm id='idxmanga' class='startofrange'><primary>manga</primary></indexterm>
1499 <indexterm id='idxpiracyderivativeworkvs2' class='startofrange'><primary>piracy</primary><secondary>derivative work vs.</secondary></indexterm>
1500 <para>
1501 Consider, for example, a form of creativity that seems strange to many
1502 Americans but that is inescapable within Japanese culture: <citetitle>manga</citetitle>, or
1503 comics. The Japanese are fanatics about comics. Some 40 percent of
1504 publications are comics, and 30 percent of publication revenue derives
1505 from comics. They are everywhere in Japanese society, at every
1506 magazine stand, carried by a large proportion of commuters on Japan's
1507 extraordinary system of public transportation.
1508 </para>
1509 <para>
1510 Americans tend to look down upon this form of culture. That's an
1511 unattractive characteristic of ours. We're likely to misunderstand
1512 much about manga, because few of us have ever read anything close to
1513 the stories that these <quote>graphic novels</quote> tell. For the Japanese, manga
1514 cover every aspect of social life. For us, comics are <quote>men in tights.</quote>
1515 And anyway, it's not as if the New York subways are filled with
1516 readers of Joyce or even Hemingway. People of different cultures
1517 distract themselves in different ways, the Japanese in this
1518 interestingly different way.
1519 </para>
1520 <para>
1521 But my purpose here is not to understand manga. It is to describe a
1522 variant on manga that from a lawyer's perspective is quite odd, but
1523 from a Disney perspective is quite familiar.
1524 </para>
1525 <indexterm id='idxcreativitybytransformingpreviousworks2' class='startofrange'><primary>creativity</primary><secondary>by transforming previous works</secondary></indexterm>
1526 <indexterm id='idxdoujinshicomics' class='startofrange'><primary>doujinshi comics</primary></indexterm>
1527 <para>
1528 This is the phenomenon of <citetitle>doujinshi</citetitle>. Doujinshi are also comics, but
1529 they are a kind of copycat comic. A rich ethic governs the creation of
1530 doujinshi. It is not doujinshi if it is <emphasis>just</emphasis> a
1531 copy; the artist must make a contribution to the art he copies, by
1532 transforming it either subtly or
1533 <!-- PAGE BREAK 39 -->
1534 significantly. A doujinshi comic can thus take a mainstream comic and
1535 develop it differently&mdash;with a different story line. Or the comic can
1536 keep the character in character but change its look slightly. There is no
1537 formula for what makes the doujinshi sufficiently <quote>different.</quote> But they
1538 must be different if they are to be considered true doujinshi. Indeed,
1539 there are committees that review doujinshi for inclusion within shows
1540 and reject any copycat comic that is merely a copy.
1541 </para>
1542 <indexterm id='idxdisneywalt2' class='startofrange'><primary>Disney, Walt</primary></indexterm>
1543 <para>
1544 These copycat comics are not a tiny part of the manga market. They are
1545 huge. More than 33,000 <quote>circles</quote> of creators from across Japan produce
1546 these bits of Walt Disney creativity. More than 450,000 Japanese come
1547 together twice a year, in the largest public gathering in the country,
1548 to exchange and sell them. This market exists in parallel to the
1549 mainstream commercial manga market. In some ways, it obviously
1550 competes with that market, but there is no sustained effort by those
1551 who control the commercial manga market to shut the doujinshi market
1552 down. It flourishes, despite the competition and despite the law.
1553 </para>
1554 <indexterm id='idxcopyrightlawjapanese' class='startofrange'><primary>copyright law</primary><secondary>Japanese</secondary></indexterm>
1555 <indexterm><primary>Steamboat Bill, Jr.</primary></indexterm>
1556 <para>
1557 The most puzzling feature of the doujinshi market, for those trained
1558 in the law, at least, is that it is allowed to exist at all. Under
1559 Japanese copyright law, which in this respect (on paper) mirrors
1560 American copyright law, the doujinshi market is an illegal
1561 one. Doujinshi are plainly <quote>derivative works.</quote> There is no general
1562 practice by doujinshi artists of securing the permission of the manga
1563 creators. Instead, the practice is simply to take and modify the
1564 creations of others, as Walt Disney did with <citetitle>Steamboat Bill,
1565 Jr</citetitle>. Under both Japanese and American law, that <quote>taking</quote> without
1566 the permission of the original copyright owner is illegal. It is an
1567 infringement of the original copyright to make a copy or a derivative
1568 work without the original copyright owner's permission.
1569 </para>
1570 <indexterm startref='idxdisneywalt2' class='endofrange'/>
1571 <indexterm id='idxwinickjudd' class='startofrange'><primary>Winick, Judd</primary></indexterm>
1572 <para>
1573 Yet this illegal market exists and indeed flourishes in Japan, and in
1574 the view of many, it is precisely because it exists that Japanese manga
1575 flourish. As American graphic novelist Judd Winick said to me, <quote>The
1576 early days of comics in America are very much like what's going on
1577 in Japan now. &hellip; American comics were born out of copying each
1578 <!-- PAGE BREAK 40 -->
1579 other. &hellip; That's how [the artists] learn to draw &mdash; by going into comic
1580 books and not tracing them, but looking at them and copying them</quote>
1581 and building from them.<footnote><para>
1582 <!-- f5 -->
1583 For an excellent history, see Scott McCloud, <citetitle>Reinventing Comics</citetitle> (New
1584 York: Perennial, 2000).
1585 </para></footnote>
1586 </para>
1587 <indexterm startref='idxcopyrightlawjapanese' class='endofrange'/>
1588 <indexterm><primary>Superman comics</primary></indexterm>
1589 <para>
1590 American comics now are quite different, Winick explains, in part
1591 because of the legal difficulty of adapting comics the way doujinshi are
1592 allowed. Speaking of Superman, Winick told me, <quote>there are these rules
1593 and you have to stick to them.</quote> There are things Superman <quote>cannot</quote>
1594 do. <quote>As a creator, it's frustrating having to stick to some parameters
1595 which are fifty years old.</quote>
1596 </para>
1597 <indexterm startref='idxwinickjudd' class='endofrange'/>
1598 <indexterm id='idxcopyrightlawjapanese2' class='startofrange'><primary>copyright law</primary><secondary>Japanese</secondary></indexterm>
1599 <indexterm><primary>comics, Japanese</primary></indexterm>
1600 <indexterm id='idxmehrasalil' class='startofrange'><primary>Mehra, Salil</primary></indexterm>
1601 <para>
1602 The norm in Japan mitigates this legal difficulty. Some say it is
1603 precisely the benefit accruing to the Japanese manga market that
1604 explains the mitigation. Temple University law professor Salil Mehra,
1605 for example, hypothesizes that the manga market accepts these
1606 technical violations because they spur the manga market to be more
1607 wealthy and productive. Everyone would be worse off if doujinshi were
1608 banned, so the law does not ban doujinshi.<footnote><para>
1609 <!-- f6 -->
1610 See Salil K. Mehra, <quote>Copyright and Comics in Japan: Does Law Explain
1611 Why All the Comics My Kid Watches Are Japanese Imports?</quote> <citetitle>Rutgers Law
1612 Review</citetitle> 55 (2002): 155, 182. <quote>[T]here might be a collective economic
1613 rationality that would lead manga and anime artists to forgo bringing
1614 legal actions for infringement. One hypothesis is that all manga
1615 artists may be better off collectively if they set aside their
1616 individual self-interest and decide not to press their legal
1617 rights. This is essentially a prisoner's dilemma solved.</quote>
1618 </para></footnote>
1619 </para>
1620 <indexterm startref='idxcomicsjapanese' class='endofrange'/>
1621 <indexterm startref='idxjapanesecomics' class='endofrange'/>
1622 <indexterm startref='idxmanga' class='endofrange'/>
1623 <para>
1624 The problem with this story, however, as Mehra plainly acknowledges,
1625 is that the mechanism producing this laissez faire response is not
1626 clear. It may well be that the market as a whole is better off if
1627 doujinshi are permitted rather than banned, but that doesn't explain
1628 why individual copyright owners don't sue nonetheless. If the law has
1629 no general exception for doujinshi, and indeed in some cases
1630 individual manga artists have sued doujinshi artists, why is there not
1631 a more general pattern of blocking this <quote>free taking</quote> by the doujinshi
1632 culture?
1633 </para>
1634 <indexterm startref='idxcopyrightlawjapanese2' class='endofrange'/>
1635 <indexterm startref='idxmehrasalil' class='endofrange'/>
1636 <para>
1637 I spent four wonderful months in Japan, and I asked this question
1638 as often as I could. Perhaps the best account in the end was offered by
1639 a friend from a major Japanese law firm. <quote>We don't have enough
1640 lawyers,</quote> he told me one afternoon. There <quote>just aren't enough resources
1641 to prosecute cases like this.</quote>
1642 </para>
1643 <para>
1644 This is a theme to which we will return: that regulation by law is a
1645 function of both the words on the books and the costs of making those
1646 words have effect. For now, focus on the obvious question that is
1647 begged: Would Japan be better off with more lawyers? Would manga
1648 <!-- PAGE BREAK 41 -->
1649 be richer if doujinshi artists were regularly prosecuted? Would the
1650 Japanese gain something important if they could end this practice of
1651 uncompensated sharing? Does piracy here hurt the victims of the
1652 piracy, or does it help them? Would lawyers fighting this piracy help
1653 their clients or hurt them?
1654 </para>
1655 <indexterm startref='idxdoujinshicomics' class='endofrange'/>
1656 <para>
1657 <emphasis role='strong'>Let's pause</emphasis> for a moment.
1658 </para>
1659 <para>
1660 If you're like I was a decade ago, or like most people are when they
1661 first start thinking about these issues, then just about now you should
1662 be puzzled about something you hadn't thought through before.
1663 </para>
1664 <para>
1665 We live in a world that celebrates <quote>property.</quote> I am one of those
1666 celebrants. I believe in the value of property in general, and I also
1667 believe in the value of that weird form of property that lawyers call
1668 <quote>intellectual property.</quote><footnote><para>
1669 <!-- f7 -->
1670 <indexterm><primary>Vaidhyanathan, Siva</primary></indexterm>
1671 The term <citetitle>intellectual property</citetitle> is of relatively recent origin. See
1672 Siva Vaidhyanathan, <citetitle>Copyrights and Copywrongs</citetitle>, 11 (New York: New York
1673 University Press, 2001). See also Lawrence Lessig, <citetitle>The Future of Ideas</citetitle>
1674 (New York: Random House, 2001), 293 n. 26. The term accurately
1675 describes a set of <quote>property</quote> rights &mdash; copyright, patents,
1676 trademark, and trade-secret &mdash; but the nature of those rights is
1677 very different.
1678 </para></footnote>
1679 A large, diverse society cannot survive without property; a large,
1680 diverse, and modern society cannot flourish without intellectual
1681 property.
1682 </para>
1683 <indexterm id='idxdisneywalt3' class='startofrange'><primary>Disney, Walt</primary></indexterm>
1684 <indexterm id='idxgrimmfairytales2' class='startofrange'><primary>Grimm fairy tales</primary></indexterm>
1685 <indexterm><primary>Keaton, Buster</primary></indexterm>
1686 <para>
1687 But it takes just a second's reflection to realize that there is
1688 plenty of value out there that <quote>property</quote> doesn't capture. I don't
1689 mean <quote>money can't buy you love,</quote> but rather, value that is plainly
1690 part of a process of production, including commercial as well as
1691 noncommercial production. If Disney animators had stolen a set of
1692 pencils to draw Steamboat Willie, we'd have no hesitation in
1693 condemning that taking as wrong&mdash; even though trivial, even if
1694 unnoticed. Yet there was nothing wrong, at least under the law of the
1695 day, with Disney's taking from Buster Keaton or from the Brothers
1696 Grimm. There was nothing wrong with the taking from Keaton because
1697 Disney's use would have been considered <quote>fair.</quote> There was nothing
1698 wrong with the taking from the Grimms because the Grimms' work was in
1699 the public domain.
1700 </para>
1701 <indexterm id='idxfreeculturederivativeworksbasedon' class='startofrange'><primary>free culture</primary><secondary>derivative works based on</secondary></indexterm>
1702 <para>
1703 Thus, even though the things that Disney took&mdash;or more generally,
1704 the things taken by anyone exercising Walt Disney creativity&mdash;are
1705 valuable, our tradition does not treat those takings as wrong. Some
1706
1707 <!-- PAGE BREAK 42 -->
1708 things remain free for the taking within a free culture, and that
1709 freedom is good.
1710 </para>
1711 <indexterm startref='idxgrimmfairytales2' class='endofrange'/>
1712 <indexterm id='idxcopyrightlawjapanese3' class='startofrange'><primary>copyright law</primary><secondary>Japanese</secondary></indexterm>
1713 <indexterm><primary>comics, Japanese</primary></indexterm>
1714 <indexterm id='idxdoujinshicomics2' class='startofrange'><primary>doujinshi comics</primary></indexterm>
1715 <indexterm id='idxjapanesecomics2' class='startofrange'><primary>Japanese comics</primary></indexterm>
1716 <indexterm id='idxmanga2' class='startofrange'><primary>manga</primary></indexterm>
1717 <para>
1718 The same with the doujinshi culture. If a doujinshi artist broke into
1719 a publisher's office and ran off with a thousand copies of his latest
1720 work&mdash;or even one copy&mdash;without paying, we'd have no hesitation in
1721 saying the artist was wrong. In addition to having trespassed, he would
1722 have stolen something of value. The law bans that stealing in whatever
1723 form, whether large or small.
1724 </para>
1725 <indexterm startref='idxcreativitybytransformingpreviousworks2' class='endofrange'/>
1726 <para>
1727 Yet there is an obvious reluctance, even among Japanese lawyers, to
1728 say that the copycat comic artists are <quote>stealing.</quote> This form of Walt
1729 Disney creativity is seen as fair and right, even if lawyers in
1730 particular find it hard to say why.
1731 </para>
1732 <indexterm startref='idxderivativeworkspiracyvs2' class='endofrange'/>
1733 <indexterm startref='idxpiracyderivativeworkvs2' class='endofrange'/>
1734 <indexterm startref='idxcopyrightlawjapanese3' class='endofrange'/>
1735 <indexterm startref='idxdoujinshicomics2' class='endofrange'/>
1736 <indexterm startref='idxjapanesecomics2' class='endofrange'/>
1737 <indexterm startref='idxmanga2' class='endofrange'/>
1738 <indexterm><primary>Shakespeare, William</primary></indexterm>
1739 <para>
1740 It's the same with a thousand examples that appear everywhere once you
1741 begin to look. Scientists build upon the work of other scientists
1742 without asking or paying for the privilege. (<quote>Excuse me, Professor
1743 Einstein, but may I have permission to use your theory of relativity
1744 to show that you were wrong about quantum physics?</quote>) Acting companies
1745 perform adaptations of the works of Shakespeare without securing
1746 permission from anyone. (Does <emphasis>anyone</emphasis> believe
1747 Shakespeare would be better spread within our culture if there were a
1748 central Shakespeare rights clearinghouse that all productions of
1749 Shakespeare must appeal to first?) And Hollywood goes through cycles
1750 with a certain kind of movie: five asteroid films in the late 1990s;
1751 two volcano disaster films in 1997.
1752 </para>
1753 <para>
1754 Creators here and everywhere are always and at all times building
1755 upon the creativity that went before and that surrounds them now.
1756 That building is always and everywhere at least partially done without
1757 permission and without compensating the original creator. No society,
1758 free or controlled, has ever demanded that every use be paid for or that
1759 permission for Walt Disney creativity must always be sought. Instead,
1760 every society has left a certain bit of its culture free for the taking&mdash;free
1761 societies more fully than unfree, perhaps, but all societies to some degree.
1762 <!-- PAGE BREAK 43 -->
1763 </para>
1764 <indexterm startref='idxdisneywalt3' class='endofrange'/>
1765 <para>
1766 The hard question is therefore not <emphasis>whether</emphasis> a
1767 culture is free. All cultures are free to some degree. The hard
1768 question instead is <quote><emphasis>How</emphasis> free is this culture?</quote>
1769 How much, and how broadly, is the culture free for others to take and
1770 build upon? Is that freedom limited to party members? To members of
1771 the royal family? To the top ten corporations on the New York Stock
1772 Exchange? Or is that freedom spread broadly? To artists generally,
1773 whether affiliated with the Met or not? To musicians generally,
1774 whether white or not? To filmmakers generally, whether affiliated with
1775 a studio or not?
1776 </para>
1777 <para>
1778 Free cultures are cultures that leave a great deal open for others to
1779 build upon; unfree, or permission, cultures leave much less. Ours was a
1780 free culture. It is becoming much less so.
1781 </para>
1782 <indexterm startref='idxfreeculturederivativeworksbasedon' class='endofrange'/>
1783
1784 <!-- PAGE BREAK 44 -->
1785 </chapter>
1786 <chapter label="2" id="mere-copyists">
1787 <title>Chapter Two: <quote>Mere Copyists</quote></title>
1788 <indexterm><primary>Daguerre, Louis</primary></indexterm>
1789 <indexterm id='idxcameratechnology' class='startofrange'><primary>camera technology</primary></indexterm>
1790 <indexterm id='idxphotography' class='startofrange'><primary>photography</primary></indexterm>
1791 <para>
1792 <emphasis role='strong'>In 1839</emphasis>, Louis Daguerre invented
1793 the first practical technology for producing what we would call
1794 <quote>photographs.</quote> Appropriately enough, they were called
1795 <quote>daguerreotypes.</quote> The process was complicated and
1796 expensive, and the field was thus limited to professionals and a few
1797 zealous and wealthy amateurs. (There was even an American Daguerre
1798 Association that helped regulate the industry, as do all such
1799 associations, by keeping competition down so as to keep prices up.)
1800 </para>
1801 <indexterm><primary>Talbot, William</primary></indexterm>
1802 <para>
1803 Yet despite high prices, the demand for daguerreotypes was strong.
1804 This pushed inventors to find simpler and cheaper ways to make
1805 <quote>automatic pictures.</quote> William Talbot soon discovered a process for
1806 making <quote>negatives.</quote> But because the negatives were glass, and had to
1807 be kept wet, the process still remained expensive and cumbersome. In
1808 the 1870s, dry plates were developed, making it easier to separate the
1809 taking of a picture from its developing. These were still plates of
1810 glass, and thus it was still not a process within reach of most
1811 amateurs.
1812 </para>
1813 <indexterm id='idxeastmangeorge' class='startofrange'><primary>Eastman, George</primary></indexterm>
1814 <para>
1815 The technological change that made mass photography possible
1816 didn't happen until 1888, and was the creation of a single man. George
1817 <!-- PAGE BREAK 45 -->
1818 Eastman, himself an amateur photographer, was frustrated by the
1819 technology of photographs made with plates. In a flash of insight (so
1820 to speak), Eastman saw that if the film could be made to be flexible,
1821 it could be held on a single spindle. That roll could then be sent to
1822 a developer, driving the costs of photography down substantially. By
1823 lowering the costs, Eastman expected he could dramatically broaden the
1824 population of photographers.
1825 </para>
1826 <indexterm id='idxkodakcameras' class='startofrange'><primary>Kodak cameras</primary></indexterm>
1827 <indexterm id='idxkodakprimertheeastman' class='startofrange'><primary>Kodak Primer, The (Eastman)</primary></indexterm>
1828 <para>
1829 Eastman developed flexible, emulsion-coated paper film and placed
1830 rolls of it in small, simple cameras: the Kodak. The device was
1831 marketed on the basis of its simplicity. <quote>You press the button and we
1832 do the rest.</quote><footnote><para>
1833 <!-- f1 -->
1834 Reese V. Jenkins, <citetitle>Images and Enterprise</citetitle> (Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 1975), 112.
1835 </para></footnote> As he described in <citetitle>The Kodak Primer</citetitle>:
1836 </para>
1837 <blockquote>
1838 <para>
1839 The principle of the Kodak system is the separation of the work that
1840 any person whomsoever can do in making a photograph, from the work
1841 that only an expert can do. &hellip; We furnish anybody, man, woman or
1842 child, who has sufficient intelligence to point a box straight and
1843 press a button, with an instrument which altogether removes from the
1844 practice of photography the necessity for exceptional facilities or,
1845 in fact, any special knowledge of the art. It can be employed without
1846 preliminary study, without a darkroom and without
1847 chemicals.<footnote>
1848 <para>
1849 <!-- f2 -->
1850 <indexterm><primary>Coe, Brian</primary></indexterm>
1851 Brian Coe, <citetitle>The Birth of Photography</citetitle> (New York: Taplinger Publishing,
1852 1977), 53.
1853 </para></footnote>
1854 </para>
1855 </blockquote>
1856 <indexterm startref='idxkodakprimertheeastman' class='endofrange'/>
1857 <para>
1858 For $25, anyone could make pictures. The camera came preloaded
1859 with film, and when it had been used, the camera was returned to an
1860 Eastman factory, where the film was developed. Over time, of course,
1861 the cost of the camera and the ease with which it could be used both
1862 improved. Roll film thus became the basis for the explosive growth of
1863 popular photography. Eastman's camera first went on sale in 1888; one
1864 year later, Kodak was printing more than six thousand negatives a day.
1865 From 1888 through 1909, while industrial production was rising by 4.7
1866 percent, photographic equipment and material sales increased by 11
1867 percent.<footnote><para>
1868 <!-- f3 -->
1869 Jenkins, 177.
1870 </para></footnote> Eastman Kodak's sales during the same period experienced
1871 an average annual increase of over 17 percent.<footnote><para>
1872 <!-- f4 -->
1873 Based on a chart in Jenkins, p. 178.
1874 </para></footnote>
1875 </para>
1876 <indexterm><primary>Coe, Brian</primary></indexterm>
1877 <para>
1878
1879 <!-- PAGE BREAK 46 -->
1880 The real significance of Eastman's invention, however, was not
1881 economic. It was social. Professional photography gave individuals a
1882 glimpse of places they would never otherwise see. Amateur photography
1883 gave them the ability to record their own lives in a way they had
1884 never been able to do before. As author Brian Coe notes, <quote>For the
1885 first time the snapshot album provided the man on the street with a
1886 permanent record of his family and its activities. &hellip; For the first
1887 time in history there exists an authentic visual record of the
1888 appearance and activities of the common man made without [literary]
1889 interpretation or bias.</quote><footnote><para>
1890 <!-- f5 -->
1891 Coe, 58.
1892 </para></footnote>
1893 </para>
1894 <indexterm><primary>democracy</primary><secondary>in technologies of expression</secondary></indexterm>
1895 <indexterm><primary>expression, technologies of</primary><secondary>democratic</secondary></indexterm>
1896 <para>
1897 In this way, the Kodak camera and film were technologies of
1898 expression. The pencil or paintbrush was also a technology of
1899 expression, of course. But it took years of training before they could
1900 be deployed by amateurs in any useful or effective way. With the
1901 Kodak, expression was possible much sooner and more simply. The
1902 barrier to expression was lowered. Snobs would sneer at its <quote>quality</quote>;
1903 professionals would discount it as irrelevant. But watch a child study
1904 how best to frame a picture and you get a sense of the experience of
1905 creativity that the Kodak enabled. Democratic tools gave ordinary
1906 people a way to express themselves more easily than any tools could
1907 have before.
1908 </para>
1909 <indexterm startref='idxkodakcameras' class='endofrange'/>
1910 <indexterm id='idxpermissionsphotographyexemptedfrom' class='startofrange'><primary>permissions</primary><secondary>photography exempted from</secondary></indexterm>
1911 <para>
1912 What was required for this technology to flourish? Obviously,
1913 Eastman's genius was an important part. But also important was the
1914 legal environment within which Eastman's invention grew. For early in
1915 the history of photography, there was a series of judicial decisions
1916 that could well have changed the course of photography substantially.
1917 Courts were asked whether the photographer, amateur or professional,
1918 required permission before he could capture and print whatever image
1919 he wanted. Their answer was no.<footnote><para>
1920 <!-- f6 -->
1921 For illustrative cases, see, for example, <citetitle>Pavesich</citetitle>
1922 v. <citetitle>N.E. Life Ins. Co</citetitle>., 50 S.E. 68 (Ga. 1905);
1923 <citetitle>Foster-Milburn Co</citetitle>. v. <citetitle>Chinn</citetitle>, 123090 S.W. 364, 366
1924 (Ky. 1909); <citetitle>Corliss</citetitle> v. <citetitle>Walker</citetitle>, 64 F. 280 (Mass.
1925 Dist. Ct. 1894).
1926 </para></footnote>
1927 </para>
1928 <indexterm startref='idxcameratechnology' class='endofrange'/>
1929 <indexterm id='idxdisneywalt4' class='startofrange'><primary>Disney, Walt</primary></indexterm>
1930 <indexterm id='idximagesownershipof' class='startofrange'><primary>images, ownership of</primary></indexterm>
1931 <para>
1932 The arguments in favor of requiring permission will sound surprisingly
1933 familiar. The photographer was <quote>taking</quote> something from the person or
1934 building whose photograph he shot&mdash;pirating something of
1935 value. Some even thought he was taking the target's soul. Just as
1936 Disney was not free to take the pencils that his animators used to
1937 draw
1938 <!-- PAGE BREAK 47 -->
1939 Mickey, so, too, should these photographers not be free to take images
1940 that they thought valuable.
1941 </para>
1942 <indexterm><primary>Brandeis, Louis D.</primary></indexterm>
1943 <indexterm><primary>Steamboat Bill, Jr.</primary></indexterm>
1944 <indexterm id='idxcameratechnology2' class='startofrange'><primary>camera technology</primary></indexterm>
1945 <para>
1946 On the other side was an argument that should be familiar, as well.
1947 Sure, there may be something of value being used. But citizens should
1948 have the right to capture at least those images that stand in public view.
1949 (Louis Brandeis, who would become a Supreme Court Justice, thought
1950 the rule should be different for images from private spaces.<footnote>
1951 <para>
1952 <!-- f7 -->
1953 Samuel D. Warren and Louis D. Brandeis, <quote>The Right to Privacy,</quote>
1954 <citetitle>Harvard Law Review</citetitle> 4 (1890): 193.
1955 <indexterm><primary>Brandeis, Louis D.</primary></indexterm>
1956 <indexterm><primary>Warren, Samuel D.</primary></indexterm>
1957 </para></footnote>) It may be that this means that the photographer
1958 gets something for nothing. Just as Disney could take inspiration from
1959 <citetitle>Steamboat Bill, Jr</citetitle>. or the Brothers Grimm, the photographer should be
1960 free to capture an image without compensating the source.
1961 </para>
1962 <indexterm startref='idxdisneywalt4' class='endofrange'/>
1963 <para>
1964 Fortunately for Mr. Eastman, and for photography in general, these
1965 early decisions went in favor of the pirates. In general, no
1966 permission would be required before an image could be captured and
1967 shared with others. Instead, permission was presumed. Freedom was the
1968 default. (The law would eventually craft an exception for famous
1969 people: commercial photographers who snap pictures of famous people
1970 for commercial purposes have more restrictions than the rest of
1971 us. But in the ordinary case, the image can be captured without
1972 clearing the rights to do the capturing.<footnote><para>
1973 <!-- f8 -->
1974 See Melville B. Nimmer, <quote>The Right of Publicity,</quote> <citetitle>Law and Contemporary
1975 Problems</citetitle> 19 (1954): 203; William L. Prosser, <quote>Privacy,</quote> <citetitle>California Law
1976 Review</citetitle> 48 (1960) 398&ndash;407; <citetitle>White</citetitle> v. <citetitle>Samsung Electronics America,
1977 Inc</citetitle>., 971 F. 2d 1395 (9th Cir. 1992), cert. denied, 508 U.S. 951
1978 (1993).
1979 </para></footnote>)
1980 </para>
1981 <indexterm><primary>Kodak cameras</primary></indexterm>
1982 <indexterm><primary>Napster</primary></indexterm>
1983 <para>
1984 We can only speculate about how photography would have developed had
1985 the law gone the other way. If the presumption had been against the
1986 photographer, then the photographer would have had to demonstrate
1987 permission. Perhaps Eastman Kodak would have had to demonstrate
1988 permission, too, before it developed the film upon which images were
1989 captured. After all, if permission were not granted, then Eastman
1990 Kodak would be benefiting from the <quote>theft</quote> committed by the
1991 photographer. Just as Napster benefited from the copyright
1992 infringements committed by Napster users, Kodak would be benefiting
1993 from the <quote>image-right</quote> infringement of its photographers. We could
1994 imagine the law then requiring that some form of permission be
1995 demonstrated before a company developed pictures. We could imagine a
1996 system developing to demonstrate that permission.
1997 </para>
1998 <indexterm startref='idxcameratechnology2' class='endofrange'/>
1999 <indexterm id='idxcameratechnology3' class='startofrange'><primary>camera technology</primary></indexterm>
2000 <indexterm><primary>democracy</primary><secondary>in technologies of expression</secondary></indexterm>
2001 <indexterm><primary>expression, technologies of</primary><secondary>democratic</secondary></indexterm>
2002 <para>
2003
2004 <!-- PAGE BREAK 48 -->
2005 But though we could imagine this system of permission, it would be
2006 very hard to see how photography could have flourished as it did if
2007 the requirement for permission had been built into the rules that
2008 govern it. Photography would have existed. It would have grown in
2009 importance over time. Professionals would have continued to use the
2010 technology as they did&mdash;since professionals could have more
2011 easily borne the burdens of the permission system. But the spread of
2012 photography to ordinary people would not have occurred. Nothing like
2013 that growth would have been realized. And certainly, nothing like that
2014 growth in a democratic technology of expression would have been
2015 realized.
2016 </para>
2017 <indexterm startref='idxphotography' class='endofrange'/>
2018 <indexterm startref='idxeastmangeorge' class='endofrange'/>
2019 <indexterm startref='idxpermissionsphotographyexemptedfrom' class='endofrange'/>
2020 <indexterm startref='idximagesownershipof' class='endofrange'/>
2021 <indexterm><primary>digital cameras</primary></indexterm>
2022 <indexterm id='idxjustthink' class='startofrange'><primary>Just Think!</primary></indexterm>
2023 <para>
2024 <emphasis role='strong'>If you drive</emphasis> through San
2025 Francisco's Presidio, you might see two gaudy yellow school buses
2026 painted over with colorful and striking images, and the logo
2027 <quote>Just Think!</quote> in place of the name of a school. But
2028 there's little that's <quote>just</quote> cerebral in the projects
2029 that these busses enable. These buses are filled with technologies
2030 that teach kids to tinker with film. Not the film of Eastman. Not even
2031 the film of your VCR. Rather the <quote>film</quote> of digital
2032 cameras. Just Think! is a project that enables kids to make films, as
2033 a way to understand and critique the filmed culture that they find all
2034 around them. Each year, these busses travel to more than thirty
2035 schools and enable three hundred to five hundred children to learn
2036 something about media by doing something with media. By doing, they
2037 think. By tinkering, they learn.
2038 </para>
2039 <indexterm id='idxeducationinmedialiteracy' class='startofrange'><primary>education</primary><secondary>in media literacy</secondary></indexterm>
2040 <indexterm id='idxmedialiteracy' class='startofrange'><primary>media literacy</primary></indexterm>
2041 <indexterm id='idxexpressiontechnologiesofmedialiteracyand' class='startofrange'><primary>expression, technologies of</primary><secondary>media literacy and</secondary></indexterm>
2042 <para>
2043 These buses are not cheap, but the technology they carry is
2044 increasingly so. The cost of a high-quality digital video system has
2045 fallen dramatically. As one analyst puts it, <quote>Five years ago, a good
2046 real-time digital video editing system cost $25,000. Today you can get
2047 professional quality for $595.</quote><footnote><para>
2048 <!-- f9 -->
2049 H. Edward Goldberg, <quote>Essential Presentation Tools: Hardware and
2050 Software You Need to Create Digital Multimedia Presentations,</quote>
2051 cadalyst, February 2002, available at
2052 <ulink url="http://free-culture.cc/notes/">link #7</ulink>.
2053 </para></footnote>
2054 These buses are filled with technology that would have cost hundreds
2055 of thousands just ten years ago. And it is now feasible to imagine not
2056 just buses like this, but classrooms across the country where kids are
2057 learning more and more of something teachers call <quote>media literacy.</quote>
2058 </para>
2059 <indexterm><primary>Yanofsky, Dave</primary></indexterm>
2060 <para>
2061 <!-- PAGE BREAK 49 -->
2062 <quote>Media literacy,</quote> as Dave Yanofsky, the executive director of Just
2063 Think!, puts it, <quote>is the ability &hellip; to understand, analyze, and
2064 deconstruct media images. Its aim is to make [kids] literate about the
2065 way media works, the way it's constructed, the way it's delivered, and
2066 the way people access it.</quote>
2067 </para>
2068 <indexterm startref='idxjustthink' class='endofrange'/>
2069 <para>
2070 This may seem like an odd way to think about <quote>literacy.</quote> For most
2071 people, literacy is about reading and writing. Faulkner and Hemingway
2072 and noticing split infinitives are the things that <quote>literate</quote> people know
2073 about.
2074 </para>
2075 <indexterm><primary>advertising</primary></indexterm>
2076 <indexterm><primary>commercials</primary></indexterm>
2077 <indexterm><primary>television</primary><secondary>advertising on</secondary></indexterm>
2078 <para>
2079 Maybe. But in a world where children see on average 390 hours of
2080 television commercials per year, or between 20,000 and 45,000
2081 commercials generally,<footnote><para>
2082 <!-- f10 -->
2083 Judith Van Evra, <citetitle>Television and Child Development</citetitle> (Hillsdale, N.J.:
2084 Lawrence Erlbaum Associates, 1990); <quote>Findings on Family and TV
2085 Study,</quote> <citetitle>Denver Post</citetitle>, 25 May 1997, B6.
2086 </para></footnote>
2087 it is increasingly important to understand the <quote>grammar</quote> of media. For
2088 just as there is a grammar for the written word, so, too, is there one
2089 for media. And just as kids learn how to write by writing lots of
2090 terrible prose, kids learn how to write media by constructing lots of
2091 (at least at first) terrible media.
2092 </para>
2093 <para>
2094 A growing field of academics and activists sees this form of literacy
2095 as crucial to the next generation of culture. For though anyone who
2096 has written understands how difficult writing is&mdash;how difficult
2097 it is to sequence the story, to keep a reader's attention, to craft
2098 language to be understandable&mdash;few of us have any real sense of
2099 how difficult media is. Or more fundamentally, few of us have a sense
2100 of how media works, how it holds an audience or leads it through a
2101 story, how it triggers emotion or builds suspense.
2102 </para>
2103 <indexterm startref='idxcameratechnology3' class='endofrange'/>
2104 <para>
2105 It took filmmaking a generation before it could do these things well.
2106 But even then, the knowledge was in the filming, not in writing about
2107 the film. The skill came from experiencing the making of a film, not
2108 from reading a book about it. One learns to write by writing and then
2109 reflecting upon what one has written. One learns to write with images
2110 by making them and then reflecting upon what one has created.
2111 </para>
2112 <indexterm id='idxdaleyelizabeth' class='startofrange'><primary>Daley, Elizabeth</primary></indexterm>
2113 <indexterm><primary>Crichton, Michael</primary></indexterm>
2114 <para>
2115 This grammar has changed as media has changed. When it was just film,
2116 as Elizabeth Daley, executive director of the University of Southern
2117 California's Annenberg Center for Communication and dean of the
2118
2119 <!-- PAGE BREAK 50 -->
2120 USC School of Cinema-Television, explained to me, the grammar was
2121 about <quote>the placement of objects, color, &hellip; rhythm, pacing, and
2122 texture.</quote><footnote>
2123 <para>
2124 <!-- f11 -->
2125 Interview with Elizabeth Daley and Stephanie Barish, 13 December
2126 2002.
2127 <indexterm><primary>Barish, Stephanie</primary></indexterm>
2128 <indexterm><primary>Daley, Elizabeth</primary></indexterm>
2129 </para></footnote>
2130 But as computers open up an interactive space where a story is
2131 <quote>played</quote> as well as experienced, that grammar changes. The simple
2132 control of narrative is lost, and so other techniques are necessary. Author
2133 Michael Crichton had mastered the narrative of science fiction.
2134 But when he tried to design a computer game based on one of his
2135 works, it was a new craft he had to learn. How to lead people through
2136 a game without their feeling they have been led was not obvious, even
2137 to a wildly successful author.<footnote><para>
2138 <!-- f12 -->
2139 See Scott Steinberg, <quote>Crichton Gets Medieval on PCs,</quote> E!online, 4
2140 November 2000, available at
2141 <ulink url="http://free-culture.cc/notes/">link #8</ulink>; <quote>Timeline,</quote> 22 November 2000,
2142 available at
2143 <ulink url="http://free-culture.cc/notes/">link #9</ulink>.
2144 </para></footnote>
2145 </para>
2146 <indexterm><primary>computer games</primary></indexterm>
2147 <para>
2148 This skill is precisely the craft a filmmaker learns. As Daley
2149 describes, <quote>people are very surprised about how they are led through a
2150 film. [I]t is perfectly constructed to keep you from seeing it, so you
2151 have no idea. If a filmmaker succeeds you do not know how you were
2152 led.</quote> If you know you were led through a film, the film has failed.
2153 </para>
2154 <para>
2155 Yet the push for an expanded literacy&mdash;one that goes beyond text
2156 to include audio and visual elements&mdash;is not about making better
2157 film directors. The aim is not to improve the profession of
2158 filmmaking at all. Instead, as Daley explained,
2159 </para>
2160 <blockquote>
2161 <para>
2162 From my perspective, probably the most important digital divide
2163 is not access to a box. It's the ability to be empowered with the
2164 language that that box works in. Otherwise only a very few people
2165 can write with this language, and all the rest of us are reduced to
2166 being read-only.
2167 </para>
2168 </blockquote>
2169 <para>
2170 <quote>Read-only.</quote> Passive recipients of culture produced elsewhere.
2171 Couch potatoes. Consumers. This is the world of media from the
2172 twentieth century.
2173 </para>
2174 <para>
2175 The twenty-first century could be different. This is the crucial
2176 point: It could be both read and write. Or at least reading and better
2177 understanding the craft of writing. Or best, reading and understanding
2178 the tools that enable the writing to lead or mislead. The aim of any
2179 literacy,
2180 <!-- PAGE BREAK 51 -->
2181 and this literacy in particular, is to <quote>empower people to choose the
2182 appropriate language for what they need to create or
2183 express.</quote><footnote>
2184 <para>
2185 <!-- f13 -->
2186 Interview with Daley and Barish.
2187 <indexterm><primary>Barish, Stephanie</primary></indexterm>
2188 </para></footnote> It is to enable students <quote>to communicate in the
2189 language of the twenty-first century.</quote><footnote><para>
2190 <!-- f14 -->
2191 Ibid.
2192 </para></footnote>
2193 </para>
2194 <indexterm id='idxbarishstephanie' class='startofrange'><primary>Barish, Stephanie</primary></indexterm>
2195 <para>
2196 As with any language, this language comes more easily to some than to
2197 others. It doesn't necessarily come more easily to those who excel in
2198 written language. Daley and Stephanie Barish, director of the
2199 Institute for Multimedia Literacy at the Annenberg Center, describe
2200 one particularly poignant example of a project they ran in a high
2201 school. The high school was a very poor inner-city Los Angeles
2202 school. In all the traditional measures of success, this school was a
2203 failure. But Daley and Barish ran a program that gave kids an
2204 opportunity to use film to express meaning about something the
2205 students know something about&mdash;gun violence.
2206 </para>
2207 <indexterm startref='idxdaleyelizabeth' class='endofrange'/>
2208 <para>
2209 The class was held on Friday afternoons, and it created a relatively
2210 new problem for the school. While the challenge in most classes was
2211 getting the kids to come, the challenge in this class was keeping them
2212 away. The <quote>kids were showing up at 6 A.M. and leaving at 5 at night,</quote>
2213 said Barish. They were working harder than in any other class to do
2214 what education should be about&mdash;learning how to express themselves.
2215 </para>
2216 <para>
2217 Using whatever <quote>free web stuff they could find,</quote> and relatively simple
2218 tools to enable the kids to mix <quote>image, sound, and text,</quote> Barish said
2219 this class produced a series of projects that showed something about
2220 gun violence that few would otherwise understand. This was an issue
2221 close to the lives of these students. The project <quote>gave them a tool
2222 and empowered them to be able to both understand it and talk about
2223 it,</quote> Barish explained. That tool succeeded in creating
2224 expression&mdash;far more successfully and powerfully than could have
2225 been created using only text. <quote>If you had said to these students, <quote>you
2226 have to do it in text,</quote> they would've just thrown their hands up and
2227 gone and done something else,</quote> Barish described, in part, no doubt,
2228 because expressing themselves in text is not something these students
2229 can do well. Yet neither is text a form in which
2230 <emphasis>these</emphasis> ideas can be expressed well. The power of
2231 this message depended upon its connection to this form of expression.
2232 </para>
2233 <indexterm startref='idxbarishstephanie' class='endofrange'/>
2234 <indexterm id='idxdaleyelizabeth2' class='startofrange'><primary>Daley, Elizabeth</primary></indexterm>
2235 <para>
2236
2237 <!-- PAGE BREAK 52 -->
2238 <quote>But isn't education about teaching kids to write?</quote> I asked. In part,
2239 of course, it is. But why are we teaching kids to write? Education,
2240 Daley explained, is about giving students a way of <quote>constructing
2241 meaning.</quote> To say that that means just writing is like saying teaching
2242 writing is only about teaching kids how to spell. Text is one
2243 part&mdash;and increasingly, not the most powerful part&mdash;of
2244 constructing meaning. As Daley explained in the most moving part of
2245 our interview,
2246 </para>
2247 <blockquote>
2248 <para>
2249 What you want is to give these students ways of constructing
2250 meaning. If all you give them is text, they're not going to do it.
2251 Because they can't. You know, you've got Johnny who can look at a
2252 video, he can play a video game, he can do graffiti all over your
2253 walls, he can take your car apart, and he can do all sorts of other
2254 things. He just can't read your text. So Johnny comes to school and
2255 you say, <quote>Johnny, you're illiterate. Nothing you can do matters.</quote>
2256 Well, Johnny then has two choices: He can dismiss you or he [can]
2257 dismiss himself. If his ego is healthy at all, he's going to dismiss
2258 you. [But i]nstead, if you say, <quote>Well, with all these things that you
2259 can do, let's talk about this issue. Play for me music that you think
2260 reflects that, or show me images that you think reflect that, or draw
2261 for me something that reflects that.</quote> Not by giving a kid a video
2262 camera and &hellip; saying, <quote>Let's go have fun with the video camera and
2263 make a little movie.</quote> But instead, really help you take these elements
2264 that you understand, that are your language, and construct meaning
2265 about the topic.&hellip;
2266 </para>
2267 <indexterm><primary>Barish, Stephanie</primary></indexterm>
2268 <para>
2269 That empowers enormously. And then what happens, of
2270 course, is eventually, as it has happened in all these classes, they
2271 bump up against the fact, <quote>I need to explain this and I really need
2272 to write something.</quote> And as one of the teachers told Stephanie,
2273 they would rewrite a paragraph 5, 6, 7, 8 times, till they got it right.
2274 </para>
2275 <para>
2276 Because they needed to. There was a reason for doing it. They
2277 needed to say something, as opposed to just jumping through
2278 your hoops. They actually needed to use a language that they
2279 <!-- PAGE BREAK 53 -->
2280 didn't speak very well. But they had come to understand that they
2281 had a lot of power with this language.
2282 </para>
2283 </blockquote>
2284 <indexterm startref='idxeducationinmedialiteracy' class='endofrange'/>
2285 <indexterm startref='idxmedialiteracy' class='endofrange'/>
2286 <indexterm startref='idxexpressiontechnologiesofmedialiteracyand' class='endofrange'/>
2287 <indexterm startref='idxdaleyelizabeth2' class='endofrange'/>
2288 <indexterm id='idxseptemberterroristattacksof' class='startofrange'><primary>September 11, 2001, terrorist attacks of</primary></indexterm>
2289 <indexterm><primary>World Trade Center</primary></indexterm>
2290 <indexterm id='idxnewscoverage' class='startofrange'><primary>news coverage</primary></indexterm>
2291 <para>
2292 <emphasis role='strong'>When two planes</emphasis> crashed into the
2293 World Trade Center, another into the Pentagon, and a fourth into a
2294 Pennsylvania field, all media around the world shifted to this
2295 news. Every moment of just about every day for that week, and for
2296 weeks after, television in particular, and media generally, retold the
2297 story of the events we had just witnessed. The telling was a
2298 retelling, because we had seen the events that were described. The
2299 genius of this awful act of terrorism was that the delayed second
2300 attack was perfectly timed to assure that the whole world would be
2301 watching.
2302 </para>
2303 <para>
2304 These retellings had an increasingly familiar feel. There was music
2305 scored for the intermissions, and fancy graphics that flashed across
2306 the screen. There was a formula to interviews. There was <quote>balance,</quote>
2307 and seriousness. This was news choreographed in the way we have
2308 increasingly come to expect it, <quote>news as entertainment,</quote> even if the
2309 entertainment is tragedy.
2310 </para>
2311 <indexterm><primary>ABC</primary></indexterm>
2312 <indexterm><primary>CBS</primary></indexterm>
2313 <indexterm><primary>Cyber Rights (Godwin)</primary></indexterm>
2314 <indexterm><primary>Godwin, Mike</primary></indexterm>
2315 <indexterm id='idxinternetnewseventson' class='startofrange'><primary>Internet</primary><secondary>news events on</secondary></indexterm>
2316 <para>
2317 But in addition to this produced news about the <quote>tragedy of September
2318 11,</quote> those of us tied to the Internet came to see a very different
2319 production as well. The Internet was filled with accounts of the same
2320 events. Yet these Internet accounts had a very different flavor. Some
2321 people constructed photo pages that captured images from around the
2322 world and presented them as slide shows with text. Some offered open
2323 letters. There were sound recordings. There was anger and frustration.
2324 There were attempts to provide context. There was, in short, an
2325 extraordinary worldwide barn raising, in the sense Mike Godwin uses
2326 the term in his book <citetitle>Cyber Rights</citetitle>, around a news event that had
2327 captured the attention of the world. There was ABC and CBS, but there
2328 was also the Internet.
2329 </para>
2330 <indexterm startref='idxseptemberterroristattacksof' class='endofrange'/>
2331 <para>
2332 I don't mean simply to praise the Internet&mdash;though I do think the
2333 people who supported this form of speech should be praised. I mean
2334 instead to point to a significance in this form of speech. For like a
2335 Kodak, the Internet enables people to capture images. And like in a
2336 movie
2337 <!-- PAGE BREAK 54 -->
2338 by a student on the <quote>Just Think!</quote> bus, the visual images could be mixed
2339 with sound or text.
2340 </para>
2341 <para>
2342 But unlike any technology for simply capturing images, the Internet
2343 allows these creations to be shared with an extraordinary number of
2344 people, practically instantaneously. This is something new in our
2345 tradition&mdash;not just that culture can be captured mechanically,
2346 and obviously not just that events are commented upon critically, but
2347 that this mix of captured images, sound, and commentary can be widely
2348 spread practically instantaneously.
2349 </para>
2350 <indexterm><primary>September 11, 2001, terrorist attacks of</primary></indexterm>
2351 <indexterm id='idxblogsweblogs' class='startofrange'><primary>blogs (Web-logs)</primary></indexterm>
2352 <indexterm id='idxinternetblogson' class='startofrange'><primary>Internet</primary><secondary>blogs on</secondary></indexterm>
2353 <indexterm id='idxweblogsblogs' class='startofrange'><primary>Web-logs (blogs)</primary></indexterm>
2354 <para>
2355 September 11 was not an aberration. It was a beginning. Around the
2356 same time, a form of communication that has grown dramatically was
2357 just beginning to come into public consciousness: the Web-log, or
2358 blog. The blog is a kind of public diary, and within some cultures,
2359 such as in Japan, it functions very much like a diary. In those
2360 cultures, it records private facts in a public way&mdash;it's a kind
2361 of electronic <citetitle>Jerry Springer</citetitle>, available anywhere in the world.
2362 </para>
2363 <indexterm startref='idxinternetnewseventson' class='endofrange'/>
2364 <indexterm><primary>political discourse</primary></indexterm>
2365 <indexterm id='idxinternetpublicdiscourseconductedon' class='startofrange'><primary>Internet</primary><secondary>public discourse conducted on</secondary></indexterm>
2366 <para>
2367 But in the United States, blogs have taken on a very different
2368 character. There are some who use the space simply to talk about
2369 their private life. But there are many who use the space to engage in
2370 public discourse. Discussing matters of public import, criticizing
2371 others who are mistaken in their views, criticizing politicians about
2372 the decisions they make, offering solutions to problems we all see:
2373 blogs create the sense of a virtual public meeting, but one in which
2374 we don't all hope to be there at the same time and in which
2375 conversations are not necessarily linked. The best of the blog entries
2376 are relatively short; they point directly to words used by others,
2377 criticizing with or adding to them. They are arguably the most
2378 important form of unchoreographed public discourse that we have.
2379 </para>
2380 <indexterm id='idxdemocracyintechnologiesofexpression' class='startofrange'><primary>democracy</primary><secondary>in technologies of expression</secondary></indexterm>
2381 <indexterm id='idxelections' class='startofrange'><primary>elections</primary></indexterm>
2382 <indexterm id='idxexpressiontechnologiesofdemocratic' class='startofrange'><primary>expression, technologies of</primary><secondary>democratic</secondary></indexterm>
2383 <para>
2384 That's a strong statement. Yet it says as much about our democracy as
2385 it does about blogs. This is the part of America that is most
2386 difficult for those of us who love America to accept: Our democracy
2387 has atrophied. Of course we have elections, and most of the time the
2388 courts allow those elections to count. A relatively small number of
2389 people vote
2390 <!-- PAGE BREAK 55 -->
2391 in those elections. The cycle of these elections has become totally
2392 professionalized and routinized. Most of us think this is democracy.
2393 </para>
2394 <indexterm startref='idxblogsweblogs' class='endofrange'/>
2395 <indexterm startref='idxinternetblogson' class='endofrange'/>
2396 <indexterm startref='idxweblogsblogs' class='endofrange'/>
2397 <indexterm><primary>Tocqueville, Alexis de</primary></indexterm>
2398 <indexterm id='idxdemocracypublicdiscoursein' class='startofrange'><primary>democracy</primary><secondary>public discourse in</secondary></indexterm>
2399 <indexterm><primary>jury system</primary></indexterm>
2400 <para>
2401 But democracy has never just been about elections. Democracy
2402 means rule by the people, but rule means something more than mere
2403 elections. In our tradition, it also means control through reasoned
2404 discourse. This was the idea that captured the imagination of Alexis
2405 de Tocqueville, the nineteenth-century French lawyer who wrote the
2406 most important account of early <quote>Democracy in America.</quote> It wasn't
2407 popular elections that fascinated him&mdash;it was the jury, an
2408 institution that gave ordinary people the right to choose life or
2409 death for other citizens. And most fascinating for him was that the
2410 jury didn't just vote about the outcome they would impose. They
2411 deliberated. Members argued about the <quote>right</quote> result; they tried to
2412 persuade each other of the <quote>right</quote> result, and in criminal cases at
2413 least, they had to agree upon a unanimous result for the process to
2414 come to an end.<footnote><para>
2415 <!-- f15 -->
2416 See, for example, Alexis de Tocqueville, <citetitle>Democracy in America</citetitle>,
2417 bk. 1, trans. Henry Reeve (New York: Bantam Books, 2000), ch. 16.
2418 </para></footnote>
2419 </para>
2420 <indexterm startref='idxelections' class='endofrange'/>
2421 <para>
2422 Yet even this institution flags in American life today. And in its
2423 place, there is no systematic effort to enable citizen deliberation. Some
2424 are pushing to create just such an institution.<footnote><para>
2425 <!-- f16 -->
2426 Bruce Ackerman and James Fishkin, <quote>Deliberation Day,</quote> <citetitle>Journal of
2427 Political Philosophy</citetitle> 10 (2) (2002): 129.
2428 </para></footnote>
2429 And in some towns in New England, something close to deliberation
2430 remains. But for most of us for most of the time, there is no time or
2431 place for <quote>democratic deliberation</quote> to occur.
2432 </para>
2433 <indexterm id='idxpoliticaldiscourse' class='startofrange'><primary>political discourse</primary></indexterm>
2434 <para>
2435 More bizarrely, there is generally not even permission for it to
2436 occur. We, the most powerful democracy in the world, have developed a
2437 strong norm against talking about politics. It's fine to talk about
2438 politics with people you agree with. But it is rude to argue about
2439 politics with people you disagree with. Political discourse becomes
2440 isolated, and isolated discourse becomes more extreme.<footnote><para>
2441 <!-- f17 -->
2442 Cass Sunstein, <citetitle>Republic.com</citetitle> (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2001),
2443 65&ndash;80, 175, 182, 183, 192.
2444 </para></footnote> We say what our friends want to hear, and hear very
2445 little beyond what our friends say.
2446 </para>
2447 <indexterm id='idxblogsweblogs2' class='startofrange'><primary>blogs (Web-logs)</primary></indexterm>
2448 <indexterm><primary>e-mail</primary></indexterm>
2449 <indexterm id='idxinternetblogson2' class='startofrange'><primary>Internet</primary><secondary>blogs on</secondary></indexterm>
2450 <indexterm id='idxweblogsblogs2' class='startofrange'><primary>Web-logs (blogs)</primary></indexterm>
2451 <indexterm startref='idxdemocracyintechnologiesofexpression' class='endofrange'/>
2452 <indexterm startref='idxexpressiontechnologiesofdemocratic' class='endofrange'/>
2453 <indexterm startref='idxdemocracypublicdiscoursein' class='endofrange'/>
2454 <para>
2455 Enter the blog. The blog's very architecture solves one part of this
2456 problem. People post when they want to post, and people read when they
2457 want to read. The most difficult time is synchronous time.
2458 Technologies that enable asynchronous communication, such as e-mail,
2459 increase the opportunity for communication. Blogs allow for public
2460
2461 <!-- PAGE BREAK 56 -->
2462 discourse without the public ever needing to gather in a single public
2463 place.
2464 </para>
2465 <para>
2466 But beyond architecture, blogs also have solved the problem of
2467 norms. There's no norm (yet) in blog space not to talk about politics.
2468 Indeed, the space is filled with political speech, on both the right and
2469 the left. Some of the most popular sites are conservative or libertarian,
2470 but there are many of all political stripes. And even blogs that are not
2471 political cover political issues when the occasion merits.
2472 </para>
2473 <indexterm><primary>Dean, Howard</primary></indexterm>
2474 <para>
2475 The significance of these blogs is tiny now, though not so tiny. The
2476 name Howard Dean may well have faded from the 2004 presidential race
2477 but for blogs. Yet even if the number of readers is small, the reading
2478 is having an effect.
2479 </para>
2480 <indexterm><primary>Lott, Trent</primary></indexterm>
2481 <indexterm><primary>Thurmond, Strom</primary></indexterm>
2482 <indexterm id='idxmediablogpressureon' class='startofrange'><primary>media</primary><secondary>blog pressure on</secondary></indexterm>
2483 <indexterm id='idxinternetnewseventson2' class='startofrange'><primary>Internet</primary><secondary>news events on</secondary></indexterm>
2484 <para>
2485 One direct effect is on stories that had a different life cycle in the
2486 mainstream media. The Trent Lott affair is an example. When Lott
2487 <quote>misspoke</quote> at a party for Senator Strom Thurmond, essentially praising
2488 Thurmond's segregationist policies, he calculated correctly that this
2489 story would disappear from the mainstream press within forty-eight
2490 hours. It did. But he didn't calculate its life cycle in blog
2491 space. The bloggers kept researching the story. Over time, more and
2492 more instances of the same <quote>misspeaking</quote> emerged. Finally, the story
2493 broke back into the mainstream press. In the end, Lott was forced to
2494 resign as senate majority leader.<footnote><para>
2495 <!-- f18 -->
2496 Noah Shachtman, <quote>With Incessant Postings, a Pundit Stirs the
2497 Pot,</quote> <citetitle>New York Times</citetitle>, 16 January 2003, G5.
2498 </para></footnote>
2499 </para>
2500 <indexterm id='idxmediacommercialimperativesof' class='startofrange'><primary>media</primary><secondary>commercial imperatives of</secondary></indexterm>
2501 <para>
2502 This different cycle is possible because the same commercial pressures
2503 don't exist with blogs as with other ventures. Television and
2504 newspapers are commercial entities. They must work to keep attention.
2505 If they lose readers, they lose revenue. Like sharks, they must move
2506 on.
2507 </para>
2508 <indexterm startref='idxmediablogpressureon' class='endofrange'/>
2509 <indexterm><primary>Internet</primary><secondary>peer-generated rankings on</secondary></indexterm>
2510 <para>
2511 But bloggers don't have a similar constraint. They can obsess, they
2512 can focus, they can get serious. If a particular blogger writes a
2513 particularly interesting story, more and more people link to that
2514 story. And as the number of links to a particular story increases, it
2515 rises in the ranks of stories. People read what is popular; what is
2516 popular has been selected by a very democratic process of
2517 peer-generated rankings.
2518 </para>
2519 <indexterm startref='idxmediacommercialimperativesof' class='endofrange'/>
2520 <indexterm id='idxjournalism' class='startofrange'><primary>journalism</primary></indexterm>
2521 <indexterm id='idxwinerdave' class='startofrange'><primary>Winer, Dave</primary></indexterm>
2522 <para>
2523 There's a second way, as well, in which blogs have a different cycle
2524 <!-- PAGE BREAK 57 -->
2525 from the mainstream press. As Dave Winer, one of the fathers of this
2526 movement and a software author for many decades, told me, another
2527 difference is the absence of a financial <quote>conflict of interest.</quote> <quote>I think you
2528 have to take the conflict of interest</quote> out of journalism, Winer told me.
2529 <quote>An amateur journalist simply doesn't have a conflict of interest, or the
2530 conflict of interest is so easily disclosed that you know you can sort of
2531 get it out of the way.</quote>
2532 </para>
2533 <indexterm><primary>CNN</primary></indexterm>
2534 <indexterm><primary>media</primary><secondary>commercial imperatives of</secondary></indexterm>
2535 <indexterm><primary>Iraq war</primary></indexterm>
2536 <indexterm><primary>media</primary><secondary>ownership concentration in</secondary></indexterm>
2537 <para>
2538 These conflicts become more important as media becomes more
2539 concentrated (more on this below). A concentrated media can hide more
2540 from the public than an unconcentrated media can&mdash;as CNN admitted
2541 it did after the Iraq war because it was afraid of the consequences to
2542 its own employees.<footnote><para>
2543 <!-- f19 -->
2544 Telephone interview with David Winer, 16 April 2003.
2545 </para></footnote>
2546 It also needs to sustain a more coherent account. (In the middle of
2547 the Iraq war, I read a post on the Internet from someone who was at
2548 that time listening to a satellite uplink with a reporter in Iraq. The
2549 New York headquarters was telling the reporter over and over that her
2550 account of the war was too bleak: She needed to offer a more
2551 optimistic story. When she told New York that wasn't warranted, they
2552 told her that <emphasis>they</emphasis> were writing <quote>the story.</quote>)
2553 </para>
2554 <indexterm startref='idxinternetnewseventson2' class='endofrange'/>
2555 <para>
2556 Blog space gives amateurs a way to enter the
2557 debate&mdash;<quote>amateur</quote> not in the sense of inexperienced,
2558 but in the sense of an Olympic athlete, meaning not paid by anyone to
2559 give their reports. It allows for a much broader range of input into a
2560 story, as reporting on the Columbia disaster revealed, when hundreds
2561 from across the southwest United States turned to the Internet to
2562 retell what they had seen.<footnote><para>
2563 <!-- f20 -->
2564 John Schwartz, <quote>Loss of the Shuttle: The Internet; A Wealth of
2565 Information Online,</quote> <citetitle>New York Times</citetitle>, 2 February 2003, A28; Staci
2566 D. Kramer, <quote>Shuttle Disaster Coverage Mixed, but Strong Overall,</quote>
2567 Online Journalism Review, 2 February 2003, available at
2568 <ulink url="http://free-culture.cc/notes/">link #10</ulink>.
2569 </para></footnote>
2570 And it drives readers to read across the range of accounts and
2571 <quote>triangulate,</quote> as Winer puts it, the truth. Blogs, Winer says, are
2572 <quote>communicating directly with our constituency, and the middle man is
2573 out of it</quote>&mdash;with all the benefits, and costs, that might entail.
2574 </para>
2575 <para>
2576 Winer is optimistic about the future of journalism infected
2577 with blogs. <quote>It's going to become an essential skill,</quote> Winer predicts,
2578 for public figures and increasingly for private figures as well. It's
2579 not clear that <quote>journalism</quote> is happy about this&mdash;some journalists
2580 have been told to curtail their blogging.<footnote>
2581 <para>
2582 <!-- f21 -->
2583 <indexterm><primary>CNN</primary></indexterm>
2584 <indexterm><primary>Iraq war</primary></indexterm>
2585 <indexterm><primary>Olafson, Steve</primary></indexterm>
2586 <indexterm><primary>blogs (Web-logs)</primary></indexterm>
2587 See Michael Falcone, <quote>Does an Editor's Pencil Ruin a Web Log?</quote> <citetitle>New
2588 York Times</citetitle>, 29 September 2003, C4. (<quote>Not all news organizations have
2589 been as accepting of employees who blog. Kevin Sites, a CNN
2590 correspondent in Iraq who started a blog about his reporting of the
2591 war on March 9, stopped posting 12 days later at his bosses'
2592 request. Last year Steve Olafson, a <citetitle>Houston Chronicle</citetitle> reporter, was
2593 fired for keeping a personal Web log, published under a pseudonym,
2594 that dealt with some of the issues and people he was covering.</quote>)
2595 </para></footnote>
2596 But it is clear that we are still in transition. <quote>A
2597
2598 <!-- PAGE BREAK 58 -->
2599 lot of what we are doing now is warm-up exercises,</quote> Winer told me.
2600 There is a lot that must mature before this space has its mature effect.
2601 And as the inclusion of content in this space is the least infringing use
2602 of the Internet (meaning infringing on copyright), Winer said, <quote>we will
2603 be the last thing that gets shut down.</quote>
2604 </para>
2605 <indexterm startref='idxjournalism' class='endofrange'/>
2606 <para>
2607 This speech affects democracy. Winer thinks that happens because <quote>you
2608 don't have to work for somebody who controls, [for] a gatekeeper.</quote>
2609 That is true. But it affects democracy in another way as well. As
2610 more and more citizens express what they think, and defend it in
2611 writing, that will change the way people understand public issues. It
2612 is easy to be wrong and misguided in your head. It is harder when the
2613 product of your mind can be criticized by others. Of course, it is a
2614 rare human who admits that he has been persuaded that he is wrong. But
2615 it is even rarer for a human to ignore when he has been proven wrong.
2616 The writing of ideas, arguments, and criticism improves democracy.
2617 Today there are probably a couple of million blogs where such writing
2618 happens. When there are ten million, there will be something
2619 extraordinary to report.
2620 </para>
2621 <indexterm startref='idxnewscoverage' class='endofrange'/>
2622 <indexterm startref='idxinternetpublicdiscourseconductedon' class='endofrange'/>
2623 <indexterm startref='idxpoliticaldiscourse' class='endofrange'/>
2624 <indexterm startref='idxblogsweblogs2' class='endofrange'/>
2625 <indexterm startref='idxinternetblogson2' class='endofrange'/>
2626 <indexterm startref='idxweblogsblogs2' class='endofrange'/>
2627 <indexterm startref='idxwinerdave' class='endofrange'/>
2628 <indexterm id='idxbrownjohnseely' class='startofrange'><primary>Brown, John Seely</primary></indexterm>
2629 <indexterm id='idxadvertising1' class='startofrange'><primary>advertising</primary></indexterm>
2630 <para>
2631 <emphasis role='strong'>John Seely Brown</emphasis> is the chief
2632 scientist of the Xerox Corporation. His work, as his Web site
2633 describes it, is <quote>human learning and &hellip; the creation of
2634 knowledge ecologies for creating &hellip; innovation.</quote>
2635 </para>
2636 <para>
2637 Brown thus looks at these technologies of digital creativity a bit
2638 differently from the perspectives I've sketched so far. I'm sure he
2639 would be excited about any technology that might improve
2640 democracy. But his real excitement comes from how these technologies
2641 affect learning.
2642 </para>
2643 <para>
2644 As Brown believes, we learn by tinkering. When <quote>a lot of us grew up,</quote>
2645 he explains, that tinkering was done <quote>on motorcycle engines, lawnmower
2646 engines, automobiles, radios, and so on.</quote> But digital technologies
2647 enable a different kind of tinkering&mdash;with abstract ideas though
2648 in concrete form. The kids at Just Think! not only think about how a
2649 commercial portrays a politician; using digital technology, they can
2650 <!-- PAGE BREAK 59 -->
2651 take the commercial apart and manipulate it, tinker with it to see how
2652 it does what it does. Digital technologies launch a kind of bricolage,
2653 or <quote>free collage,</quote> as Brown calls it. Many get to add to or transform
2654 the tinkering of many others.
2655 </para>
2656 <para>
2657 The best large-scale example of this kind of tinkering so far is free
2658 software or open-source software (FS/OSS). FS/OSS is software whose
2659 source code is shared. Anyone can download the technology that makes a
2660 FS/OSS program run. And anyone eager to learn how a particular bit of
2661 FS/OSS technology works can tinker with the code.
2662 </para>
2663 <para>
2664 This opportunity creates a <quote>completely new kind of learning platform,</quote>
2665 as Brown describes. <quote>As soon as you start doing that, you &hellip;
2666 unleash a free collage on the community, so that other people can
2667 start looking at your code, tinkering with it, trying it out, seeing
2668 if they can improve it.</quote> Each effort is a kind of
2669 apprenticeship. <quote>Open source becomes a major apprenticeship platform.</quote>
2670 </para>
2671 <para>
2672 In this process, <quote>the concrete things you tinker with are abstract.
2673 They are code.</quote> Kids are <quote>shifting to the ability to tinker in the
2674 abstract, and this tinkering is no longer an isolated activity that
2675 you're doing in your garage. You are tinkering with a community
2676 platform. &hellip; You are tinkering with other people's stuff. The more
2677 you tinker the more you improve.</quote> The more you improve, the more you
2678 learn.
2679 </para>
2680 <para>
2681 This same thing happens with content, too. And it happens in the same
2682 collaborative way when that content is part of the Web. As Brown puts
2683 it, <quote>the Web [is] the first medium that truly honors multiple forms of
2684 intelligence.</quote> Earlier technologies, such as the typewriter or word
2685 processors, helped amplify text. But the Web amplifies much more than
2686 text. <quote>The Web &hellip; says if you are musical, if you are artistic, if
2687 you are visual, if you are interested in film &hellip; [then] there is a
2688 lot you can start to do on this medium. [It] can now amplify and honor
2689 these multiple forms of intelligence.</quote>
2690 </para>
2691 <indexterm startref='idxadvertising1' class='endofrange'/>
2692 <indexterm><primary>Barish, Stephanie</primary></indexterm>
2693 <para>
2694 Brown is talking about what Elizabeth Daley, Stephanie Barish, and
2695 Just Think! teach: that this tinkering with culture teaches as well
2696
2697 <!-- PAGE BREAK 60 -->
2698 as creates. It develops talents differently, and it builds a different
2699 kind of recognition.
2700 </para>
2701 <para>
2702 Yet the freedom to tinker with these objects is not guaranteed.
2703 Indeed, as we'll see through the course of this book, that freedom is
2704 increasingly highly contested. While there's no doubt that your father
2705 had the right to tinker with the car engine, there's great doubt that
2706 your child will have the right to tinker with the images she finds all
2707 around. The law and, increasingly, technology interfere with a
2708 freedom that technology, and curiosity, would otherwise ensure.
2709 </para>
2710 <para>
2711 These restrictions have become the focus of researchers and scholars.
2712 Professor Ed Felten of Princeton (whom we'll see more of in chapter
2713 <xref xrefstyle="select: labelnumber" linkend="property-i"/>)
2714 has developed a powerful argument in favor of the <quote>right to
2715 tinker</quote> as it applies to computer science and to knowledge in
2716 general.<footnote><para>
2717 <!-- f22 -->
2718 See, for example, Edward Felten and Andrew Appel, <quote>Technological Access
2719 Control Interferes with Noninfringing Scholarship,</quote> <citetitle>Communications
2720 of the Association for Computer Machinery</citetitle> 43 (2000): 9.
2721 </para></footnote>
2722 But Brown's concern is earlier, or younger, or more fundamental. It is
2723 about the learning that kids can do, or can't do, because of the law.
2724 </para>
2725 <para>
2726 <quote>This is where education in the twenty-first century is going,</quote> Brown
2727 explains. We need to <quote>understand how kids who grow up digital think
2728 and want to learn.</quote>
2729 </para>
2730 <para>
2731 <quote>Yet,</quote> as Brown continued, and as the balance of this book will
2732 evince, <quote>we are building a legal system that completely suppresses the
2733 natural tendencies of today's digital kids. &hellip; We're building an
2734 architecture that unleashes 60 percent of the brain [and] a legal
2735 system that closes down that part of the brain.</quote>
2736 </para>
2737 <para>
2738 We're building a technology that takes the magic of Kodak, mixes
2739 moving images and sound, and adds a space for commentary and an
2740 opportunity to spread that creativity everywhere. But we're building
2741 the law to close down that technology.
2742 </para>
2743 <indexterm><primary>Kahle, Brewster</primary></indexterm>
2744 <indexterm startref='idxbrownjohnseely' class='endofrange'/>
2745 <para>
2746 <quote>No way to run a culture,</quote> as Brewster Kahle, whom we'll meet in
2747 chapter <xref xrefstyle="select: labelnumber" linkend="collectors"/>,
2748 quipped to me in a rare moment of despondence.
2749 </para>
2750 <!-- PAGE BREAK 61 -->
2751 </chapter>
2752 <chapter label="3" id="catalogs">
2753 <title>Chapter Three: Catalogs</title>
2754 <indexterm><primary>Jordan, Jesse</primary></indexterm>
2755 <indexterm><primary>RPI</primary><see>Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute (RPI)</see></indexterm>
2756 <indexterm id='idxrensselaer' class='startofrange'><primary>Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute (RPI)</primary></indexterm>
2757 <indexterm id='idxrensselaerpolytechnicinstituterpicomputernetworksearchengineof' class='startofrange'><primary>Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute (RPI)</primary><secondary>computer network search engine of</secondary></indexterm>
2758 <indexterm id='idxsearchengines' class='startofrange'><primary>search engines</primary></indexterm>
2759 <indexterm id='idxuniversitycomputernetworksppsharingon' class='startofrange'><primary>university computer networks, p2p sharing on</primary></indexterm>
2760 <indexterm id='idxinternetsearchenginesusedon' class='startofrange'><primary>Internet</primary><secondary>search engines used on</secondary></indexterm>
2761 <para>
2762 <emphasis role='strong'>In the fall</emphasis> of 2002, Jesse Jordan
2763 of Oceanside, New York, enrolled as a freshman at Rensselaer
2764 Polytechnic Institute, in Troy, New York. His major at RPI was
2765 information technology. Though he is not a programmer, in October
2766 Jesse decided to begin to tinker with search engine technology that
2767 was available on the RPI network.
2768 </para>
2769 <para>
2770 RPI is one of America's foremost technological research institutions.
2771 It offers degrees in fields ranging from architecture and engineering
2772 to information sciences. More than 65 percent of its five thousand
2773 undergraduates finished in the top 10 percent of their high school
2774 class. The school is thus a perfect mix of talent and experience to
2775 imagine and then build, a generation for the network age.
2776 </para>
2777 <para>
2778 RPI's computer network links students, faculty, and administration to
2779 one another. It also links RPI to the Internet. Not everything
2780 available on the RPI network is available on the Internet. But the
2781 network is designed to enable students to get access to the Internet,
2782 as well as more intimate access to other members of the RPI community.
2783 </para>
2784 <indexterm id='idxgoogle' class='startofrange'><primary>Google</primary></indexterm>
2785 <para>
2786 Search engines are a measure of a network's intimacy. Google
2787 <!-- PAGE BREAK 62 -->
2788 brought the Internet much closer to all of us by fantastically
2789 improving the quality of search on the network. Specialty search
2790 engines can do this even better. The idea of <quote>intranet</quote> search
2791 engines, search engines that search within the network of a particular
2792 institution, is to provide users of that institution with better
2793 access to material from that institution. Businesses do this all the
2794 time, enabling employees to have access to material that people
2795 outside the business can't get. Universities do it as well.
2796 </para>
2797 <indexterm id='idxjordanjesse' class='startofrange'><primary>Jordan, Jesse</primary></indexterm>
2798 <indexterm id='idxmicrosoftnetworkfilesystemof' class='startofrange'><primary>Microsoft</primary><secondary>network file system of</secondary></indexterm>
2799 <para>
2800 These engines are enabled by the network technology itself.
2801 Microsoft, for example, has a network file system that makes it very
2802 easy for search engines tuned to that network to query the system for
2803 information about the publicly (within that network) available
2804 content. Jesse's search engine was built to take advantage of this
2805 technology. It used Microsoft's network file system to build an index
2806 of all the files available within the RPI network.
2807 </para>
2808 <indexterm startref='idxgoogle' class='endofrange'/>
2809 <para>
2810 Jesse's wasn't the first search engine built for the RPI network.
2811 Indeed, his engine was a simple modification of engines that others
2812 had built. His single most important improvement over those engines
2813 was to fix a bug within the Microsoft file-sharing system that could
2814 cause a user's computer to crash. With the engines that existed
2815 before, if you tried to access a file through a Windows browser that
2816 was on a computer that was off-line, your computer could crash. Jesse
2817 modified the system a bit to fix that problem, by adding a button that
2818 a user could click to see if the machine holding the file was still
2819 on-line.
2820 </para>
2821 <indexterm startref='idxmicrosoftnetworkfilesystemof' class='endofrange'/>
2822 <para>
2823 Jesse's engine went on-line in late October. Over the following six
2824 months, he continued to tweak it to improve its functionality. By
2825 March, the system was functioning quite well. Jesse had more than one
2826 million files in his directory, including every type of content that might
2827 be on users' computers.
2828 </para>
2829 <indexterm startref='idxinternetsearchenginesusedon' class='endofrange'/>
2830 <para>
2831 Thus the index his search engine produced included pictures, which
2832 students could use to put on their own Web sites; copies of notes or
2833 research; copies of information pamphlets; movie clips that students
2834 might have created; university brochures&mdash;basically anything that
2835 <!-- PAGE BREAK 63 -->
2836 users of the RPI network made available in a public folder of their
2837 computer.
2838 </para>
2839 <indexterm><primary>Google</primary></indexterm>
2840 <indexterm><primary>education</primary><secondary>tinkering as means of</secondary></indexterm>
2841 <para>
2842 But the index also included music files. In fact, one quarter of the
2843 files that Jesse's search engine listed were music files. But that
2844 means, of course, that three quarters were not, and&mdash;so that this
2845 point is absolutely clear&mdash;Jesse did nothing to induce people to
2846 put music files in their public folders. He did nothing to target the
2847 search engine to these files. He was a kid tinkering with a
2848 Google-like technology at a university where he was studying
2849 information science, and hence, tinkering was the aim. Unlike Google,
2850 or Microsoft, for that matter, he made no money from this tinkering;
2851 he was not connected to any business that would make any money from
2852 this experiment. He was a kid tinkering with technology in an
2853 environment where tinkering with technology was precisely what he was
2854 supposed to do.
2855 </para>
2856 <indexterm id='idxcopyrightinfringementlawsuitsinrecordingindustry' class='startofrange'><primary>copyright infringement lawsuits</primary><secondary>in recording industry</secondary></indexterm>
2857 <indexterm id='idxcopyrightinfringementlawsuitsagainststudentfilesharing' class='startofrange'><primary>copyright infringement lawsuits</primary><secondary>against student file sharing</secondary></indexterm>
2858 <indexterm id='idxrecordingindustrycopyrightinfringementlawsuitsof' class='startofrange'><primary>recording industry</primary><secondary>copyright infringement lawsuits of</secondary></indexterm>
2859 <indexterm id='idxrecordingindustryassociationofamericariaacopyrightinfringementlawsuitsfiledby' class='startofrange'><primary>Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA)</primary><secondary>copyright infringement lawsuits filed by</secondary></indexterm>
2860 <indexterm startref='idxrensselaerpolytechnicinstituterpicomputernetworksearchengineof' class='endofrange'/>
2861 <para>
2862 On April 3, 2003, Jesse was contacted by the dean of students at
2863 RPI. The dean informed Jesse that the Recording Industry Association
2864 of America, the RIAA, would be filing a lawsuit against him and three
2865 other students whom he didn't even know, two of them at other
2866 universities. A few hours later, Jesse was served with papers from
2867 the suit. As he read these papers and watched the news reports about
2868 them, he was increasingly astonished.
2869 </para>
2870 <para>
2871 <quote>It was absurd,</quote> he told me. <quote>I don't think I did anything
2872 wrong. &hellip; I don't think there's anything wrong with the search
2873 engine that I ran or &hellip; what I had done to it. I mean, I hadn't
2874 modified it in any way that promoted or enhanced the work of
2875 pirates. I just modified the search engine in a way that would make it
2876 easier to use</quote>&mdash;again, a <emphasis>search engine</emphasis>,
2877 which Jesse had not himself built, using the Windows filesharing
2878 system, which Jesse had not himself built, to enable members of the
2879 RPI community to get access to content, which Jesse had not himself
2880 created or posted, and the vast majority of which had nothing to do
2881 with music.
2882 </para>
2883 <indexterm startref='idxsearchengines' class='endofrange'/>
2884 <indexterm><primary>copyright infringement lawsuits</primary><secondary>exaggerated claims of</secondary></indexterm>
2885 <indexterm><primary>copyright infringement lawsuits</primary><secondary>statutory damages of</secondary></indexterm>
2886 <indexterm id='idxcopyrightinfringementlawsuitsindividualdefendantsintimidatedby' class='startofrange'><primary>copyright infringement lawsuits</primary><secondary>individual defendants intimidated by</secondary></indexterm>
2887 <indexterm><primary>statutory damages</primary></indexterm>
2888 <indexterm id='idxrecordingindustryassociationofamericariaaintimidationtacticsof' class='startofrange'><primary>Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA)</primary><secondary>intimidation tactics of</secondary></indexterm>
2889 <para>
2890 But the RIAA branded Jesse a pirate. They claimed he operated a
2891 network and had therefore <quote>willfully</quote> violated copyright laws. They
2892 <!-- PAGE BREAK 64 -->
2893 demanded that he pay them the damages for his wrong. For cases of
2894 <quote>willful infringement,</quote> the Copyright Act specifies something lawyers
2895 call <quote>statutory damages.</quote> These damages permit a copyright owner to
2896 claim $150,000 per infringement. As the RIAA alleged more than one
2897 hundred specific copyright infringements, they therefore demanded that
2898 Jesse pay them at least $15,000,000.
2899 </para>
2900 <indexterm><primary>Michigan Technical University</primary></indexterm>
2901 <indexterm><primary>Princeton University</primary></indexterm>
2902 <para>
2903 Similar lawsuits were brought against three other students: one other
2904 student at RPI, one at Michigan Technical University, and one at
2905 Princeton. Their situations were similar to Jesse's. Though each case
2906 was different in detail, the bottom line in each was exactly the same:
2907 huge demands for <quote>damages</quote> that the RIAA claimed it was entitled to.
2908 If you added up the claims, these four lawsuits were asking courts in
2909 the United States to award the plaintiffs close to $100
2910 <emphasis>billion</emphasis>&mdash;six times the
2911 <emphasis>total</emphasis> profit of the film industry in
2912 2001.<footnote><para>
2913
2914 <!-- f1 -->
2915 Tim Goral, <quote>Recording Industry Goes After Campus P-2-P Networks:
2916 Suit Alleges $97.8 Billion in Damages,</quote> <citetitle>Professional Media Group LCC</citetitle> 6
2917 (2003): 5, available at 2003 WL 55179443.
2918 </para></footnote>
2919 </para>
2920 <indexterm startref='idxrensselaer' class='endofrange'/>
2921 <para>
2922 Jesse called his parents. They were supportive but a bit frightened.
2923 An uncle was a lawyer. He began negotiations with the RIAA. They
2924 demanded to know how much money Jesse had. Jesse had saved
2925 $12,000 from summer jobs and other employment. They demanded
2926 $12,000 to dismiss the case.
2927 </para>
2928 <indexterm><primary>Oppenheimer, Matt</primary></indexterm>
2929 <para>
2930 The RIAA wanted Jesse to admit to doing something wrong. He
2931 refused. They wanted him to agree to an injunction that would
2932 essentially make it impossible for him to work in many fields of
2933 technology for the rest of his life. He refused. They made him
2934 understand that this process of being sued was not going to be
2935 pleasant. (As Jesse's father recounted to me, the chief lawyer on the
2936 case, Matt Oppenheimer, told Jesse, <quote>You don't want to pay another
2937 visit to a dentist like me.</quote>) And throughout, the RIAA insisted it
2938 would not settle the case until it took every penny Jesse had saved.
2939 </para>
2940 <indexterm><primary>legal system, attorney costs in</primary></indexterm>
2941 <para>
2942 Jesse's family was outraged at these claims. They wanted to fight.
2943 But Jesse's uncle worked to educate the family about the nature of the
2944 American legal system. Jesse could fight the RIAA. He might even
2945 win. But the cost of fighting a lawsuit like this, Jesse was told, would be
2946 at least $250,000. If he won, he would not recover that money. If he
2947 <!-- PAGE BREAK 65 -->
2948 won, he would have a piece of paper saying he had won, and a piece of
2949 paper saying he and his family were bankrupt.
2950 </para>
2951 <para>
2952 So Jesse faced a mafia-like choice: $250,000 and a chance at winning,
2953 or $12,000 and a settlement.
2954 </para>
2955 <indexterm><primary>artists</primary><secondary>recording industry payments to</secondary></indexterm>
2956 <indexterm><primary>recording industry</primary><secondary>artist remuneration in</secondary></indexterm>
2957 <indexterm><primary>Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA)</primary><secondary>lobbying power of</secondary></indexterm>
2958 <para>
2959 The recording industry insists this is a matter of law and morality.
2960 Let's put the law aside for a moment and think about the morality.
2961 Where is the morality in a lawsuit like this? What is the virtue in
2962 scapegoatism? The RIAA is an extraordinarily powerful lobby. The
2963 president of the RIAA is reported to make more than $1 million a year.
2964 Artists, on the other hand, are not well paid. The average recording
2965 artist makes $45,900.<footnote><para>
2966 <!-- f2 -->
2967 Occupational Employment Survey, U.S. Dept. of Labor (2001)
2968 (27&ndash;2042&mdash;Musicians and Singers). See also National Endowment for
2969 the Arts, <citetitle>More Than One in a Blue Moon</citetitle> (2000).
2970 </para></footnote>
2971 There are plenty of ways for the RIAA to affect
2972 and direct policy. So where is the morality in taking money from a
2973 student for running a search engine?<footnote><para>
2974 <!-- f3 -->
2975 Douglas Lichtman makes a related point in <quote>KaZaA and Punishment,</quote>
2976 <citetitle>Wall Street Journal</citetitle>, 10 September 2003, A24.
2977 </para></footnote>
2978 </para>
2979 <indexterm startref='idxcopyrightinfringementlawsuitsindividualdefendantsintimidatedby' class='endofrange'/>
2980 <indexterm startref='idxrecordingindustryassociationofamericariaaintimidationtacticsof' class='endofrange'/>
2981 <para>
2982 On June 23, Jesse wired his savings to the lawyer working for the
2983 RIAA. The case against him was then dismissed. And with this, this
2984 kid who had tinkered a computer into a $15 million lawsuit became an
2985 activist:
2986 </para>
2987 <blockquote>
2988 <para>
2989 I was definitely not an activist [before]. I never really meant to be
2990 an activist. &hellip; [But] I've been pushed into this. In no way did I
2991 ever foresee anything like this, but I think it's just completely
2992 absurd what the RIAA has done.
2993 </para>
2994 </blockquote>
2995 <para>
2996 Jesse's parents betray a certain pride in their reluctant activist. As
2997 his father told me, Jesse <quote>considers himself very conservative, and so do
2998 I. &hellip; He's not a tree hugger. &hellip; I think it's bizarre that they would
2999 pick on him. But he wants to let people know that they're sending the
3000 wrong message. And he wants to correct the record.</quote>
3001 </para>
3002 <indexterm startref='idxuniversitycomputernetworksppsharingon' class='endofrange'/>
3003 <indexterm startref='idxjordanjesse' class='endofrange'/>
3004 <indexterm startref='idxcopyrightinfringementlawsuitsinrecordingindustry' class='endofrange'/>
3005 <indexterm startref='idxcopyrightinfringementlawsuitsagainststudentfilesharing' class='endofrange'/>
3006 <indexterm startref='idxrecordingindustrycopyrightinfringementlawsuitsof' class='endofrange'/>
3007 <indexterm startref='idxrecordingindustryassociationofamericariaacopyrightinfringementlawsuitsfiledby' class='endofrange'/>
3008 <!-- PAGE BREAK 66 -->
3009 </chapter>
3010 <chapter label="4" id="pirates">
3011 <title>Chapter Four: <quote>Pirates</quote></title>
3012 <indexterm id='idxpiracyindevelopmentofcontentindustry' class='startofrange'><primary>piracy</primary><secondary>in development of content industry</secondary></indexterm>
3013 <indexterm><primary><quote>if value, then right</quote> theory</primary></indexterm>
3014 <para>
3015 <emphasis role='strong'>If <quote>piracy</quote> means</emphasis>
3016 using the creative property of others without their
3017 permission&mdash;if <quote>if value, then right</quote> is
3018 true&mdash;then the history of the content industry is a history of
3019 piracy. Every important sector of <quote>big media</quote>
3020 today&mdash;film, records, radio, and cable TV&mdash;was born of a
3021 kind of piracy so defined. The consistent story is how last
3022 generation's pirates join this generation's country club&mdash;until
3023 now.
3024 </para>
3025 <section id="film">
3026 <title>Film</title>
3027 <indexterm><primary>Hollywood film industry</primary><seealso>film industry</seealso></indexterm>
3028 <indexterm id='idxhollywoodfilmindustry' class='startofrange'><primary>Hollywood film industry</primary></indexterm>
3029 <indexterm id='idxpatentsonfilmtechnology' class='startofrange'><primary>patents</primary><secondary>on film technology</secondary></indexterm>
3030 <para>
3031 The film industry of Hollywood was built by fleeing pirates.<footnote><para>
3032 <!-- f1 -->
3033 <indexterm><primary>Vaidhyanathan, Siva</primary></indexterm>
3034 I am grateful to Peter DiMauro for pointing me to this extraordinary
3035 history. See also Siva Vaidhyanathan, <citetitle>Copyrights and Copywrongs</citetitle>, 87&ndash;93,
3036 which details Edison's <quote>adventures</quote> with copyright and patent.
3037 </para></footnote>
3038 Creators and directors migrated from the East Coast to California in
3039 the early twentieth century in part to escape controls that patents
3040 granted the inventor of filmmaking, Thomas Edison. These controls were
3041 exercised through a monopoly <quote>trust,</quote> the Motion Pictures Patents
3042 Company, and were based on Thomas Edison's creative
3043 property&mdash;patents. Edison formed the MPPC to exercise the rights
3044 this creative property
3045 <!-- PAGE BREAK 67 -->
3046 gave him, and the MPPC was serious about the control it demanded.
3047 </para>
3048 <para>
3049 As one commentator tells one part of the story,
3050 </para>
3051 <blockquote>
3052 <para>
3053 A January 1909 deadline was set for all companies to comply with
3054 the license. By February, unlicensed outlaws, who referred to
3055 themselves as independents protested the trust and carried on
3056 business without submitting to the Edison monopoly. In the
3057 summer of 1909 the independent movement was in full-swing,
3058 with producers and theater owners using illegal equipment and
3059 imported film stock to create their own underground market.
3060 </para>
3061 <indexterm><primary>Fox, William</primary></indexterm>
3062 <indexterm><primary>General Film Company</primary></indexterm>
3063 <indexterm><primary>Picker, Randal C.</primary></indexterm>
3064 <para>
3065 With the country experiencing a tremendous expansion in the number of
3066 nickelodeons, the Patents Company reacted to the independent movement
3067 by forming a strong-arm subsidiary known as the General Film Company
3068 to block the entry of non-licensed independents. With coercive tactics
3069 that have become legendary, General Film confiscated unlicensed
3070 equipment, discontinued product supply to theaters which showed
3071 unlicensed films, and effectively monopolized distribution with the
3072 acquisition of all U.S. film exchanges, except for the one owned by
3073 the independent William Fox who defied the Trust even after his
3074 license was revoked.<footnote><para>
3075 <!-- f2 -->
3076 J. A. Aberdeen, <citetitle>Hollywood Renegades: The Society of Independent Motion
3077 Picture Producers</citetitle> (Cobblestone Entertainment, 2000) and expanded texts
3078 posted at <quote>The Edison Movie Monopoly: The Motion Picture Patents
3079 Company vs. the Independent Outlaws,</quote> available at
3080 <ulink url="http://free-culture.cc/notes/">link #11</ulink>. For a
3081 discussion of the economic motive behind both these limits and the
3082 limits imposed by Victor on phonographs, see Randal C. Picker, <quote>From
3083 Edison to the Broadcast Flag: Mechanisms of Consent and Refusal and
3084 the Propertization of Copyright</quote> (September 2002), University of
3085 Chicago Law School, James M. Olin Program in Law and Economics,
3086 Working Paper No. 159.
3087 <indexterm><primary>broadcast flag</primary></indexterm>
3088 </para></footnote>
3089 </para>
3090 </blockquote>
3091 <para>
3092 The Napsters of those days, the <quote>independents,</quote> were
3093 companies like Fox. And no less than today, these independents were
3094 vigorously resisted. <quote>Shooting was disrupted by machinery
3095 stolen, and <quote>accidents</quote> resulting in loss of negatives,
3096 equipment, buildings and sometimes life and limb frequently
3097 occurred.</quote><footnote><para>
3098 <!-- f3 -->
3099 Marc Wanamaker, <quote>The First Studios,</quote> <citetitle>The Silents Majority</citetitle>, archived at
3100 <ulink url="http://free-culture.cc/notes/">link #12</ulink>.
3101 </para></footnote>
3102 That led the independents to flee the East
3103 Coast. California was remote enough from Edison's reach that
3104 filmmakers there could pirate his inventions without fear of the
3105 law. And the leaders of Hollywood filmmaking, Fox most prominently,
3106 did just that.
3107 </para>
3108 <indexterm startref='idxhollywoodfilmindustry' class='endofrange'/>
3109 <para>
3110 Of course, California grew quickly, and the effective enforcement
3111 of federal law eventually spread west. But because patents grant the
3112 patent holder a truly <quote>limited</quote> monopoly (just seventeen years at that
3113
3114 <!-- PAGE BREAK 68 -->
3115 time), by the time enough federal marshals appeared, the patents had
3116 expired. A new industry had been born, in part from the piracy of
3117 Edison's creative property.
3118 </para>
3119 <indexterm startref='idxpatentsonfilmtechnology' class='endofrange'/>
3120 </section>
3121 <section id="recordedmusic">
3122 <title>Recorded Music</title>
3123 <indexterm id='idxcopyrightlawonmusicrecordings' class='startofrange'><primary>copyright law</primary><secondary>on music recordings</secondary></indexterm>
3124 <para>
3125 The record industry was born of another kind of piracy, though to see
3126 how requires a bit of detail about the way the law regulates music.
3127 </para>
3128 <indexterm id='idxfourneauxhenri' class='startofrange'><primary>Fourneaux, Henri</primary></indexterm>
3129 <indexterm><primary>Russel, Phil</primary></indexterm>
3130 <para>
3131 At the time that Edison and Henri Fourneaux invented machines
3132 for reproducing music (Edison the phonograph, Fourneaux the player
3133 piano), the law gave composers the exclusive right to control copies of
3134 their music and the exclusive right to control public performances of
3135 their music. In other words, in 1900, if I wanted a copy of Phil Russel's
3136 1899 hit <quote>Happy Mose,</quote> the law said I would have to pay for the right
3137 to get a copy of the musical score, and I would also have to pay for the
3138 right to perform it publicly.
3139 </para>
3140 <indexterm><primary>Beatles</primary></indexterm>
3141 <para>
3142 But what if I wanted to record <quote>Happy Mose,</quote> using Edison's phonograph
3143 or Fourneaux's player piano? Here the law stumbled. It was clear
3144 enough that I would have to buy any copy of the musical score that I
3145 performed in making this recording. And it was clear enough that I
3146 would have to pay for any public performance of the work I was
3147 recording. But it wasn't totally clear that I would have to pay for a
3148 <quote>public performance</quote> if I recorded the song in my own house (even
3149 today, you don't owe the Beatles anything if you sing their songs in
3150 the shower), or if I recorded the song from memory (copies in your
3151 brain are not&mdash;yet&mdash; regulated by copyright law). So if I
3152 simply sang the song into a recording device in the privacy of my own
3153 home, it wasn't clear that I owed the composer anything. And more
3154 importantly, it wasn't clear whether I owed the composer anything if I
3155 then made copies of those recordings. Because of this gap in the law,
3156 then, I could effectively pirate someone else's song without paying
3157 its composer anything.
3158 </para>
3159 <indexterm startref='idxfourneauxhenri' class='endofrange'/>
3160 <indexterm id='idxkittredgealfred' class='startofrange'><primary>Kittredge, Alfred</primary></indexterm>
3161 <indexterm id='idxmusicpublishing' class='startofrange'><primary>music publishing</primary></indexterm>
3162 <para>
3163 The composers (and publishers) were none too happy about
3164 <!-- PAGE BREAK 69 -->
3165 this capacity to pirate. As South Dakota senator Alfred Kittredge
3166 put it,
3167 <indexterm><primary>Kittredge, Alfred</primary></indexterm>
3168 </para>
3169 <blockquote>
3170 <para>
3171 Imagine the injustice of the thing. A composer writes a song or an
3172 opera. A publisher buys at great expense the rights to the same and
3173 copyrights it. Along come the phonographic companies and companies who
3174 cut music rolls and deliberately steal the work of the brain of the
3175 composer and publisher without any regard for [their]
3176 rights.<footnote><para>
3177 <!-- f4 -->
3178 To Amend and Consolidate the Acts Respecting Copyright: Hearings on
3179 S. 6330 and H.R. 19853 Before the (Joint) Committees on Patents, 59th
3180 Cong. 59, 1st sess. (1906) (statement of Senator Alfred B. Kittredge,
3181 of South Dakota, chairman), reprinted in <citetitle>Legislative History of the
3182 Copyright Act</citetitle>, E. Fulton Brylawski and Abe Goldman, eds. (South
3183 Hackensack, N.J.: Rothman Reprints, 1976).
3184 <indexterm><primary>Kittredge, Alfred</primary></indexterm>
3185 </para></footnote>
3186 </para>
3187 </blockquote>
3188 <indexterm startref='idxkittredgealfred' class='endofrange'/>
3189 <indexterm><primary>Sousa, John Philip</primary></indexterm>
3190 <para>
3191 The innovators who developed the technology to record other
3192 people's works were <quote>sponging upon the toil, the work, the talent, and
3193 genius of American composers,</quote><footnote><para>
3194 <!-- f5 -->
3195 To Amend and Consolidate the Acts Respecting Copyright, 223
3196 (statement of Nathan Burkan, attorney for the Music Publishers Association).
3197 </para></footnote>
3198 and the <quote>music publishing industry</quote>
3199 was thereby <quote>at the complete mercy of this one pirate.</quote><footnote><para>
3200 <!-- f6 -->
3201 To Amend and Consolidate the Acts Respecting Copyright, 226
3202 (statement of Nathan Burkan, attorney for the Music Publishers Association).
3203 </para></footnote>
3204 As John Philip
3205 Sousa put it, in as direct a way as possible, <quote>When they make money
3206 out of my pieces, I want a share of it.</quote><footnote><para>
3207 <!-- f7 -->
3208 To Amend and Consolidate the Acts Respecting Copyright, 23
3209 (statement of John Philip Sousa, composer).
3210 </para></footnote>
3211 </para>
3212 <indexterm startref='idxmusicpublishing' class='endofrange'/>
3213 <indexterm><primary>American Graphophone Company</primary></indexterm>
3214 <indexterm><primary>player pianos</primary></indexterm>
3215 <indexterm><primary>sheet music</primary></indexterm>
3216 <indexterm id='idxcongressusoncopyrightlaws' class='startofrange'><primary>Congress, U.S.</primary><secondary>on copyright laws</secondary></indexterm>
3217 <indexterm id='idxcongressusonrecordingindustry' class='startofrange'><primary>Congress, U.S.</primary><secondary>on recording industry</secondary></indexterm>
3218 <indexterm id='idxcopyrightlawstatutorylicensesin' class='startofrange'><primary>copyright law</primary><secondary>statutory licenses in</secondary></indexterm>
3219 <indexterm id='idxrecordingindustrystatutorylicensesystemin' class='startofrange'><primary>recording industry</primary><secondary>statutory license system in</secondary></indexterm>
3220 <para>
3221 These arguments have familiar echoes in the wars of our day. So, too,
3222 do the arguments on the other side. The innovators who developed the
3223 player piano argued that <quote>it is perfectly demonstrable that the
3224 introduction of automatic music players has not deprived any composer
3225 of anything he had before their introduction.</quote> Rather, the machines
3226 increased the sales of sheet music.<footnote><para>
3227 <!-- f8 -->
3228
3229 To Amend and Consolidate the Acts Respecting Copyright, 283&ndash;84
3230 (statement of Albert Walker, representative of the Auto-Music
3231 Perforating Company of New York).
3232 </para></footnote> In any case, the innovators argued, the job of
3233 Congress was <quote>to consider first the interest of [the public], whom
3234 they represent, and whose servants they are.</quote> <quote>All talk about
3235 <quote>theft,</quote></quote> the general counsel of the American Graphophone Company
3236 wrote, <quote>is the merest claptrap, for there exists no property in ideas
3237 musical, literary or artistic, except as defined by
3238 statute.</quote><footnote><para>
3239 <!-- f9 -->
3240 To Amend and Consolidate the Acts Respecting Copyright, 376 (prepared
3241 memorandum of Philip Mauro, general patent counsel of the American
3242 Graphophone Company Association).
3243 </para></footnote>
3244 </para>
3245 <indexterm><primary>cover songs</primary></indexterm>
3246 <para>
3247 The law soon resolved this battle in favor of the composer
3248 <emphasis>and</emphasis> the recording artist. Congress amended the
3249 law to make sure that composers would be paid for the <quote>mechanical
3250 reproductions</quote> of their music. But rather than simply granting the
3251 composer complete control over the right to make mechanical
3252 reproductions, Congress gave recording artists a right to record the
3253 music, at a price set by Congress, once the composer allowed it to be
3254 recorded once. This is the part of
3255
3256 <!-- PAGE BREAK 70 -->
3257 copyright law that makes cover songs possible. Once a composer
3258 authorizes a recording of his song, others are free to record the same
3259 song, so long as they pay the original composer a fee set by the law.
3260 </para>
3261 <indexterm id='idxcompulsorylicense' class='startofrange'><primary>compulsory license</primary></indexterm>
3262 <indexterm id='idxstatutorylicenses' class='startofrange'><primary>statutory licenses</primary></indexterm>
3263 <para>
3264 American law ordinarily calls this a <quote>compulsory license,</quote> but I will
3265 refer to it as a <quote>statutory license.</quote> A statutory license is a license
3266 whose key terms are set by law. After Congress's amendment of the
3267 Copyright Act in 1909, record companies were free to distribute copies
3268 of recordings so long as they paid the composer (or copyright holder)
3269 the fee set by the statute.
3270 </para>
3271 <indexterm id='idxgrishamjohn' class='startofrange'><primary>Grisham, John</primary></indexterm>
3272 <para>
3273 This is an exception within the law of copyright. When John Grisham
3274 writes a novel, a publisher is free to publish that novel only if
3275 Grisham gives the publisher permission. Grisham, in turn, is free to
3276 charge whatever he wants for that permission. The price to publish
3277 Grisham is thus set by Grisham, and copyright law ordinarily says you
3278 have no permission to use Grisham's work except with permission of
3279 Grisham.
3280 </para>
3281 <indexterm startref='idxcopyrightlawonmusicrecordings' class='endofrange'/>
3282 <indexterm><primary>Beatles</primary></indexterm>
3283 <para>
3284 But the law governing recordings gives recording artists less. And
3285 thus, in effect, the law <emphasis>subsidizes</emphasis> the recording
3286 industry through a kind of piracy&mdash;by giving recording artists a
3287 weaker right than it otherwise gives creative authors. The Beatles
3288 have less control over their creative work than Grisham does. And the
3289 beneficiaries of this less control are the recording industry and the
3290 public. The recording industry gets something of value for less than
3291 it otherwise would pay; the public gets access to a much wider range
3292 of musical creativity. Indeed, Congress was quite explicit about its
3293 reasons for granting this right. Its fear was the monopoly power of
3294 rights holders, and that that power would stifle follow-on
3295 creativity.<footnote><para>
3296
3297 <!-- f10 -->
3298 Copyright Law Revision: Hearings on S. 2499, S. 2900, H.R. 243, and
3299 H.R. 11794 Before the (Joint) Committee on Patents, 60th Cong., 1st
3300 sess., 217 (1908) (statement of Senator Reed Smoot, chairman), reprinted
3301 in <citetitle>Legislative History of the 1909 Copyright Act</citetitle>, E. Fulton Brylawski and
3302 Abe Goldman, eds. (South Hackensack, N.J.: Rothman Reprints, 1976).
3303 </para></footnote>
3304 </para>
3305 <indexterm startref='idxcongressusoncopyrightlaws' class='endofrange'/>
3306 <indexterm startref='idxcongressusonrecordingindustry' class='endofrange'/>
3307 <indexterm startref='idxgrishamjohn' class='endofrange'/>
3308 <para>
3309 While the recording industry has been quite coy about this recently,
3310 historically it has been quite a supporter of the statutory license for
3311 records. As a 1967 report from the House Committee on the Judiciary
3312 relates,
3313 </para>
3314 <blockquote>
3315 <para>
3316 the record producers argued vigorously that the compulsory
3317 <!-- PAGE BREAK 71 -->
3318 license system must be retained. They asserted that the record
3319 industry is a half-billion-dollar business of great economic
3320 importance in the United States and throughout the world; records
3321 today are the principal means of disseminating music, and this creates
3322 special problems, since performers need unhampered access to musical
3323 material on nondiscriminatory terms. Historically, the record
3324 producers pointed out, there were no recording rights before 1909 and
3325 the 1909 statute adopted the compulsory license as a deliberate
3326 anti-monopoly condition on the grant of these rights. They argue that
3327 the result has been an outpouring of recorded music, with the public
3328 being given lower prices, improved quality, and a greater
3329 choice.<footnote><para>
3330 <!-- f11 -->
3331 Copyright Law Revision: Report to Accompany H.R. 2512, House Committee
3332 on the Judiciary, 90th Cong., 1st sess., House Document no. 83, (8
3333 March 1967). I am grateful to Glenn Brown for drawing my attention to
3334 this report.</para></footnote>
3335 </para>
3336 </blockquote>
3337 <indexterm startref='idxcopyrightlawstatutorylicensesin' class='endofrange'/>
3338 <indexterm startref='idxrecordingindustrystatutorylicensesystemin' class='endofrange'/>
3339 <indexterm startref='idxcompulsorylicense' class='endofrange'/>
3340 <indexterm startref='idxstatutorylicenses' class='endofrange'/>
3341 <para>
3342 By limiting the rights musicians have, by partially pirating their
3343 creative work, the record producers, and the public, benefit.
3344 </para>
3345 </section>
3346 <section id="radio">
3347 <title>Radio</title>
3348 <indexterm id='idxrecordingindustryradiobroadcastand' class='startofrange'><primary>recording industry</primary><secondary>radio broadcast and</secondary></indexterm>
3349 <indexterm id='idxartistsrecordingindustrypaymentsto' class='startofrange'><primary>artists</primary><secondary>recording industry payments to</secondary></indexterm>
3350 <para>
3351 Radio was also born of piracy.
3352 </para>
3353 <para>
3354 When a radio station plays a record on the air, that constitutes a
3355 <quote>public performance</quote> of the composer's work.<footnote><para>
3356 <!-- f12 -->
3357 See 17 <citetitle>United States Code</citetitle>, sections 106 and 110. At the beginning,
3358 record companies printed <quote>Not Licensed for Radio Broadcast</quote> and other
3359 messages purporting to restrict the ability to play a record on a
3360 radio station. Judge Learned Hand rejected the argument that a
3361 warning attached to a record might restrict the rights of the radio
3362 station. See <citetitle>RCA Manufacturing Co</citetitle>. v. <citetitle>Whiteman</citetitle>, 114 F. 2d 86 (2nd
3363 Cir. 1940). See also Randal C. Picker, <quote>From Edison to the Broadcast
3364 Flag: Mechanisms of Consent and Refusal and the Propertization of
3365 Copyright,</quote> <citetitle>University of Chicago Law Review</citetitle> 70 (2003): 281.
3366 <indexterm><primary>Hand, Learned</primary></indexterm>
3367 <indexterm><primary>Picker, Randal C.</primary></indexterm>
3368 </para></footnote>
3369 As I described above, the law gives the composer (or copyright holder)
3370 an exclusive right to public performances of his work. The radio
3371 station thus owes the composer money for that performance.
3372 </para>
3373 <indexterm id='idxradiomusicrecordingsplayedon' class='startofrange'><primary>radio</primary><secondary>music recordings played on</secondary></indexterm>
3374 <para>
3375 But when the radio station plays a record, it is not only performing a
3376 copy of the <emphasis>composer's</emphasis> work. The radio station is
3377 also performing a copy of the <emphasis>recording artist's</emphasis>
3378 work. It's one thing to have <quote>Happy Birthday</quote> sung on the radio by the
3379 local children's choir; it's quite another to have it sung by the
3380 Rolling Stones or Lyle Lovett. The recording artist is adding to the
3381 value of the composition performed on the radio station. And if the
3382 law were perfectly consistent, the radio station would have to pay the
3383 recording artist for his work, just as it pays the composer of the
3384 music for his work.
3385 <indexterm><primary>Lovett, Lyle</primary></indexterm>
3386
3387 <!-- PAGE BREAK 72 -->
3388 </para>
3389 <para>
3390 But it doesn't. Under the law governing radio performances, the radio
3391 station does not have to pay the recording artist. The radio station
3392 need only pay the composer. The radio station thus gets a bit of
3393 something for nothing. It gets to perform the recording artist's work
3394 for free, even if it must pay the composer something for the privilege
3395 of playing the song.
3396 </para>
3397 <indexterm id='idxmadonna' class='startofrange'><primary>Madonna</primary></indexterm>
3398 <para>
3399 This difference can be huge. Imagine you compose a piece of music.
3400 Imagine it is your first. You own the exclusive right to authorize
3401 public performances of that music. So if Madonna wants to sing your
3402 song in public, she has to get your permission.
3403 </para>
3404 <para>
3405 Imagine she does sing your song, and imagine she likes it a lot. She
3406 then decides to make a recording of your song, and it becomes a top
3407 hit. Under our law, every time a radio station plays your song, you
3408 get some money. But Madonna gets nothing, save the indirect effect on
3409 the sale of her CDs. The public performance of her recording is not a
3410 <quote>protected</quote> right. The radio station thus gets to
3411 <emphasis>pirate</emphasis> the value of Madonna's work without paying
3412 her anything.
3413 </para>
3414 <indexterm startref='idxartistsrecordingindustrypaymentsto' class='endofrange'/>
3415 <indexterm startref='idxradiomusicrecordingsplayedon' class='endofrange'/>
3416 <indexterm startref='idxmadonna' class='endofrange'/>
3417 <para>
3418 No doubt, one might argue that, on balance, the recording artists
3419 benefit. On average, the promotion they get is worth more than the
3420 performance rights they give up. Maybe. But even if so, the law
3421 ordinarily gives the creator the right to make this choice. By making
3422 the choice for him or her, the law gives the radio station the right
3423 to take something for nothing.
3424 </para>
3425 <indexterm startref='idxrecordingindustryradiobroadcastand' class='endofrange'/>
3426 </section>
3427 <section id="cabletv">
3428 <title>Cable TV</title>
3429 <indexterm id='idxcabletelevision' class='startofrange'><primary>cable television</primary></indexterm>
3430 <para>
3431 Cable TV was also born of a kind of piracy.
3432 </para>
3433 <para>
3434 When cable entrepreneurs first started wiring communities with cable
3435 television in 1948, most refused to pay broadcasters for the content
3436 that they echoed to their customers. Even when the cable companies
3437 started selling access to television broadcasts, they refused to pay
3438 <!-- PAGE BREAK 73 -->
3439 for what they sold. Cable companies were thus Napsterizing
3440 broadcasters' content, but more egregiously than anything Napster ever
3441 did&mdash; Napster never charged for the content it enabled others to
3442 give away.
3443 </para>
3444 <indexterm><primary>Anello, Douglas</primary></indexterm>
3445 <indexterm><primary>Burdick, Quentin</primary></indexterm>
3446 <indexterm><primary>Hyde, Rosel H.</primary></indexterm>
3447 <para>
3448 Broadcasters and copyright owners were quick to attack this theft.
3449 Rosel Hyde, chairman of the FCC, viewed the practice as a kind of
3450 <quote>unfair and potentially destructive competition.</quote><footnote><para>
3451 <!-- f13 -->
3452 Copyright Law Revision&mdash;CATV: Hearing on S. 1006 Before the
3453 Subcommittee on Patents, Trademarks, and Copyrights of the Senate
3454 Committee on the Judiciary, 89th Cong., 2nd sess., 78 (1966)
3455 (statement of Rosel H. Hyde, chairman of the Federal Communications
3456 Commission).
3457 <indexterm><primary>Hyde, Rosel H.</primary></indexterm>
3458 </para></footnote>
3459 There may have been a <quote>public interest</quote> in spreading the reach of cable
3460 TV, but as Douglas Anello, general counsel to the National Association
3461 of Broadcasters, asked Senator Quentin Burdick during testimony, <quote>Does public
3462 interest dictate that you use somebody else's property?</quote><footnote><para>
3463 <!-- f14 -->
3464 Copyright Law Revision&mdash;CATV, 116 (statement of Douglas A. Anello,
3465 general counsel of the National Association of Broadcasters).
3466 </para></footnote>
3467 As another broadcaster put it,
3468 </para>
3469 <blockquote>
3470 <para>
3471 The extraordinary thing about the CATV business is that it is the
3472 only business I know of where the product that is being sold is not
3473 paid for.<footnote><para>
3474 <!-- f15 -->
3475 Copyright Law Revision&mdash;CATV, 126 (statement of Ernest W. Jennes,
3476 general counsel of the Association of Maximum Service Telecasters, Inc.).
3477 </para></footnote>
3478 </para>
3479 </blockquote>
3480 <para>
3481 Again, the demand of the copyright holders seemed reasonable enough:
3482 </para>
3483 <blockquote>
3484 <para>
3485 All we are asking for is a very simple thing, that people who now
3486 take our property for nothing pay for it. We are trying to stop
3487 piracy and I don't think there is any lesser word to describe it. I
3488 think there are harsher words which would fit it.<footnote><para>
3489 <!-- f16 -->
3490 Copyright Law Revision&mdash;CATV, 169 (joint statement of Arthur B.
3491 Krim, president of United Artists Corp., and John Sinn, president of
3492 United Artists Television, Inc.).
3493 </para></footnote>
3494 </para>
3495 </blockquote>
3496 <indexterm><primary>Heston, Charlton</primary></indexterm>
3497 <para>
3498 These were <quote>free-ride[rs],</quote> Screen Actor's Guild president Charlton
3499 Heston said, who were <quote>depriving actors of
3500 compensation.</quote><footnote><para>
3501 <!-- f17 -->
3502 Copyright Law Revision&mdash;CATV, 209 (statement of Charlton Heston,
3503 president of the Screen Actors Guild).
3504 <indexterm><primary>Heston, Charlton</primary></indexterm>
3505 </para>
3506 </footnote>
3507 </para>
3508 <para>
3509 But again, there was another side to the debate. As Assistant Attorney
3510 General Edwin Zimmerman put it,
3511 </para>
3512 <blockquote>
3513 <para>
3514 Our point here is that unlike the problem of whether you have any
3515 copyright protection at all, the problem here is whether copyright
3516 holders who are already compensated, who already have a monopoly,
3517 should be permitted to extend that monopoly. &hellip; The
3518
3519 <!-- PAGE BREAK 74 -->
3520 question here is how much compensation they should have and
3521 how far back they should carry their right to compensation.<footnote><para>
3522 <!-- f18 -->
3523 Copyright Law Revision&mdash;CATV, 216 (statement of Edwin M.
3524 Zimmerman, acting assistant attorney general).
3525 <indexterm><primary>Zimmerman, Edwin</primary></indexterm>
3526 </para></footnote>
3527 <indexterm><primary>Zimmerman, Edwin</primary></indexterm>
3528 </para>
3529 </blockquote>
3530 <para>
3531 Copyright owners took the cable companies to court. Twice the Supreme
3532 Court held that the cable companies owed the copyright owners nothing.
3533 </para>
3534 <para>
3535 It took Congress almost thirty years before it resolved the question
3536 of whether cable companies had to pay for the content they <quote>pirated.</quote>
3537 In the end, Congress resolved this question in the same way that it
3538 resolved the question about record players and player pianos. Yes,
3539 cable companies would have to pay for the content that they broadcast;
3540 but the price they would have to pay was not set by the copyright
3541 owner. The price was set by law, so that the broadcasters couldn't
3542 exercise veto power over the emerging technologies of cable. Cable
3543 companies thus built their empire in part upon a <quote>piracy</quote> of the value
3544 created by broadcasters' content.
3545 </para>
3546 <indexterm startref='idxpiracyindevelopmentofcontentindustry' class='endofrange'/>
3547 <indexterm startref='idxcabletelevision' class='endofrange'/>
3548 <para>
3549 <emphasis role='strong'>These separate stories</emphasis> sing a
3550 common theme. If <quote>piracy</quote> means using value from someone
3551 else's creative property without permission from that creator&mdash;as
3552 it is increasingly described today<footnote><para>
3553 <!-- f19 -->
3554 See, for example, National Music Publisher's Association, <citetitle>The Engine
3555 of Free Expression: Copyright on the Internet&mdash;The Myth of Free
3556 Information</citetitle>, available at
3557 <ulink url="http://free-culture.cc/notes/">link #13</ulink>. <quote>The
3558 threat of piracy&mdash;the use of someone else's creative work without
3559 permission or compensation&mdash;has grown with the Internet.</quote>
3560 </para></footnote>
3561 &mdash; then <emphasis>every</emphasis> industry affected by copyright
3562 today is the product and beneficiary of a certain kind of
3563 piracy. Film, records, radio, cable TV. &hellip; The list is long and
3564 could well be expanded. Every generation welcomes the pirates from the
3565 last. Every generation&mdash;until now.
3566 </para>
3567 <!-- PAGE BREAK 75 -->
3568 </section>
3569 </chapter>
3570 <chapter label="5" id="piracy">
3571 <title>Chapter Five: <quote>Piracy</quote></title>
3572 <para>
3573 <emphasis role='strong'>There is piracy</emphasis> of copyrighted
3574 material. Lots of it. This piracy comes in many forms. The most
3575 significant is commercial piracy, the unauthorized taking of other
3576 people's content within a commercial context. Despite the many
3577 justifications that are offered in its defense, this taking is
3578 wrong. No one should condone it, and the law should stop it.
3579 </para>
3580 <para>
3581 But as well as copy-shop piracy, there is another kind of <quote>taking</quote>
3582 that is more directly related to the Internet. That taking, too, seems
3583 wrong to many, and it is wrong much of the time. Before we paint this
3584 taking <quote>piracy,</quote> however, we should understand its nature a bit more.
3585 For the harm of this taking is significantly more ambiguous than
3586 outright copying, and the law should account for that ambiguity, as it
3587 has so often done in the past.
3588 <!-- PAGE BREAK 76 -->
3589 </para>
3590 <section id="piracy-i">
3591 <title>Piracy I</title>
3592 <indexterm><primary>Asia, commercial piracy in</primary></indexterm>
3593 <indexterm id='idxcdsforeign' class='startofrange'><primary>CDs</primary><secondary>foreign piracy of</secondary></indexterm>
3594 <para>
3595 All across the world, but especially in Asia and Eastern Europe, there
3596 are businesses that do nothing but take others people's copyrighted
3597 content, copy it, and sell it&mdash;all without the permission of a copyright
3598 owner. The recording industry estimates that it loses about $4.6 billion
3599 every year to physical piracy<footnote><para>
3600 <!-- f1 -->
3601 See IFPI (International Federation of the Phonographic Industry), <citetitle>The
3602 Recording Industry Commercial Piracy Report 2003</citetitle>, July 2003, available
3603 at <ulink url="http://free-culture.cc/notes/">link #14</ulink>. See
3604 also Ben Hunt, <quote>Companies Warned on Music Piracy Risk,</quote> <citetitle>Financial
3605 Times</citetitle>, 14 February 2003, 11.
3606 </para></footnote>
3607 (that works out to one in three CDs sold worldwide). The MPAA
3608 estimates that it loses $3 billion annually worldwide to piracy.
3609 </para>
3610 <para>
3611 This is piracy plain and simple. Nothing in the argument of this
3612 book, nor in the argument that most people make when talking about
3613 the subject of this book, should draw into doubt this simple point:
3614 This piracy is wrong.
3615 </para>
3616 <para>
3617 Which is not to say that excuses and justifications couldn't be made
3618 for it. We could, for example, remind ourselves that for the first one
3619 hundred years of the American Republic, America did not honor foreign
3620 copyrights. We were born, in this sense, a pirate nation. It might
3621 therefore seem hypocritical for us to insist so strongly that other
3622 developing nations treat as wrong what we, for the first hundred years
3623 of our existence, treated as right.
3624 </para>
3625 <para>
3626 That excuse isn't terribly strong. Technically, our law did not ban
3627 the taking of foreign works. It explicitly limited itself to American
3628 works. Thus the American publishers who published foreign works
3629 without the permission of foreign authors were not violating any rule.
3630 The copy shops in Asia, by contrast, are violating Asian law. Asian
3631 law does protect foreign copyrights, and the actions of the copy shops
3632 violate that law. So the wrong of piracy that they engage in is not
3633 just a moral wrong, but a legal wrong, and not just an internationally
3634 legal wrong, but a locally legal wrong as well.
3635 </para>
3636 <para>
3637 True, these local rules have, in effect, been imposed upon these
3638 countries. No country can be part of the world economy and choose
3639 <!-- PAGE BREAK 77-->
3640 not to protect copyright internationally. We may have been born a
3641 pirate nation, but we will not allow any other nation to have a
3642 similar childhood.
3643 </para>
3644 <para>
3645 If a country is to be treated as a sovereign, however, then its laws are
3646 its laws regardless of their source. The international law under which
3647 these nations live gives them some opportunities to escape the burden
3648 of intellectual property law.<footnote><para>
3649 <!-- f2 -->
3650 See Peter Drahos with John Braithwaite, Information Feudalism:
3651 <citetitle>Who Owns the Knowledge Economy?</citetitle> (New York: The
3652 New Press, 2003), 10&ndash;13, 209. The Trade-Related Aspects of
3653 Intellectual Property Rights (TRIPS) agreement obligates member
3654 nations to create administrative and enforcement mechanisms for
3655 intellectual property rights, a costly proposition for developing
3656 countries. Additionally, patent rights may lead to higher prices for
3657 staple industries such as agriculture. Critics of TRIPS question the
3658 disparity between burdens imposed upon developing countries and
3659 benefits conferred to industrialized nations. TRIPS does permit
3660 governments to use patents for public, noncommercial uses without
3661 first obtaining the patent holder's permission. Developing nations may
3662 be able to use this to gain the benefits of foreign patents at lower
3663 prices. This is a promising strategy for developing nations within the
3664 TRIPS framework.
3665 <indexterm><primary>agricultural patents</primary></indexterm>
3666 <indexterm><primary>Drahos, Peter</primary></indexterm>
3667 </para></footnote> In my view, more developing nations should take
3668 advantage of that opportunity, but when they don't, then their laws
3669 should be respected. And under the laws of these nations, this piracy
3670 is wrong.
3671 </para>
3672 <indexterm><primary>Asia, commercial piracy in</primary></indexterm>
3673 <para>
3674 Alternatively, we could try to excuse this piracy by noting that in
3675 any case, it does no harm to the industry. The Chinese who get access
3676 to American CDs at 50 cents a copy are not people who would have
3677 bought those American CDs at $15 a copy. So no one really has any
3678 less money than they otherwise would have had.<footnote><para>
3679 <!-- f3 -->
3680 For an analysis of the economic impact of copying technology, see Stan
3681 Liebowitz, <citetitle>Rethinking the Network Economy</citetitle> (New York: Amacom, 2002),
3682 144&ndash;90. <quote>In some instances &hellip; the impact of piracy on the
3683 copyright holder's ability to appropriate the value of the work will
3684 be negligible. One obvious instance is the case where the individual
3685 engaging in pirating would not have purchased an original even if
3686 pirating were not an option.</quote> Ibid., 149.
3687 <indexterm><primary>Liebowitz, Stan</primary></indexterm>
3688 </para></footnote>
3689 </para>
3690 <para>
3691 This is often true (though I have friends who have purchased many
3692 thousands of pirated DVDs who certainly have enough money to pay
3693 for the content they have taken), and it does mitigate to some degree
3694 the harm caused by such taking. Extremists in this debate love to say,
3695 <quote>You wouldn't go into Barnes &amp; Noble and take a book off of the shelf
3696 without paying; why should it be any different with on-line music?</quote>
3697 The difference is, of course, that when you take a book from Barnes &amp;
3698 Noble, it has one less book to sell. By contrast, when you take an MP3
3699 from a computer network, there is not one less CD that can be sold.
3700 The physics of piracy of the intangible are different from the physics of
3701 piracy of the tangible.
3702 </para>
3703 <indexterm startref='idxcdsforeign' class='endofrange'/>
3704 <para>
3705 This argument is still very weak. However, although copyright is a
3706 property right of a very special sort, it <emphasis>is</emphasis> a
3707 property right. Like all property rights, the copyright gives the
3708 owner the right to decide the terms under which content is shared. If
3709 the copyright owner doesn't want to sell, she doesn't have to. There
3710 are exceptions: important statutory licenses that apply to copyrighted
3711 content regardless of the wish of the copyright owner. Those licenses
3712 give people the right to <quote>take</quote> copyrighted content whether or not the
3713 copyright owner wants to sell. But
3714
3715 <!-- PAGE BREAK 78 -->
3716 where the law does not give people the right to take content, it is
3717 wrong to take that content even if the wrong does no harm. If we have
3718 a property system, and that system is properly balanced to the
3719 technology of a time, then it is wrong to take property without the
3720 permission of a property owner. That is exactly what <quote>property</quote> means.
3721 </para>
3722 <indexterm><primary>Asia, commercial piracy in</primary></indexterm>
3723 <indexterm><primary>piracy</primary><secondary>in Asia</secondary></indexterm>
3724 <indexterm><primary>open-source software</primary><see>free software/open-source software (FS/OSS)</see></indexterm>
3725 <indexterm><primary>free software/open-source software (FS/OSS)</primary></indexterm>
3726 <indexterm><primary>GNU/Linux operating system</primary></indexterm>
3727 <indexterm><primary>Linux operating system</primary></indexterm>
3728 <indexterm><primary>Microsoft</primary><secondary>competitive strategies of</secondary></indexterm>
3729 <indexterm><primary>Windows</primary></indexterm>
3730 <indexterm><primary>Microsoft</primary><secondary>international software piracy of</secondary></indexterm>
3731 <indexterm><primary>Microsoft</primary><secondary>Windows operating system of</secondary></indexterm>
3732 <para>
3733 Finally, we could try to excuse this piracy with the argument that the
3734 piracy actually helps the copyright owner. When the Chinese <quote>steal</quote>
3735 Windows, that makes the Chinese dependent on Microsoft. Microsoft
3736 loses the value of the software that was taken. But it gains users who
3737 are used to life in the Microsoft world. Over time, as the nation
3738 grows more wealthy, more and more people will buy software rather than
3739 steal it. And hence over time, because that buying will benefit
3740 Microsoft, Microsoft benefits from the piracy. If instead of pirating
3741 Microsoft Windows, the Chinese used the free GNU/Linux operating
3742 system, then these Chinese users would not eventually be buying
3743 Microsoft. Without piracy, then, Microsoft would lose.
3744 </para>
3745 <indexterm><primary>law</primary><secondary>databases of case reports in</secondary></indexterm>
3746 <para>
3747 This argument, too, is somewhat true. The addiction strategy is a good
3748 one. Many businesses practice it. Some thrive because of it. Law
3749 students, for example, are given free access to the two largest legal
3750 databases. The companies marketing both hope the students will become
3751 so used to their service that they will want to use it and not the
3752 other when they become lawyers (and must pay high subscription fees).
3753 </para>
3754 <indexterm><primary>Netscape</primary></indexterm>
3755 <indexterm><primary>Internet Explorer</primary></indexterm>
3756 <indexterm><primary>GNU/Linux operating system</primary></indexterm>
3757 <indexterm><primary>Linux operating system</primary></indexterm>
3758 <para>
3759 Still, the argument is not terribly persuasive. We don't give the
3760 alcoholic a defense when he steals his first beer, merely because that
3761 will make it more likely that he will buy the next three. Instead, we
3762 ordinarily allow businesses to decide for themselves when it is best
3763 to give their product away. If Microsoft fears the competition of
3764 GNU/Linux, then Microsoft can give its product away, as it did, for
3765 example, with Internet Explorer to fight Netscape. A property right
3766 means giving the property owner the right to say who gets access to
3767 what&mdash;at least ordinarily. And if the law properly balances the
3768 rights of the copyright owner with the rights of access, then
3769 violating the law is still wrong.
3770 </para>
3771 <para>
3772 <!-- PAGE BREAK 79 -->
3773 Thus, while I understand the pull of these justifications for piracy,
3774 and I certainly see the motivation, in my view, in the end, these efforts
3775 at justifying commercial piracy simply don't cut it. This kind of piracy
3776 is rampant and just plain wrong. It doesn't transform the content it
3777 steals; it doesn't transform the market it competes in. It merely gives
3778 someone access to something that the law says he should not have.
3779 Nothing has changed to draw that law into doubt. This form of piracy
3780 is flat out wrong.
3781 </para>
3782 <para>
3783 But as the examples from the four chapters that introduced this part
3784 suggest, even if some piracy is plainly wrong, not all <quote>piracy</quote> is. Or
3785 at least, not all <quote>piracy</quote> is wrong if that term is understood in the
3786 way it is increasingly used today. Many kinds of <quote>piracy</quote> are useful
3787 and productive, to produce either new content or new ways of doing
3788 business. Neither our tradition nor any tradition has ever banned all
3789 <quote>piracy</quote> in that sense of the term.
3790 </para>
3791 <para>
3792 This doesn't mean that there are no questions raised by the latest
3793 piracy concern, peer-to-peer file sharing. But it does mean that we
3794 need to understand the harm in peer-to-peer sharing a bit more before
3795 we condemn it to the gallows with the charge of piracy.
3796 </para>
3797 <para>
3798 For (1) like the original Hollywood, p2p sharing escapes an overly
3799 controlling industry; and (2) like the original recording industry, it
3800 simply exploits a new way to distribute content; but (3) unlike cable
3801 TV, no one is selling the content that is shared on p2p services.
3802 </para>
3803 <para>
3804 These differences distinguish p2p sharing from true piracy. They
3805 should push us to find a way to protect artists while enabling this
3806 sharing to survive.
3807 </para>
3808 </section>
3809 <section id="piracy-ii">
3810 <title>Piracy II</title>
3811 <para>
3812 The key to the <quote>piracy</quote> that the law aims to quash is a use that <quote>rob[s]
3813 the author of [his] profit.</quote><footnote><para>
3814 <!-- f4 -->
3815 <citetitle>Bach</citetitle> v. <citetitle>Longman</citetitle>, 98 Eng. Rep. 1274 (1777).
3816 </para></footnote>
3817 This means we must determine whether
3818 and how much p2p sharing harms before we know how strongly the
3819 <!-- PAGE BREAK 80 -->
3820 law should seek to either prevent it or find an alternative to assure the
3821 author of his profit.
3822 </para>
3823 <para>
3824 <indexterm><primary>Fanning, Shawn</primary></indexterm>
3825 <indexterm><primary>innovation</primary><seealso>creativity</seealso></indexterm>
3826 <indexterm><primary>innovation</primary></indexterm>
3827 <indexterm id='idxnapster' class='startofrange'><primary>Napster</primary></indexterm>
3828 Peer-to-peer sharing was made famous by Napster. But the inventors of
3829 the Napster technology had not made any major technological
3830 innovations. Like every great advance in innovation on the Internet
3831 (and, arguably, off the Internet as well<footnote><para>
3832 <!-- f5 -->
3833 <indexterm><primary>innovation</primary></indexterm>
3834 See Clayton M. Christensen, <citetitle>The Innovator's Dilemma: The Revolutionary
3835 National Bestseller That Changed the Way We Do Business</citetitle> (New York:
3836 HarperBusiness, 2000). Professor Christensen examines why companies
3837 that give rise to and dominate a product area are frequently unable to
3838 come up with the most creative, paradigm-shifting uses for their own
3839 products. This job usually falls to outside innovators, who
3840 reassemble existing technology in inventive ways. For a discussion of
3841 Christensen's ideas, see Lawrence Lessig, <citetitle>Future</citetitle>, 89&ndash;92, 139.
3842
3843 <indexterm><primary>Christensen, Clayton M.</primary></indexterm>
3844 </para></footnote>), Shawn Fanning and crew had simply
3845 put together components that had been developed independently.
3846 </para>
3847 <para>
3848 <indexterm><primary>Kazaa</primary></indexterm>
3849 <indexterm><primary>Napster</primary><secondary>number of registrations on</secondary></indexterm>
3850 <indexterm><primary>Napster</primary><secondary>replacement of</secondary></indexterm>
3851 The result was spontaneous combustion. Launched in July 1999,
3852 Napster amassed over 10 million users within nine months. After
3853 eighteen months, there were close to 80 million registered users of the
3854 system.<footnote><para>
3855 <!-- f6 -->
3856 See Carolyn Lochhead, <quote>Silicon Valley Dream, Hollywood Nightmare,</quote> <citetitle>San
3857 Francisco Chronicle</citetitle>, 24 September 2002, A1; <quote>Rock 'n' Roll Suicide,</quote>
3858 <citetitle>New Scientist</citetitle>, 6 July 2002, 42; Benny Evangelista, <quote>Napster Names CEO,
3859 Secures New Financing,</quote> <citetitle>San Francisco Chronicle</citetitle>, 23 May 2003, C1;
3860 <quote>Napster's Wake-Up Call,</quote> <citetitle>Economist</citetitle>, 24 June 2000, 23; John Naughton,
3861 <quote>Hollywood at War with the Internet</quote> (London) <citetitle>Times</citetitle>, 26 July 2002, 18.
3862 </para></footnote>
3863 Courts quickly shut Napster down, but other services emerged
3864 to take its place. (Kazaa is currently the most popular p2p service. It
3865 boasts over 100 million members.) These services' systems are different
3866 architecturally, though not very different in function: Each enables
3867 users to make content available to any number of other users. With a
3868 p2p system, you can share your favorite songs with your best friend&mdash;
3869 or your 20,000 best friends.
3870 </para>
3871 <indexterm startref='idxnapster' class='endofrange'/>
3872 <para>
3873 According to a number of estimates, a huge proportion of Americans
3874 have tasted file-sharing technology. A study by Ipsos-Insight in
3875 September 2002 estimated that 60 million Americans had downloaded
3876 music&mdash;28 percent of Americans older than 12.<footnote><para>
3877
3878 <!-- f7 -->
3879 See Ipsos-Insight, <citetitle>TEMPO: Keeping Pace with Online Music Distribution</citetitle>
3880 (September 2002), reporting that 28 percent of Americans aged twelve
3881 and older have downloaded music off of the Internet and 30 percent have
3882 listened to digital music files stored on their computers.
3883 </para></footnote>
3884 A survey by the NPD group quoted in <citetitle>The New York Times</citetitle>
3885 estimated that 43 million citizens used file-sharing networks to
3886 exchange content in May 2003.<footnote><para>
3887 <!-- f8 -->
3888 Amy Harmon, <quote>Industry Offers a Carrot in Online Music Fight,</quote> <citetitle>New
3889 York Times</citetitle>, 6 June 2003, A1.
3890 </para></footnote>
3891 The vast majority of these are not kids. Whatever the actual figure, a
3892 massive quantity of content is being <quote>taken</quote> on these networks. The
3893 ease and inexpensiveness of file-sharing networks have inspired
3894 millions to enjoy music in a way that they hadn't before.
3895 </para>
3896 <para>
3897 Some of this enjoying involves copyright infringement. Some of it does
3898 not. And even among the part that is technically copyright
3899 infringement, calculating the actual harm to copyright owners is more
3900 complicated than one might think. So consider&mdash;a bit more
3901 carefully than the polarized voices around this debate usually
3902 do&mdash;the kinds of sharing that file sharing enables, and the kinds
3903 of harm it entails.
3904 </para>
3905 <indexterm id='idxpeertopeerppfilesharingfourtypesof' class='startofrange'><primary>peer-to-peer (p2p) file sharing</primary><secondary>four types of</secondary></indexterm>
3906 <indexterm><primary>Napster</primary><secondary>range of content on</secondary></indexterm>
3907 <para>
3908 <!-- PAGE BREAK 81 -->
3909 File sharers share different kinds of content. We can divide these
3910 different kinds into four types.
3911 </para>
3912 <orderedlist numeration="upperalpha">
3913 <listitem>
3914 <indexterm><primary>Madonna</primary></indexterm>
3915 <para>
3916 <!-- A. -->
3917 There are some who use sharing networks as substitutes for purchasing
3918 content. Thus, when a new Madonna CD is released, rather than buying
3919 the CD, these users simply take it. We might quibble about whether
3920 everyone who takes it would actually have bought it if sharing didn't
3921 make it available for free. Most probably wouldn't have, but clearly
3922 there are some who would. The latter are the target of category A:
3923 users who download instead of purchasing.
3924 </para></listitem>
3925 <listitem><para>
3926 <!-- B. -->
3927 There are some who use sharing networks to sample music before
3928 purchasing it. Thus, a friend sends another friend an MP3 of an artist
3929 he's not heard of. The other friend then buys CDs by that artist. This
3930 is a kind of targeted advertising, quite likely to succeed. If the
3931 friend recommending the album gains nothing from a bad recommendation,
3932 then one could expect that the recommendations will actually be quite
3933 good. The net effect of this sharing could increase the quantity of
3934 music purchased.
3935 </para></listitem>
3936 <listitem><para>
3937 <!-- C. -->
3938 There are many who use sharing networks to get access to copyrighted
3939 content that is no longer sold or that they would not have purchased
3940 because the transaction costs off the Net are too high. This use of
3941 sharing networks is among the most rewarding for many. Songs that were
3942 part of your childhood but have long vanished from the marketplace
3943 magically appear again on the network. (One friend told me that when
3944 she discovered Napster, she spent a solid weekend <quote>recalling</quote> old
3945 songs. She was astonished at the range and mix of content that was
3946 available.) For content not sold, this is still technically a
3947 violation of copyright, though because the copyright owner is not
3948 selling the content anymore, the economic harm is zero&mdash;the same
3949 harm that occurs when I sell my collection of 1960s 45-rpm records to
3950 a local collector.
3951 </para></listitem>
3952 <listitem><para>
3953 <!-- PAGE BREAK 82 -->
3954 <!-- D. -->
3955 Finally, there are many who use sharing networks to get access
3956 to content that is not copyrighted or that the copyright owner
3957 wants to give away.
3958 </para></listitem>
3959 </orderedlist>
3960 <indexterm startref='idxpeertopeerppfilesharingfourtypesof' class='endofrange'/>
3961 <para>
3962 How do these different types of sharing balance out?
3963 </para>
3964 <para>
3965 Let's start with some simple but important points. From the
3966 perspective of the law, only type D sharing is clearly legal. From the
3967 perspective of economics, only type A sharing is clearly
3968 harmful.<footnote><para>
3969 <!-- f9 -->
3970 See Liebowitz, <citetitle>Rethinking the Network Economy</citetitle>, 148&ndash;49.
3971 <indexterm><primary>Liebowitz, Stan</primary></indexterm>
3972 </para></footnote>
3973 Type B sharing is illegal but plainly beneficial. Type C sharing is
3974 illegal, yet good for society (since more exposure to music is good)
3975 and harmless to the artist (since the work is not otherwise
3976 available). So how sharing matters on balance is a hard question to
3977 answer&mdash;and certainly much more difficult than the current
3978 rhetoric around the issue suggests.
3979 </para>
3980 <para>
3981 Whether on balance sharing is harmful depends importantly on how
3982 harmful type A sharing is. Just as Edison complained about Hollywood,
3983 composers complained about piano rolls, recording artists complained
3984 about radio, and broadcasters complained about cable TV, the music
3985 industry complains that type A sharing is a kind of <quote>theft</quote> that is
3986 <quote>devastating</quote> the industry.
3987 </para>
3988 <indexterm id='idxcassette' class='startofrange'><primary>cassette recording</primary><secondary>VCRs</secondary></indexterm>
3989 <para>
3990 While the numbers do suggest that sharing is harmful, how
3991 harmful is harder to reckon. It has long been the recording industry's
3992 practice to blame technology for any drop in sales. The history of
3993 cassette recording is a good example. As a study by Cap Gemini Ernst
3994 &amp; Young put it, <quote>Rather than exploiting this new, popular
3995 technology, the labels fought it.</quote><footnote><para>
3996 <!-- f10 -->
3997 <indexterm><primary>cassette recording</primary></indexterm>
3998 <indexterm><primary>DAT (digital audio tape)</primary></indexterm>
3999 See Cap Gemini Ernst &amp; Young, <citetitle>Technology Evolution and the
4000 Music Industry's Business Model Crisis</citetitle> (2003), 3. This report
4001 describes the music industry's effort to stigmatize the budding
4002 practice of cassette taping in the 1970s, including an advertising
4003 campaign featuring a cassette-shape skull and the caption <quote>Home taping
4004 is killing music.</quote> At the time digital audio tape became a threat,
4005 the Office of Technical Assessment conducted a survey of consumer
4006 behavior. In 1988, 40 percent of consumers older than ten had taped
4007 music to a cassette format. U.S. Congress, Office of Technology
4008 Assessment, <citetitle>Copyright and Home Copying: Technology Challenges the Law</citetitle>,
4009 OTA-CIT-422 (Washington, D.C.: U.S. Government Printing Office,
4010 October 1989), 145&ndash;56. </para></footnote>
4011 The labels claimed that every album taped was an album unsold, and
4012 when record sales fell by 11.4 percent in 1981, the industry claimed
4013 that its point was proved. Technology was the problem, and banning or
4014 regulating technology was the answer.
4015 </para>
4016 <indexterm><primary>MTV</primary></indexterm>
4017 <para>
4018 Yet soon thereafter, and before Congress was given an opportunity to
4019 enact regulation, MTV was launched, and the industry had a record
4020 turnaround. <quote>In the end,</quote> Cap Gemini concludes,
4021 <quote>the <quote>crisis</quote> &hellip; was not the fault of the
4022 tapers&mdash;who did not [stop after MTV came into
4023 <!-- PAGE BREAK 83 -->
4024 being]&mdash;but had to a large extent resulted from stagnation in musical
4025 innovation at the major labels.</quote><footnote><para>
4026 <!-- f11 -->
4027 U.S. Congress, <citetitle>Copyright and Home Copying</citetitle>, 4.
4028 </para></footnote>
4029 </para>
4030 <indexterm startref='idxcassette' class='endofrange'/>
4031 <para>
4032 But just because the industry was wrong before does not mean it is
4033 wrong today. To evaluate the real threat that p2p sharing presents to
4034 the industry in particular, and society in general&mdash;or at least
4035 the society that inherits the tradition that gave us the film
4036 industry, the record industry, the radio industry, cable TV, and the
4037 VCR&mdash;the question is not simply whether type A sharing is
4038 harmful. The question is also <emphasis>how</emphasis> harmful type A
4039 sharing is, and how beneficial the other types of sharing are.
4040 </para>
4041 <para>
4042 We start to answer this question by focusing on the net harm, from the
4043 standpoint of the industry as a whole, that sharing networks cause.
4044 The <quote>net harm</quote> to the industry as a whole is the amount by which type
4045 A sharing exceeds type B. If the record companies sold more records
4046 through sampling than they lost through substitution, then sharing
4047 networks would actually benefit music companies on balance. They would
4048 therefore have little <emphasis>static</emphasis> reason to resist
4049 them.
4050
4051 </para>
4052 <indexterm id='idxcdssales' class='startofrange'><primary>CDs</primary><secondary>sales levels of</secondary></indexterm>
4053 <para>
4054 Could that be true? Could the industry as a whole be gaining because
4055 of file sharing? Odd as that might sound, the data about CD sales
4056 actually suggest it might be close.
4057 </para>
4058 <para>
4059 In 2002, the RIAA reported that CD sales had fallen by 8.9 percent,
4060 from 882 million to 803 million units; revenues fell 6.7
4061 percent.<footnote><para>
4062 <!-- f12 -->
4063 See Recording Industry Association of America, <citetitle>2002 Yearend Statistics</citetitle>,
4064 available at
4065 <ulink url="http://free-culture.cc/notes/">link #15</ulink>. A later
4066 report indicates even greater losses. See Recording Industry
4067 Association of America, <citetitle>Some Facts About Music Piracy</citetitle>, 25 June 2003,
4068 available at <ulink url="http://free-culture.cc/notes/">link
4069 #16</ulink>: <quote>In the past four years, unit shipments of recorded music
4070 have fallen by 26 percent from 1.16 billion units in to 860 million
4071 units in 2002 in the United States (based on units shipped). In terms
4072 of sales, revenues are down 14 percent, from $14.6 billion in to $12.6
4073 billion last year (based on U.S. dollar value of shipments). The music
4074 industry worldwide has gone from a $39 billion industry in 2000 down
4075 to a $32 billion industry in 2002 (based on U.S. dollar value of
4076 shipments).</quote>
4077 </para></footnote>
4078 This confirms a trend over the past few years. The RIAA blames
4079 Internet piracy for the trend, though there are many other causes that
4080 could account for this drop. SoundScan, for example, reports a more
4081 than 20 percent drop in the number of CDs released since 1999. That no
4082 doubt accounts for some of the decrease in sales. Rising prices could
4083 account for at least some of the loss. <quote>From 1999 to 2001, the average
4084 price of a CD rose 7.2 percent, from $13.04 to $14.19.</quote><footnote>
4085 <!-- f13 -->
4086 <para>
4087 Jane Black, <quote>Big Music's Broken Record,</quote> BusinessWeek online, 13
4088 February 2003, available at
4089 <ulink url="http://free-culture.cc/notes/">link #17</ulink>.
4090 <indexterm><primary>Black, Jane</primary></indexterm>
4091 </para>
4092 </footnote>
4093 Competition from other forms of media could also account for some of
4094 the decline. As Jane Black of <citetitle>BusinessWeek</citetitle> notes, <quote>The
4095 soundtrack to the film <citetitle>High Fidelity</citetitle> has a list price of
4096 $18.98. You could get the whole movie [on DVD] for
4097 $19.99.</quote><footnote><para>
4098 <!-- f14 -->
4099 Ibid.
4100 </para></footnote>
4101 </para>
4102 <para>
4103
4104 <!-- PAGE BREAK 84 -->
4105 But let's assume the RIAA is right, and all of the decline in CD sales
4106 is because of Internet sharing. Here's the rub: In the same period
4107 that the RIAA estimates that 803 million CDs were sold, the RIAA
4108 estimates that 2.1 billion CDs were downloaded for free. Thus,
4109 although 2.6 times the total number of CDs sold were downloaded for
4110 free, sales revenue fell by just 6.7 percent.
4111 </para>
4112 <para>
4113 There are too many different things happening at the same time to
4114 explain these numbers definitively, but one conclusion is unavoidable:
4115 The recording industry constantly asks, <quote>What's the difference between
4116 downloading a song and stealing a CD?</quote>&mdash;but their own numbers
4117 reveal the difference. If I steal a CD, then there is one less CD to
4118 sell. Every taking is a lost sale. But on the basis of the numbers the
4119 RIAA provides, it is absolutely clear that the same is not true of
4120 downloads. If every download were a lost sale&mdash;if every use of
4121 Kazaa <quote>rob[bed] the author of [his] profit</quote>&mdash;then the industry
4122 would have suffered a 100 percent drop in sales last year, not a 7
4123 percent drop. If 2.6 times the number of CDs sold were downloaded for
4124 free, and yet sales revenue dropped by just 6.7 percent, then there is
4125 a huge difference between <quote>downloading a song and stealing a CD.</quote>
4126 </para>
4127 <indexterm startref='idxcdssales' class='endofrange'/>
4128 <para>
4129 These are the harms&mdash;alleged and perhaps exaggerated but, let's
4130 assume, real. What of the benefits? File sharing may impose costs on
4131 the recording industry. What value does it produce in addition to
4132 these costs?
4133 </para>
4134 <para>
4135 One benefit is type C sharing&mdash;making available content that
4136 is technically still under copyright but is no longer commercially
4137 available. This is not a small category of content. There are
4138 millions of tracks that are no longer commercially
4139 available.<footnote><para>
4140 <!-- f15 -->
4141 By one estimate, 75 percent of the music released by the major labels
4142 is no longer in print. See Online Entertainment and Copyright
4143 Law&mdash;Coming Soon to a Digital Device Near You: Hearing Before the
4144 Senate Committee on the Judiciary, 107th Cong., 1st sess. (3 April
4145 2001) (prepared statement of the Future of Music Coalition), available
4146 at <ulink url="http://free-culture.cc/notes/">link #18</ulink>.
4147 </para></footnote>
4148 And while it's conceivable that some of this content is not available
4149 because the artist producing the content doesn't want it to be made
4150 available, the vast majority of it is unavailable solely because the
4151 publisher or the distributor has decided it no longer makes economic
4152 sense <emphasis>to the company</emphasis> to make it available.
4153 </para>
4154 <indexterm><primary>books</primary><secondary>resales of</secondary></indexterm>
4155 <indexterm><primary>used record sales</primary></indexterm>
4156 <para>
4157 In real space&mdash;long before the Internet&mdash;the market had a simple
4158 <!-- PAGE BREAK 85 -->
4159 response to this problem: used book and record stores. There are
4160 thousands of used book and used record stores in America
4161 today.<footnote><para>
4162 <!-- f16 -->
4163 <indexterm><primary>books</primary><secondary>resales of</secondary></indexterm>
4164 While there are not good estimates of the number of used record stores
4165 in existence, in 2002, there were 7,198 used book dealers in the
4166 United States, an increase of 20 percent since 1993. See Book Hunter
4167 Press, <citetitle>The Quiet Revolution: The Expansion of the Used Book
4168 Market</citetitle> (2002), available at
4169 <ulink url="http://free-culture.cc/notes/">link #19</ulink>. Used
4170 records accounted for $260 million in sales in 2002. See National
4171 Association of Recording Merchandisers, <quote>2002 Annual Survey
4172 Results,</quote> available at
4173 <ulink url="http://free-culture.cc/notes/">link #20</ulink>.
4174 </para></footnote>
4175 These stores buy content from owners, then sell the content they
4176 buy. And under American copyright law, when they buy and sell this
4177 content, <emphasis>even if the content is still under
4178 copyright</emphasis>, the copyright owner doesn't get a dime. Used
4179 book and record stores are commercial entities; their owners make
4180 money from the content they sell; but as with cable companies before
4181 statutory licensing, they don't have to pay the copyright owner for
4182 the content they sell.
4183 </para>
4184 <indexterm><primary>books</primary><secondary>out of print</secondary></indexterm>
4185 <indexterm><primary>Bernstein, Leonard</primary></indexterm>
4186 <indexterm id='idxinternetbookson' class='startofrange'><primary>Internet</primary><secondary>books on</secondary></indexterm>
4187 <para>
4188 Type C sharing, then, is very much like used book stores or used
4189 record stores. It is different, of course, because the person making
4190 the content available isn't making money from making the content
4191 available. It is also different, of course, because in real space,
4192 when I sell a record, I don't have it anymore, while in cyberspace,
4193 when someone shares my 1949 recording of Bernstein's <quote>Two Love Songs,</quote>
4194 I still have it. That difference would matter economically if the
4195 owner of the copyright were selling the record in competition to my
4196 sharing. But we're talking about the class of content that is not
4197 currently commercially available. The Internet is making it available,
4198 through cooperative sharing, without competing with the market.
4199 </para>
4200 <para>
4201 It may well be, all things considered, that it would be better if the
4202 copyright owner got something from this trade. But just because it may
4203 well be better, it doesn't follow that it would be good to ban used book
4204 stores. Or put differently, if you think that type C sharing should be
4205 stopped, do you think that libraries and used book stores should be
4206 shut as well?
4207 </para>
4208 <indexterm id='idxbooksfreeonline1' class='startofrange'><primary>books</primary><secondary>free on-line releases of</secondary></indexterm>
4209 <indexterm><primary>Doctorow, Cory</primary></indexterm>
4210 <indexterm><primary>Down and Out in the Magic Kingdom (Doctorow)</primary></indexterm>
4211 <para>
4212 Finally, and perhaps most importantly, file-sharing networks enable
4213 type D sharing to occur&mdash;the sharing of content that copyright owners
4214 want to have shared or for which there is no continuing copyright. This
4215 sharing clearly benefits authors and society. Science fiction author
4216 Cory Doctorow, for example, released his first novel, <citetitle>Down and Out in
4217 the Magic Kingdom</citetitle>, both free on-line and in bookstores on the same
4218
4219 <!-- PAGE BREAK 86 -->
4220 day. His (and his publisher's) thinking was that the on-line distribution
4221 would be a great advertisement for the <quote>real</quote> book. People would read
4222 part on-line, and then decide whether they liked the book or not. If
4223 they liked it, they would be more likely to buy it. Doctorow's content is
4224 type D content. If sharing networks enable his work to be spread, then
4225 both he and society are better off. (Actually, much better off: It is a
4226 great book!)
4227 </para>
4228 <indexterm startref='idxbooksfreeonline1' class='endofrange'/>
4229 <para>
4230 Likewise for work in the public domain: This sharing benefits society
4231 with no legal harm to authors at all. If efforts to solve the problem
4232 of type A sharing destroy the opportunity for type D sharing, then we
4233 lose something important in order to protect type A content.
4234 </para>
4235 <para>
4236 The point throughout is this: While the recording industry
4237 understandably says, <quote>This is how much we've lost,</quote> we must also ask,
4238 <quote>How much has society gained from p2p sharing? What are the
4239 efficiencies? What is the content that otherwise would be
4240 unavailable?</quote>
4241 </para>
4242 <indexterm startref='idxinternetbookson' class='endofrange'/>
4243 <para>
4244 For unlike the piracy I described in the first section of this
4245 chapter, much of the <quote>piracy</quote> that file sharing enables is plainly
4246 legal and good. And like the piracy I described in chapter
4247 <xref xrefstyle="select: labelnumber" linkend="pirates"/>, much of
4248 this piracy is motivated by a new way of spreading content caused by
4249 changes in the technology of distribution. Thus, consistent with the
4250 tradition that gave us Hollywood, radio, the recording industry, and
4251 cable TV, the question we should be asking about file sharing is how
4252 best to preserve its benefits while minimizing (to the extent
4253 possible) the wrongful harm it causes artists. The question is one of
4254 balance. The law should seek that balance, and that balance will be
4255 found only with time.
4256 </para>
4257 <para>
4258 <quote>But isn't the war just a war against illegal sharing? Isn't the target
4259 just what you call type A sharing?</quote>
4260 </para>
4261 <indexterm id='idxcopyrightinfringementlawsuitszerotolerancein' class='startofrange'><primary>copyright infringement lawsuits</primary><secondary>zero tolerance in</secondary></indexterm>
4262 <indexterm id='idxnapsterinfringingmaterialblockedby' class='startofrange'><primary>Napster</primary><secondary>infringing material blocked by</secondary></indexterm>
4263 <indexterm id='idxpeertopeerppfilesharinginfringementprotectionsin' class='startofrange'><primary>peer-to-peer (p2p) file sharing</primary><secondary>infringement protections in</secondary></indexterm>
4264 <para>
4265 You would think. And we should hope. But so far, it is not. The effect
4266 of the war purportedly on type A sharing alone has been felt far
4267 beyond that one class of sharing. That much is obvious from the
4268 Napster case itself. When Napster told the district court that it had
4269 developed a technology to block the transfer of 99.4 percent of
4270 identified
4271
4272 <!-- PAGE BREAK 87 -->
4273 infringing material, the district court told counsel for Napster 99.4
4274 percent was not good enough. Napster had to push the infringements
4275 <quote>down to zero.</quote><footnote><para>
4276 <!-- f17 -->
4277 See Transcript of Proceedings, In Re: Napster Copyright Litigation at 34-
4278 35 (N.D. Cal., 11 July 2001), nos. MDL-00-1369 MHP, C 99-5183
4279 MHP, available at
4280
4281 <ulink url="http://free-culture.cc/notes/">link #21</ulink>. For an
4282 account of the litigation and its toll on Napster, see Joseph Menn,
4283 <citetitle>All the Rave: The Rise and Fall of Shawn Fanning's Napster</citetitle> (New
4284 York: Crown Business, 2003), 269&ndash;82.
4285 </para></footnote>
4286 </para>
4287 <indexterm startref='idxnapsterinfringingmaterialblockedby' class='endofrange'/>
4288 <indexterm startref='idxpeertopeerppfilesharinginfringementprotectionsin' class='endofrange'/>
4289 <para>
4290 If 99.4 percent is not good enough, then this is a war on file-sharing
4291 technologies, not a war on copyright infringement. There is no way to
4292 assure that a p2p system is used 100 percent of the time in compliance
4293 with the law, any more than there is a way to assure that 100 percent of
4294 VCRs or 100 percent of Xerox machines or 100 percent of handguns
4295 are used in compliance with the law. Zero tolerance means zero p2p.
4296 The court's ruling means that we as a society must lose the benefits of
4297 p2p, even for the totally legal and beneficial uses they serve, simply to
4298 assure that there are zero copyright infringements caused by p2p.
4299 </para>
4300 <indexterm startref='idxcopyrightinfringementlawsuitszerotolerancein' class='endofrange'/>
4301 <para>
4302 Zero tolerance has not been our history. It has not produced the
4303 content industry that we know today. The history of American law has
4304 been a process of balance. As new technologies changed the way content
4305 was distributed, the law adjusted, after some time, to the new
4306 technology. In this adjustment, the law sought to ensure the
4307 legitimate rights of creators while protecting innovation. Sometimes
4308 this has meant more rights for creators. Sometimes less.
4309 </para>
4310 <indexterm><primary>artists</primary><secondary>recording industry payments to</secondary></indexterm>
4311 <indexterm><primary>composers, copyright protections of</primary></indexterm>
4312 <indexterm id='idxcongressusoncopyrightlaws2' class='startofrange'><primary>Congress, U.S.</primary><secondary>on copyright laws</secondary></indexterm>
4313 <indexterm id='idxcongressusonrecordingindustry2' class='startofrange'><primary>Congress, U.S.</primary><secondary>on recording industry</secondary></indexterm>
4314 <indexterm id='idxcopyrightlawonmusicrecordings2' class='startofrange'><primary>copyright law</primary><secondary>on music recordings</secondary></indexterm>
4315 <indexterm id='idxcopyrightlawstatutorylicensesin2' class='startofrange'><primary>copyright law</primary><secondary>statutory licenses in</secondary></indexterm>
4316 <indexterm><primary>radio</primary><secondary>music recordings played on</secondary></indexterm>
4317 <indexterm><primary>recording industry</primary><secondary>artist remuneration in</secondary></indexterm>
4318 <indexterm><primary>recording industry</primary><secondary>copyright protections in</secondary></indexterm>
4319 <indexterm><primary>recording industry</primary><secondary>radio broadcast and</secondary></indexterm>
4320 <indexterm><primary>statutory licenses</primary></indexterm>
4321 <indexterm><primary>composer's rights vs. producers' rights in</primary></indexterm>
4322 <para>
4323 So, as we've seen, when <quote>mechanical reproduction</quote> threatened the
4324 interests of composers, Congress balanced the rights of composers
4325 against the interests of the recording industry. It granted rights to
4326 composers, but also to the recording artists: Composers were to be
4327 paid, but at a price set by Congress. But when radio started
4328 broadcasting the recordings made by these recording artists, and they
4329 complained to Congress that their <quote>creative property</quote> was not being
4330 respected (since the radio station did not have to pay them for the
4331 creativity it broadcast), Congress rejected their claim. An indirect
4332 benefit was enough.
4333 </para>
4334 <indexterm id='idxcabletv2' class='startofrange'><primary>cable television</primary></indexterm>
4335 <para>
4336 Cable TV followed the pattern of record albums. When the courts
4337 rejected the claim that cable broadcasters had to pay for the content
4338 they rebroadcast, Congress responded by giving broadcasters a right to
4339 compensation, but at a level set by the law. It likewise gave cable
4340 companies the right to the content, so long as they paid the statutory
4341 price.
4342 </para>
4343 <indexterm startref='idxcongressusonrecordingindustry2' class='endofrange'/>
4344 <indexterm><primary>copyright law</primary><secondary>two central goals of</secondary></indexterm>
4345 <para>
4346
4347 <!-- PAGE BREAK 88 -->
4348 This compromise, like the compromise affecting records and player
4349 pianos, served two important goals&mdash;indeed, the two central goals
4350 of any copyright legislation. First, the law assured that new
4351 innovators would have the freedom to develop new ways to deliver
4352 content. Second, the law assured that copyright holders would be paid
4353 for the content that was distributed. One fear was that if Congress
4354 simply required cable TV to pay copyright holders whatever they
4355 demanded for their content, then copyright holders associated with
4356 broadcasters would use their power to stifle this new technology,
4357 cable. But if Congress had permitted cable to use broadcasters'
4358 content for free, then it would have unfairly subsidized cable. Thus
4359 Congress chose a path that would assure
4360 <emphasis>compensation</emphasis> without giving the past
4361 (broadcasters) control over the future (cable).
4362 </para>
4363 <indexterm startref='idxcopyrightlawonmusicrecordings2' class='endofrange'/>
4364 <indexterm startref='idxcopyrightlawstatutorylicensesin2' class='endofrange'/>
4365 <indexterm startref='idxcabletv2' class='endofrange'/>
4366 <indexterm id='idxbetamax' class='startofrange'><primary>Betamax</primary></indexterm>
4367 <indexterm id='idxcassettevcrs1' class='startofrange'><primary>cassette recording</primary><secondary>VCRs</secondary></indexterm>
4368 <indexterm id='idxsonybetamaxtechnologydevelopedby' class='startofrange'><primary>Sony</primary><secondary>Betamax technology developed by</secondary></indexterm>
4369 <para>
4370 In the same year that Congress struck this balance, two major
4371 producers and distributors of film content filed a lawsuit against
4372 another technology, the video tape recorder (VTR, or as we refer to
4373 them today, VCRs) that Sony had produced, the Betamax. Disney's and
4374 Universal's claim against Sony was relatively simple: Sony produced a
4375 device, Disney and Universal claimed, that enabled consumers to engage
4376 in copyright infringement. Because the device that Sony built had a
4377 <quote>record</quote> button, the device could be used to record copyrighted movies
4378 and shows. Sony was therefore benefiting from the copyright
4379 infringement of its customers. It should therefore, Disney and
4380 Universal claimed, be partially liable for that infringement.
4381 </para>
4382 <indexterm startref='idxcongressusoncopyrightlaws2' class='endofrange'/>
4383 <para>
4384 There was something to Disney's and Universal's claim. Sony did
4385 decide to design its machine to make it very simple to record television
4386 shows. It could have built the machine to block or inhibit any direct
4387 copying from a television broadcast. Or possibly, it could have built the
4388 machine to copy only if there were a special <quote>copy me</quote> signal on the
4389 line. It was clear that there were many television shows that did not
4390 grant anyone permission to copy. Indeed, if anyone had asked, no
4391 doubt the majority of shows would not have authorized copying. And
4392 <!-- PAGE BREAK 89 -->
4393 in the face of this obvious preference, Sony could have designed its
4394 system to minimize the opportunity for copyright infringement. It did
4395 not, and for that, Disney and Universal wanted to hold it responsible
4396 for the architecture it chose.
4397 </para>
4398 <indexterm id='idxcongressusoncopyrightlaws3' class='startofrange'><primary>Congress, U.S.</primary><secondary>on copyright laws</secondary></indexterm>
4399 <indexterm><primary>Congress, U.S.</primary><secondary>on VCR technology</secondary></indexterm>
4400 <indexterm id='idxvalentijackonvcrtechnology' class='startofrange'><primary>Valenti, Jack</primary><secondary>on VCR technology</secondary></indexterm>
4401 <para>
4402 MPAA president Jack Valenti became the studios' most vocal
4403 champion. Valenti called VCRs <quote>tapeworms.</quote> He warned,
4404 <quote>When there are 20, 30, 40 million of these VCRs in the land, we
4405 will be invaded by millions of <quote>tapeworms,</quote> eating away
4406 at the very heart and essence of the most precious asset the copyright
4407 owner has, his copyright.</quote><footnote><para>
4408 <!-- f18 -->
4409 Copyright Infringements (Audio and Video Recorders): Hearing on
4410 S. 1758 Before the Senate Committee on the Judiciary, 97th Cong., 1st
4411 and 2nd sess., 459 (1982) (testimony of Jack Valenti, president, Motion
4412 Picture Association of America, Inc.).
4413 </para></footnote>
4414 <quote>One does not have to be trained in sophisticated marketing and
4415 creative judgment,</quote> he told Congress, <quote>to understand the devastation
4416 on the after-theater marketplace caused by the hundreds of millions of
4417 tapings that will adversely impact on the future of the creative
4418 community in this country. It is simply a question of basic economics
4419 and plain common sense.</quote><footnote><para>
4420 <!-- f19 -->
4421 Copyright Infringements (Audio and Video Recorders), 475.
4422 </para></footnote>
4423 Indeed, as surveys would later show, 45
4424 percent of VCR owners had movie libraries of ten videos or more<footnote><para>
4425 <!-- f20 -->
4426 <citetitle>Universal City Studios, Inc</citetitle>. v. <citetitle>Sony Corp. of America</citetitle>, 480 F. Supp. 429,
4427 (C.D. Cal., 1979).
4428 </para></footnote>
4429 &mdash; a use the Court would later hold was not <quote>fair.</quote> By
4430 <quote>allowing VCR owners to copy freely by the means of an exemption from
4431 copyright infringement without creating a mechanism to compensate
4432 copyright owners,</quote> Valenti testified, Congress would <quote>take from the
4433 owners the very essence of their property: the exclusive right to
4434 control who may use their work, that is, who may copy it and thereby
4435 profit from its reproduction.</quote><footnote><para>
4436 <!-- f21 -->
4437 Copyright Infringements (Audio and Video Recorders), 485 (testimony
4438 of Jack Valenti).
4439 </para></footnote>
4440 </para>
4441 <indexterm startref='idxbetamax' class='endofrange'/>
4442 <indexterm startref='idxsonybetamaxtechnologydevelopedby' class='endofrange'/>
4443 <para>
4444 It took eight years for this case to be resolved by the Supreme
4445 Court. In the interim, the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals, which
4446 includes Hollywood in its jurisdiction&mdash;leading Judge Alex
4447 Kozinski, who sits on that court, refers to it as the <quote>Hollywood
4448 Circuit</quote>&mdash;held that Sony would be liable for the copyright
4449 infringement made possible by its machines. Under the Ninth Circuit's
4450 rule, this totally familiar technology&mdash;which Jack Valenti had
4451 called <quote>the Boston Strangler of the American film industry</quote> (worse
4452 yet, it was a <emphasis>Japanese</emphasis> Boston Strangler of the
4453 American film industry)&mdash;was an illegal
4454 technology.<footnote><para>
4455 <!-- f22 -->
4456 <citetitle>Universal City Studios, Inc</citetitle>. v. <citetitle>Sony Corp. of America</citetitle>, 659 F. 2d 963 (9th Cir.
4457 1981).
4458 </para></footnote>
4459 <indexterm><primary>Kozinski, Alex</primary></indexterm>
4460 </para>
4461 <indexterm startref='idxvalentijackonvcrtechnology' class='endofrange'/>
4462 <para>
4463 But the Supreme Court reversed the decision of the Ninth Circuit.
4464
4465 <!-- PAGE BREAK 90 -->
4466 And in its reversal, the Court clearly articulated its understanding of
4467 when and whether courts should intervene in such disputes. As the
4468 Court wrote,
4469 </para>
4470 <blockquote>
4471 <para>
4472 Sound policy, as well as history, supports our consistent deference
4473 to Congress when major technological innovations alter the
4474 market
4475 for copyrighted materials. Congress has the constitutional
4476 authority
4477 and the institutional ability to accommodate fully the
4478 varied permutations of competing interests that are inevitably
4479 implicated
4480 by such new technology.<footnote><para>
4481 <!-- f23 -->
4482 <citetitle>Sony Corp. of America</citetitle> v. <citetitle>Universal City Studios, Inc</citetitle>., 464 U.S. 417, 431 (1984).
4483 </para></footnote>
4484 </para>
4485 </blockquote>
4486 <indexterm startref='idxcongressusoncopyrightlaws3' class='endofrange'/>
4487 <para>
4488 Congress was asked to respond to the Supreme Court's decision. But as
4489 with the plea of recording artists about radio broadcasts, Congress
4490 ignored the request. Congress was convinced that American film got
4491 enough, this <quote>taking</quote> notwithstanding. If we put these cases
4492 together, a pattern is clear:
4493 </para>
4494
4495 <informaltable id="t1">
4496 <tgroup cols="4" align="left">
4497 <thead>
4498 <row>
4499 <entry>CASE</entry>
4500 <entry>WHOSE VALUE WAS <quote>PIRATED</quote></entry>
4501 <entry>RESPONSE OF THE COURTS</entry>
4502 <entry>RESPONSE OF CONGRESS</entry>
4503 </row>
4504 </thead>
4505 <tbody>
4506 <row>
4507 <entry>Recordings</entry>
4508 <entry>Composers</entry>
4509 <entry>No protection</entry>
4510 <entry>Statutory license</entry>
4511 </row>
4512 <row>
4513 <entry>Radio</entry>
4514 <entry>Recording artists</entry>
4515 <entry>N/A</entry>
4516 <entry>Nothing</entry>
4517 </row>
4518 <row>
4519 <entry>Cable TV</entry>
4520 <entry>Broadcasters</entry>
4521 <entry>No protection</entry>
4522 <entry>Statutory license</entry>
4523 </row>
4524 <row>
4525 <entry>VCR</entry>
4526 <entry>Film creators</entry>
4527 <entry>No protection</entry>
4528 <entry>Nothing</entry>
4529 </row>
4530 </tbody>
4531 </tgroup>
4532 </informaltable>
4533 <indexterm startref='idxcassettevcrs1' class='endofrange'/>
4534 <para>
4535 In each case throughout our history, a new technology changed the
4536 way content was distributed.<footnote><para>
4537 <indexterm><primary>DAT (digital audio tape)</primary></indexterm>
4538 <!-- f24 -->
4539 These are the most important instances in our history, but there are other
4540 cases as well. The technology of digital audio tape (DAT), for example,
4541 was regulated by Congress to minimize the risk of piracy. The remedy
4542 Congress imposed did burden DAT producers, by taxing tape sales and
4543 controlling the technology of DAT. See Audio Home Recording Act of
4544 1992 (Title 17 of the <citetitle>United States Code</citetitle>), Pub. L. No. 102-563, 106 Stat.
4545 4237, codified at 17 U.S.C. §1001. Again, however, this regulation did not
4546 eliminate the opportunity for free riding in the sense I've described. See
4547 Lessig, <citetitle>Future</citetitle>, 71. See also Picker, <quote>From Edison to the Broadcast Flag,</quote>
4548 <citetitle>University of Chicago Law Review</citetitle> 70 (2003): 293&ndash;96.
4549 <indexterm><primary>broadcast flag</primary></indexterm>
4550 <indexterm><primary>Picker, Randal C.</primary></indexterm>
4551 </para></footnote>
4552 In each case, throughout our history,
4553 that change meant that someone got a <quote>free ride</quote> on someone else's
4554 work.
4555 </para>
4556 <para>
4557 In <emphasis>none</emphasis> of these cases did either the courts or
4558 Congress eliminate all free riding. In <emphasis>none</emphasis> of
4559 these cases did the courts or Congress insist that the law should
4560 assure that the copyright holder get all the value that his copyright
4561 created. In every case, the copyright owners complained of <quote>piracy.</quote>
4562 In every case, Congress acted to recognize some of the legitimacy in
4563 the behavior of the <quote>pirates.</quote> In each case, Congress allowed some new
4564 technology to benefit from content made before. It balanced the
4565 interests at stake.
4566 <!-- PAGE BREAK 91 -->
4567 </para>
4568 <indexterm><primary>Disney, Walt</primary></indexterm>
4569 <para>
4570 When you think across these examples, and the other examples that
4571 make up the first four chapters of this section, this balance makes
4572 sense. Was Walt Disney a pirate? Would doujinshi be better if creators
4573 had to ask permission? Should tools that enable others to capture and
4574 spread images as a way to cultivate or criticize our culture be better
4575 regulated?
4576 Is it really right that building a search engine should expose you
4577 to $15 million in damages? Would it have been better if Edison had
4578 controlled film? Should every cover band have to hire a lawyer to get
4579 permission to record a song?
4580 </para>
4581 <indexterm><primary>Supreme Court, U.S.</primary><secondary>on balance of interests in copyright law</secondary></indexterm>
4582 <para>
4583 We could answer yes to each of these questions, but our tradition
4584 has answered no. In our tradition, as the Supreme Court has stated,
4585 copyright <quote>has never accorded the copyright owner complete control
4586 over all possible uses of his work.</quote><footnote><para>
4587 <!-- f25 -->
4588 <citetitle>Sony Corp. of America</citetitle> v. <citetitle>Universal City Studios, Inc</citetitle>., 464 U.S. 417,
4589 (1984).
4590 </para></footnote>
4591 Instead, the particular uses that the law regulates have been defined
4592 by balancing the good that comes from granting an exclusive right
4593 against the burdens such an exclusive right creates. And this
4594 balancing has historically been done <emphasis>after</emphasis> a
4595 technology has matured, or settled into the mix of technologies that
4596 facilitate the distribution of content.
4597 </para>
4598 <para>
4599 We should be doing the same thing today. The technology of the
4600 Internet is changing quickly. The way people connect to the Internet
4601 (wires vs. wireless) is changing very quickly. No doubt the network
4602 should not become a tool for <quote>stealing</quote> from artists. But neither
4603 should the law become a tool to entrench one particular way in which
4604 artists (or more accurately, distributors) get paid. As I describe in
4605 some detail in the last chapter of this book, we should be securing
4606 income to artists while we allow the market to secure the most
4607 efficient way to promote and distribute content. This will require
4608 changes in the law, at least in the interim. These changes should be
4609 designed to balance the protection of the law against the strong
4610 public interest that innovation continue.
4611 </para>
4612 <para>
4613
4614 <!-- PAGE BREAK 92 -->
4615 This is especially true when a new technology enables a vastly
4616 superior mode of distribution. And this p2p has done. P2p technologies
4617 can be ideally efficient in moving content across a widely diverse
4618 network. Left to develop, they could make the network vastly more
4619 efficient. Yet these <quote>potential public benefits,</quote> as John Schwartz
4620 writes in <citetitle>The New York Times</citetitle>, <quote>could be delayed in the P2P
4621 fight.</quote><footnote><para>
4622 <!-- f26 -->
4623 John Schwartz, <quote>New Economy: The Attack on Peer-to-Peer Software
4624 Echoes Past Efforts,</quote> <citetitle>New York Times</citetitle>, 22 September 2003, C3.
4625 </para></footnote>
4626 </para>
4627 <para>
4628 <emphasis role='strong'>Yet when anyone</emphasis> begins to talk
4629 about <quote>balance,</quote> the copyright warriors raise a different
4630 argument. <quote>All this hand waving about balance and
4631 incentives,</quote> they say, <quote>misses a fundamental point. Our
4632 content,</quote> the warriors insist, <quote>is our
4633 <emphasis>property</emphasis>. Why should we wait for Congress to
4634 <quote>rebalance</quote> our property rights? Do you have to wait
4635 before calling the police when your car has been stolen? And why
4636 should Congress deliberate at all about the merits of this theft? Do
4637 we ask whether the car thief had a good use for the car before we
4638 arrest him?</quote>
4639 </para>
4640 <para>
4641 <quote>It is <emphasis>our property</emphasis>,</quote> the warriors
4642 insist. <quote>And it should be protected just as any other property
4643 is protected.</quote>
4644 </para>
4645 <!-- PAGE BREAK 93 -->
4646 </section>
4647 </chapter>
4648 </part>
4649 <part id="c-property">
4650 <title><quote>Property</quote></title>
4651 <partintro>
4652 <para>
4653
4654 <!-- PAGE BREAK 94 -->
4655 <emphasis role='strong'>The copyright warriors</emphasis> are right: A
4656 copyright is a kind of property. It can be owned and sold, and the law
4657 protects against its theft. Ordinarily, the copyright owner gets to
4658 hold out for any price he wants. Markets reckon the supply and demand
4659 that partially determine the price she can get.
4660 </para>
4661 <para>
4662 But in ordinary language, to call a copyright a <quote>property</quote> right is a
4663 bit misleading, for the property of copyright is an odd kind of
4664 property. Indeed, the very idea of property in any idea or any
4665 expression is very odd. I understand what I am taking when I take the
4666 picnic table you put in your backyard. I am taking a thing, the picnic
4667 table, and after I take it, you don't have it. But what am I taking
4668 when I take the good <emphasis>idea</emphasis> you had to put a picnic
4669 table in the backyard&mdash;by, for example, going to Sears, buying a
4670 table, and putting it in my backyard? What is the thing I am taking
4671 then?
4672 </para>
4673 <indexterm><primary>Jefferson, Thomas</primary></indexterm>
4674 <para>
4675 The point is not just about the thingness of picnic tables versus
4676 ideas, though that's an important difference. The point instead is that
4677 <!-- PAGE BREAK 95 -->
4678 in the ordinary case&mdash;indeed, in practically every case except for a
4679 narrow
4680 range of exceptions&mdash;ideas released to the world are free. I don't
4681 take anything from you when I copy the way you dress&mdash;though I
4682 might seem weird if I did it every day, and especially weird if you are a
4683 woman. Instead, as Thomas Jefferson said (and as is especially true
4684 when I copy the way someone else dresses), <quote>He who receives an idea
4685 from me, receives instruction himself without lessening mine; as he who
4686 lights his taper at mine, receives light without darkening me.</quote><footnote><para>
4687 <!-- f1 -->
4688 Letter from Thomas Jefferson to Isaac McPherson (13 August 1813) in
4689 <citetitle>The Writings of Thomas Jefferson</citetitle>, vol. 6 (Andrew A. Lipscomb and Albert
4690 Ellery Bergh, eds., 1903), 330, 333&ndash;34.
4691 </para></footnote>
4692 </para>
4693 <indexterm><primary>property rights</primary><secondary>intangibility of</secondary></indexterm>
4694 <para>
4695 The exceptions to free use are ideas and expressions within the
4696 reach of the law of patent and copyright, and a few other domains that
4697 I won't discuss here. Here the law says you can't take my idea or
4698 expression
4699 without my permission: The law turns the intangible into
4700 property.
4701 </para>
4702 <para>
4703 But how, and to what extent, and in what form&mdash;the details,
4704 in other words&mdash;matter. To get a good sense of how this practice
4705 of turning the intangible into property emerged, we need to place this
4706 <quote>property</quote> in its proper context.<footnote><para>
4707 <!-- f2 -->
4708 As the legal realists taught American law, all property rights are
4709 intangible. A property right is simply a right that an individual has
4710 against the world to do or not do certain things that may or may not
4711 attach to a physical object. The right itself is intangible, even if
4712 the object to which it is (metaphorically) attached is tangible. See
4713 Adam Mossoff, <quote>What Is Property? Putting the Pieces Back Together,</quote>
4714 <citetitle>Arizona Law Review</citetitle> 45 (2003): 373, 429 n. 241.
4715 </para></footnote>
4716 </para>
4717 <para>
4718 My strategy in doing this will be the same as my strategy in the
4719 preceding part. I offer four stories to help put the idea of
4720 <quote>copyright material is property</quote> in context. Where did the idea come
4721 from? What are its limits? How does it function in practice? After
4722 these stories, the significance of this true
4723 statement&mdash;<quote>copyright material is property</quote>&mdash; will be a bit
4724 more clear, and its implications will be revealed as quite different
4725 from the implications that the copyright warriors would have us draw.
4726 </para>
4727 </partintro>
4728
4729 <!-- PAGE BREAK 96 -->
4730 <chapter label="6" id="founders">
4731 <title>Chapter Six: Founders</title>
4732 <indexterm id='idxbooksenglishcopyrightlawdevelopedfor' class='startofrange'><primary>books</primary><secondary>English copyright law developed for</secondary></indexterm>
4733 <indexterm id='idxcopyrightlawdevelopmentof' class='startofrange'><primary>copyright law</primary><secondary>development of</secondary></indexterm>
4734 <indexterm id='idxcopyrightlawenglish' class='startofrange'><primary>copyright law</primary><secondary>English</secondary></indexterm>
4735 <indexterm id='idxenglandcopyrightlawsdevelopedin' class='startofrange'><primary>England, copyright laws developed in</primary></indexterm>
4736 <indexterm id='idxunitedkingdomhistoryofcopyrightlawin' class='startofrange'><primary>United Kingdom</primary><secondary>history of copyright law in</secondary></indexterm>
4737 <indexterm><primary>Branagh, Kenneth</primary></indexterm>
4738 <indexterm><primary>Henry V</primary></indexterm>
4739 <indexterm><primary>Shakespeare, William</primary></indexterm>
4740 <indexterm id='idxromeoandjulietshakespeare' class='startofrange'><primary>Romeo and Juliet (Shakespeare)</primary></indexterm>
4741 <para>
4742 <emphasis role='strong'>William Shakespeare</emphasis> wrote
4743 <citetitle>Romeo and Juliet</citetitle> in 1595. The play was first
4744 published in 1597. It was the eleventh major play that Shakespeare had
4745 written. He would continue to write plays through 1613, and the plays
4746 that he wrote have continued to define Anglo-American culture ever
4747 since. So deeply have the works of a sixteenth-century writer seeped
4748 into our culture that we often don't even recognize their source. I
4749 once overheard someone commenting on Kenneth Branagh's adaptation of
4750 Henry V: <quote>I liked it, but Shakespeare is so full of
4751 clichés.</quote>
4752 </para>
4753 <indexterm><primary>Conger</primary></indexterm>
4754 <indexterm id='idxtonsonjacob' class='startofrange'><primary>Tonson, Jacob</primary></indexterm>
4755 <para>
4756 In 1774, almost 180 years after <citetitle>Romeo and Juliet</citetitle> was written, the
4757 <quote>copy-right</quote> for the work was still thought by many to be the exclusive
4758 right of a single London publisher, Jacob Tonson.<footnote><para>
4759 <!-- f1 -->
4760 <indexterm><primary>Jonson, Ben</primary></indexterm>
4761 <indexterm><primary>Dryden, John</primary></indexterm>
4762 Jacob Tonson is typically remembered for his associations with prominent
4763 eighteenth-century literary figures, especially John Dryden, and for his
4764 handsome <quote>definitive editions</quote> of classic works. In addition to <citetitle>Romeo and
4765 Juliet</citetitle>, he published an astonishing array of works that still remain at the
4766 heart of the English canon, including collected works of Shakespeare, Ben
4767 Jonson, John Milton, and John Dryden. See Keith Walker, <quote>Jacob Tonson,
4768 Bookseller,</quote> <citetitle>American Scholar</citetitle> 61:3 (1992): 424&ndash;31.
4769 </para></footnote>
4770 Tonson was the most prominent of a small group of publishers called
4771 the Conger<footnote><para>
4772 <!-- f2 -->
4773 Lyman Ray Patterson, <citetitle>Copyright in Historical Perspective</citetitle> (Nashville:
4774 Vanderbilt University Press, 1968), 151&ndash;52.
4775 </para></footnote>
4776 who controlled bookselling in England during the eighteenth
4777 century. The Conger claimed a perpetual right to control the <quote>copy</quote> of
4778 books that they had acquired from authors. That perpetual right meant
4779 that no
4780 <!-- PAGE BREAK 97 -->
4781 one else could publish copies of a book to which they held the
4782 copyright. Prices of the classics were thus kept high; competition to
4783 produce better or cheaper editions was eliminated.
4784 </para>
4785 <indexterm><primary>British Parliament</primary></indexterm>
4786 <indexterm id='idxcopyrightdurationof2' class='startofrange'><primary>copyright</primary><secondary>duration of</secondary></indexterm>
4787 <indexterm><primary>copyright</primary><secondary>renewability of</secondary></indexterm>
4788 <indexterm><primary>Statute of Anne (1710)</primary></indexterm>
4789 <para>
4790 Now, there's something puzzling about the year 1774 to anyone who
4791 knows a little about copyright law. The better-known year in the
4792 history of copyright is 1710, the year that the British Parliament
4793 adopted the first <quote>copyright</quote> act. Known as the Statute of Anne, the
4794 act stated that all published works would get a copyright term of
4795 fourteen years, renewable once if the author was alive, and that all
4796 works already published by 1710 would get a single term of twenty-one
4797 additional years.<footnote><para>
4798 <!-- f3 -->
4799 <indexterm><primary>Vaidhyanathan, Siva</primary></indexterm>
4800 As Siva Vaidhyanathan nicely argues, it is erroneous to call this a
4801 <quote>copyright law.</quote> See Vaidhyanathan, <citetitle>Copyrights and Copywrongs</citetitle>, 40.
4802 </para></footnote> Under this law, <citetitle>Romeo and Juliet</citetitle> should have been
4803 free in 1731. So why was there any issue about it still being under
4804 Tonson's control in 1774?
4805 </para>
4806 <indexterm startref='idxromeoandjulietshakespeare' class='endofrange'/>
4807 <indexterm startref='idxtonsonjacob' class='endofrange'/>
4808 <indexterm id='idxlawcommonvspositive' class='startofrange'><primary>law</primary><secondary>common vs. positive</secondary></indexterm>
4809 <indexterm><primary>positive law</primary></indexterm>
4810 <indexterm><primary>Licensing Act (1662)</primary></indexterm>
4811 <para>
4812 The reason is that the English hadn't yet agreed on what a <quote>copyright</quote>
4813 was&mdash;indeed, no one had. At the time the English passed the
4814 Statute of Anne, there was no other legislation governing copyrights.
4815 The last law regulating publishers, the Licensing Act of 1662, had
4816 expired in 1695. That law gave publishers a monopoly over publishing,
4817 as a way to make it easier for the Crown to control what was
4818 published. But after it expired, there was no positive law that said
4819 that the publishers, or <quote>Stationers,</quote> had an exclusive right to print
4820 books.
4821 </para>
4822 <indexterm startref='idxcopyrightdurationof2' class='endofrange'/>
4823 <indexterm><primary>common law</primary></indexterm>
4824 <para>
4825 There was no <emphasis>positive</emphasis> law, but that didn't mean
4826 that there was no law. The Anglo-American legal tradition looks to
4827 both the words of legislatures and the words of judges to know the
4828 rules that are to govern how people are to behave. We call the words
4829 from legislatures <quote>positive law.</quote> We call the words from judges
4830 <quote>common law.</quote> The common law sets the background against which
4831 legislatures legislate; the legislature, ordinarily, can trump that
4832 background only if it passes a law to displace it. And so the real
4833 question after the licensing statutes had expired was whether the
4834 common law protected a copyright, independent of any positive law.
4835 </para>
4836 <indexterm startref='idxlawcommonvspositive' class='endofrange'/>
4837 <indexterm><primary>Conger</primary></indexterm>
4838 <indexterm id='idxbritishparliament' class='startofrange'><primary>British Parliament</primary></indexterm>
4839 <indexterm><primary>Scottish publishers</primary></indexterm>
4840 <indexterm id='idxstatuteofanne' class='startofrange'><primary>Statute of Anne (1710)</primary></indexterm>
4841 <para>
4842 This question was important to the publishers, or <quote>booksellers,</quote> as
4843 they were called, because there was growing competition from foreign
4844 publishers. The Scottish, in particular, were increasingly publishing
4845 and exporting books to England. That competition reduced the profits
4846
4847 <!-- PAGE BREAK 98 -->
4848 of the Conger, which reacted by demanding that Parliament pass a law
4849 to again give them exclusive control over publishing. That demand
4850 ultimately
4851 resulted in the Statute of Anne.
4852 </para>
4853 <indexterm id='idxcopyrightasnarrowmonopolyright' class='startofrange'><primary>copyright</primary><secondary>as narrow monopoly right</secondary></indexterm>
4854 <para>
4855 The Statute of Anne granted the author or <quote>proprietor</quote> of a book an
4856 exclusive right to print that book. In an important limitation,
4857 however, and to the horror of the booksellers, the law gave the
4858 bookseller that right for a limited term. At the end of that term, the
4859 copyright <quote>expired,</quote> and the work would then be free and could be
4860 published by anyone. Or so the legislature is thought to have
4861 believed.
4862 </para>
4863 <indexterm startref='idxstatuteofanne' class='endofrange'/>
4864 <para>
4865 Now, the thing to puzzle about for a moment is this: Why would
4866 Parliament limit the exclusive right? Not why would they limit it to
4867 the particular limit they set, but why would they limit the right
4868 <emphasis>at all?</emphasis>
4869 </para>
4870 <indexterm startref='idxbritishparliament' class='endofrange'/>
4871 <indexterm><primary>Shakespeare, William</primary></indexterm>
4872 <indexterm><primary>Romeo and Juliet (Shakespeare)</primary></indexterm>
4873 <para>
4874 For the booksellers, and the authors whom they represented, had a very
4875 strong claim. Take <citetitle>Romeo and Juliet</citetitle> as an example: That play
4876 was written by Shakespeare. It was his genius that brought it into the
4877 world. He didn't take anybody's property when he created this play
4878 (that's a controversial claim, but never mind), and by his creating
4879 this play, he didn't make it any harder for others to craft a play. So
4880 why is it that the law would ever allow someone else to come along and
4881 take Shakespeare's play without his, or his estate's, permission? What
4882 reason is there to allow someone else to <quote>steal</quote> Shakespeare's work?
4883 </para>
4884 <indexterm><primary>Statute of Anne (1710)</primary></indexterm>
4885 <para>
4886 The answer comes in two parts. We first need to see something special
4887 about the notion of <quote>copyright</quote> that existed at the time of the
4888 Statute of Anne. Second, we have to see something important about
4889 <quote>booksellers.</quote>
4890 </para>
4891 <indexterm><primary>copyright</primary><secondary>usage restrictions attached to</secondary></indexterm>
4892 <para>
4893 First, about copyright. In the last three hundred years, we have come
4894 to apply the concept of <quote>copyright</quote> ever more broadly. But in 1710, it
4895 wasn't so much a concept as it was a very particular right. The
4896 copyright was born as a very specific set of restrictions: It forbade
4897 others from reprinting a book. In 1710, the <quote>copy-right</quote> was a right
4898 to use a particular machine to replicate a particular work. It did not
4899 go beyond that very narrow right. It did not control any more
4900 generally how
4901 <!-- PAGE BREAK 99 -->
4902 a work could be <emphasis>used</emphasis>. Today the right includes a
4903 large collection of restrictions on the freedom of others: It grants
4904 the author the exclusive right to copy, the exclusive right to
4905 distribute, the exclusive right to perform, and so on.
4906 </para>
4907 <indexterm><primary>Branagh, Kenneth</primary></indexterm>
4908 <indexterm><primary>Shakespeare, William</primary></indexterm>
4909 <para>
4910 So, for example, even if the copyright to Shakespeare's works were
4911 perpetual, all that would have meant under the original meaning of the
4912 term was that no one could reprint Shakespeare's work without the
4913 permission of the Shakespeare estate. It would not have controlled
4914 anything, for example, about how the work could be performed, whether
4915 the work could be translated, or whether Kenneth Branagh would be
4916 allowed to make his films. The <quote>copy-right</quote> was only an exclusive
4917 right to print&mdash;no less, of course, but also no more.
4918 </para>
4919 <indexterm><primary>Henry VIII, King of England</primary></indexterm>
4920 <indexterm id='idxmonopolycopyrightas' class='startofrange'><primary>monopoly, copyright as</primary></indexterm>
4921 <indexterm><primary>Statute of Monopolies (1656)</primary></indexterm>
4922 <para>
4923 Even that limited right was viewed with skepticism by the British.
4924 They had had a long and ugly experience with <quote>exclusive rights,</quote>
4925 especially <quote>exclusive rights</quote> granted by the Crown. The English had
4926 fought a civil war in part about the Crown's practice of handing out
4927 monopolies&mdash;especially monopolies for works that already
4928 existed. King Henry VIII granted a patent to print the Bible and a
4929 monopoly to Darcy to print playing cards. The English Parliament began
4930 to fight back against this power of the Crown. In 1656, it passed the
4931 Statute of Monopolies, limiting monopolies to patents for new
4932 inventions. And by 1710, Parliament was eager to deal with the growing
4933 monopoly in publishing.
4934 </para>
4935 <para>
4936 Thus the <quote>copy-right,</quote> when viewed as a monopoly right, was naturally
4937 viewed as a right that should be limited. (However convincing the
4938 claim that <quote>it's my property, and I should have it forever,</quote> try
4939 sounding convincing when uttering, <quote>It's my monopoly, and I should
4940 have it forever.</quote>) The state would protect the exclusive right, but
4941 only so long as it benefited society. The British saw the harms from
4942 specialinterest favors; they passed a law to stop them.
4943 </para>
4944 <indexterm><primary>Milton, John</primary></indexterm>
4945 <indexterm id='idxbooksellersenglish' class='startofrange'><primary>booksellers, English</primary></indexterm>
4946 <indexterm><primary>Conger</primary></indexterm>
4947 <indexterm id='idxcopyrightdurationof3' class='startofrange'><primary>copyright</primary><secondary>duration of</secondary></indexterm>
4948 <para>
4949 Second, about booksellers. It wasn't just that the copyright was a
4950 monopoly. It was also that it was a monopoly held by the booksellers.
4951 Booksellers sound quaint and harmless to us. They were not viewed
4952 as harmless in seventeenth-century England. Members of the Conger
4953 <!-- PAGE BREAK 100 -->
4954
4955 were increasingly seen as monopolists of the worst
4956 kind&mdash;tools of the Crown's repression, selling the liberty of
4957 England to guarantee themselves a monopoly profit. The attacks against
4958 these monopolists were harsh: Milton described them as <quote>old patentees
4959 and monopolizers in the trade of book-selling</quote>; they were <quote>men who do
4960 not therefore labour in an honest profession to which learning is
4961 indetted.</quote><footnote><para>
4962
4963 <!-- f4 -->
4964 Philip Wittenberg, <citetitle>The Protection and Marketing of Literary
4965 Property</citetitle> (New York: J. Messner, Inc., 1937), 31.
4966 </para></footnote>
4967 </para>
4968 <indexterm><primary>Enlightenment</primary></indexterm>
4969 <indexterm><primary>knowledge, freedom of</primary></indexterm>
4970 <para>
4971 Many believed the power the booksellers exercised over the spread of
4972 knowledge was harming that spread, just at the time the Enlightenment
4973 was teaching the importance of education and knowledge spread
4974 generally. The idea that knowledge should be free was a hallmark of
4975 the time, and these powerful commercial interests were interfering
4976 with that idea.
4977 </para>
4978 <indexterm id='idxbritishparliament2' class='startofrange'><primary>British Parliament</primary></indexterm>
4979 <para>
4980 To balance this power, Parliament decided to increase competition
4981 among booksellers, and the simplest way to do that was to spread the
4982 wealth of valuable books. Parliament therefore limited the term of
4983 copyrights, and thereby guaranteed that valuable books would become
4984 open to any publisher to publish after a limited time. Thus the setting
4985 of the term for existing works to just twenty-one years was a
4986 compromise
4987 to fight the power of the booksellers. The limitation on terms was
4988 an indirect way to assure competition among publishers, and thus the
4989 construction and spread of culture.
4990 </para>
4991 <indexterm id='idxstatuteofanne2' class='startofrange'><primary>Statute of Anne (1710)
4992 </primary></indexterm>
4993 <indexterm id='idxcopyrightinperpetuity' class='startofrange'><primary>copyright</primary><secondary>in perpetuity</secondary></indexterm>
4994 <para>
4995 When 1731 (1710 + 21) came along, however, the booksellers were
4996 getting anxious. They saw the consequences of more competition, and
4997 like every competitor, they didn't like them. At first booksellers simply
4998 ignored the Statute of Anne, continuing to insist on the perpetual right
4999 to control publication. But in 1735 and 1737, they tried to persuade
5000 Parliament to extend their terms. Twenty-one years was not enough,
5001 they said; they needed more time.
5002 </para>
5003 <para>
5004 Parliament rejected their requests. As one pamphleteer put it, in
5005 words that echo today,
5006 </para>
5007 <blockquote>
5008 <para>
5009 I see no Reason for granting a further Term now, which will not
5010 hold as well for granting it again and again, as often as the Old
5011 <!-- PAGE BREAK 101 -->
5012 ones Expire; so that should this Bill pass, it will in Effect be
5013 establishing a perpetual Monopoly, a Thing deservedly odious in the
5014 Eye of the Law; it will be a great Cramp to Trade, a Discouragement to
5015 Learning, no Benefit to the Authors, but a general Tax on the Publick;
5016 and all this only to increase the private Gain of the
5017 Booksellers.<footnote><para>
5018 <!-- f5 -->
5019 A Letter to a Member of Parliament concerning the Bill now depending
5020 in the House of Commons, for making more effectual an Act in the
5021 Eighth Year of the Reign of Queen Anne, entitled, An Act for the
5022 Encouragement of Learning, by Vesting the Copies of Printed Books in
5023 the Authors or Purchasers of such Copies, during the Times therein
5024 mentioned (London, 1735), in Brief Amici Curiae of Tyler T. Ochoa et
5025 al., 8, <citetitle>Eldred</citetitle> v. <citetitle>Ashcroft</citetitle>, 537 U.S. 186 (2003) (No. 01-618).
5026 </para></footnote>
5027 </para>
5028 </blockquote>
5029 <indexterm startref='idxstatuteofanne2' class='endofrange'/>
5030 <indexterm startref='idxcopyrightinperpetuity' class='endofrange'/>
5031 <indexterm><primary>common law</primary></indexterm>
5032 <indexterm><primary>law</primary><secondary>common vs. positive</secondary></indexterm>
5033 <indexterm><primary>positive law</primary></indexterm>
5034 <para>
5035 Having failed in Parliament, the publishers turned to the courts in a
5036 series of cases. Their argument was simple and direct: The Statute of
5037 Anne gave authors certain protections through positive law, but those
5038 protections were not intended as replacements for the common law.
5039 Instead, they were intended simply to supplement the common law.
5040 Under common law, it was already wrong to take another person's
5041 creative <quote>property</quote> and use it without his permission. The Statute of
5042 Anne, the booksellers argued, didn't change that. Therefore, just
5043 because the protections of the Statute of Anne expired, that didn't
5044 mean the protections of the common law expired: Under the common law
5045 they had the right to ban the publication of a book, even if its
5046 Statute of Anne copyright had expired. This, they argued, was the only
5047 way to protect authors.
5048 </para>
5049 <indexterm startref='idxbritishparliament2' class='endofrange'/>
5050 <para>
5051 This was a clever argument, and one that had the support of some of
5052 the leading jurists of the day. It also displayed extraordinary
5053 chutzpah. Until then, as law professor Raymond Patterson has put it,
5054 <quote>The publishers &hellip; had as much concern for authors as a cattle
5055 rancher has for cattle.</quote><footnote><para>
5056 <!-- f6 -->
5057 <indexterm><primary>Patterson, Raymond</primary></indexterm>
5058 <indexterm><primary>Vaidhyanathan, Siva</primary></indexterm>
5059 Lyman Ray Patterson, <quote>Free Speech, Copyright, and Fair Use,</quote> <citetitle>Vanderbilt
5060 Law Review</citetitle> 40 (1987): 28. For a wonderfully compelling account, see
5061 Vaidhyanathan, 37&ndash;48.
5062 </para></footnote>
5063 The bookseller didn't care squat for the rights of the author. His
5064 concern was the monopoly profit that the author's work gave.
5065 </para>
5066 <indexterm id='idxdonaldsonalexander' class='startofrange'><primary>Donaldson, Alexander</primary></indexterm>
5067 <indexterm><primary>Patterson, Raymond</primary></indexterm>
5068 <indexterm id='idxscottishpublishers' class='startofrange'><primary>Scottish publishers</primary></indexterm>
5069 <para>
5070 The booksellers' argument was not accepted without a fight.
5071 The hero of this fight was a Scottish bookseller named Alexander
5072 Donaldson.<footnote><para>
5073 <!-- f7 -->
5074 For a compelling account, see David Saunders, <citetitle>Authorship and Copyright</citetitle>
5075 (London: Routledge, 1992), 62&ndash;69.
5076 </para></footnote>
5077 </para>
5078 <indexterm id='idxstatuteofanne3' class='startofrange'><primary>Statute of Anne (1710)</primary></indexterm>
5079 <indexterm id='idxconger' class='startofrange'><primary>Conger</primary></indexterm>
5080 <indexterm><primary>Boswell, James</primary></indexterm>
5081 <indexterm><primary>Erskine, Andrew</primary></indexterm>
5082 <para>
5083 Donaldson was an outsider to the London Conger. He began his
5084 career in Edinburgh in 1750. The focus of his business was inexpensive
5085 reprints <quote>of standard works whose copyright term had expired,</quote> at least
5086 under the Statute of Anne.<footnote><para>
5087 <!-- f8 -->
5088 Mark Rose, <citetitle>Authors and Owners</citetitle> (Cambridge: Harvard University Press,
5089 1993), 92.
5090 <indexterm><primary>Rose, Mark</primary></indexterm>
5091 </para></footnote>
5092 Donaldson's publishing house prospered
5093 <!-- PAGE BREAK 102 -->
5094 and became <quote>something of a center for literary Scotsmen.</quote> <quote>[A]mong
5095 them,</quote> Professor Mark Rose writes, was <quote>the young James Boswell
5096 who, together with his friend Andrew Erskine, published an anthology
5097 of contemporary Scottish poems with Donaldson.</quote><footnote><para>
5098 <!-- f9 -->
5099 Ibid., 93.
5100 </para></footnote>
5101 </para>
5102 <indexterm id='idxcommonlaw' class='startofrange'><primary>common law</primary></indexterm>
5103 <para>
5104 When the London booksellers tried to shut down Donaldson's shop in
5105 Scotland, he responded by moving his shop to London, where he sold
5106 inexpensive editions <quote>of the most popular English books, in defiance
5107 of the supposed common law right of Literary
5108 Property.</quote><footnote><para>
5109 <!-- f10 -->
5110 <indexterm><primary>Patterson, Raymond</primary></indexterm>
5111 Lyman Ray Patterson, <citetitle>Copyright in Historical Perspective</citetitle>, 167 (quoting
5112 Borwell).
5113 </para></footnote>
5114 His books undercut the Conger prices by 30 to 50 percent, and he
5115 rested his right to compete upon the ground that, under the Statute of
5116 Anne, the works he was selling had passed out of protection.
5117 </para>
5118 <indexterm startref='idxconger' class='endofrange'/>
5119 <indexterm id='idxmillarvtaylor' class='startofrange'><primary>Millar v. Taylor</primary></indexterm>
5120 <para>
5121 The London booksellers quickly brought suit to block <quote>piracy</quote> like
5122 Donaldson's. A number of actions were successful against the <quote>pirates,</quote>
5123 the most important early victory being <citetitle>Millar</citetitle> v. <citetitle>Taylor</citetitle>.
5124 </para>
5125 <indexterm startref='idxdonaldsonalexander' class='endofrange'/>
5126 <indexterm startref='idxscottishpublishers' class='endofrange'/>
5127 <indexterm id='idxthomsonjames' class='startofrange'><primary>Thomson, James</primary></indexterm>
5128 <indexterm id='idxcopyrightinperpetuity2' class='startofrange'><primary>copyright</primary><secondary>in perpetuity</secondary></indexterm>
5129 <indexterm><primary>Seasons, The (Thomson)</primary></indexterm>
5130 <indexterm><primary>Taylor, Robert</primary></indexterm>
5131 <para>
5132 Millar was a bookseller who in 1729 had purchased the rights to James
5133 Thomson's poem <quote>The Seasons.</quote> Millar complied with the requirements of
5134 the Statute of Anne, and therefore received the full protection of the
5135 statute. After the term of copyright ended, Robert Taylor began
5136 printing a competing volume. Millar sued, claiming a perpetual common
5137 law right, the Statute of Anne notwithstanding.<footnote><para>
5138 <!-- f11 -->
5139 Howard B. Abrams, <quote>The Historic Foundation of American Copyright Law:
5140 Exploding the Myth of Common Law Copyright,</quote> <citetitle>Wayne Law Review</citetitle> 29
5141 (1983): 1152.
5142 </para></footnote>
5143 </para>
5144 <indexterm id='idxmansfieldwilliammurraylord2' class='startofrange'><primary>Mansfield, William Murray, Lord</primary></indexterm>
5145 <para>
5146 Astonishingly to modern lawyers, one of the greatest judges in English
5147 history, Lord Mansfield, agreed with the booksellers. Whatever
5148 protection the Statute of Anne gave booksellers, it did not, he held,
5149 extinguish any common law right. The question was whether the common
5150 law would protect the author against subsequent <quote>pirates.</quote>
5151 Mansfield's answer was yes: The common law would bar Taylor from
5152 reprinting Thomson's poem without Millar's permission. That common law
5153 rule thus effectively gave the booksellers a perpetual right to
5154 control the publication of any book assigned to them.
5155 </para>
5156 <indexterm startref='idxcommonlaw' class='endofrange'/>
5157 <indexterm startref='idxthomsonjames' class='endofrange'/>
5158 <indexterm startref='idxcopyrightinperpetuity2' class='endofrange'/>
5159 <indexterm id='idxbritishparliament3' class='startofrange'><primary>British Parliament</primary></indexterm>
5160 <para>
5161 Considered as a matter of abstract justice&mdash;reasoning as if
5162 justice were just a matter of logical deduction from first
5163 principles&mdash;Mansfield's conclusion might make some sense. But
5164 what it ignored was the larger issue that Parliament had struggled
5165 with in 1710: How best to limit
5166 <!-- PAGE BREAK 103 -->
5167 the monopoly power of publishers? Parliament's strategy was to offer a
5168 term for existing works that was long enough to buy peace in 1710, but
5169 short enough to assure that culture would pass into competition within
5170 a reasonable period of time. Within twenty-one years, Parliament
5171 believed, Britain would mature from the controlled culture that the
5172 Crown coveted to the free culture that we inherited.
5173 </para>
5174 <indexterm startref='idxmansfieldwilliammurraylord2' class='endofrange'/>
5175 <indexterm id='idxdonaldsonalexander2' class='startofrange'><primary>Donaldson, Alexander</primary></indexterm>
5176 <indexterm id='idxscottishpublishers2' class='startofrange'><primary>Scottish publishers</primary></indexterm>
5177 <para>
5178 The fight to defend the limits of the Statute of Anne was not to end
5179 there, however, and it is here that Donaldson enters the mix.
5180 </para>
5181 <indexterm><primary>Thomson, James</primary></indexterm>
5182 <indexterm><primary>Beckett, Thomas</primary></indexterm>
5183 <indexterm id='idxhouseoflords' class='startofrange'><primary>House of Lords</primary></indexterm>
5184 <indexterm id='idxsupremecourtushouseoflordsvs' class='startofrange'><primary>Supreme Court, U.S.</primary><secondary>House of Lords vs.</secondary></indexterm>
5185 <para>
5186 Millar died soon after his victory, so his case was not appealed. His
5187 estate sold Thomson's poems to a syndicate of printers that included
5188 Thomas Beckett.<footnote><para>
5189 <!-- f12 -->
5190 Ibid., 1156.
5191 </para></footnote>
5192 Donaldson then released an unauthorized edition
5193 of Thomson's works. Beckett, on the strength of the decision in <citetitle>Millar</citetitle>,
5194 got an injunction against Donaldson. Donaldson appealed the case to
5195 the House of Lords, which functioned much like our own Supreme
5196 Court. In February of 1774, that body had the chance to interpret the
5197 meaning of Parliament's limits from sixty years before.
5198 </para>
5199 <indexterm startref='idxmillarvtaylor' class='endofrange'/>
5200 <indexterm startref='idxbritishparliament3' class='endofrange'/>
5201 <indexterm id='idxdonaldsonvbeckett' class='startofrange'><primary>Donaldson v. Beckett</primary></indexterm>
5202 <indexterm id='idxcommonlaw2' class='startofrange'><primary>common law</primary></indexterm>
5203 <para>
5204 As few legal cases ever do, <citetitle>Donaldson</citetitle> v. <citetitle>Beckett</citetitle> drew an
5205 enormous amount of attention throughout Britain. Donaldson's lawyers
5206 argued that whatever rights may have existed under the common law, the
5207 Statute of Anne terminated those rights. After passage of the Statute
5208 of Anne, the only legal protection for an exclusive right to control
5209 publication came from that statute. Thus, they argued, after the term
5210 specified in the Statute of Anne expired, works that had been
5211 protected by the statute were no longer protected.
5212 </para>
5213 <indexterm startref='idxstatuteofanne3' class='endofrange'/>
5214 <para>
5215 The House of Lords was an odd institution. Legal questions were
5216 presented to the House and voted upon first by the <quote>law lords,</quote>
5217 members of special legal distinction who functioned much like the
5218 Justices in our Supreme Court. Then, after the law lords voted, the
5219 House of Lords generally voted.
5220 </para>
5221 <indexterm startref='idxsupremecourtushouseoflordsvs' class='endofrange'/>
5222 <indexterm id='idxcopyrightinperpetuity3' class='startofrange'><primary>copyright</primary><secondary>in perpetuity</secondary></indexterm>
5223 <indexterm id='idxpublicdomainenglishlegalestablishmentof' class='startofrange'><primary>public domain</primary><secondary>English legal establishment of</secondary></indexterm>
5224 <para>
5225 The reports about the law lords' votes are mixed. On some counts,
5226 it looks as if perpetual copyright prevailed. But there is no ambiguity
5227 <!-- PAGE BREAK 104 -->
5228 about how the House of Lords voted as whole. By a two-to-one majority
5229 (22 to 11) they voted to reject the idea of perpetual copyrights.
5230 Whatever one's understanding of the common law, now a copyright was
5231 fixed for a limited time, after which the work protected by copyright
5232 passed into the public domain.
5233 </para>
5234 <indexterm><primary>Bacon, Francis</primary></indexterm>
5235 <indexterm><primary>Bunyan, John</primary></indexterm>
5236 <indexterm><primary>Johnson, Samuel</primary></indexterm>
5237 <indexterm><primary>Milton, John</primary></indexterm>
5238 <indexterm><primary>Shakespeare, William</primary></indexterm>
5239 <para>
5240 <quote>The public domain.</quote> Before the case of <citetitle>Donaldson</citetitle>
5241 v. <citetitle>Beckett</citetitle>, there was no clear idea of a public domain in
5242 England. Before 1774, there was a strong argument that common law
5243 copyrights were perpetual. After 1774, the public domain was
5244 born. For the first time in Anglo-American history, the legal control
5245 over creative works expired, and the greatest works in English
5246 history&mdash;including those of Shakespeare, Bacon, Milton, Johnson,
5247 and Bunyan&mdash;were free of legal restraint.
5248 </para>
5249 <indexterm startref='idxdonaldsonalexander2' class='endofrange'/>
5250 <indexterm startref='idxscottishpublishers2' class='endofrange'/>
5251 <indexterm startref='idxcommonlaw2' class='endofrange'/>
5252 <indexterm startref='idxcopyrightinperpetuity3' class='endofrange'/>
5253 <indexterm startref='idxpublicdomainenglishlegalestablishmentof' class='endofrange'/>
5254 <indexterm><primary>Scottish publishers</primary></indexterm>
5255 <para>
5256 It is hard for us to imagine, but this decision by the House of Lords
5257 fueled an extraordinarily popular and political reaction. In Scotland,
5258 where most of the <quote>pirate publishers</quote> did their work, people
5259 celebrated the decision in the streets. As the <citetitle>Edinburgh Advertiser</citetitle>
5260 reported, <quote>No private cause has so much engrossed the attention of the
5261 public, and none has been tried before the House of Lords in the
5262 decision of which so many individuals were interested.</quote> <quote>Great
5263 rejoicing in Edinburgh upon victory over literary property: bonfires
5264 and illuminations.</quote><footnote><para>
5265 <!-- f13 -->
5266 Rose, 97.
5267 </para></footnote>
5268 </para>
5269 <indexterm startref='idxhouseoflords' class='endofrange'/>
5270 <para>
5271 In London, however, at least among publishers, the reaction was
5272 equally strong in the opposite direction. The <citetitle>Morning Chronicle</citetitle>
5273 reported:
5274 </para>
5275 <blockquote>
5276 <para>
5277 By the above decision &hellip; near 200,000 pounds worth of what was
5278 honestly purchased at public sale, and which was yesterday thought
5279 property is now reduced to nothing. The Booksellers of London and
5280 Westminster, many of whom sold estates and houses to purchase
5281 Copy-right, are in a manner ruined, and those who after many years
5282 industry thought they had acquired a competency to provide for their
5283 families now find themselves without a shilling to devise to their
5284 successors.<footnote><para>
5285 <!-- f14 -->
5286 Ibid.
5287 </para></footnote>
5288 </para>
5289 </blockquote>
5290 <indexterm><primary>House of Lords</primary></indexterm>
5291 <indexterm><primary>free culture</primary><secondary>English legal establishment of</secondary></indexterm>
5292 <para>
5293 <!-- PAGE BREAK 105 -->
5294 <quote>Ruined</quote> is a bit of an exaggeration. But it is not an exaggeration to
5295 say that the change was profound. The decision of the House of Lords
5296 meant that the booksellers could no longer control how culture in
5297 England would grow and develop. Culture in England was thereafter
5298 <emphasis>free</emphasis>. Not in the sense that copyrights would not
5299 be respected, for of course, for a limited time after a work was
5300 published, the bookseller had an exclusive right to control the
5301 publication of that book. And not in the sense that books could be
5302 stolen, for even after a copyright expired, you still had to buy the
5303 book from someone. But <emphasis>free</emphasis> in the sense that the
5304 culture and its growth would no longer be controlled by a small group
5305 of publishers. As every free market does, this free market of free
5306 culture would grow as the consumers and producers chose. English
5307 culture would develop as the many English readers chose to let it
5308 develop&mdash; chose in the books they bought and wrote; chose in the
5309 memes they repeated and endorsed. Chose in a <emphasis>competitive
5310 context</emphasis>, not a context in which the choices about what
5311 culture is available to people and how they get access to it are made
5312 by the few despite the wishes of the many.
5313 </para>
5314 <indexterm startref='idxbooksellersenglish' class='endofrange'/>
5315 <indexterm><primary>British Parliament</primary></indexterm>
5316 <para>
5317 At least, this was the rule in a world where the Parliament is
5318 antimonopoly, resistant to the protectionist pleas of publishers. In a
5319 world where the Parliament is more pliant, free culture would be less
5320 protected.
5321 </para>
5322 <indexterm startref='idxbooksenglishcopyrightlawdevelopedfor' class='endofrange'/>
5323 <indexterm startref='idxcopyrightlawdevelopmentof' class='endofrange'/>
5324 <indexterm startref='idxcopyrightlawenglish' class='endofrange'/>
5325 <indexterm startref='idxenglandcopyrightlawsdevelopedin' class='endofrange'/>
5326 <indexterm startref='idxunitedkingdomhistoryofcopyrightlawin' class='endofrange'/>
5327 <indexterm startref='idxcopyrightasnarrowmonopolyright' class='endofrange'/>
5328 <indexterm startref='idxmonopolycopyrightas' class='endofrange'/>
5329 <indexterm startref='idxcopyrightdurationof3' class='endofrange'/>
5330 <indexterm startref='idxdonaldsonvbeckett' class='endofrange'/>
5331 <!-- PAGE BREAK 106 -->
5332 </chapter>
5333 <chapter label="7" id="recorders">
5334 <title>Chapter Seven: Recorders</title>
5335 <indexterm id='idxcopyrightlawfairuseand' class='startofrange'><primary>copyright law</primary><secondary>fair use and</secondary></indexterm>
5336 <indexterm id='idxdocumentaryfilm' class='startofrange'><primary>documentary film</primary></indexterm>
5337 <indexterm id='idxelsejon' class='startofrange'><primary>Else, Jon</primary></indexterm>
5338 <indexterm id='idxfairuseindocumentaryfilm' class='startofrange'><primary>fair use</primary><secondary>in documentary film</secondary></indexterm>
5339 <indexterm id='idxfilmsfairuseofcopyrightedmaterialin' class='startofrange'><primary>films</primary><secondary>fair use of copyrighted material in</secondary></indexterm>
5340 <para>
5341 <emphasis role='strong'>Jon Else</emphasis> is a filmmaker. He is best
5342 known for his documentaries and has been very successful in spreading
5343 his art. He is also a teacher, and as a teacher myself, I envy the
5344 loyalty and admiration that his students feel for him. (I met, by
5345 accident, two of his students at a dinner party. He was their god.)
5346 </para>
5347 <para>
5348 Else worked on a documentary that I was involved in. At a break,
5349 he told me a story about the freedom to create with film in America
5350 today.
5351 </para>
5352 <indexterm id='idxwagnerrichard' class='startofrange'><primary>Wagner, Richard</primary></indexterm>
5353 <indexterm><primary>San Francisco Opera</primary></indexterm>
5354 <para>
5355 In 1990, Else was working on a documentary about Wagner's Ring
5356 Cycle. The focus was stagehands at the San Francisco Opera.
5357 Stagehands are a particularly funny and colorful element of an opera.
5358 During a show, they hang out below the stage in the grips' lounge and
5359 in the lighting loft. They make a perfect contrast to the art on the
5360 stage.
5361 </para>
5362 <indexterm id='idxsimpsonsthe' class='startofrange'><primary>Simpsons, The</primary></indexterm>
5363 <para>
5364 During one of the performances, Else was shooting some stagehands
5365 playing checkers. In one corner of the room was a television set.
5366 Playing on the television set, while the stagehands played checkers
5367 and the opera company played Wagner, was <citetitle>The Simpsons</citetitle>. As Else judged
5368 <!-- PAGE BREAK 107 -->
5369 it, this touch of cartoon helped capture the flavor of what was special
5370 about the scene.
5371 </para>
5372 <indexterm startref='idxwagnerrichard' class='endofrange'/>
5373 <indexterm><primary>films</primary><secondary>multiple copyrights associated with</secondary></indexterm>
5374 <para>
5375 Years later, when he finally got funding to complete the film, Else
5376 attempted to clear the rights for those few seconds of <citetitle>The Simpsons</citetitle>.
5377 For of course, those few seconds are copyrighted; and of course, to use
5378 copyrighted material you need the permission of the copyright owner,
5379 unless <quote>fair use</quote> or some other privilege applies.
5380 </para>
5381 <indexterm id='idxgraciefilms' class='startofrange'><primary>Gracie Films</primary></indexterm>
5382 <indexterm id='idxgroeningmatt' class='startofrange'><primary>Groening, Matt</primary></indexterm>
5383 <para>
5384 Else called <citetitle>Simpsons</citetitle> creator Matt Groening's office to get permission.
5385 Groening approved the shot. The shot was a four-and-a-halfsecond image
5386 on a tiny television set in the corner of the room. How could it hurt?
5387 Groening was happy to have it in the film, but he told Else to contact
5388 Gracie Films, the company that produces the program.
5389 </para>
5390 <indexterm id='idxfoxfilmcompany' class='startofrange'><primary>Fox (film company)</primary></indexterm>
5391 <para>
5392 Gracie Films was okay with it, too, but they, like Groening, wanted
5393 to be careful. So they told Else to contact Fox, Gracie's parent company.
5394 Else called Fox and told them about the clip in the corner of the one
5395 room shot of the film. Matt Groening had already given permission,
5396 Else said. He was just confirming the permission with Fox.
5397 </para>
5398 <indexterm startref='idxgraciefilms' class='endofrange'/>
5399 <para>
5400 Then, as Else told me, <quote>two things happened. First we discovered
5401 &hellip; that Matt Groening doesn't own his own creation&mdash;or at
5402 least that someone [at Fox] believes he doesn't own his own creation.</quote>
5403 And second, Fox <quote>wanted ten thousand dollars as a licensing fee for us
5404 to use this four-point-five seconds of &hellip; entirely unsolicited
5405 <citetitle>Simpsons</citetitle> which was in the corner of the shot.</quote>
5406 </para>
5407 <indexterm id='idxherrerarebecca' class='startofrange'><primary>Herrera, Rebecca</primary></indexterm>
5408 <para>
5409 Else was certain there was a mistake. He worked his way up to someone
5410 he thought was a vice president for licensing, Rebecca Herrera. He
5411 explained to her, <quote>There must be some mistake here. &hellip; We're
5412 asking for your educational rate on this.</quote> That was the educational
5413 rate, Herrera told Else. A day or so later, Else called again to
5414 confirm what he had been told.
5415 </para>
5416 <indexterm><primary>Wagner, Richard</primary></indexterm>
5417 <para>
5418 <quote>I wanted to make sure I had my facts straight,</quote> he told me. <quote>Yes, you
5419 have your facts straight,</quote> she said. It would cost $10,000 to use the
5420 clip of <citetitle>The Simpsons</citetitle> in the corner of a shot in a documentary film
5421 about
5422
5423 <!-- PAGE BREAK 108 -->
5424 Wagner's Ring Cycle. And then, astonishingly, Herrera told Else, <quote>And
5425 if you quote me, I'll turn you over to our attorneys.</quote> As an assistant
5426 to Herrera told Else later on, <quote>They don't give a shit. They just want
5427 the money.</quote>
5428 </para>
5429 <indexterm startref='idxherrerarebecca' class='endofrange'/>
5430 <indexterm><primary>San Francisco Opera</primary></indexterm>
5431 <indexterm><primary>Day After Trinity, The</primary></indexterm>
5432 <para>
5433 Else didn't have the money to buy the right to replay what was playing
5434 on the television backstage at the San Francisco Opera. To reproduce
5435 this reality was beyond the documentary filmmaker's budget. At the
5436 very last minute before the film was to be released, Else digitally
5437 replaced the shot with a clip from another film that he had worked on,
5438 <citetitle>The Day After Trinity</citetitle>, from ten years before.
5439 </para>
5440 <para>
5441 There's no doubt that someone, whether Matt Groening or Fox, owns the
5442 copyright to <citetitle>The Simpsons</citetitle>. That copyright is their property. To use
5443 that copyrighted material thus sometimes requires the permission of
5444 the copyright owner. If the use that Else wanted to make of the
5445 <citetitle>Simpsons</citetitle> copyright were one of the uses restricted by the law, then he
5446 would need to get the permission of the copyright owner before he
5447 could use the work in that way. And in a free market, it is the owner
5448 of the copyright who gets to set the price for any use that the law
5449 says the owner gets to control.
5450 </para>
5451 <para>
5452 For example, <quote>public performance</quote> is a use of <citetitle>The Simpsons</citetitle> that the
5453 copyright owner gets to control. If you take a selection of favorite
5454 episodes, rent a movie theater, and charge for tickets to come see <quote>My
5455 Favorite <citetitle>Simpsons</citetitle>,</quote> then you need to get permission from the copyright
5456 owner. And the copyright owner (rightly, in my view) can charge
5457 whatever she wants&mdash;$10 or $1,000,000. That's her right, as set
5458 by the law.
5459 </para>
5460 <para>
5461 But when lawyers hear this story about Jon Else and Fox, their first
5462 thought is <quote>fair use.</quote><footnote><para>
5463 <!-- f1 -->
5464 For an excellent argument that such use is <quote>fair use,</quote> but that
5465 lawyers don't permit recognition that it is <quote>fair use,</quote> see Richard
5466 A. Posner with William F. Patry, <quote>Fair Use and Statutory Reform in the
5467 Wake of <citetitle>Eldred</citetitle></quote> (draft on file with author), University of Chicago
5468 Law School, 5 August 2003.
5469 </para></footnote>
5470 Else's use of just 4.5 seconds of an indirect shot of a <citetitle>Simpsons</citetitle>
5471 episode is clearly a fair use of <citetitle>The Simpsons</citetitle>&mdash;and fair use does
5472 not require the permission of anyone.
5473 </para>
5474 <indexterm startref='idxfoxfilmcompany' class='endofrange'/>
5475 <indexterm startref='idxgroeningmatt' class='endofrange'/>
5476 <para>
5477 <!-- PAGE BREAK 109 -->
5478 So I asked Else why he didn't just rely upon <quote>fair use.</quote> Here's his reply:
5479 </para>
5480 <blockquote>
5481 <indexterm id='idxfairuselegalintimidationtacticsagainst' class='startofrange'><primary>fair use</primary><secondary>legal intimidation tactics against</secondary></indexterm>
5482 <para>
5483 The <citetitle>Simpsons</citetitle> fiasco was for me a great lesson in the gulf between what
5484 lawyers find irrelevant in some abstract sense, and what is crushingly
5485 relevant in practice to those of us actually trying to make and
5486 broadcast documentaries. I never had any doubt that it was <quote>clearly
5487 fair use</quote> in an absolute legal sense. But I couldn't rely on the
5488 concept in any concrete way. Here's why:
5489 </para>
5490 <orderedlist numeration="arabic">
5491 <listitem>
5492 <indexterm><primary>Errors and Omissions insurance</primary></indexterm>
5493 <para>
5494 <!-- 1. -->
5495 Before our films can be broadcast, the network requires that we buy
5496 Errors and Omissions insurance. The carriers require a detailed
5497 <quote>visual cue sheet</quote> listing the source and licensing status of each
5498 shot in the film. They take a dim view of <quote>fair use,</quote> and a claim of
5499 <quote>fair use</quote> can grind the application process to a halt.
5500 </para></listitem>
5501 <listitem>
5502 <indexterm id='idxfoxfilmcompany3' class='startofrange'><primary>Fox (film company)</primary></indexterm>
5503 <indexterm><primary>Groening, Matt</primary></indexterm>
5504 <indexterm><primary>Lucas, George</primary></indexterm>
5505 <indexterm><primary><citetitle>Star Wars</citetitle></primary></indexterm>
5506 <para>
5507 <!-- 2. -->
5508 I probably never should have asked Matt Groening in the first
5509 place. But I knew (at least from folklore) that Fox had a history of
5510 tracking down and stopping unlicensed <citetitle>Simpsons</citetitle> usage, just as George
5511 Lucas had a very high profile litigating <citetitle>Star Wars</citetitle> usage. So I decided
5512 to play by the book, thinking that we would be granted free or cheap
5513 license to four seconds of <citetitle>Simpsons</citetitle>. As a documentary producer working
5514 to exhaustion on a shoestring, the last thing I wanted was to risk
5515 legal trouble, even nuisance legal trouble, and even to defend a
5516 principle.
5517 </para></listitem>
5518 <listitem><para>
5519 <!-- 3. -->
5520 I did, in fact, speak with one of your colleagues at Stanford Law
5521 School &hellip; who confirmed that it was fair use. He also confirmed
5522 that Fox would <quote>depose and litigate you to within an inch of your
5523 life,</quote> regardless of the merits of my claim. He made clear that it
5524 would boil down to who had the bigger legal department and the deeper
5525 pockets, me or them.
5526 <!-- PAGE BREAK 110 -->
5527 </para>
5528 <indexterm startref='idxfoxfilmcompany3' class='endofrange'/>
5529 </listitem>
5530 <listitem><para>
5531 <!-- 4. -->
5532 The question of fair use usually comes up at the end of the
5533 project, when we are up against a release deadline and out of
5534 money.
5535 </para></listitem>
5536 </orderedlist>
5537 </blockquote>
5538 <indexterm startref='idxsimpsonsthe' class='endofrange'/>
5539 <para>
5540 In theory, fair use means you need no permission. The theory therefore
5541 supports free culture and insulates against a permission culture. But
5542 in practice, fair use functions very differently. The fuzzy lines of
5543 the law, tied to the extraordinary liability if lines are crossed,
5544 means that the effective fair use for many types of creators is
5545 slight. The law has the right aim; practice has defeated the aim.
5546 </para>
5547 <para>
5548 This practice shows just how far the law has come from its
5549 eighteenth-century roots. The law was born as a shield to protect
5550 publishers' profits against the unfair competition of a pirate. It has
5551 matured into a sword that interferes with any use, transformative or
5552 not.
5553 </para>
5554 <indexterm startref='idxcopyrightlawfairuseand' class='endofrange'/>
5555 <indexterm startref='idxdocumentaryfilm' class='endofrange'/>
5556 <indexterm startref='idxelsejon' class='endofrange'/>
5557 <indexterm startref='idxfairuseindocumentaryfilm' class='endofrange'/>
5558 <indexterm startref='idxfilmsfairuseofcopyrightedmaterialin' class='endofrange'/>
5559 <indexterm startref='idxfairuselegalintimidationtacticsagainst' class='endofrange'/>
5560 <!-- PAGE BREAK 111 -->
5561 </chapter>
5562 <chapter label="8" id="transformers">
5563 <title>Chapter Eight: Transformers</title>
5564 <indexterm><primary>Allen, Paul</primary></indexterm>
5565 <indexterm id='idxalbenalex1' class='startofrange'><primary>Alben, Alex</primary></indexterm>
5566 <indexterm><primary>Microsoft</primary></indexterm>
5567 <para>
5568 <emphasis role='strong'>In 1993</emphasis>, Alex Alben was a lawyer
5569 working at Starwave, Inc. Starwave was an innovative company founded
5570 by Microsoft cofounder Paul Allen to develop digital
5571 entertainment. Long before the Internet became popular, Starwave began
5572 investing in new technology for delivering entertainment in
5573 anticipation of the power of networks.
5574 </para>
5575 <indexterm id='idxartistsretrospective' class='startofrange'><primary>artists</primary><secondary>retrospective compilations on</secondary></indexterm>
5576 <indexterm id='idxcdroms' class='startofrange'><primary>CD-ROMs, film clips used in</primary></indexterm>
5577 <para>
5578 Alben had a special interest in new technology. He was intrigued by
5579 the emerging market for CD-ROM technology&mdash;not to distribute
5580 film, but to do things with film that otherwise would be very
5581 difficult. In 1993, he launched an initiative to develop a product to
5582 build retrospectives on the work of particular actors. The first actor
5583 chosen was Clint Eastwood. The idea was to showcase all of the work of
5584 Eastwood, with clips from his films and interviews with figures
5585 important to his career.
5586 </para>
5587 <para>
5588 At that time, Eastwood had made more than fifty films, as an actor and
5589 as a director. Alben began with a series of interviews with Eastwood,
5590 asking him about his career. Because Starwave produced those
5591 interviews, it was free to include them on the CD.
5592 </para>
5593 <para>
5594 <!-- PAGE BREAK 112 -->
5595 That alone would not have made a very interesting product, so
5596 Starwave wanted to add content from the movies in Eastwood's career:
5597 posters, scripts, and other material relating to the films Eastwood
5598 made. Most of his career was spent at Warner Brothers, and so it was
5599 relatively easy to get permission for that content.
5600 </para>
5601 <para>
5602 Then Alben and his team decided to include actual film clips. <quote>Our
5603 goal was that we were going to have a clip from every one of
5604 Eastwood's films,</quote> Alben told me. It was here that the problem
5605 arose. <quote>No one had ever really done this before,</quote> Alben explained. <quote>No
5606 one had ever tried to do this in the context of an artistic look at an
5607 actor's career.</quote>
5608 </para>
5609 <para>
5610 Alben brought the idea to Michael Slade, the CEO of Starwave.
5611 Slade asked, <quote>Well, what will it take?</quote>
5612 </para>
5613 <para>
5614 Alben replied, <quote>Well, we're going to have to clear rights from
5615 everyone who appears in these films, and the music and everything
5616 else that we want to use in these film clips.</quote> Slade said, <quote>Great! Go
5617 for it.</quote><footnote>
5618 <para>
5619 <!-- f1 -->
5620 Technically, the rights that Alben had to clear were mainly those of
5621 publicity&mdash;rights an artist has to control the commercial
5622 exploitation of his image. But these rights, too, burden <quote>Rip, Mix,
5623 Burn</quote> creativity, as this chapter evinces.
5624 <indexterm><primary>artists</primary><secondary>publicity rights on images of</secondary></indexterm>
5625 <indexterm><primary>Alben, Alex</primary></indexterm>
5626 </para></footnote>
5627 </para>
5628 <para>
5629 The problem was that neither Alben nor Slade had any idea what
5630 clearing those rights would mean. Every actor in each of the films
5631 could have a claim to royalties for the reuse of that film. But CD-
5632 ROMs had not been specified in the contracts for the actors, so there
5633 was no clear way to know just what Starwave was to do.
5634 </para>
5635 <para>
5636 I asked Alben how he dealt with the problem. With an obvious
5637 pride in his resourcefulness that obscured the obvious bizarreness of his
5638 tale, Alben recounted just what they did:
5639 </para>
5640 <blockquote>
5641 <para>
5642 So we very mechanically went about looking up the film clips. We made
5643 some artistic decisions about what film clips to include&mdash;of
5644 course we were going to use the <quote>Make my day</quote> clip from <citetitle>Dirty
5645 Harry</citetitle>. But you then need to get the guy on the ground who's wiggling
5646 under the gun and you need to get his permission. And then you have
5647 to decide what you are going to pay him.
5648 </para>
5649 <para>
5650 <!-- PAGE BREAK 113 -->
5651 We decided that it would be fair if we offered them the dayplayer rate
5652 for the right to reuse that performance. We're talking about a clip of
5653 less than a minute, but to reuse that performance in the CD-ROM the
5654 rate at the time was about $600. So we had to identify the
5655 people&mdash;some of them were hard to identify because in Eastwood
5656 movies you can't tell who's the guy crashing through the
5657 glass&mdash;is it the actor or is it the stuntman? And then we just,
5658 we put together a team, my assistant and some others, and we just
5659 started calling people.
5660 </para>
5661 </blockquote>
5662 <indexterm><primary>Sutherland, Donald</primary></indexterm>
5663 <para>
5664 Some actors were glad to help&mdash;Donald Sutherland, for example,
5665 followed up himself to be sure that the rights had been cleared.
5666 Others were dumbfounded at their good fortune. Alben would ask,
5667 <quote>Hey, can I pay you $600 or maybe if you were in two films, you
5668 know, $1,200?</quote> And they would say, <quote>Are you for real? Hey, I'd love
5669 to get $1,200.</quote> And some of course were a bit difficult (estranged
5670 ex-wives, in particular). But eventually, Alben and his team had
5671 cleared the rights to this retrospective CD-ROM on Clint Eastwood's
5672 career.
5673 </para>
5674 <para>
5675 It was one <emphasis>year</emphasis> later&mdash;<quote>and even then we
5676 weren't sure whether we were totally in the clear.</quote>
5677 </para>
5678 <para>
5679 Alben is proud of his work. The project was the first of its kind and
5680 the only time he knew of that a team had undertaken such a massive
5681 project for the purpose of releasing a retrospective.
5682 </para>
5683 <blockquote>
5684 <para>
5685 Everyone thought it would be too hard. Everyone just threw up their
5686 hands and said, <quote>Oh, my gosh, a film, it's so many copyrights, there's
5687 the music, there's the screenplay, there's the director, there's the
5688 actors.</quote> But we just broke it down. We just put it into its
5689 constituent parts and said, <quote>Okay, there's this many actors, this many
5690 directors, &hellip; this many musicians,</quote> and we just went at it very
5691 systematically and cleared the rights.
5692 </para>
5693 </blockquote>
5694 <para>
5695
5696 <!-- PAGE BREAK 114 -->
5697 And no doubt, the product itself was exceptionally good. Eastwood
5698 loved it, and it sold very well.
5699 </para>
5700 <indexterm><primary>Drucker, Peter</primary></indexterm>
5701 <para>
5702 But I pressed Alben about how weird it seems that it would have to
5703 take a year's work simply to clear rights. No doubt Alben had done
5704 this efficiently, but as Peter Drucker has famously quipped, <quote>There is
5705 nothing so useless as doing efficiently that which should not be done
5706 at all.</quote><footnote><para>
5707 <!-- f2 -->
5708 U.S. Department of Commerce Office of Acquisition Management, <citetitle>Seven
5709 Steps to Performance-Based Services Acquisition</citetitle>, available at
5710 <ulink url="http://free-culture.cc/notes/">link #22</ulink>.
5711 </para></footnote>
5712 Did it make sense, I asked Alben, that this is the way a new work
5713 has to be made?
5714 </para>
5715 <para>
5716 For, as he acknowledged, <quote>very few &hellip; have the time and resources,
5717 and the will to do this,</quote> and thus, very few such works would ever be
5718 made. Does it make sense, I asked him, from the standpoint of what
5719 anybody really thought they were ever giving rights for originally, that
5720 you would have to go clear rights for these kinds of clips?
5721 </para>
5722 <blockquote>
5723 <para>
5724 I don't think so. When an actor renders a performance in a movie,
5725 he or she gets paid very well. &hellip; And then when 30 seconds of
5726 that performance is used in a new product that is a retrospective
5727 of somebody's career, I don't think that that person &hellip; should be
5728 compensated for that.
5729 </para>
5730 </blockquote>
5731 <para>
5732 Or at least, is this <emphasis>how</emphasis> the artist should be
5733 compensated? Would it make sense, I asked, for there to be some kind
5734 of statutory license that someone could pay and be free to make
5735 derivative use of clips like this? Did it really make sense that a
5736 follow-on creator would have to track down every artist, actor,
5737 director, musician, and get explicit permission from each? Wouldn't a
5738 lot more be created if the legal part of the creative process could be
5739 made to be more clean?
5740 </para>
5741 <blockquote>
5742 <para>
5743 Absolutely. I think that if there were some fair-licensing
5744 mechanism&mdash;where you weren't subject to hold-ups and you weren't
5745 subject to estranged former spouses&mdash;you'd see a lot more of this
5746 work, because it wouldn't be so daunting to try to put together a
5747 <!-- PAGE BREAK 115 -->
5748 retrospective of someone's career and meaningfully illustrate it with
5749 lots of media from that person's career. You'd build in a cost as the
5750 producer of one of these things. You'd build in a cost of paying X
5751 dollars to the talent that performed. But it would be a known
5752 cost. That's the thing that trips everybody up and makes this kind of
5753 product hard to get off the ground. If you knew I have a hundred
5754 minutes of film in this product and it's going to cost me X, then you
5755 build your budget around it, and you can get investments and
5756 everything else that you need to produce it. But if you say, <quote>Oh, I
5757 want a hundred minutes of something and I have no idea what it's going
5758 to cost me, and a certain number of people are going to hold me up for
5759 money,</quote> then it becomes difficult to put one of these things together.
5760 </para>
5761 </blockquote>
5762 <para>
5763 Alben worked for a big company. His company was backed by some of the
5764 richest investors in the world. He therefore had authority and access
5765 that the average Web designer would not have. So if it took him a
5766 year, how long would it take someone else? And how much creativity is
5767 never made just because the costs of clearing the rights are so high?
5768 </para>
5769 <indexterm startref='idxcdroms' class='endofrange'/>
5770 <indexterm startref='idxartistsretrospective' class='endofrange'/>
5771 <para>
5772 These costs are the burdens of a kind of regulation. Put on a
5773 Republican hat for a moment, and get angry for a bit. The government
5774 defines the scope of these rights, and the scope defined determines
5775 how much it's going to cost to negotiate them. (Remember the idea that
5776 land runs to the heavens, and imagine the pilot purchasing flythrough
5777 rights as he negotiates to fly from Los Angeles to San Francisco.)
5778 These rights might well have once made sense; but as circumstances
5779 change, they make no sense at all. Or at least, a well-trained,
5780 regulationminimizing Republican should look at the rights and ask,
5781 <quote>Does this still make sense?</quote>
5782 </para>
5783 <indexterm startref='idxalbenalex1' class='endofrange'/>
5784 <para>
5785 I've seen the flash of recognition when people get this point, but only
5786 a few times. The first was at a conference of federal judges in California.
5787 The judges were gathered to discuss the emerging topic of cyber-law. I
5788 was asked to be on the panel. Harvey Saferstein, a well-respected lawyer
5789
5790 <!-- PAGE BREAK 116 -->
5791 from an L.A. firm, introduced the panel with a video that he and a
5792 friend, Robert Fairbank, had produced.
5793 </para>
5794 <para>
5795 The video was a brilliant collage of film from every period in the
5796 twentieth century, all framed around the idea of a <citetitle>60 Minutes</citetitle> episode.
5797 The execution was perfect, down to the sixty-minute stopwatch. The
5798 judges loved every minute of it.
5799 </para>
5800 <indexterm><primary>Nimmer, David</primary></indexterm>
5801 <para>
5802 When the lights came up, I looked over to my copanelist, David
5803 Nimmer, perhaps the leading copyright scholar and practitioner in the
5804 nation. He had an astonished look on his face, as he peered across the
5805 room of over 250 well-entertained judges. Taking an ominous tone, he
5806 began his talk with a question: <quote>Do you know how many federal laws
5807 were just violated in this room?</quote>
5808 </para>
5809 <para>
5810 <indexterm><primary>Alben, Alex</primary></indexterm>
5811 <indexterm><primary>Boies, David</primary></indexterm>
5812 <indexterm><primary>Court of Appeals</primary><secondary>Ninth Circuit</secondary></indexterm>
5813 <indexterm><primary>Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals</primary></indexterm>
5814 <indexterm><primary>Napster</primary></indexterm>
5815 For of course, the two brilliantly talented creators who made this
5816 film hadn't done what Alben did. They hadn't spent a year clearing the
5817 rights to these clips; technically, what they had done violated the
5818 law. Of course, it wasn't as if they or anyone were going to be
5819 prosecuted for this violation (the presence of 250 judges and a gaggle
5820 of federal marshals notwithstanding). But Nimmer was making an
5821 important point: A year before anyone would have heard of the word
5822 Napster, and two years before another member of our panel, David
5823 Boies, would defend Napster before the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals,
5824 Nimmer was trying to get the judges to see that the law would not be
5825 friendly to the capacities that this technology would
5826 enable. Technology means you can now do amazing things easily; but you
5827 couldn't easily do them legally.
5828 </para>
5829 <para>
5830 We live in a <quote>cut and paste</quote> culture enabled by technology. Anyone
5831 building a presentation knows the extraordinary freedom that the cut
5832 and paste architecture of the Internet created&mdash;in a second you can
5833 find just about any image you want; in another second, you can have it
5834 planted in your presentation.
5835 </para>
5836 <indexterm><primary>Camp Chaos</primary></indexterm>
5837 <para>
5838 But presentations are just a tiny beginning. Using the Internet and
5839 <!-- PAGE BREAK 117 -->
5840 its archives, musicians are able to string together mixes of sound
5841 never before imagined; filmmakers are able to build movies out of
5842 clips on computers around the world. An extraordinary site in Sweden
5843 takes images of politicians and blends them with music to create
5844 biting political commentary. A site called Camp Chaos has produced
5845 some of the most biting criticism of the record industry that there is
5846 through the mixing of Flash! and music.
5847 </para>
5848 <para>
5849 All of these creations are technically illegal. Even if the creators
5850 wanted to be <quote>legal,</quote> the cost of complying with the law is impossibly
5851 high. Therefore, for the law-abiding sorts, a wealth of creativity is
5852 never made. And for that part that is made, if it doesn't follow the
5853 clearance rules, it doesn't get released.
5854 </para>
5855 <para>
5856 To some, these stories suggest a solution: Let's alter the mix of
5857 rights so that people are free to build upon our culture. Free to add
5858 or mix as they see fit. We could even make this change without
5859 necessarily requiring that the <quote>free</quote> use be free as in <quote>free beer.</quote>
5860 Instead, the system could simply make it easy for follow-on creators
5861 to compensate artists without requiring an army of lawyers to come
5862 along: a rule, for example, that says <quote>the royalty owed the copyright
5863 owner of an unregistered work for the derivative reuse of his work
5864 will be a flat 1 percent of net revenues, to be held in escrow for the
5865 copyright owner.</quote> Under this rule, the copyright owner could benefit
5866 from some royalty, but he would not have the benefit of a full
5867 property right (meaning the right to name his own price) unless he
5868 registers the work.
5869 </para>
5870 <para>
5871 Who could possibly object to this? And what reason would there be
5872 for objecting? We're talking about work that is not now being made;
5873 which if made, under this plan, would produce new income for artists.
5874 What reason would anyone have to oppose it?
5875 </para>
5876 <para>
5877 <emphasis role='strong'>In February 2003</emphasis>, DreamWorks
5878 studios announced an agreement with Mike Myers, the comic genius of
5879 <citetitle>Saturday Night Live</citetitle> and
5880 <!-- PAGE BREAK 118 -->
5881 Austin Powers. According to the announcement, Myers and Dream-Works
5882 would work together to form a <quote>unique filmmaking pact.</quote> Under the
5883 agreement, DreamWorks <quote>will acquire the rights to existing motion
5884 picture hits and classics, write new storylines and&mdash;with the use
5885 of stateof-the-art digital technology&mdash;insert Myers and other
5886 actors into the film, thereby creating an entirely new piece of
5887 entertainment.</quote>
5888 </para>
5889 <para>
5890 The announcement called this <quote>film sampling.</quote> As Myers explained,
5891 <quote>Film Sampling is an exciting way to put an original spin on existing
5892 films and allow audiences to see old movies in a new light. Rap
5893 artists have been doing this for years with music and now we are able
5894 to take that same concept and apply it to film.</quote> Steven Spielberg is
5895 quoted as saying, <quote>If anyone can create a way to bring old films to
5896 new audiences, it is Mike.</quote>
5897 </para>
5898 <para>
5899 Spielberg is right. Film sampling by Myers will be brilliant. But if
5900 you don't think about it, you might miss the truly astonishing point
5901 about this announcement. As the vast majority of our film heritage
5902 remains under copyright, the real meaning of the DreamWorks
5903 announcement is just this: It is Mike Myers and only Mike Myers who is
5904 free to sample. Any general freedom to build upon the film archive of
5905 our culture, a freedom in other contexts presumed for us all, is now a
5906 privilege reserved for the funny and famous&mdash;and presumably rich.
5907 </para>
5908 <para>
5909 This privilege becomes reserved for two sorts of reasons. The first
5910 continues the story of the last chapter: the vagueness of <quote>fair use.</quote>
5911 Much of <quote>sampling</quote> should be considered <quote>fair use.</quote> But few would
5912 rely upon so weak a doctrine to create. That leads to the second reason
5913 that the privilege is reserved for the few: The costs of negotiating the
5914 legal rights for the creative reuse of content are astronomically high.
5915 These costs mirror the costs with fair use: You either pay a lawyer to
5916 defend your fair use rights or pay a lawyer to track down permissions
5917 so you don't have to rely upon fair use rights. Either way, the creative
5918 process is a process of paying lawyers&mdash;again a privilege, or perhaps a
5919 curse, reserved for the few.
5920 </para>
5921 <!-- PAGE BREAK 119 -->
5922 </chapter>
5923 <chapter label="9" id="collectors">
5924 <title>Chapter Nine: Collectors</title>
5925 <indexterm id='idxarchivesdigital1' class='startofrange'><primary>archives, digital</primary></indexterm>
5926 <indexterm><primary>bots</primary></indexterm>
5927 <para>
5928 <emphasis role='strong'>In April 1996</emphasis>, millions of
5929 <quote>bots</quote>&mdash;computer codes designed to
5930 <quote>spider,</quote> or automatically search the Internet and copy
5931 content&mdash;began running across the Net. Page by page, these bots
5932 copied Internet-based information onto a small set of computers
5933 located in a basement in San Francisco's Presidio. Once the bots
5934 finished the whole of the Internet, they started again. Over and over
5935 again, once every two months, these bits of code took copies of the
5936 Internet and stored them.
5937 </para>
5938 <indexterm><primary>Way Back Machine</primary></indexterm>
5939 <para>
5940 By October 2001, the bots had collected more than five years of
5941 copies. And at a small announcement in Berkeley, California, the
5942 archive that these copies created, the Internet Archive, was opened to
5943 the world. Using a technology called <quote>the Way Back Machine,</quote> you could
5944 enter a Web page, and see all of its copies going back to 1996, as
5945 well as when those pages changed.
5946 </para>
5947 <indexterm id='idxorwellgeorge' class='startofrange'><primary>Orwell, George</primary></indexterm>
5948 <para>
5949 This is the thing about the Internet that Orwell would have
5950 appreciated. In the dystopia described in <citetitle>1984</citetitle>, old newspapers were
5951 constantly updated to assure that the current view of the world,
5952 approved of by the government, was not contradicted by previous news
5953 reports.
5954 </para>
5955 <para>
5956 <!-- PAGE BREAK 120 -->
5957 Thousands of workers constantly reedited the past, meaning there was
5958 no way ever to know whether the story you were reading today was the
5959 story that was printed on the date published on the paper.
5960 </para>
5961 <para>
5962 It's the same with the Internet. If you go to a Web page today,
5963 there's no way for you to know whether the content you are reading is
5964 the same as the content you read before. The page may seem the same,
5965 but the content could easily be different. The Internet is Orwell's
5966 library&mdash;constantly updated, without any reliable memory.
5967 </para>
5968 <indexterm startref='idxorwellgeorge' class='endofrange'/>
5969 <indexterm><primary>Way Back Machine</primary></indexterm>
5970 <para>
5971 Until the Way Back Machine, at least. With the Way Back Machine, and
5972 the Internet Archive underlying it, you can see what the Internet
5973 was. You have the power to see what you remember. More importantly,
5974 perhaps, you also have the power to find what you don't remember and
5975 what others might prefer you forget.<footnote><para>
5976 <!-- f1 -->
5977 <indexterm><primary>Iraq war</primary></indexterm>
5978 <indexterm><primary>Kahle, Brewster</primary></indexterm>
5979 <indexterm><primary>White House press releases</primary></indexterm>
5980 The temptations remain, however. Brewster Kahle reports that the White
5981 House changes its own press releases without notice. A May 13, 2003,
5982 press release stated, <quote>Combat Operations in Iraq Have Ended.</quote> That was
5983 later changed, without notice, to <quote>Major Combat Operations in Iraq
5984 Have Ended.</quote> E-mail from Brewster Kahle, 1 December 2003.
5985 </para></footnote>
5986 </para>
5987 <indexterm><primary>history, records of</primary></indexterm>
5988 <para>
5989 <emphasis role='strong'>We take it</emphasis> for granted that we can
5990 go back to see what we remember reading. Think about newspapers. If
5991 you wanted to study the reaction of your hometown newspaper to the
5992 race riots in Watts in 1965, or to Bull Connor's water cannon in 1963,
5993 you could go to your public library and look at the newspapers. Those
5994 papers probably exist on microfiche. If you're lucky, they exist in
5995 paper, too. Either way, you are free, using a library, to go back and
5996 remember&mdash;not just what it is convenient to remember, but
5997 remember something close to the truth.
5998 </para>
5999 <para>
6000 It is said that those who fail to remember history are doomed to
6001 repeat it. That's not quite correct. We <emphasis>all</emphasis>
6002 forget history. The key is whether we have a way to go back to
6003 rediscover what we forget. More directly, the key is whether an
6004 objective past can keep us honest. Libraries help do that, by
6005 collecting content and keeping it, for schoolchildren, for
6006 researchers, for grandma. A free society presumes this knowedge.
6007 </para>
6008 <para>
6009 The Internet was an exception to this presumption. Until the Internet
6010 Archive, there was no way to go back. The Internet was the
6011 quintessentially transitory medium. And yet, as it becomes more
6012 important in forming and reforming society, it becomes more and more
6013 <!-- PAGE BREAK 121 -->
6014 important to maintain in some historical form. It's just bizarre to
6015 think that we have scads of archives of newspapers from tiny towns
6016 around the world, yet there is but one copy of the Internet&mdash;the
6017 one kept by the Internet Archive.
6018 </para>
6019 <indexterm id='idxkahlebrewster' class='startofrange'><primary>Kahle, Brewster</primary></indexterm>
6020 <para>
6021 Brewster Kahle is the founder of the Internet Archive. He was a very
6022 successful Internet entrepreneur after he was a successful computer
6023 researcher. In the 1990s, Kahle decided he had had enough business
6024 success. It was time to become a different kind of success. So he
6025 launched a series of projects designed to archive human knowledge. The
6026 Internet Archive was just the first of the projects of this Andrew
6027 Carnegie of the Internet. By December of 2002, the archive had over 10
6028 billion pages, and it was growing at about a billion pages a month.
6029 </para>
6030 <indexterm><primary>Library of Congress</primary></indexterm>
6031 <indexterm><primary>Television Archive</primary></indexterm>
6032 <indexterm><primary>Vanderbilt University</primary></indexterm>
6033 <indexterm><primary>Way Back Machine</primary></indexterm>
6034 <indexterm><primary>libraries</primary><secondary>archival function of</secondary></indexterm>
6035 <indexterm id='idxnewscoverage2' class='startofrange'><primary>news coverage</primary></indexterm>
6036 <para>
6037 The Way Back Machine is the largest archive of human knowledge in
6038 human history. At the end of 2002, it held <quote>two hundred and thirty
6039 terabytes of material</quote>&mdash;and was <quote>ten times larger than the
6040 Library of Congress.</quote> And this was just the first of the archives that
6041 Kahle set out to build. In addition to the Internet Archive, Kahle has
6042 been constructing the Television Archive. Television, it turns out, is
6043 even more ephemeral than the Internet. While much of twentieth-century
6044 culture was constructed through television, only a tiny proportion of
6045 that culture is available for anyone to see today. Three hours of news
6046 are recorded each evening by Vanderbilt University&mdash;thanks to a
6047 specific exemption in the copyright law. That content is indexed, and
6048 is available to scholars for a very low fee. <quote>But other than that,
6049 [television] is almost unavailable,</quote> Kahle told me. <quote>If you were
6050 Barbara Walters you could get access to [the archives], but if you are
6051 just a graduate student?</quote> As Kahle put it,
6052 </para>
6053 <blockquote>
6054 <indexterm><primary>Quayle, Dan</primary></indexterm>
6055 <indexterm><primary>60 Minutes</primary></indexterm>
6056 <para>
6057 Do you remember when Dan Quayle was interacting with Murphy Brown?
6058 Remember that back and forth surreal experience of a politician
6059 interacting with a fictional television character? If you were a
6060 graduate student wanting to study that, and you wanted to get those
6061 original back and forth exchanges between the two, the
6062
6063 <!-- PAGE BREAK 122 -->
6064 <citetitle>60 Minutes</citetitle> episode that came out after it &hellip; it would be almost
6065 impossible. &hellip; Those materials are almost unfindable. &hellip;
6066 </para>
6067 </blockquote>
6068 <indexterm><primary>newspapers</primary><secondary>archives of</secondary></indexterm>
6069 <para>
6070 Why is that? Why is it that the part of our culture that is recorded
6071 in newspapers remains perpetually accessible, while the part that is
6072 recorded on videotape is not? How is it that we've created a world
6073 where researchers trying to understand the effect of media on
6074 nineteenthcentury America will have an easier time than researchers
6075 trying to understand the effect of media on twentieth-century America?
6076 </para>
6077 <para>
6078 In part, this is because of the law. Early in American copyright law,
6079 copyright owners were required to deposit copies of their work in
6080 libraries. These copies were intended both to facilitate the spread
6081 of knowledge and to assure that a copy of the work would be around
6082 once the copyright expired, so that others might access and copy the
6083 work.
6084 </para>
6085 <indexterm><primary>Library of Congress</primary></indexterm>
6086 <indexterm><primary>films</primary><secondary>archive of</secondary></indexterm>
6087 <para>
6088 These rules applied to film as well. But in 1915, the Library
6089 of Congress made an exception for film. Film could be copyrighted so
6090 long as such deposits were made. But the filmmaker was then allowed to
6091 borrow back the deposits&mdash;for an unlimited time at no cost. In
6092 1915 alone, there were more than 5,475 films deposited and <quote>borrowed
6093 back.</quote> Thus, when the copyrights to films expire, there is no copy
6094 held by any library. The copy exists&mdash;if it exists at
6095 all&mdash;in the library archive of the film company.<footnote><para>
6096 <!-- f2 -->
6097 Doug Herrick, <quote>Toward a National Film Collection: Motion Pictures at
6098 the Library of Congress,</quote> <citetitle>Film Library Quarterly</citetitle> 13 nos. 2&ndash;3
6099 (1980): 5; Anthony Slide, <citetitle>Nitrate Won't Wait: A History of Film
6100 Preservation in the United States</citetitle> (Jefferson, N.C.: McFarland &amp;
6101 Co., 1992), 36.
6102 </para></footnote>
6103 </para>
6104 <para>
6105 The same is generally true about television. Television broadcasts
6106 were originally not copyrighted&mdash;there was no way to capture the
6107 broadcasts, so there was no fear of <quote>theft.</quote> But as technology enabled
6108 capturing, broadcasters relied increasingly upon the law. The law
6109 required they make a copy of each broadcast for the work to be
6110 <quote>copyrighted.</quote> But those copies were simply kept by the
6111 broadcasters. No library had any right to them; the government didn't
6112 demand them. The content of this part of American culture is
6113 practically invisible to anyone who would look.
6114 </para>
6115 <indexterm><primary>September 11, 2001, terrorist attacks of</primary></indexterm>
6116 <para>
6117 Kahle was eager to correct this. Before September 11, 2001, he and
6118 <!-- PAGE BREAK 123 -->
6119 his allies had started capturing television. They selected twenty
6120 stations from around the world and hit the Record button. After
6121 September 11, Kahle, working with dozens of others, selected twenty
6122 stations from around the world and, beginning October 11, 2001, made
6123 their coverage during the week of September 11 available free on-line.
6124 Anyone could see how news reports from around the world covered the
6125 events of that day.
6126 </para>
6127 <indexterm><primary>Movie Archive</primary></indexterm>
6128 <indexterm><primary>archive.org</primary><seealso>Internet Archive</seealso></indexterm>
6129 <indexterm startref='idxnewscoverage2' class='endofrange'/>
6130 <indexterm><primary>films</primary><secondary>archive of</secondary></indexterm>
6131 <indexterm><primary>Internet Archive</primary></indexterm>
6132 <indexterm><primary>Duck and Cover film</primary></indexterm>
6133 <indexterm><primary>ephemeral films</primary></indexterm>
6134 <indexterm><primary>Prelinger, Rick</primary></indexterm>
6135 <para>
6136 Kahle had the same idea with film. Working with Rick Prelinger, whose
6137 archive of film includes close to 45,000 <quote>ephemeral films</quote> (meaning
6138 films other than Hollywood movies, films that were never copyrighted),
6139 Kahle established the Movie Archive. Prelinger let Kahle digitize
6140 1,300 films in this archive and post those films on the Internet to be
6141 downloaded for free. Prelinger's is a for-profit company. It sells
6142 copies of these films as stock footage. What he has discovered is that
6143 after he made a significant chunk available for free, his stock
6144 footage sales went up dramatically. People could easily find the
6145 material they wanted to use. Some downloaded that material and made
6146 films on their own. Others purchased copies to enable other films to
6147 be made. Either way, the archive enabled access to this important
6148 part of our culture. Want to see a copy of the <quote>Duck and Cover</quote> film
6149 that instructed children how to save themselves in the middle of
6150 nuclear attack? Go to archive.org, and you can download the film in a
6151 few minutes&mdash;for free.
6152 </para>
6153 <para>
6154 Here again, Kahle is providing access to a part of our culture that we
6155 otherwise could not get easily, if at all. It is yet another part of
6156 what defines the twentieth century that we have lost to history. The
6157 law doesn't require these copies to be kept by anyone, or to be
6158 deposited in an archive by anyone. Therefore, there is no simple way
6159 to find them.
6160 </para>
6161 <para>
6162 The key here is access, not price. Kahle wants to enable free access
6163 to this content, but he also wants to enable others to sell access to
6164 it. His aim is to ensure competition in access to this important part
6165 of our culture. Not during the commercial life of a bit of creative
6166 property, but during a second life that all creative property
6167 has&mdash;a noncommercial life.
6168 </para>
6169 <para>
6170 For here is an idea that we should more clearly recognize. Every bit
6171 of creative property goes through different <quote>lives.</quote> In its first
6172 life, if the
6173
6174 <!-- PAGE BREAK 124 -->
6175 creator is lucky, the content is sold. In such cases the commercial
6176 market is successful for the creator. The vast majority of creative
6177 property doesn't enjoy such success, but some clearly does. For that
6178 content, commercial life is extremely important. Without this
6179 commercial market, there would be, many argue, much less creativity.
6180 </para>
6181 <para>
6182 After the commercial life of creative property has ended, our
6183 tradition has always supported a second life as well. A newspaper
6184 delivers the news every day to the doorsteps of America. The very next
6185 day, it is used to wrap fish or to fill boxes with fragile gifts or to
6186 build an archive of knowledge about our history. In this second life,
6187 the content can continue to inform even if that information is no
6188 longer sold.
6189 </para>
6190 <indexterm><primary>books</primary><secondary>out of print</secondary></indexterm>
6191 <para>
6192 The same has always been true about books. A book goes out of print
6193 very quickly (the average today is after about a year<footnote><para>
6194 <!-- f3 -->
6195 <indexterm><primary>books</primary><secondary>out of print</secondary></indexterm>
6196 Dave Barns, <quote>Fledgling Career in Antique Books: Woodstock Landlord,
6197 Bar Owner Starts a New Chapter by Adopting Business,</quote> <citetitle>Chicago Tribune</citetitle>,
6198 5 September 1997, at Metro Lake 1L. Of books published between 1927
6199 and 1946, only 2.2 percent were in print in 2002. R. Anthony Reese,
6200 <quote>The First Sale Doctrine in the Era of Digital Networks,</quote> <citetitle>Boston
6201 College Law Review</citetitle> 44 (2003): 593 n. 51.
6202 </para></footnote>). After
6203 it is out of print, it can be sold in used book stores without the
6204 copyright owner getting anything and stored in libraries, where many
6205 get to read the book, also for free. Used book stores and libraries
6206 are thus the second life of a book. That second life is extremely
6207 important to the spread and stability of culture.
6208 </para>
6209 <para>
6210 Yet increasingly, any assumption about a stable second life for
6211 creative property does not hold true with the most important
6212 components of popular culture in the twentieth and twenty-first
6213 centuries. For these&mdash;television, movies, music, radio, the
6214 Internet&mdash;there is no guarantee of a second life. For these sorts
6215 of culture, it is as if we've replaced libraries with Barnes &amp;
6216 Noble superstores. With this culture, what's accessible is nothing but
6217 what a certain limited market demands. Beyond that, culture
6218 disappears.
6219 </para>
6220 <para>
6221 <emphasis role='strong'>For most of</emphasis> the twentieth century,
6222 it was economics that made this so. It would have been insanely
6223 expensive to collect and make accessible all television and film and
6224 music: The cost of analog copies is extraordinarily high. So even
6225 though the law in principle would have restricted the ability of a
6226 Brewster Kahle to copy culture generally, the
6227 <!-- PAGE BREAK 125 -->
6228 real restriction was economics. The market made it impossibly
6229 difficult to do anything about this ephemeral culture; the law had
6230 little practical effect.
6231 </para>
6232 <para>
6233 Perhaps the single most important feature of the digital revolution is
6234 that for the first time since the Library of Alexandria, it is
6235 feasible to imagine constructing archives that hold all culture
6236 produced or distributed publicly. Technology makes it possible to
6237 imagine an archive of all books published, and increasingly makes it
6238 possible to imagine an archive of all moving images and sound.
6239 </para>
6240 <para>
6241 The scale of this potential archive is something we've never imagined
6242 before. The Brewster Kahles of our history have dreamed about it; but
6243 we are for the first time at a point where that dream is possible. As
6244 Kahle describes,
6245 </para>
6246 <blockquote>
6247 <indexterm><primary>books</primary><secondary>total number of</secondary></indexterm>
6248 <indexterm><primary>films</primary><secondary>total number of</secondary></indexterm>
6249 <indexterm><primary>music recordings</primary><see>peer-to-peer (p2p) file sharing</see></indexterm>
6250 <indexterm><primary>music recordings</primary><see>recording industry</see></indexterm>
6251 <indexterm><primary>music recordings</primary><secondary>total number of</secondary></indexterm>
6252 <para>
6253 It looks like there's about two to three million recordings of music.
6254 Ever. There are about a hundred thousand theatrical releases of
6255 movies, &hellip; and about one to two million movies [distributed] during
6256 the twentieth century. There are about twenty-six million different
6257 titles of books. All of these would fit on computers that would fit in
6258 this room and be able to be afforded by a small company. So we're at
6259 a turning point in our history. Universal access is the goal. And the
6260 opportunity of leading a different life, based on this, is
6261 &hellip; thrilling. It could be one of the things humankind would be most
6262 proud of. Up there with the Library of Alexandria, putting a man on
6263 the moon, and the invention of the printing press.
6264 </para>
6265 </blockquote>
6266 <indexterm><primary>Disney, Walt</primary></indexterm>
6267 <para>
6268 Kahle is not the only librarian. The Internet Archive is not the only
6269 archive. But Kahle and the Internet Archive suggest what the future of
6270 libraries or archives could be. <emphasis>When</emphasis> the
6271 commercial life of creative property ends, I don't know. But it
6272 does. And whenever it does, Kahle and his archive hint at a world
6273 where this knowledge, and culture, remains perpetually available. Some
6274 will draw upon it to understand it;
6275 <!-- PAGE BREAK 126 -->
6276 some to criticize it. Some will use it, as Walt Disney did, to
6277 re-create the past for the future. These technologies promise
6278 something that had become unimaginable for much of our past&mdash;a
6279 future <emphasis>for</emphasis> our past. The technology of digital
6280 arts could make the dream of the Library of Alexandria real again.
6281 </para>
6282 <para>
6283 Technologists have thus removed the economic costs of building such an
6284 archive. But lawyers' costs remain. For as much as we might like to
6285 call these <quote>archives,</quote> as warm as the idea of a <quote>library</quote> might seem,
6286 the <quote>content</quote> that is collected in these digital spaces is also
6287 someone's <quote>property.</quote> And the law of property restricts the freedoms
6288 that Kahle and others would exercise.
6289 </para>
6290 <indexterm startref='idxarchivesdigital1' class='endofrange'/>
6291 <indexterm startref='idxkahlebrewster' class='endofrange'/>
6292 <!-- PAGE BREAK 127 -->
6293 </chapter>
6294 <chapter label="10" id="property-i">
6295 <title>Chapter Ten: <quote>Property</quote></title>
6296 <indexterm><primary>Johnson, Lyndon</primary></indexterm>
6297 <indexterm><primary>Kennedy, John F.</primary></indexterm>
6298 <indexterm id='idxvalentijackbackgroundof' class='startofrange'><primary>Valenti, Jack</primary><secondary>background of</secondary></indexterm>
6299 <para>
6300 <emphasis role='strong'>Jack Valenti</emphasis> has been the president
6301 of the Motion Picture Association of America since 1966. He first came
6302 to Washington, D.C., with Lyndon Johnson's
6303 administration&mdash;literally. The famous picture of Johnson's
6304 swearing-in on Air Force One after the assassination of President
6305 Kennedy has Valenti in the background. In his almost forty years of
6306 running the MPAA, Valenti has established himself as perhaps the most
6307 prominent and effective lobbyist in Washington.
6308 </para>
6309 <indexterm><primary>Disney, Inc.</primary></indexterm>
6310 <indexterm><primary>MGM</primary></indexterm>
6311 <indexterm><primary>Paramount Pictures</primary></indexterm>
6312 <indexterm><primary>Twentieth Century Fox</primary></indexterm>
6313 <indexterm><primary>Sony Pictures Entertainment</primary></indexterm>
6314 <indexterm><primary>Universal Pictures</primary></indexterm>
6315 <indexterm><primary>Warner Brothers</primary></indexterm>
6316 <para>
6317 The MPAA is the American branch of the international Motion Picture
6318 Association. It was formed in 1922 as a trade association whose goal
6319 was to defend American movies against increasing domestic criticism.
6320 The organization now represents not only filmmakers but producers and
6321 distributors of entertainment for television, video, and cable. Its
6322 board is made up of the chairmen and presidents of the seven major
6323 producers and distributors of motion picture and television programs
6324 in the United States: Walt Disney, Sony Pictures Entertainment, MGM,
6325 Paramount Pictures, Twentieth Century Fox, Universal Studios, and
6326 Warner Brothers.
6327 </para>
6328 <para>
6329 <!-- PAGE BREAK 128 -->
6330 Valenti is only the third president of the MPAA. No president before
6331 him has had as much influence over that organization, or over
6332 Washington. As a Texan, Valenti has mastered the single most important
6333 political skill of a Southerner&mdash;the ability to appear simple and
6334 slow while hiding a lightning-fast intellect. To this day, Valenti
6335 plays the simple, humble man. But this Harvard MBA, and author of four
6336 books, who finished high school at the age of fifteen and flew more
6337 than fifty combat missions in World War II, is no Mr. Smith. When
6338 Valenti went to Washington, he mastered the city in a quintessentially
6339 Washingtonian way.
6340 </para>
6341 <para>
6342 In defending artistic liberty and the freedom of speech that our
6343 culture depends upon, the MPAA has done important good. In crafting
6344 the MPAA rating system, it has probably avoided a great deal of
6345 speech-regulating harm. But there is an aspect to the organization's
6346 mission that is both the most radical and the most important. This is
6347 the organization's effort, epitomized in Valenti's every act, to
6348 redefine the meaning of <quote>creative property.</quote>
6349 </para>
6350 <para>
6351 In 1982, Valenti's testimony to Congress captured the strategy
6352 perfectly:
6353 </para>
6354 <blockquote>
6355 <para>
6356 No matter the lengthy arguments made, no matter the charges and the
6357 counter-charges, no matter the tumult and the shouting, reasonable men
6358 and women will keep returning to the fundamental issue, the central
6359 theme which animates this entire debate: <emphasis>Creative property
6360 owners must be accorded the same rights and protection resident in all
6361 other property owners in the nation</emphasis>. That is the issue.
6362 That is the question. And that is the rostrum on which this entire
6363 hearing and the debates to follow must rest.<footnote><para>
6364 <!-- f1 -->
6365 Home Recording of Copyrighted Works: Hearings on H.R. 4783, H.R.
6366 4794, H.R. 4808, H.R. 5250, H.R. 5488, and H.R. 5705 Before the
6367 Subcommittee on Courts, Civil Liberties, and the Administration of
6368 Justice of the Committee on the Judiciary of the House of
6369 Representatives, 97th Cong., 2nd sess. (1982): 65 (testimony of Jack
6370 Valenti).
6371 </para></footnote>
6372 </para>
6373 </blockquote>
6374 <para>
6375 The strategy of this rhetoric, like the strategy of most of Valenti's
6376 rhetoric, is brilliant and simple and brilliant because simple. The
6377 <quote>central theme</quote> to which <quote>reasonable men and women</quote> will return is
6378 this:
6379 <!-- PAGE BREAK 129 -->
6380 <quote>Creative property owners must be accorded the same rights and
6381 protections resident in all other property owners in the nation.</quote>
6382 There are no second-class citizens, Valenti might have
6383 continued. There should be no second-class property owners.
6384 </para>
6385 <para>
6386 This claim has an obvious and powerful intuitive pull. It is stated
6387 with such clarity as to make the idea as obvious as the notion that we
6388 use elections to pick presidents. But in fact, there is no more
6389 extreme a claim made by <emphasis>anyone</emphasis> who is serious in
6390 this debate than this claim of Valenti's. Jack Valenti, however sweet
6391 and however brilliant, is perhaps the nation's foremost extremist when
6392 it comes to the nature and scope of <quote>creative property.</quote> His views
6393 have <emphasis>no</emphasis> reasonable connection to our actual legal
6394 tradition, even if the subtle pull of his Texan charm has slowly
6395 redefined that tradition, at least in Washington.
6396 </para>
6397 <indexterm startref='idxvalentijackbackgroundof' class='endofrange'/>
6398 <para>
6399 While <quote>creative property</quote> is certainly <quote>property</quote> in a nerdy and
6400 precise sense that lawyers are trained to understand,<footnote><para>
6401 <!-- f2 -->
6402 Lawyers speak of <quote>property</quote> not as an absolute thing, but as a bundle
6403 of rights that are sometimes associated with a particular
6404 object. Thus, my <quote>property right</quote> to my car gives me the right to
6405 exclusive use, but not the right to drive at 150 miles an hour. For
6406 the best effort to connect the ordinary meaning of <quote>property</quote> to
6407 <quote>lawyer talk,</quote> see Bruce Ackerman, <citetitle>Private Property and the
6408 Constitution</citetitle> (New Haven: Yale University Press, 1977), 26&ndash;27.
6409 </para></footnote> it has never been the case, nor should it be, that
6410 <quote>creative property owners</quote> have been <quote>accorded the same rights and
6411 protection resident in all other property owners.</quote> Indeed, if creative
6412 property owners were given the same rights as all other property
6413 owners, that would effect a radical, and radically undesirable, change
6414 in our tradition.
6415 </para>
6416 <para>
6417 Valenti knows this. But he speaks for an industry that cares squat for
6418 our tradition and the values it represents. He speaks for an industry
6419 that is instead fighting to restore the tradition that the British
6420 overturned in 1710. In the world that Valenti's changes would create,
6421 a powerful few would exercise powerful control over how our creative
6422 culture would develop.
6423 </para>
6424 <para>
6425 I have two purposes in this chapter. The first is to convince you
6426 that, historically, Valenti's claim is absolutely wrong. The second is
6427 to convince you that it would be terribly wrong for us to reject our
6428 history. We have always treated rights in creative property
6429 differently from the rights resident in all other property
6430 owners. They have never been the same. And they should never be the
6431 same, because, however counterintuitive this may seem, to make them
6432 the same would be to
6433
6434 <!-- PAGE BREAK 130 -->
6435 fundamentally weaken the opportunity for new creators to create.
6436 Creativity depends upon the owners of creativity having less than
6437 perfect control.
6438 </para>
6439 <para>
6440 Organizations such as the MPAA, whose board includes the most powerful
6441 of the old guard, have little interest, their rhetoric
6442 notwithstanding, in assuring that the new can displace them. No
6443 organization does. No person does. (Ask me about tenure, for example.)
6444 But what's good for the MPAA is not necessarily good for America. A
6445 society that defends the ideals of free culture must preserve
6446 precisely the opportunity for new creativity to threaten the old.
6447 </para>
6448 <para>
6449 <emphasis role='strong'>To get</emphasis> just a hint that there is
6450 something fundamentally wrong in Valenti's argument, we need look no
6451 further than the United States Constitution itself.
6452 </para>
6453 <para>
6454 The framers of our Constitution loved <quote>property.</quote> Indeed, so strongly
6455 did they love property that they built into the Constitution an
6456 important requirement. If the government takes your property&mdash;if
6457 it condemns your house, or acquires a slice of land from your
6458 farm&mdash;it is required, under the Fifth Amendment's <quote>Takings
6459 Clause,</quote> to pay you <quote>just compensation</quote> for that taking. The
6460 Constitution thus guarantees that property is, in a certain sense,
6461 sacred. It cannot <emphasis>ever</emphasis> be taken from the property
6462 owner unless the government pays for the privilege.
6463 </para>
6464 <para>
6465 Yet the very same Constitution speaks very differently about what
6466 Valenti calls <quote>creative property.</quote> In the clause granting Congress the
6467 power to create <quote>creative property,</quote> the Constitution
6468 <emphasis>requires</emphasis> that after a <quote>limited time,</quote> Congress
6469 take back the rights that it has granted and set the <quote>creative
6470 property</quote> free to the public domain. Yet when Congress does this, when
6471 the expiration of a copyright term <quote>takes</quote> your copyright and turns it
6472 over to the public domain, Congress does not have any obligation to
6473 pay <quote>just compensation</quote> for this <quote>taking.</quote> Instead, the same
6474 Constitution that requires compensation for your land
6475 <!-- PAGE BREAK 131 -->
6476 requires that you lose your <quote>creative property</quote> right without any
6477 compensation at all.
6478 </para>
6479 <para>
6480 The Constitution thus on its face states that these two forms of
6481 property are not to be accorded the same rights. They are plainly to
6482 be treated differently. Valenti is therefore not just asking for a
6483 change in our tradition when he argues that creative-property owners
6484 should be accorded the same rights as every other property-right
6485 owner. He is effectively arguing for a change in our Constitution
6486 itself.
6487 </para>
6488 <indexterm id='idxjeffersonthomas' class='startofrange'><primary>Jefferson, Thomas</primary></indexterm>
6489 <para>
6490 Arguing for a change in our Constitution is not necessarily wrong.
6491 There was much in our original Constitution that was plainly wrong.
6492 The Constitution of 1789 entrenched slavery; it left senators to be
6493 appointed rather than elected; it made it possible for the electoral
6494 college to produce a tie between the president and his own vice
6495 president (as it did in 1800). The framers were no doubt
6496 extraordinary, but I would be the first to admit that they made big
6497 mistakes. We have since rejected some of those mistakes; no doubt
6498 there could be others that we should reject as well. So my argument is
6499 not simply that because Jefferson did it, we should, too.
6500 </para>
6501 <para>
6502 Instead, my argument is that because Jefferson did it, we should at
6503 least try to understand <emphasis>why</emphasis>. Why did the framers,
6504 fanatical property types that they were, reject the claim that
6505 creative property be given the same rights as all other property? Why
6506 did they require that for creative property there must be a public
6507 domain?
6508 </para>
6509 <indexterm startref='idxjeffersonthomas' class='endofrange'/>
6510
6511 <para>
6512 To answer this question, we need to get some perspective on the
6513 history of these <quote>creative property</quote> rights, and the control that they
6514 enabled. Once we see clearly how differently these rights have been
6515 defined, we will be in a better position to ask the question that
6516 should be at the core of this war: Not <emphasis>whether</emphasis>
6517 creative property should be protected, but how. Not
6518 <emphasis>whether</emphasis> we will enforce the rights the law gives
6519 to creative-property owners, but what the particular mix of rights
6520 ought to be. Not <emphasis>whether</emphasis> artists should be paid,
6521 but whether institutions designed to assure that artists get paid need
6522 also control how culture develops.
6523 </para>
6524 <indexterm><primary>Code (Lessig)</primary></indexterm>
6525 <indexterm><primary>Lessig, Lawrence</primary></indexterm>
6526 <indexterm id='idxfreeculturefourmodalitiesofconstrainton' class='startofrange'><primary>free culture</primary><secondary>four modalities of constraint on</secondary></indexterm>
6527 <indexterm id='idxregulationfourmodalitiesof' class='startofrange'><primary>regulation</primary><secondary>four modalities of</secondary></indexterm>
6528 <indexterm id='idxcopyrightlawasexpostregulationmodality' class='startofrange'><primary>copyright law</primary><secondary>as ex post regulation modality</secondary></indexterm>
6529 <indexterm id='idxlawasconstraintmodality' class='startofrange'><primary>law</primary><secondary>as constraint modality</secondary></indexterm>
6530 <para>
6531
6532 <!-- PAGE BREAK 132 -->
6533 To answer these questions, we need a more general way to talk about
6534 how property is protected. More precisely, we need a more general way
6535 than the narrow language of the law allows. In <citetitle>Code and Other Laws of
6536 Cyberspace</citetitle>, I used a simple model to capture this more general
6537 perspective. For any particular right or regulation, this model asks
6538 how four different modalities of regulation interact to support or
6539 weaken the right or regulation. I represented it with this diagram:
6540 </para>
6541 <figure id="fig-1331">
6542 <title></title>
6543 <graphic fileref="images/1331.svg" align="center" width="10em"></graphic>
6544 </figure>
6545 <indexterm><primary>Madonna</primary></indexterm>
6546 <para>
6547 At the center of this picture is a regulated dot: the individual or
6548 group that is the target of regulation, or the holder of a right. (In
6549 each case throughout, we can describe this either as regulation or as
6550 a right. For simplicity's sake, I will speak only of regulations.)
6551 The ovals represent four ways in which the individual or group might
6552 be regulated&mdash; either constrained or, alternatively, enabled. Law
6553 is the most obvious constraint (to lawyers, at least). It constrains
6554 by threatening punishments after the fact if the rules set in advance
6555 are violated. So if, for example, you willfully infringe Madonna's
6556 copyright by copying a song from her latest CD and posting it on the
6557 Web, you can be punished
6558 <!-- PAGE BREAK 133 -->
6559 with a $150,000 fine. The fine is an ex post punishment for violating
6560 an ex ante rule. It is imposed by the state.
6561 <indexterm><primary>Madonna</primary></indexterm>
6562 </para>
6563 <indexterm><primary>norms, regulatory influence of</primary></indexterm>
6564 <para>
6565 Norms are a different kind of constraint. They, too, punish an
6566 individual for violating a rule. But the punishment of a norm is
6567 imposed by a community, not (or not only) by the state. There may be
6568 no law against spitting, but that doesn't mean you won't be punished
6569 if you spit on the ground while standing in line at a movie. The
6570 punishment might not be harsh, though depending upon the community, it
6571 could easily be more harsh than many of the punishments imposed by the
6572 state. The mark of the difference is not the severity of the rule, but
6573 the source of the enforcement.
6574 </para>
6575 <indexterm id='idxmarketconstraints' class='startofrange'><primary>market constraints</primary></indexterm>
6576 <para>
6577 The market is a third type of constraint. Its constraint is effected
6578 through conditions: You can do X if you pay Y; you'll be paid M if you
6579 do N. These constraints are obviously not independent of law or
6580 norms&mdash;it is property law that defines what must be bought if it
6581 is to be taken legally; it is norms that say what is appropriately
6582 sold. But given a set of norms, and a background of property and
6583 contract law, the market imposes a simultaneous constraint upon how an
6584 individual or group might behave.
6585 </para>
6586 <indexterm><primary>architecture, constraint effected through</primary></indexterm>
6587 <para>
6588 Finally, and for the moment, perhaps, most mysteriously,
6589 <quote>architecture</quote>&mdash;the physical world as one finds it&mdash;is a
6590 constraint on behavior. A fallen bridge might constrain your ability
6591 to get across a river. Railroad tracks might constrain the ability of
6592 a community to integrate its social life. As with the market,
6593 architecture does not effect its constraint through ex post
6594 punishments. Instead, also as with the market, architecture effects
6595 its constraint through simultaneous conditions. These conditions are
6596 imposed not by courts enforcing contracts, or by police punishing
6597 theft, but by nature, by <quote>architecture.</quote> If a 500-pound boulder
6598 blocks your way, it is the law of gravity that enforces this
6599 constraint. If a $500 airplane ticket stands between you and a flight
6600 to New York, it is the market that enforces this constraint.
6601 </para>
6602 <indexterm startref='idxcopyrightlawasexpostregulationmodality' class='endofrange'/>
6603 <indexterm startref='idxlawasconstraintmodality' class='endofrange'/>
6604 <indexterm startref='idxmarketconstraints' class='endofrange'/>
6605 <indexterm id='idxlawasconstraintmodality2' class='startofrange'><primary>law</primary><secondary>as constraint modality</secondary></indexterm>
6606 <para>
6607
6608 <!-- PAGE BREAK 134 -->
6609 So the first point about these four modalities of regulation is
6610 obvious: They interact. Restrictions imposed by one might be
6611 reinforced by another. Or restrictions imposed by one might be
6612 undermined by another.
6613 </para>
6614 <para>
6615 The second point follows directly: If we want to understand the
6616 effective freedom that anyone has at a given moment to do any
6617 particular thing, we have to consider how these four modalities
6618 interact. Whether or not there are other constraints (there may well
6619 be; my claim is not about comprehensiveness), these four are among the
6620 most significant, and any regulator (whether controlling or freeing)
6621 must consider how these four in particular interact.
6622 </para>
6623 <indexterm><primary>architecture, constraint effected through</primary></indexterm>
6624 <indexterm><primary>market constraints</primary></indexterm>
6625 <indexterm><primary>norms, regulatory influence of</primary></indexterm>
6626 <indexterm id='idxdrivingspeedconstraintson' class='startofrange'><primary>driving speed, constraints on</primary></indexterm>
6627 <indexterm id='idxspeedingconstraintson' class='startofrange'><primary>speeding, constraints on</primary></indexterm>
6628 <para>
6629 So, for example, consider the <quote>freedom</quote> to drive a car at a high
6630 speed. That freedom is in part restricted by laws: speed limits that
6631 say how fast you can drive in particular places at particular
6632 times. It is in part restricted by architecture: speed bumps, for
6633 example, slow most rational drivers; governors in buses, as another
6634 example, set the maximum rate at which the driver can drive. The
6635 freedom is in part restricted by the market: Fuel efficiency drops as
6636 speed increases, thus the price of gasoline indirectly constrains
6637 speed. And finally, the norms of a community may or may not constrain
6638 the freedom to speed. Drive at 50 mph by a school in your own
6639 neighborhood and you're likely to be punished by the neighbors. The
6640 same norm wouldn't be as effective in a different town, or at night.
6641 </para>
6642 <para>
6643 The final point about this simple model should also be fairly clear:
6644 While these four modalities are analytically independent, law has a
6645 special role in affecting the three.<footnote><para>
6646 <!-- f3 -->
6647 By describing the way law affects the other three modalities, I don't
6648 mean to suggest that the other three don't affect law. Obviously, they
6649 do. Law's only distinction is that it alone speaks as if it has a
6650 right self-consciously to change the other three. The right of the
6651 other three is more timidly expressed. See Lawrence Lessig, <citetitle>Code: And
6652 Other Laws of Cyberspace</citetitle> (New York: Basic Books, 1999): 90&ndash;95;
6653 Lawrence Lessig, <quote>The New Chicago School,</quote> <citetitle>Journal of Legal Studies</citetitle>,
6654 June 1998.
6655 <indexterm><primary>Code (Lessig)</primary></indexterm>
6656 </para></footnote>
6657 The law, in other words, sometimes operates to increase or decrease
6658 the constraint of a particular modality. Thus, the law might be used
6659 to increase taxes on gasoline, so as to increase the incentives to
6660 drive more slowly. The law might be used to mandate more speed bumps,
6661 so as to increase the difficulty of driving rapidly. The law might be
6662 used to fund ads that stigmatize reckless driving. Or the law might be
6663 used to require that other laws be more
6664 <!-- PAGE BREAK 135 -->
6665 strict&mdash;a federal requirement that states decrease the speed
6666 limit, for example&mdash;so as to decrease the attractiveness of fast
6667 driving.
6668 </para>
6669 <indexterm startref='idxdrivingspeedconstraintson' class='endofrange'/>
6670 <indexterm startref='idxspeedingconstraintson' class='endofrange'/>
6671 <figure id="fig-1361">
6672 <title></title>
6673 <graphic fileref="images/1361.svg" align="center" width="12em"></graphic>
6674
6675 </figure>
6676 <indexterm><primary>architecture, constraint effected through</primary></indexterm>
6677 <para>
6678 These constraints can thus change, and they can be changed. To
6679 understand the effective protection of liberty or protection of
6680 property at any particular moment, we must track these changes over
6681 time. A restriction imposed by one modality might be erased by
6682 another. A freedom enabled by one modality might be displaced by
6683 another.<footnote>
6684 <para>
6685 <!-- f4 -->
6686 Some people object to this way of talking about <quote>liberty.</quote> They object
6687 because their focus when considering the constraints that exist at any
6688 particular moment are constraints imposed exclusively by the
6689 government. For instance, if a storm destroys a bridge, these people
6690 think it is meaningless to say that one's liberty has been
6691 restrained. A bridge has washed out, and it's harder to get from one
6692 place to another. To talk about this as a loss of freedom, they say,
6693 is to confuse the stuff of politics with the vagaries of ordinary
6694 life. I don't mean to deny the value in this narrower view, which
6695 depends upon the context of the inquiry. I do, however, mean to argue
6696 against any insistence that this narrower view is the only proper view
6697 of liberty. As I argued in <citetitle>Code</citetitle>, we come from a
6698 long tradition of political thought with a broader focus than the
6699 narrow question of what the government did when. John Stuart Mill
6700 defended freedom of speech, for example, from the tyranny of narrow
6701 minds, not from the fear of government prosecution; John Stuart Mill,
6702 <citetitle>On Liberty</citetitle> (Indiana: Hackett Publishing Co.,
6703 1978), 19. John R. Commons famously defended the economic freedom of
6704 labor from constraints imposed by the market; John R. Commons, <quote>The
6705 Right to Work,</quote> in Malcom Rutherford and Warren J. Samuels, eds.,
6706 <citetitle>John R. Commons: Selected Essays</citetitle> (London:
6707 Routledge: 1997), 62. The Americans with Disabilities Act increases
6708 the liberty of people with physical disabilities by changing the
6709 architecture of certain public places, thereby making access to those
6710 places easier; 42 <citetitle>United States Code</citetitle>, section
6711 12101 (2000). Each of these interventions to change existing
6712 conditions changes the liberty of a particular group. The effect of
6713 those interventions should be accounted for in order to understand the
6714 effective liberty that each of these groups might face.
6715 <indexterm><primary>Americans with Disabilities Act (1990)</primary></indexterm>
6716 <indexterm><primary>Commons, John R.</primary></indexterm>
6717 <indexterm><primary>architecture, constraint effected through</primary></indexterm>
6718 <indexterm><primary>market constraints</primary></indexterm>
6719 <indexterm><primary>Code (Lessig)</primary></indexterm>
6720 </para></footnote>
6721 </para>
6722 <indexterm startref='idxlawasconstraintmodality2' class='endofrange'/>
6723 <section id="hollywood">
6724 <title>Why Hollywood Is Right</title>
6725 <indexterm id='idxcopyrightfourregulatorymodalitieson' class='startofrange'><primary>copyright</primary><secondary>four regulatory modalities on</secondary></indexterm>
6726 <para>
6727 The most obvious point that this model reveals is just why, or just
6728 how, Hollywood is right. The copyright warriors have rallied Congress
6729 and the courts to defend copyright. This model helps us see why that
6730 rallying makes sense.
6731 </para>
6732 <para>
6733 Let's say this is the picture of copyright's regulation before the
6734 Internet:
6735 </para>
6736 <figure id="fig-1371">
6737 <title></title>
6738 <graphic fileref="images/1331.svg" align="center" width="10em"></graphic>
6739
6740 </figure>
6741 <indexterm id='idxarchitectureconstrainteffectedthrough' class='startofrange'><primary>architecture, constraint effected through</primary></indexterm>
6742 <indexterm><primary>law</primary><secondary>as constraint modality</secondary></indexterm>
6743 <indexterm id='idxnormsregulatoryinfluenceof2' class='startofrange'><primary>norms, regulatory influence of</primary></indexterm>
6744 <para>
6745 <!-- PAGE BREAK 136 -->
6746 There is balance between law, norms, market, and architecture. The law
6747 limits the ability to copy and share content, by imposing penalties on
6748 those who copy and share content. Those penalties are reinforced by
6749 technologies that make it hard to copy and share content
6750 (architecture) and expensive to copy and share content
6751 (market). Finally, those penalties are mitigated by norms we all
6752 recognize&mdash;kids, for example, taping other kids' records. These
6753 uses of copyrighted material may well be infringement, but the norms
6754 of our society (before the Internet, at least) had no problem with
6755 this form of infringement.
6756 </para>
6757 <indexterm id='idxinternetcopyrightregulatorybalancelostwith' class='startofrange'><primary>Internet</primary><secondary>copyright regulatory balance lost with</secondary></indexterm>
6758 <indexterm><primary>peer-to-peer (p2p) file sharing</primary><secondary>regulatory balance lost in</secondary></indexterm>
6759 <indexterm><primary>market constraints</primary></indexterm>
6760 <indexterm><primary>MP3s</primary></indexterm>
6761 <para>
6762 Enter the Internet, or, more precisely, technologies such as MP3s and
6763 p2p sharing. Now the constraint of architecture changes dramatically,
6764 as does the constraint of the market. And as both the market and
6765 architecture relax the regulation of copyright, norms pile on. The
6766 happy balance (for the warriors, at least) of life before the Internet
6767 becomes an effective state of anarchy after the Internet.
6768 </para>
6769 <indexterm startref='idxarchitectureconstrainteffectedthrough' class='endofrange'/>
6770 <indexterm startref='idxnormsregulatoryinfluenceof2' class='endofrange'/>
6771 <indexterm><primary>technology</primary><secondary>established industries threatened by changes in</secondary></indexterm>
6772 <para>
6773 Thus the sense of, and justification for, the warriors' response.
6774 Technology has changed, the warriors say, and the effect of this
6775 change, when ramified through the market and norms, is that a balance
6776 of protection for the copyright owners' rights has been lost. This is
6777 Iraq
6778 <!-- PAGE BREAK 137 -->
6779 after the fall of Saddam, but this time no government is justifying the
6780 looting that results.
6781 </para>
6782 <figure id="fig-1381">
6783 <title></title>
6784 <graphic fileref="images/1381.svg" align="center" width="10em"></graphic>
6785
6786 </figure>
6787 <indexterm><primary>Commerce, U.S. Department of</primary></indexterm>
6788 <indexterm id='idxregulationasestablishmentprotectionism' class='startofrange'><primary>regulation</primary><secondary>as establishment protectionism</secondary></indexterm>
6789 <para>
6790 Neither this analysis nor the conclusions that follow are new to the
6791 warriors. Indeed, in a <quote>White Paper</quote> prepared by the Commerce
6792 Department (one heavily influenced by the copyright warriors) in 1995,
6793 this mix of regulatory modalities had already been identified and the
6794 strategy to respond already mapped. In response to the changes the
6795 Internet had effected, the White Paper argued (1) Congress should
6796 strengthen intellectual property law, (2) businesses should adopt
6797 innovative marketing techniques, (3) technologists should push to
6798 develop code to protect copyrighted material, and (4) educators should
6799 educate kids to better protect copyright.
6800 </para>
6801 <indexterm startref='idxfreeculturefourmodalitiesofconstrainton' class='endofrange'/>
6802 <indexterm startref='idxregulationfourmodalitiesof' class='endofrange'/>
6803 <indexterm><primary>farming</primary></indexterm>
6804 <indexterm><primary>steel industry</primary></indexterm>
6805 <para>
6806 This mixed strategy is just what copyright needed&mdash;if it was to
6807 preserve the particular balance that existed before the change induced
6808 by the Internet. And it's just what we should expect the content
6809 industry to push for. It is as American as apple pie to consider the
6810 happy life you have as an entitlement, and to look to the law to
6811 protect it if something comes along to change that happy
6812 life. Homeowners living in a
6813
6814 <!-- PAGE BREAK 138 -->
6815 flood plain have no hesitation appealing to the government to rebuild
6816 (and rebuild again) when a flood (architecture) wipes away their
6817 property (law). Farmers have no hesitation appealing to the government
6818 to bail them out when a virus (architecture) devastates their
6819 crop. Unions have no hesitation appealing to the government to bail
6820 them out when imports (market) wipe out the U.S. steel industry.
6821 </para>
6822 <indexterm startref='idxcopyrightfourregulatorymodalitieson' class='endofrange'/>
6823 <indexterm startref='idxinternetcopyrightregulatorybalancelostwith' class='endofrange'/>
6824 <indexterm><primary>Brown, John Seely</primary></indexterm>
6825 <para>
6826 Thus, there's nothing wrong or surprising in the content industry's
6827 campaign to protect itself from the harmful consequences of a
6828 technological innovation. And I would be the last person to argue that
6829 the changing technology of the Internet has not had a profound effect
6830 on the content industry's way of doing business, or as John Seely
6831 Brown describes it, its <quote>architecture of revenue.</quote>
6832 </para>
6833 <indexterm><primary>advertising</primary></indexterm>
6834 <indexterm><primary>television</primary><secondary>advertising on</secondary></indexterm>
6835 <indexterm><primary>commercials</primary></indexterm>
6836 <indexterm><primary>camera technology</primary></indexterm>
6837 <indexterm><primary>digital cameras</primary></indexterm>
6838 <indexterm><primary>Kodak cameras</primary></indexterm>
6839 <indexterm><primary>railroad industry</primary></indexterm>
6840 <indexterm><primary>remote channel changers</primary></indexterm>
6841 <para>
6842 But just because a particular interest asks for government support, it
6843 doesn't follow that support should be granted. And just because
6844 technology has weakened a particular way of doing business, it doesn't
6845 follow that the government should intervene to support that old way of
6846 doing business. Kodak, for example, has lost perhaps as much as 20
6847 percent of their traditional film market to the emerging technologies
6848 of digital cameras.<footnote><para>
6849 <!-- f5 -->
6850 See Geoffrey Smith, <quote>Film vs. Digital: Can Kodak Build a Bridge?</quote>
6851 BusinessWeek online, 2 August 1999, available at
6852 <ulink url="http://free-culture.cc/notes/">link #23</ulink>. For a more
6853 recent analysis of Kodak's place in the market, see Chana
6854 R. Schoenberger, <quote>Can Kodak Make Up for Lost Moments?</quote> Forbes.com, 6
6855 October 2003, available at
6856 <ulink url="http://free-culture.cc/notes/">link #24</ulink>.
6857 </para></footnote>
6858
6859 Does anyone believe the government should ban digital cameras just to
6860 support Kodak? Highways have weakened the freight business for
6861 railroads. Does anyone think we should ban trucks from roads
6862 <emphasis>for the purpose of</emphasis> protecting the railroads?
6863 Closer to the subject of this book, remote channel changers have
6864 weakened the <quote>stickiness</quote> of television advertising (if a boring
6865 commercial comes on the TV, the remote makes it easy to surf), and it
6866 may well be that this change has weakened the television advertising
6867 market. But does anyone believe we should regulate remotes to
6868 reinforce commercial television? (Maybe by limiting them to function
6869 only once a second, or to switch to only ten channels within an hour?)
6870 </para>
6871 <indexterm id='idxfreemarkettechnologicalchangesin' class='startofrange'><primary>free market, technological changes in</primary></indexterm>
6872 <indexterm><primary>Brezhnev, Leonid</primary></indexterm>
6873 <indexterm><primary>FM radio</primary></indexterm>
6874 <indexterm><primary>radio</primary><secondary>FM spectrum of</secondary></indexterm>
6875 <indexterm><primary>Gates, Bill</primary></indexterm>
6876 <indexterm><primary>market competition</primary></indexterm>
6877 <indexterm><primary>RCA</primary></indexterm>
6878 <para>
6879 The obvious answer to these obviously rhetorical questions is no.
6880 In a free society, with a free market, supported by free enterprise and
6881 free trade, the government's role is not to support one way of doing
6882 <!-- PAGE BREAK 139 -->
6883 business against others. Its role is not to pick winners and protect
6884 them against loss. If the government did this generally, then we would
6885 never have any progress. As Microsoft chairman Bill Gates wrote in
6886 1991, in a memo criticizing software patents, <quote>established companies
6887 have an interest in excluding future competitors.</quote><footnote><para>
6888 <!-- f6 -->
6889 Fred Warshofsky, <citetitle>The Patent Wars</citetitle> (New York: Wiley, 1994), 170&ndash;71.
6890 </para></footnote>
6891 And relative to a
6892 startup, established companies also have the means. (Think RCA and
6893 FM radio.) A world in which competitors with new ideas must fight
6894 not only the market but also the government is a world in which
6895 competitors with new ideas will not succeed. It is a world of stasis and
6896 increasingly concentrated stagnation. It is the Soviet Union under
6897 Brezhnev.
6898 </para>
6899 <para>
6900 Thus, while it is understandable for industries threatened with new
6901 technologies that change the way they do business to look to the
6902 government for protection, it is the special duty of policy makers to
6903 guarantee that that protection not become a deterrent to progress. It
6904 is the duty of policy makers, in other words, to assure that the
6905 changes they create, in response to the request of those hurt by
6906 changing technology, are changes that preserve the incentives and
6907 opportunities for innovation and change.
6908 </para>
6909 <indexterm><primary>Constitution, U.S.</primary><secondary>First Amendment to</secondary></indexterm>
6910 <indexterm><primary>First Amendment</primary></indexterm>
6911 <indexterm><primary>speech, freedom of</primary><secondary>constitutional guarantee of</secondary></indexterm>
6912 <para>
6913 In the context of laws regulating speech&mdash;which include,
6914 obviously, copyright law&mdash;that duty is even stronger. When the
6915 industry complaining about changing technologies is asking Congress to
6916 respond in a way that burdens speech and creativity, policy makers
6917 should be especially wary of the request. It is always a bad deal for
6918 the government to get into the business of regulating speech
6919 markets. The risks and dangers of that game are precisely why our
6920 framers created the First Amendment to our Constitution: <quote>Congress
6921 shall make no law &hellip; abridging the freedom of speech.</quote> So when
6922 Congress is being asked to pass laws that would <quote>abridge</quote> the freedom
6923 of speech, it should ask&mdash; carefully&mdash;whether such
6924 regulation is justified.
6925 </para>
6926 <indexterm startref='idxregulationasestablishmentprotectionism' class='endofrange'/>
6927 <indexterm startref='idxfreemarkettechnologicalchangesin' class='endofrange'/>
6928 <para>
6929 My argument just now, however, has nothing to do with whether
6930 <!-- PAGE BREAK 140 -->
6931 the changes that are being pushed by the copyright warriors are
6932 <quote>justified.</quote> My argument is about their effect. For before we get to
6933 the question of justification, a hard question that depends a great
6934 deal upon your values, we should first ask whether we understand the
6935 effect of the changes the content industry wants.
6936 </para>
6937 <para>
6938 Here's the metaphor that will capture the argument to follow.
6939 </para>
6940 <indexterm id='idxmllerpaulhermann' class='startofrange'><primary>Müller, Paul Hermann</primary></indexterm>
6941 <indexterm id='idxddt' class='startofrange'><primary>DDT</primary></indexterm>
6942 <indexterm id='idxinsecticideenvironmentalconsequencesof' class='startofrange'><primary>insecticide, environmental consequences of</primary></indexterm>
6943 <indexterm id='idxfarming' class='startofrange'><primary>farming</primary></indexterm>
6944 <para>
6945 In 1873, the chemical DDT was first synthesized. In 1948, Swiss
6946 chemist Paul Hermann Müller won the Nobel Prize for his work
6947 demonstrating the insecticidal properties of DDT. By the 1950s, the
6948 insecticide was widely used around the world to kill disease-carrying
6949 pests. It was also used to increase farm production.
6950 </para>
6951 <para>
6952 No one doubts that killing disease-carrying pests or increasing crop
6953 production is a good thing. No one doubts that the work of Müller was
6954 important and valuable and probably saved lives, possibly millions.
6955 </para>
6956 <indexterm><primary>Carson, Rachel</primary></indexterm>
6957 <indexterm><primary>Silent Spring (Carson)</primary></indexterm>
6958 <indexterm id='idxenvironmentalism' class='startofrange'><primary>environmentalism</primary></indexterm>
6959 <para>
6960 But in 1962, Rachel Carson published <citetitle>Silent Spring</citetitle>, which argued that
6961 DDT, whatever its primary benefits, was also having unintended
6962 environmental consequences. Birds were losing the ability to
6963 reproduce. Whole chains of the ecology were being destroyed.
6964 </para>
6965 <para>
6966 No one set out to destroy the environment. Paul Müller certainly did
6967 not aim to harm any birds. But the effort to solve one set of problems
6968 produced another set which, in the view of some, was far worse than
6969 the problems that were originally attacked. Or more accurately, the
6970 problems DDT caused were worse than the problems it solved, at least
6971 when considering the other, more environmentally friendly ways to
6972 solve the problems that DDT was meant to solve.
6973 </para>
6974 <indexterm startref='idxmllerpaulhermann' class='endofrange'/>
6975 <indexterm><primary>Boyle, James</primary></indexterm>
6976 <indexterm id='idxcopyrightlawinnovativefreedombalancedwithfaircompensationin2' class='startofrange'><primary>copyright law</primary><secondary>innovative freedom balanced with fair compensation in</secondary></indexterm>
6977 <para>
6978 It is to this image precisely that Duke University law professor James
6979 Boyle appeals when he argues that we need an <quote>environmentalism</quote> for
6980 culture.<footnote><para>
6981 <!-- f7 -->
6982 See, for example, James Boyle, <quote>A Politics of Intellectual Property:
6983 Environmentalism for the Net?</quote> <citetitle>Duke Law Journal</citetitle> 47 (1997): 87.
6984 </para></footnote>
6985 His point, and the point I want to develop in the balance of this
6986 chapter, is not that the aims of copyright are flawed. Or that authors
6987 should not be paid for their work. Or that music should be given away
6988 <quote>for free.</quote> The point is that some of the ways in which we might
6989 protect authors will have unintended consequences for the cultural
6990 environment, much like DDT had for the natural environment. And just
6991 <!-- PAGE BREAK 141 -->
6992 as criticism of DDT is not an endorsement of malaria or an attack on
6993 farmers, so, too, is criticism of one particular set of regulations
6994 protecting copyright not an endorsement of anarchy or an attack on
6995 authors. It is an environment of creativity that we seek, and we
6996 should be aware of our actions' effects on the environment.
6997 </para>
6998 <indexterm startref='idxfarming' class='endofrange'/>
6999 <para>
7000 My argument, in the balance of this chapter, tries to map exactly
7001 this effect. No doubt the technology of the Internet has had a dramatic
7002 effect on the ability of copyright owners to protect their content. But
7003 there should also be little doubt that when you add together the
7004 changes in copyright law over time, plus the change in technology that
7005 the Internet is undergoing just now, the net effect of these changes will
7006 not be only that copyrighted work is effectively protected. Also, and
7007 generally missed, the net effect of this massive increase in protection
7008 will be devastating to the environment for creativity.
7009 </para>
7010 <indexterm startref='idxcopyrightlawinnovativefreedombalancedwithfaircompensationin2' class='endofrange'/>
7011 <para>
7012 In a line: To kill a gnat, we are spraying DDT with consequences
7013 for free culture that will be far more devastating than that this gnat will
7014 be lost.
7015 </para>
7016 <indexterm startref='idxddt' class='endofrange'/>
7017 <indexterm startref='idxinsecticideenvironmentalconsequencesof' class='endofrange'/>
7018 <indexterm startref='idxenvironmentalism' class='endofrange'/>
7019 </section>
7020 <section id="beginnings">
7021 <title>Beginnings</title>
7022 <indexterm><primary>Constitution, U.S.</primary><secondary>on creative property</secondary></indexterm>
7023 <indexterm id='idxconstitutionuscopyrightpurposeestablishedin' class='startofrange'><primary>Constitution, U.S.</primary><secondary>copyright purpose established in</secondary></indexterm>
7024 <indexterm id='idxconstitutionusprogressclauseof' class='startofrange'><primary>Constitution, U.S.</primary><secondary>Progress Clause of</secondary></indexterm>
7025 <indexterm><primary>copyright</primary><secondary>constitutional purpose of</secondary></indexterm>
7026 <indexterm><primary>copyright</primary><secondary>duration of</secondary></indexterm>
7027 <indexterm id='idxcreativepropertyconstitutionaltraditionon2' class='startofrange'><primary>creative property</primary><secondary>constitutional tradition on</secondary></indexterm>
7028 <indexterm id='idxprogressclause' class='startofrange'><primary>Progress Clause</primary></indexterm>
7029 <indexterm><primary>copyright</primary><secondary>duration of</secondary></indexterm>
7030 <para>
7031 America copied English copyright law. Actually, we copied and improved
7032 English copyright law. Our Constitution makes the purpose of <quote>creative
7033 property</quote> rights clear; its express limitations reinforce the English
7034 aim to avoid overly powerful publishers.
7035 </para>
7036 <indexterm id='idxcongressusinconstitutionalprogressclause' class='startofrange'><primary>Congress, U.S.</primary><secondary>in constitutional Progress Clause</secondary></indexterm>
7037 <para>
7038 The power to establish <quote>creative property</quote> rights is granted to
7039 Congress in a way that, for our Constitution, at least, is very
7040 odd. Article I, section 8, clause 8 of our Constitution states that:
7041 </para>
7042 <blockquote>
7043 <para>
7044 Congress has the power to promote the Progress of Science and
7045 useful Arts, by securing for limited Times to Authors and Inventors
7046 the exclusive Right to their respective Writings and Discoveries.
7047 </para>
7048 </blockquote>
7049
7050 <!-- PAGE BREAK 142 -->
7051 <para>
7052 We can call this the <quote>Progress Clause,</quote> for notice what this clause
7053 does not say. It does not say Congress has the power to grant
7054 <quote>creative property rights.</quote> It says that Congress has the power
7055 <emphasis>to promote progress</emphasis>. The grant of power is its
7056 purpose, and its purpose is a public one, not the purpose of enriching
7057 publishers, nor even primarily the purpose of rewarding authors.
7058 </para>
7059 <indexterm startref='idxcongressusinconstitutionalprogressclause' class='endofrange'/>
7060 <indexterm id='idxcopyrightlawasprotectionofcreators' class='startofrange'><primary>copyright law</primary><secondary>as protection of creators</secondary></indexterm>
7061 <indexterm id='idxcopyrightlawhistoryofamerican' class='startofrange'><primary>copyright law</primary><secondary>history of American</secondary></indexterm>
7062 <para>
7063 The Progress Clause expressly limits the term of copyrights. As we saw
7064 in chapter <xref xrefstyle="select: labelnumber" linkend="founders"/>,
7065 the English limited the term of copyright so as to assure that a few
7066 would not exercise disproportionate control over culture by exercising
7067 disproportionate control over publishing. We can assume the framers
7068 followed the English for a similar purpose. Indeed, unlike the
7069 English, the framers reinforced that objective, by requiring that
7070 copyrights extend <quote>to Authors</quote> only.
7071 </para>
7072 <indexterm><primary>Senate, U.S.</primary></indexterm>
7073 <indexterm><primary>Constitution, U.S.</primary><secondary>structural checks and balances of</secondary></indexterm>
7074 <indexterm><primary>electoral college</primary></indexterm>
7075 <para>
7076 The design of the Progress Clause reflects something about the
7077 Constitution's design in general. To avoid a problem, the framers
7078 built structure. To prevent the concentrated power of publishers, they
7079 built a structure that kept copyrights away from publishers and kept
7080 them short. To prevent the concentrated power of a church, they banned
7081 the federal government from establishing a church. To prevent
7082 concentrating power in the federal government, they built structures
7083 to reinforce the power of the states&mdash;including the Senate, whose
7084 members were at the time selected by the states, and an electoral
7085 college, also selected by the states, to select the president. In each
7086 case, a <emphasis>structure</emphasis> built checks and balances into
7087 the constitutional frame, structured to prevent otherwise inevitable
7088 concentrations of power.
7089 </para>
7090 <indexterm startref='idxconstitutionusprogressclauseof' class='endofrange'/>
7091 <indexterm startref='idxprogressclause' class='endofrange'/>
7092 <para>
7093 I doubt the framers would recognize the regulation we call <quote>copyright</quote>
7094 today. The scope of that regulation is far beyond anything they ever
7095 considered. To begin to understand what they did, we need to put our
7096 <quote>copyright</quote> in context: We need to see how it has changed in the 210
7097 years since they first struck its design.
7098 </para>
7099 <indexterm startref='idxconstitutionuscopyrightpurposeestablishedin' class='endofrange'/>
7100 <indexterm startref='idxcreativepropertyconstitutionaltraditionon2' class='endofrange'/>
7101 <indexterm startref='idxcopyrightlawasprotectionofcreators' class='endofrange'/>
7102 <indexterm><primary>copyright</primary><secondary>four regulatory modalities on</secondary></indexterm>
7103 <para>
7104 Some of these changes come from the law: some in light of changes
7105 in technology, and some in light of changes in technology given a
7106 <!-- PAGE BREAK 143 -->
7107 particular concentration of market power. In terms of our model, we
7108 started here:
7109 </para>
7110 <figure id="fig-1441">
7111 <title></title>
7112 <graphic fileref="images/1331.svg" align="center" width="10em"></graphic>
7113 </figure>
7114 <para>
7115 We will end here:
7116 </para>
7117 <figure id="fig-1442">
7118 <title></title>
7119 <graphic fileref="images/1442.svg" align="center" width="10em"></graphic>
7120 </figure>
7121 <para>
7122 Let me explain how.
7123 <!-- PAGE BREAK 144 -->
7124 </para>
7125 </section>
7126 <section id="lawduration">
7127 <title>Law: Duration</title>
7128 <indexterm id='idxcopyrightdurationof4' class='startofrange'><primary>copyright</primary><secondary>duration of</secondary></indexterm>
7129 <indexterm id='idxcongressusoncopyrightlaws5' class='startofrange'><primary>Congress, U.S.</primary><secondary>on copyright laws</secondary></indexterm>
7130 <indexterm id='idxcopyrightact' class='startofrange'><primary>Copyright Act (1790)</primary></indexterm>
7131 <indexterm><primary>creative property</primary><secondary>common law protections of</secondary></indexterm>
7132 <indexterm id='idxpublicdomainbalanceofuscontentin' class='startofrange'><primary>public domain</primary><secondary>balance of U.S. content in</secondary></indexterm>
7133 <para>
7134 When the first Congress enacted laws to protect creative property, it
7135 faced the same uncertainty about the status of creative property that
7136 the English had confronted in 1774. Many states had passed laws
7137 protecting creative property, and some believed that these laws simply
7138 supplemented common law rights that already protected creative
7139 authorship.<footnote>
7140 <para>
7141 <!-- f8 -->
7142 William W. Crosskey, <citetitle>Politics and the Constitution in the
7143 History of the United States</citetitle> (London: Cambridge University
7144 Press, 1953), vol. 1, 485&ndash;86: <quote>extinguish[ing], by plain
7145 implication of <quote>the supreme Law of the Land,</quote>
7146 <emphasis>the perpetual rights which authors had, or were supposed by
7147 some to have, under the Common Law</emphasis></quote> (emphasis
7148 added).
7149 <indexterm><primary>Crosskey, William W.</primary></indexterm>
7150 </para></footnote>
7151 This meant that there was no guaranteed public domain in the United
7152 States in 1790. If copyrights were protected by the common law, then
7153 there was no simple way to know whether a work published in the United
7154 States was controlled or free. Just as in England, this lingering
7155 uncertainty would make it hard for publishers to rely upon a public
7156 domain to reprint and distribute works.
7157 </para>
7158 <indexterm><primary>Statute of Anne (1710)</primary></indexterm>
7159 <indexterm id='idxlawfederalvsstate' class='startofrange'><primary>law</primary><secondary>federal vs. state</secondary></indexterm>
7160 <para>
7161 That uncertainty ended after Congress passed legislation granting
7162 copyrights. Because federal law overrides any contrary state law,
7163 federal protections for copyrighted works displaced any state law
7164 protections. Just as in England the Statute of Anne eventually meant
7165 that the copyrights for all English works expired, a federal statute
7166 meant that any state copyrights expired as well.
7167 </para>
7168 <indexterm id='idxcopyrightrenewabilityof' class='startofrange'><primary>copyright</primary><secondary>renewability of</secondary></indexterm>
7169 <para>
7170 In 1790, Congress enacted the first copyright law. It created a
7171 federal copyright and secured that copyright for fourteen years. If
7172 the author was alive at the end of that fourteen years, then he could
7173 opt to renew the copyright for another fourteen years. If he did not
7174 renew the copyright, his work passed into the public domain.
7175 </para>
7176 <indexterm startref='idxcongressusoncopyrightlaws5' class='endofrange'/>
7177 <para>
7178 While there were many works created in the United States in the first
7179 ten years of the Republic, only 5 percent of the works were actually
7180 registered under the federal copyright regime. Of all the work created
7181 in the United States both before 1790 and from 1790 through 1800, 95
7182 percent immediately passed into the public domain; the balance would
7183 pass into the pubic domain within twenty-eight years at most, and more
7184 likely within fourteen years.<footnote><para>
7185 <!-- f9 -->
7186 Although 13,000 titles were published in the United States from 1790
7187 to 1799, only 556 copyright registrations were filed; John Tebbel, <citetitle>A
7188 History of Book Publishing in the United States</citetitle>, vol. 1, <citetitle>The Creation
7189 of an Industry, 1630&ndash;1865</citetitle> (New York: Bowker, 1972), 141. Of the 21,000
7190 imprints recorded before 1790, only twelve were copyrighted under the
7191 1790 act; William J. Maher, <citetitle>Copyright Term, Retrospective Extension
7192 and the Copyright Law of 1790 in Historical Context</citetitle>, 7&ndash;10 (2002),
7193 available at <ulink url="http://free-culture.cc/notes/">link
7194 #25</ulink>. Thus, the overwhelming majority of works fell
7195 immediately into the public domain. Even those works that were
7196 copyrighted fell into the public domain quickly, because the term of
7197 copyright was short. The initial term of copyright was fourteen years,
7198 with the option of renewal for an additional fourteen years. Copyright
7199 Act of May 31, 1790, §1, 1 stat. 124. </para></footnote>
7200 </para>
7201 <indexterm startref='idxcopyrightact' class='endofrange'/>
7202 <indexterm startref='idxlawfederalvsstate' class='endofrange'/>
7203 <para>
7204 This system of renewal was a crucial part of the American system
7205 of copyright. It assured that the maximum terms of copyright would be
7206 <!-- PAGE BREAK 145 -->
7207 granted only for works where they were wanted. After the initial term
7208 of fourteen years, if it wasn't worth it to an author to renew his
7209 copyright, then it wasn't worth it to society to insist on the
7210 copyright, either.
7211 </para>
7212 <para>
7213 Fourteen years may not seem long to us, but for the vast majority of
7214 copyright owners at that time, it was long enough: Only a small
7215 minority of them renewed their copyright after fourteen years; the
7216 balance allowed their work to pass into the public
7217 domain.<footnote><para>
7218 <!-- f10 -->
7219 Few copyright holders ever chose to renew their copyrights. For
7220 instance, of the 25,006 copyrights registered in 1883, only 894 were
7221 renewed in 1910. For a year-by-year analysis of copyright renewal
7222 rates, see Barbara A. Ringer, <quote>Study No. 31: Renewal of Copyright,</quote>
7223 <citetitle>Studies on Copyright</citetitle>, vol. 1 (New York: Practicing Law Institute,
7224 1963), 618. For a more recent and comprehensive analysis, see William
7225 M. Landes and Richard A. Posner, <quote>Indefinitely Renewable Copyright,</quote>
7226 <citetitle>University of Chicago Law Review</citetitle> 70 (2003): 471, 498&ndash;501, and
7227 accompanying figures. </para></footnote>
7228 </para>
7229 <indexterm startref='idxpublicdomainbalanceofuscontentin' class='endofrange'/>
7230 <indexterm><primary>books</primary><secondary>resales of</secondary></indexterm>
7231 <indexterm><primary>books</primary><secondary>out of print</secondary></indexterm>
7232 <para>
7233 Even today, this structure would make sense. Most creative work
7234 has an actual commercial life of just a couple of years. Most books fall
7235 out of print after one year.<footnote><para>
7236 <!-- f11 -->
7237 See Ringer, ch. 9, n. 2. </para></footnote> When that happens, the
7238 used books are traded free of copyright regulation. Thus the books are
7239 no longer <emphasis>effectively</emphasis> controlled by
7240 copyright. The only practical commercial use of the books at that time
7241 is to sell the books as used books; that use&mdash;because it does not
7242 involve publication&mdash;is effectively free.
7243 </para>
7244 <indexterm id='idxcongressusoncopyrightlaws6' class='startofrange'><primary>Congress, U.S.</primary><secondary>on copyright laws</secondary></indexterm>
7245 <indexterm id='idxcongressuscopyrighttermsextendedby' class='startofrange'><primary>Congress, U.S.</primary><secondary>copyright terms extended by</secondary></indexterm>
7246 <indexterm id='idxcopyrightlawtermextensionsin' class='startofrange'><primary>copyright law</primary><secondary>term extensions in</secondary></indexterm>
7247 <para>
7248 In the first hundred years of the Republic, the term of copyright was
7249 changed once. In 1831, the term was increased from a maximum of 28
7250 years to a maximum of 42 by increasing the initial term of copyright
7251 from 14 years to 28 years. In the next fifty years of the Republic,
7252 the term increased once again. In 1909, Congress extended the renewal
7253 term of 14 years to 28 years, setting a maximum term of 56 years.
7254 </para>
7255 <indexterm><primary>CTEA</primary><seealso>Sonny Bono Copyright Term Extension Act (CTEA) (1998)</seealso></indexterm>
7256 <indexterm id='idxsonnybonocopyrighttermextensionactctea' class='startofrange'><primary>Sonny Bono Copyright Term Extension Act (CTEA) (1998)</primary></indexterm>
7257 <indexterm id='idxpublicdomainfuturepatentsvsfuturecopyrightsin' class='startofrange'><primary>public domain</primary><secondary>future patents vs. future copyrights in</secondary></indexterm>
7258 <para>
7259 Then, beginning in 1962, Congress started a practice that has defined
7260 copyright law since. Eleven times in the last forty years, Congress
7261 has extended the terms of existing copyrights; twice in those forty
7262 years, Congress extended the term of future copyrights. Initially, the
7263 extensions of existing copyrights were short, a mere one to two years.
7264 In 1976, Congress extended all existing copyrights by nineteen years.
7265 And in 1998, in the Sonny Bono Copyright Term Extension Act, Congress
7266 extended the term of existing and future copyrights by twenty years.
7267 </para>
7268 <indexterm><primary>patents</primary><secondary>in public domain</secondary></indexterm>
7269 <para>
7270 The effect of these extensions is simply to toll, or delay, the passing
7271 of works into the public domain. This latest extension means that the
7272 public domain will have been tolled for thirty-nine out of fifty-five
7273 years, or 70 percent of the time since 1962. Thus, in the twenty years
7274
7275 <!-- PAGE BREAK 146 -->
7276 after the Sonny Bono Act, while one million patents will pass into the
7277 public domain, zero copyrights will pass into the public domain by virtue
7278 of the expiration of a copyright term.
7279 </para>
7280 <indexterm startref='idxsonnybonocopyrighttermextensionactctea' class='endofrange'/>
7281 <para>
7282 The effect of these extensions has been exacerbated by another,
7283 little-noticed change in the copyright law. Remember I said that the
7284 framers established a two-part copyright regime, requiring a copyright
7285 owner to renew his copyright after an initial term. The requirement of
7286 renewal meant that works that no longer needed copyright protection
7287 would pass more quickly into the public domain. The works remaining
7288 under protection would be those that had some continuing commercial
7289 value.
7290 </para>
7291 <indexterm><primary>Sonny Bono Copyright Term Extension Act (CTEA) (1998)</primary></indexterm>
7292 <indexterm><primary>copyright</primary><secondary>of natural authors vs. corporations</secondary></indexterm>
7293 <indexterm><primary>corporations</primary><secondary>copyright terms for</secondary></indexterm>
7294 <para>
7295 The United States abandoned this sensible system in 1976. For
7296 all works created after 1978, there was only one copyright term&mdash;the
7297 maximum term. For <quote>natural</quote> authors, that term was life plus fifty
7298 years. For corporations, the term was seventy-five years. Then, in 1992,
7299 Congress abandoned the renewal requirement for all works created
7300 before 1978. All works still under copyright would be accorded the
7301 maximum term then available. After the Sonny Bono Act, that term
7302 was ninety-five years.
7303 </para>
7304 <para>
7305 This change meant that American law no longer had an automatic way to
7306 assure that works that were no longer exploited passed into the public
7307 domain. And indeed, after these changes, it is unclear whether it is
7308 even possible to put works into the public domain. The public domain
7309 is orphaned by these changes in copyright law. Despite the requirement
7310 that terms be <quote>limited,</quote> we have no evidence that anything will limit
7311 them.
7312 </para>
7313 <indexterm startref='idxcopyrightlawhistoryofamerican' class='endofrange'/>
7314 <indexterm startref='idxpublicdomainfuturepatentsvsfuturecopyrightsin' class='endofrange'/>
7315 <para>
7316 The effect of these changes on the average duration of copyright is
7317 dramatic. In 1973, more than 85 percent of copyright owners failed to
7318 renew their copyright. That meant that the average term of copyright
7319 in 1973 was just 32.2 years. Because of the elimination of the renewal
7320 requirement, the average term of copyright is now the maximum term.
7321 In thirty years, then, the average term has tripled, from 32.2 years to 95
7322 years.<footnote><para>
7323 <!-- f12 -->
7324 These statistics are understated. Between the years 1910 and 1962 (the
7325 first year the renewal term was extended), the average term was never
7326 more than thirty-two years, and averaged thirty years. See Landes and
7327 Posner, <quote>Indefinitely Renewable Copyright,</quote> loc. cit.
7328 </para></footnote>
7329 </para>
7330 <indexterm startref='idxcopyrightdurationof4' class='endofrange'/>
7331 <indexterm startref='idxcopyrightrenewabilityof' class='endofrange'/>
7332 <indexterm startref='idxcongressusoncopyrightlaws6' class='endofrange'/>
7333 <indexterm startref='idxcongressuscopyrighttermsextendedby' class='endofrange'/>
7334 <indexterm startref='idxcopyrightlawtermextensionsin' class='endofrange'/>
7335 <!-- PAGE BREAK 147 -->
7336 </section>
7337 <section id="lawscope">
7338 <title>Law: Scope</title>
7339 <indexterm id='idxcopyrightscopeof' class='startofrange'><primary>copyright</primary><secondary>scope of</secondary></indexterm>
7340 <para>
7341 The <quote>scope</quote> of a copyright is the range of rights granted by the law.
7342 The scope of American copyright has changed dramatically. Those
7343 changes are not necessarily bad. But we should understand the extent
7344 of the changes if we're to keep this debate in context.
7345 </para>
7346 <indexterm><primary>copyright law</primary><secondary>on republishing vs. transformation of original work</secondary></indexterm>
7347 <indexterm id='idxderivativeworkshistoricalshiftincopyrightcoverageof' class='startofrange'><primary>derivative works</primary><secondary>historical shift in copyright coverage of</secondary></indexterm>
7348 <para>
7349 In 1790, that scope was very narrow. Copyright covered only <quote>maps,
7350 charts, and books.</quote> That means it didn't cover, for example, music or
7351 architecture. More significantly, the right granted by a copyright gave
7352 the author the exclusive right to <quote>publish</quote> copyrighted works. That
7353 means someone else violated the copyright only if he republished the
7354 work without the copyright owner's permission. Finally, the right granted
7355 by a copyright was an exclusive right to that particular book. The right
7356 did not extend to what lawyers call <quote>derivative works.</quote> It would not,
7357 therefore, interfere with the right of someone other than the author to
7358 translate a copyrighted book, or to adapt the story to a different form
7359 (such as a drama based on a published book).
7360 </para>
7361 <para>
7362 This, too, has changed dramatically. While the contours of copyright
7363 today are extremely hard to describe simply, in general terms, the
7364 right covers practically any creative work that is reduced to a
7365 tangible form. It covers music as well as architecture, drama as well
7366 as computer programs. It gives the copyright owner of that creative
7367 work not only the exclusive right to <quote>publish</quote> the work, but also the
7368 exclusive right of control over any <quote>copies</quote> of that work. And most
7369 significant for our purposes here, the right gives the copyright owner
7370 control over not only his or her particular work, but also any
7371 <quote>derivative work</quote> that might grow out of the original work. In this
7372 way, the right covers more creative work, protects the creative work
7373 more broadly, and protects works that are based in a significant way
7374 on the initial creative work.
7375 </para>
7376 <indexterm id='idxcopyrightmarkingof' class='startofrange'><primary>copyright</primary><secondary>marking of</secondary></indexterm>
7377 <indexterm id='idxformalities' class='startofrange'><primary>formalities</primary></indexterm>
7378 <indexterm id='idxcopyrightlawregistrationrequirementof' class='startofrange'><primary>copyright law</primary><secondary>registration requirement of</secondary></indexterm>
7379 <para>
7380 At the same time that the scope of copyright has expanded, procedural
7381 limitations on the right have been relaxed. I've already described the
7382 complete removal of the renewal requirement in 1992. In addition
7383 <!-- PAGE BREAK 148 -->
7384 to the renewal requirement, for most of the history of American
7385 copyright law, there was a requirement that a work be registered
7386 before it could receive the protection of a copyright. There was also
7387 a requirement that any copyrighted work be marked either with that
7388 famous &copy; or the word <emphasis>copyright</emphasis>. And for most
7389 of the history of American copyright law, there was a requirement that
7390 works be deposited with the government before a copyright could be
7391 secured.
7392 </para>
7393 <indexterm startref='idxderivativeworkshistoricalshiftincopyrightcoverageof' class='endofrange'/>
7394 <para>
7395 The reason for the registration requirement was the sensible
7396 understanding that for most works, no copyright was required. Again,
7397 in the first ten years of the Republic, 95 percent of works eligible
7398 for copyright were never copyrighted. Thus, the rule reflected the
7399 norm: Most works apparently didn't need copyright, so registration
7400 narrowed the regulation of the law to the few that did. The same
7401 reasoning justified the requirement that a work be marked as
7402 copyrighted&mdash;that way it was easy to know whether a copyright was
7403 being claimed. The requirement that works be deposited was to assure
7404 that after the copyright expired, there would be a copy of the work
7405 somewhere so that it could be copied by others without locating the
7406 original author.
7407 </para>
7408 <indexterm><primary>copyright law</primary><secondary>European</secondary></indexterm>
7409 <para>
7410 All of these <quote>formalities</quote> were abolished in the American system when
7411 we decided to follow European copyright law. There is no requirement
7412 that you register a work to get a copyright; the copyright now is
7413 automatic; the copyright exists whether or not you mark your work with
7414 a &copy;; and the copyright exists whether or not you actually make a
7415 copy available for others to copy.
7416 </para>
7417 <indexterm startref='idxcopyrightmarkingof' class='endofrange'/>
7418 <indexterm startref='idxformalities' class='endofrange'/>
7419 <indexterm startref='idxcopyrightlawregistrationrequirementof' class='endofrange'/>
7420 <para>
7421 Consider a practical example to understand the scope of these
7422 differences.
7423 </para>
7424 <indexterm id='idxcopyrightact2' class='startofrange'><primary>Copyright Act (1790)</primary></indexterm>
7425 <para>
7426 If, in 1790, you wrote a book and you were one of the 5 percent who
7427 actually copyrighted that book, then the copyright law protected you
7428 against another publisher's taking your book and republishing it
7429 without your permission. The aim of the act was to regulate publishers
7430 so as to prevent that kind of unfair competition. In 1790, there were
7431 174 publishers in the United States.<footnote><para>
7432 <!-- f13 -->
7433 See Thomas Bender and David Sampliner, <quote>Poets, Pirates, and the
7434 Creation of American Literature,</quote> 29 <citetitle>New York University Journal of
7435 International Law and Politics</citetitle> 255 (1997), and James Gilraeth, ed.,
7436 Federal Copyright Records, 1790&ndash;1800 (U.S. G.P.O., 1987).
7437
7438 </para></footnote>
7439 The Copyright Act was thus a tiny
7440 regulation of a tiny proportion of a tiny part of the creative market in
7441 the United States&mdash;publishers.
7442 </para>
7443 <indexterm id='idxcopyrightlawonrepublishingvstransformationoforiginalwork2' class='startofrange'><primary>copyright law</primary><secondary>on republishing vs. transformation of original work</secondary></indexterm>
7444 <indexterm id='idxderivativeworkspiracyvs3' class='startofrange'><primary>derivative works</primary><secondary>piracy vs.</secondary></indexterm>
7445 <indexterm id='idxpiracyderivativeworkvs3' class='startofrange'><primary>piracy</primary><secondary>derivative work vs.</secondary></indexterm>
7446 <para>
7447 <!-- PAGE BREAK 149 -->
7448 The act left other creators totally unregulated. If I copied your poem
7449 by hand, over and over again, as a way to learn it by heart, my act
7450 was totally unregulated by the 1790 act. If I took your novel and made
7451 a play based upon it, or if I translated it or abridged it, none of
7452 those activities were regulated by the original copyright act. These
7453 creative activities remained free, while the activities of publishers
7454 were restrained.
7455 </para>
7456 <indexterm startref='idxcopyrightact2' class='endofrange'/>
7457 <para>
7458 Today the story is very different: If you write a book, your book is
7459 automatically protected. Indeed, not just your book. Every e-mail,
7460 every note to your spouse, every doodle, <emphasis>every</emphasis>
7461 creative act that's reduced to a tangible form&mdash;all of this is
7462 automatically copyrighted. There is no need to register or mark your
7463 work. The protection follows the creation, not the steps you take to
7464 protect it.
7465 </para>
7466 <para>
7467 That protection gives you the right (subject to a narrow range of
7468 fair use exceptions) to control how others copy the work, whether they
7469 copy it to republish it or to share an excerpt.
7470 </para>
7471 <para>
7472 That much is the obvious part. Any system of copyright would
7473 control
7474 competing publishing. But there's a second part to the copyright of
7475 today that is not at all obvious. This is the protection of <quote>derivative
7476 rights.</quote> If you write a book, no one can make a movie out of your
7477 book without permission. No one can translate it without permission.
7478 CliffsNotes can't make an abridgment unless permission is granted. All
7479 of these derivative uses of your original work are controlled by the
7480 copyright holder. The copyright, in other words, is now not just an
7481 exclusive
7482 right to your writings, but an exclusive right to your writings
7483 and a large proportion of the writings inspired by them.
7484 </para>
7485 <indexterm startref='idxderivativeworkspiracyvs3' class='endofrange'/>
7486 <para>
7487 It is this derivative right that would seem most bizarre to our
7488 framers, though it has become second nature to us. Initially, this
7489 expansion
7490 was created to deal with obvious evasions of a narrower
7491 copyright.
7492 If I write a book, can you change one word and then claim a
7493 copyright in a new and different book? Obviously that would make a
7494 joke of the copyright, so the law was properly expanded to include
7495 those slight modifications as well as the verbatim original work.
7496 </para>
7497 <para>
7498 <!-- PAGE BREAK 150 -->
7499 In preventing that joke, the law created an astonishing power
7500 within a free culture&mdash;at least, it's astonishing when you
7501 understand that the law applies not just to the commercial publisher
7502 but to anyone with a computer. I understand the wrong in duplicating
7503 and selling someone else's work. But whatever
7504 <emphasis>that</emphasis> wrong is, transforming someone else's work
7505 is a different wrong. Some view transformation as no wrong at
7506 all&mdash;they believe that our law, as the framers penned it, should
7507 not protect derivative rights at all.<footnote><para>
7508 <!-- f14 -->
7509 Jonathan Zittrain, <quote>The Copyright Cage,</quote> <citetitle>Legal
7510 Affairs</citetitle>, July/August 2003, available at
7511 <ulink url="http://free-culture.cc/notes/">link #26</ulink>.
7512 <indexterm><primary>Zittrain, Jonathan</primary></indexterm>
7513 </para></footnote>
7514 Whether or not you go that far, it seems
7515 plain that whatever wrong is involved is fundamentally different from
7516 the wrong of direct piracy.
7517 </para>
7518 <para>
7519 Yet copyright law treats these two different wrongs in the same way. I
7520 can go to court and get an injunction against your pirating my book. I
7521 can go to court and get an injunction against your transformative use
7522 of my book.<footnote><para>
7523 <!-- f15 -->
7524 Professor Rubenfeld has presented a powerful constitutional argument
7525 about the difference that copyright law should draw (from the
7526 perspective of the First Amendment) between mere <quote>copies</quote> and
7527 derivative works. See Jed Rubenfeld, <quote>The Freedom of Imagination:
7528 Copyright's Constitutionality,</quote> <citetitle>Yale Law
7529 Journal</citetitle> 112 (2002): 1&ndash;60 (see especially
7530 pp. 53&ndash;59).
7531 <indexterm><primary>Rubenfeld, Jeb</primary></indexterm>
7532 </para></footnote>
7533 These two different uses of my creative work are treated the same.
7534 </para>
7535 <indexterm startref='idxpiracyderivativeworkvs3' class='endofrange'/>
7536 <indexterm><primary>Disney, Walt</primary></indexterm>
7537 <indexterm><primary>Mickey Mouse</primary></indexterm>
7538 <para>
7539 This again may seem right to you. If I wrote a book, then why should
7540 you be able to write a movie that takes my story and makes money from
7541 it without paying me or crediting me? Or if Disney creates a creature
7542 called <quote>Mickey Mouse,</quote> why should you be able to make Mickey Mouse
7543 toys and be the one to trade on the value that Disney originally
7544 created?
7545 </para>
7546 <para>
7547 These are good arguments, and, in general, my point is not that the
7548 derivative right is unjustified. My aim just now is much narrower:
7549 simply to make clear that this expansion is a significant change from
7550 the rights originally granted.
7551 </para>
7552 <indexterm startref='idxcopyrightscopeof' class='endofrange'/>
7553 <indexterm startref='idxcopyrightlawonrepublishingvstransformationoforiginalwork2' class='endofrange'/>
7554 </section>
7555 <section id="lawreach">
7556 <title>Law and Architecture: Reach</title>
7557 <indexterm id='idxcopyrightlawcopiesascoreissueof' class='startofrange'><primary>copyright law</primary><secondary>copies as core issue of</secondary></indexterm>
7558 <indexterm id='idxcopyrightlawscopeof' class='startofrange'><primary>copyright law</primary><secondary>scope of</secondary></indexterm>
7559 <para>
7560 Whereas originally the law regulated only publishers, the change in
7561 copyright's scope means that the law today regulates publishers, users,
7562 and authors. It regulates them because all three are capable of making
7563 copies, and the core of the regulation of copyright law is copies.<footnote><para>
7564 <!-- f16 -->
7565 This is a simplification of the law, but not much of one. The law
7566 certainly regulates more than <quote>copies</quote>&mdash;a public performance of a
7567 copyrighted song, for example, is regulated even though performance
7568 per se doesn't make a copy; 17 <citetitle>United States Code</citetitle>, section
7569 106(4). And it certainly sometimes doesn't regulate a <quote>copy</quote>; 17
7570 <citetitle>United States Code</citetitle>, section 112(a). But the presumption under the
7571 existing law (which regulates <quote>copies;</quote> 17 <citetitle>United States Code</citetitle>, section
7572 102) is that if there is a copy, there is a right.
7573 </para></footnote>
7574 </para>
7575 <indexterm><primary>Valenti, Jack</primary><secondary>on creative property rights</secondary></indexterm>
7576 <indexterm id='idxcreativepropertyotherpropertyrightsvs2' class='startofrange'><primary>creative property</primary><secondary>other property rights vs.</secondary></indexterm>
7577 <para>
7578 <!-- PAGE BREAK 151 -->
7579 <quote>Copies.</quote> That certainly sounds like the obvious thing for
7580 <emphasis>copy</emphasis>right law to regulate. But as with Jack
7581 Valenti's argument at the start of this chapter, that <quote>creative
7582 property</quote> deserves the <quote>same rights</quote> as all other property, it is the
7583 <emphasis>obvious</emphasis> that we need to be most careful
7584 about. For while it may be obvious that in the world before the
7585 Internet, copies were the obvious trigger for copyright law, upon
7586 reflection, it should be obvious that in the world with the Internet,
7587 copies should <emphasis>not</emphasis> be the trigger for copyright
7588 law. More precisely, they should not <emphasis>always</emphasis> be
7589 the trigger for copyright law.
7590 </para>
7591 <indexterm startref='idxcopyrightlawcopiesascoreissueof' class='endofrange'/>
7592 <para>
7593 This is perhaps the central claim of this book, so let me take this
7594 very slowly so that the point is not easily missed. My claim is that the
7595 Internet should at least force us to rethink the conditions under which
7596 the law of copyright automatically applies,<footnote><para>
7597 <!-- f17 -->
7598 Thus, my argument is not that in each place that copyright law
7599 extends, we should repeal it. It is instead that we should have a good
7600 argument for its extending where it does, and should not determine its
7601 reach on the basis of arbitrary and automatic changes caused by
7602 technology.
7603 </para></footnote>
7604 because it is clear that the
7605 current reach of copyright was never contemplated, much less chosen,
7606 by the legislators who enacted copyright law.
7607 </para>
7608 <indexterm startref='idxcopyrightlawscopeof' class='endofrange'/>
7609 <indexterm startref='idxcreativepropertyotherpropertyrightsvs2' class='endofrange'/>
7610 <para>
7611 We can see this point abstractly by beginning with this largely
7612 empty circle.
7613 </para>
7614 <figure id="fig-1521">
7615 <title></title>
7616 <graphic fileref="images/1521.svg" align="center" width="10em"></graphic>
7617 </figure>
7618 <indexterm id='idxbooksthreetypesofusesof' class='startofrange'><primary>books</primary><secondary>three types of uses of</secondary></indexterm>
7619 <indexterm id='idxcopyrightlawcopiesascoreissueof2' class='startofrange'><primary>copyright law</primary><secondary>copies as core issue of</secondary></indexterm>
7620 <indexterm id='idxinternetcopyrightapplicabilityalteredbytechnologyof' class='startofrange'><primary>Internet</primary><secondary>copyright applicability altered by technology of</secondary></indexterm>
7621 <indexterm id='idxtechnologycopyrightintentalteredby' class='startofrange'><primary>technology</primary><secondary>copyright intent altered by</secondary></indexterm>
7622 <indexterm id='idxderivativeworkspiracyvs4' class='startofrange'><primary>derivative works</primary><secondary>piracy vs.</secondary></indexterm>
7623 <indexterm id='idxpiracyderivativeworkvs4' class='startofrange'><primary>piracy</primary><secondary>derivative work vs.</secondary></indexterm>
7624 <para>
7625 <!-- PAGE BREAK 152 -->
7626 Think about a book in real space, and imagine this circle to represent
7627 all its potential <emphasis>uses</emphasis>. Most of these uses are
7628 unregulated by copyright law, because the uses don't create a copy. If
7629 you read a book, that act is not regulated by copyright law. If you
7630 give someone the book, that act is not regulated by copyright law. If
7631 you resell a book, that act is not regulated (copyright law expressly
7632 states that after the first sale of a book, the copyright owner can
7633 impose no further conditions on the disposition of the book). If you
7634 sleep on the book or use it to hold up a lamp or let your puppy chew
7635 it up, those acts are not regulated by copyright law, because those
7636 acts do not make a copy.
7637 </para>
7638 <figure id="fig-1531">
7639 <title></title>
7640 <graphic fileref="images/1531.png" align="center" width="10em"></graphic>
7641 </figure>
7642 <para>
7643 Obviously, however, some uses of a copyrighted book are regulated
7644 by copyright law. Republishing the book, for example, makes a copy. It
7645 is therefore regulated by copyright law. Indeed, this particular use stands
7646 at the core of this circle of possible uses of a copyrighted work. It is the
7647 paradigmatic use properly regulated by copyright regulation (see
7648 diagram in figure <xref xrefstyle="template:%n" linkend="fig-1541"/>).
7649 </para>
7650 <indexterm startref='idxderivativeworkspiracyvs4' class='endofrange'/>
7651 <indexterm startref='idxpiracyderivativeworkvs4' class='endofrange'/>
7652 <figure id="fig-1541">
7653 <title></title>
7654 <graphic fileref="images/1541.svg" align="center" width="10em"></graphic>
7655 </figure>
7656 <indexterm id='idxfairuse' class='startofrange'><primary>fair use</primary></indexterm>
7657 <indexterm id='idxcopyrightlawfairuseand2' class='startofrange'><primary>copyright law</primary><secondary>fair use and</secondary></indexterm>
7658 <para>
7659 Finally, there is a tiny sliver of otherwise regulated copying uses
7660 that remain unregulated because the law considers these <quote>fair uses.</quote>
7661 </para>
7662 <!-- PAGE BREAK 153 -->
7663 <indexterm><primary>Constitution, U.S.</primary><secondary>First Amendment to</secondary></indexterm>
7664 <indexterm><primary>First Amendment</primary></indexterm>
7665 <para>
7666 These are uses that themselves involve copying, but which the law
7667 treats as unregulated because public policy demands that they remain
7668 unregulated. You are free to quote from this book, even in a review
7669 that is quite negative, without my permission, even though that
7670 quoting makes a copy. That copy would ordinarily give the copyright
7671 owner the exclusive right to say whether the copy is allowed or not,
7672 but the law denies the owner any exclusive right over such <quote>fair uses</quote>
7673 for public policy (and possibly First Amendment) reasons.
7674 </para>
7675 <figure id="fig-1542">
7676 <title></title>
7677 <graphic fileref="images/1542.svg" align="center" width="10em"></graphic>
7678 </figure>
7679 <indexterm id='idxcopyrightusagerestrictionsattachedto' class='startofrange'><primary>copyright</primary><secondary>usage restrictions attached to</secondary></indexterm>
7680 <para>
7681 <!-- PAGE BREAK 154 -->
7682 In real space, then, the possible uses of a book are divided into three
7683 sorts: (1) unregulated uses, (2) regulated uses, and (3) regulated uses that
7684 are nonetheless deemed <quote>fair</quote> regardless of the copyright owner's views.
7685 </para>
7686 <indexterm startref='idxbooksthreetypesofusesof' class='endofrange'/>
7687 <indexterm id='idxbooksoninternet' class='startofrange'><primary>books</primary><secondary>on Internet</secondary></indexterm>
7688 <indexterm id='idxinternetbookson2' class='startofrange'><primary>Internet</primary><secondary>books on</secondary></indexterm>
7689 <indexterm><primary>fair use</primary><secondary>Internet burdens on</secondary></indexterm>
7690 <para>
7691 Enter the Internet&mdash;a distributed, digital network where every use
7692 of a copyrighted work produces a copy.<footnote><para>
7693 <!-- f18 -->
7694 I don't mean <quote>nature</quote> in the sense that it couldn't be different, but
7695 rather that its present instantiation entails a copy. Optical networks
7696 need not make copies of content they transmit, and a digital network
7697 could be designed to delete anything it copies so that the same number
7698 of copies remain.
7699 </para></footnote>
7700 And because of this single, arbitrary feature of the design of a
7701 digital network, the scope of category 1 changes dramatically. Uses
7702 that before were presumptively unregulated are now presumptively
7703 regulated. No longer is there a set of presumptively unregulated uses
7704 that define a freedom associated with a copyrighted work. Instead,
7705 each use is now subject to the copyright, because each use also makes
7706 a copy&mdash;category 1 gets sucked into category 2. And those who
7707 would defend the unregulated uses of copyrighted work must look
7708 exclusively to category 3, fair uses, to bear the burden of this
7709 shift.
7710 </para>
7711 <indexterm startref='idxfairuse' class='endofrange'/>
7712 <indexterm startref='idxcopyrightlawfairuseand2' class='endofrange'/>
7713 <para>
7714 So let's be very specific to make this general point clear. Before the
7715 Internet, if you purchased a book and read it ten times, there would
7716 be no plausible <emphasis>copyright</emphasis>-related argument that
7717 the copyright owner could make to control that use of her
7718 book. Copyright law would have nothing to say about whether you read
7719 the book once, ten times, or every
7720 <!-- PAGE BREAK 155 -->
7721 night before you went to bed. None of those instances of
7722 use&mdash;reading&mdash; could be regulated by copyright law because
7723 none of those uses produced a copy.
7724 </para>
7725 <indexterm id='idxebooks' class='startofrange'><primary>e-books</primary></indexterm>
7726 <indexterm id='idxderivativeworkstechnologicaldevelopmentsand' class='startofrange'><primary>derivative works</primary><secondary>technological developments and</secondary></indexterm>
7727 <para>
7728 But the same book as an e-book is effectively governed by a different
7729 set of rules. Now if the copyright owner says you may read the book
7730 only once or only once a month, then <emphasis>copyright
7731 law</emphasis> would aid the copyright owner in exercising this degree
7732 of control, because of the accidental feature of copyright law that
7733 triggers its application upon there being a copy. Now if you read the
7734 book ten times and the license says you may read it only five times,
7735 then whenever you read the book (or any portion of it) beyond the
7736 fifth time, you are making a copy of the book contrary to the
7737 copyright owner's wish.
7738 </para>
7739 <figure id="fig-1551">
7740 <title></title>
7741 <graphic fileref="images/1551.svg" align="center" width="10em"></graphic>
7742 </figure>
7743 <para>
7744 There are some people who think this makes perfect sense. My aim
7745 just now is not to argue about whether it makes sense or not. My aim
7746 is only to make clear the change. Once you see this point, a few other
7747 points also become clear:
7748 </para>
7749 <para>
7750 First, making category 1 disappear is not anything any policy maker
7751 ever intended. Congress did not think through the collapse of the
7752 presumptively unregulated uses of copyrighted works. There is no
7753 evidence at all that policy makers had this idea in mind when they
7754 allowed our policy here to shift. Unregulated uses were an important
7755 part of free culture before the Internet.
7756 </para>
7757 <indexterm id='idxcopyrightlawonrepublishingvstransformationoforiginalwork3' class='startofrange'><primary>copyright law</primary><secondary>on republishing vs. transformation of original work</secondary></indexterm>
7758 <para>
7759 Second, this shift is especially troubling in the context of
7760 transformative uses of creative content. Again, we can all understand
7761 the wrong in commercial piracy. But the law now purports to regulate
7762 <emphasis>any</emphasis> transformation you make of creative work
7763 using a machine. <quote>Copy and paste</quote> and <quote>cut and paste</quote> become
7764 crimes. Tinkering with a story and releasing it to others exposes the
7765 tinkerer to at least a requirement of justification. However
7766 troubling the expansion with respect to copying a particular work, it
7767 is extraordinarily troubling with respect to transformative uses of
7768 creative work.
7769 </para>
7770 <indexterm id='idxfairuseinternetburdenson' class='startofrange'><primary>fair use</primary><secondary>Internet burdens on</secondary></indexterm>
7771 <indexterm id='idxcopyrightlawfairuseand3' class='startofrange'><primary>copyright law</primary><secondary>fair use and</secondary></indexterm>
7772 <indexterm id='idxderivativeworksfairusevs' class='startofrange'><primary>derivative works</primary><secondary>fair use vs.</secondary></indexterm>
7773 <para>
7774 Third, this shift from category 1 to category 2 puts an extraordinary
7775
7776 <!-- PAGE BREAK 156 -->
7777 burden on category 3 (<quote>fair use</quote>) that fair use never before had to
7778 bear. If a copyright owner now tried to control how many times I
7779 could read a book on-line, the natural response would be to argue that
7780 this is a violation of my fair use rights. But there has never been
7781 any litigation about whether I have a fair use right to read, because
7782 before the Internet, reading did not trigger the application of
7783 copyright law and hence the need for a fair use defense. The right to
7784 read was effectively protected before because reading was not
7785 regulated.
7786 </para>
7787 <indexterm startref='idxcopyrightlawcopiesascoreissueof2' class='endofrange'/>
7788 <indexterm startref='idxinternetcopyrightapplicabilityalteredbytechnologyof' class='endofrange'/>
7789 <indexterm startref='idxtechnologycopyrightintentalteredby' class='endofrange'/>
7790 <indexterm startref='idxderivativeworkstechnologicaldevelopmentsand' class='endofrange'/>
7791 <indexterm startref='idxcopyrightlawonrepublishingvstransformationoforiginalwork3' class='endofrange'/>
7792 <para>
7793 This point about fair use is totally ignored, even by advocates for
7794 free culture. We have been cornered into arguing that our rights
7795 depend upon fair use&mdash;never even addressing the earlier question
7796 about the expansion in effective regulation. A thin protection
7797 grounded in fair use makes sense when the vast majority of uses are
7798 <emphasis>unregulated</emphasis>. But when everything becomes
7799 presumptively regulated, then the protections of fair use are not
7800 enough.
7801 </para>
7802 <indexterm startref='idxcopyrightusagerestrictionsattachedto' class='endofrange'/>
7803 <indexterm startref='idxbooksoninternet' class='endofrange'/>
7804 <indexterm startref='idxinternetbookson2' class='endofrange'/>
7805 <indexterm startref='idxebooks' class='endofrange'/>
7806 <indexterm startref='idxfairuseinternetburdenson' class='endofrange'/>
7807 <indexterm startref='idxcopyrightlawfairuseand3' class='endofrange'/>
7808 <indexterm startref='idxderivativeworksfairusevs' class='endofrange'/>
7809 <indexterm id='idxvideopipeline' class='startofrange'><primary>Video Pipeline</primary></indexterm>
7810 <indexterm id='idxadvertising' class='startofrange'><primary>advertising</primary></indexterm>
7811 <indexterm id='idxfilmindustrytraileradvertisementsof' class='startofrange'><primary>film industry</primary><secondary>trailer advertisements of</secondary></indexterm>
7812 <para>
7813 The case of Video Pipeline is a good example. Video Pipeline was
7814 in the business of making <quote>trailer</quote> advertisements for movies available
7815 to video stores. The video stores displayed the trailers as a way to sell
7816 videos. Video Pipeline got the trailers from the film distributors, put
7817 the trailers on tape, and sold the tapes to the retail stores.
7818 </para>
7819 <indexterm><primary>browsing</primary></indexterm>
7820 <para>
7821 The company did this for about fifteen years. Then, in 1997, it began
7822 to think about the Internet as another way to distribute these
7823 previews. The idea was to expand their <quote>selling by sampling</quote>
7824 technique by giving on-line stores the same ability to enable
7825 <quote>browsing.</quote> Just as in a bookstore you can read a few pages of a book
7826 before you buy the book, so, too, you would be able to sample a bit
7827 from the movie on-line before you bought it.
7828 </para>
7829 <indexterm id='idxdisneyinc2' class='startofrange'><primary>Disney, Inc.</primary></indexterm>
7830 <indexterm><primary>copyright law</primary><secondary>fair use and</secondary></indexterm>
7831 <indexterm id='idxcopyrightlawcopiesascoreissueof3' class='startofrange'><primary>copyright law</primary><secondary>copies as core issue of</secondary></indexterm>
7832 <indexterm id='idxfairuselegalintimidationtacticsagainst2' class='startofrange'><primary>fair use</primary><secondary>legal intimidation tactics against</secondary></indexterm>
7833 <para>
7834 In 1998, Video Pipeline informed Disney and other film distributors
7835 that it intended to distribute the trailers through the Internet
7836 (rather than sending the tapes) to distributors of their videos. Two
7837 years later, Disney told Video Pipeline to stop. The owner of Video
7838 <!-- PAGE BREAK 157 -->
7839 Pipeline asked Disney to talk about the matter&mdash;he had built a
7840 business on distributing this content as a way to help sell Disney
7841 films; he had customers who depended upon his delivering this
7842 content. Disney would agree to talk only if Video Pipeline stopped the
7843 distribution immediately. Video Pipeline thought it was within their
7844 <quote>fair use</quote> rights to distribute the clips as they had. So they filed a
7845 lawsuit to ask the court to declare that these rights were in fact
7846 their rights.
7847 </para>
7848 <indexterm startref='idxadvertising' class='endofrange'/>
7849 <indexterm startref='idxfilmindustrytraileradvertisementsof' class='endofrange'/>
7850 <indexterm id='idxcopyrightusagerestrictionsattachedto2' class='startofrange'><primary>copyright</primary><secondary>usage restrictions attached to</secondary></indexterm>
7851 <indexterm id='idxcopyrightinfringementlawsuitswillfulinfringementfindingsin' class='startofrange'><primary>copyright infringement lawsuits</primary><secondary>willful infringement findings in</secondary></indexterm>
7852 <indexterm><primary>willful infringement</primary></indexterm>
7853 <para>
7854 Disney countersued&mdash;for $100 million in damages. Those damages
7855 were predicated upon a claim that Video Pipeline had <quote>willfully
7856 infringed</quote> on Disney's copyright. When a court makes a finding of
7857 willful infringement, it can award damages not on the basis of the
7858 actual harm to the copyright owner, but on the basis of an amount set
7859 in the statute. Because Video Pipeline had distributed seven hundred
7860 clips of Disney movies to enable video stores to sell copies of those
7861 movies, Disney was now suing Video Pipeline for $100 million.
7862 </para>
7863 <para>
7864 Disney has the right to control its property, of course. But the video
7865 stores that were selling Disney's films also had some sort of right to be
7866 able to sell the films that they had bought from Disney. Disney's claim
7867 in court was that the stores were allowed to sell the films and they were
7868 permitted to list the titles of the films they were selling, but they were
7869 not allowed to show clips of the films as a way of selling them without
7870 Disney's permission.
7871 </para>
7872 <indexterm><primary>first-sale doctrine</primary></indexterm>
7873 <para>
7874 Now, you might think this is a close case, and I think the courts
7875 would consider it a close case. My point here is to map the change
7876 that gives Disney this power. Before the Internet, Disney couldn't
7877 really control how people got access to their content. Once a video
7878 was in the marketplace, the <quote>first-sale doctrine</quote> would free the
7879 seller to use the video as he wished, including showing portions of it
7880 in order to engender sales of the entire movie video. But with the
7881 Internet, it becomes possible for Disney to centralize control over
7882 access to this content. Because each use of the Internet produces a
7883 copy, use on the Internet becomes subject to the copyright owner's
7884 control. The technology expands the scope of effective control,
7885 because the technology builds a copy into every transaction.
7886 </para>
7887 <indexterm startref='idxvideopipeline' class='endofrange'/>
7888 <indexterm startref='idxdisneyinc2' class='endofrange'/>
7889 <indexterm startref='idxcopyrightlawcopiesascoreissueof3' class='endofrange'/>
7890 <indexterm startref='idxfairuselegalintimidationtacticsagainst2' class='endofrange'/>
7891 <indexterm startref='idxcopyrightusagerestrictionsattachedto2' class='endofrange'/>
7892 <indexterm startref='idxcopyrightinfringementlawsuitswillfulinfringementfindingsin' class='endofrange'/>
7893 <indexterm><primary>Barnes &amp; Noble</primary></indexterm>
7894 <indexterm><primary>browsing</primary></indexterm>
7895 <indexterm><primary>market competition</primary></indexterm>
7896 <para>
7897 <!-- PAGE BREAK 158 -->
7898 No doubt, a potential is not yet an abuse, and so the potential for
7899 control is not yet the abuse of control. Barnes &amp; Noble has the
7900 right to say you can't touch a book in their store; property law gives
7901 them that right. But the market effectively protects against that
7902 abuse. If Barnes &amp; Noble banned browsing, then consumers would
7903 choose other bookstores. Competition protects against the
7904 extremes. And it may well be (my argument so far does not even
7905 question this) that competition would prevent any similar danger when
7906 it comes to copyright. Sure, publishers exercising the rights that
7907 authors have assigned to them might try to regulate how many times you
7908 read a book, or try to stop you from sharing the book with anyone. But
7909 in a competitive market such as the book market, the dangers of this
7910 happening are quite slight.
7911 </para>
7912 <para>
7913 Again, my aim so far is simply to map the changes that this changed
7914 architecture enables. Enabling technology to enforce the control of
7915 copyright means that the control of copyright is no longer defined by
7916 balanced policy. The control of copyright is simply what private
7917 owners choose. In some contexts, at least, that fact is harmless. But
7918 in some contexts it is a recipe for disaster.
7919 </para>
7920 </section>
7921 <section id="lawforce">
7922 <title>Architecture and Law: Force</title>
7923 <para>
7924 The disappearance of unregulated uses would be change enough, but a
7925 second important change brought about by the Internet magnifies its
7926 significance. This second change does not affect the reach of copyright
7927 regulation; it affects how such regulation is enforced.
7928 </para>
7929 <indexterm><primary>copyright law</primary><secondary>technology as automatic enforcer of</secondary></indexterm>
7930 <indexterm><primary>technology</primary><secondary>copyright enforcement controlled by</secondary></indexterm>
7931 <para>
7932 In the world before digital technology, it was generally the law that
7933 controlled whether and how someone was regulated by copyright law.
7934 The law, meaning a court, meaning a judge: In the end, it was a human,
7935 trained in the tradition of the law and cognizant of the balances that
7936 tradition embraced, who said whether and how the law would restrict
7937 your freedom.
7938 </para>
7939 <indexterm><primary>Casablanca</primary></indexterm>
7940 <indexterm id='idxmarxbrothers' class='startofrange'><primary>Marx Brothers</primary></indexterm>
7941 <indexterm id='idxwarnerbrothers' class='startofrange'><primary>Warner Brothers</primary></indexterm>
7942 <para>
7943 There's a famous story about a battle between the Marx Brothers
7944 and Warner Brothers. The Marxes intended to make a parody of
7945 <!-- PAGE BREAK 159 -->
7946 <citetitle>Casablanca</citetitle>. Warner Brothers objected. They
7947 wrote a nasty letter to the Marxes, warning them that there would be
7948 serious legal consequences if they went forward with their
7949 plan.<footnote><para>
7950 <!-- f19 -->
7951 See David Lange, <quote>Recognizing the Public Domain,</quote> <citetitle>Law and
7952 Contemporary Problems</citetitle> 44 (1981): 172&ndash;73.
7953 </para></footnote>
7954 </para>
7955 <para>
7956 This led the Marx Brothers to respond in kind. They warned
7957 Warner Brothers that the Marx Brothers <quote>were brothers long before
7958 you were.</quote><footnote><para>
7959 <!-- f20 -->
7960 <indexterm><primary>Vaidhyanathan, Siva</primary></indexterm>
7961 Ibid. See also Vaidhyanathan, <citetitle>Copyrights and
7962 Copywrongs</citetitle>, 1&ndash;3.
7963 </para></footnote>
7964 The Marx Brothers therefore owned the word
7965 <citetitle>brothers</citetitle>, and if Warner Brothers insisted on
7966 trying to control <citetitle>Casablanca</citetitle>, then the Marx
7967 Brothers would insist on control over <citetitle>brothers</citetitle>.
7968 </para>
7969 <para>
7970 An absurd and hollow threat, of course, because Warner Brothers,
7971 like the Marx Brothers, knew that no court would ever enforce such a
7972 silly claim. This extremism was irrelevant to the real freedoms anyone
7973 (including Warner Brothers) enjoyed.
7974 </para>
7975 <indexterm id='idxbooksoninternet2' class='startofrange'><primary>books</primary><secondary>on Internet</secondary></indexterm>
7976 <indexterm id='idxinternetbookson3' class='startofrange'><primary>Internet</primary><secondary>books on</secondary></indexterm>
7977 <para>
7978 On the Internet, however, there is no check on silly rules, because on
7979 the Internet, increasingly, rules are enforced not by a human but by a
7980 machine: Increasingly, the rules of copyright law, as interpreted by
7981 the copyright owner, get built into the technology that delivers
7982 copyrighted content. It is code, rather than law, that rules. And the
7983 problem with code regulations is that, unlike law, code has no
7984 shame. Code would not get the humor of the Marx Brothers. The
7985 consequence of that is not at all funny.
7986 </para>
7987 <indexterm startref='idxwarnerbrothers' class='endofrange'/>
7988 <indexterm startref='idxmarxbrothers' class='endofrange'/>
7989
7990 <indexterm id='idxadobeebookreader' class='startofrange'><primary>Adobe eBook Reader</primary></indexterm>
7991 <para>
7992 Consider the life of my Adobe eBook Reader.
7993 </para>
7994 <para>
7995 An e-book is a book delivered in electronic form. An Adobe eBook is
7996 not a book that Adobe has published; Adobe simply produces the
7997 software that publishers use to deliver e-books. It provides the
7998 technology, and the publisher delivers the content by using the
7999 technology.
8000 </para>
8001 <figure id="fig-example-adobe-ebook-reader" float="1">
8002 <title></title>
8003 <graphic fileref="images/example-adobe-ebook-reader.png" align="center" width="50%"></graphic>
8004 </figure>
8005 <para>
8006 In figure
8007 <xref xrefstyle="template:%n" linkend="fig-example-adobe-ebook-reader"/>
8008 is a picture of an old version of my Adobe eBook Reader.
8009 </para>
8010 <para>
8011 As you can see, I have a small collection of e-books within this
8012 e-book library. Some of these books reproduce content that is in the
8013 public domain: <citetitle>Middlemarch</citetitle>, for example, is in
8014 the public domain. Some of them reproduce content that is not in the
8015 public domain: My own book <citetitle>The Future of Ideas</citetitle>
8016 is not yet within the public domain. Consider
8017 <citetitle>Middlemarch</citetitle> first. If you click on my e-book
8018 copy of
8019 <!-- PAGE BREAK 160 -->
8020 <citetitle>Middlemarch</citetitle>, you'll see a fancy cover, and then
8021 a button at the bottom called Permissions.
8022 </para>
8023 <para>
8024 If you click on the Permissions button, you'll see a list of the
8025 permissions that the publisher purports to grant with this book.
8026 </para>
8027 <figure id="fig-1612">
8028 <title></title>
8029 <graphic fileref="images/1612.png" align="center" width="50%"></graphic>
8030 </figure>
8031 <para>
8032 <!-- PAGE BREAK 161 -->
8033 According to my eBook Reader, I have the permission to copy to the
8034 clipboard of the computer ten text selections every ten days. (So far,
8035 I've copied no text to the clipboard.) I also have the permission to
8036 print ten pages from the book every ten days. Lastly, I have the
8037 permission to use the Read Aloud button to hear <citetitle>Middlemarch</citetitle>
8038 read aloud through the computer.
8039 </para>
8040 <indexterm><primary>Aristotle</primary></indexterm>
8041 <indexterm><primary><citetitle>Politics</citetitle>, (Aristotle)</primary></indexterm>
8042 <para>
8043 Here's the e-book for another work in the public domain (including the
8044 translation): Aristotle's <citetitle>Politics</citetitle>.
8045 </para>
8046 <figure id="fig-1621">
8047 <title></title>
8048 <graphic fileref="images/aristotele-ebook.png" align="center" width="50%"></graphic>
8049 </figure>
8050 <para>
8051 According to its permissions, no printing or copying is permitted
8052 at all. But fortunately, you can use the Read Aloud button to hear
8053 the book.
8054 </para>
8055 <figure id="fig-1622">
8056 <title></title>
8057 <graphic fileref="images/1622.png" align="center" width="50%"></graphic>
8058 </figure>
8059 <indexterm><primary>Future of Ideas, The (Lessig)</primary></indexterm>
8060 <indexterm><primary>Lessig, Lawrence</primary></indexterm>
8061 <para>
8062 Finally (and most embarrassingly), here are the permissions for the
8063 original e-book version of my last book, <citetitle>The Future of
8064 Ideas</citetitle>:
8065 </para>
8066 <!-- PAGE BREAK 162 -->
8067 <figure id="fig-1631">
8068 <title></title>
8069 <graphic fileref="images/1631.png" align="center" width="50%"></graphic>
8070 </figure>
8071 <para>
8072 No copying, no printing, and don't you dare try to listen to this book!
8073 </para>
8074 <para>
8075 Now, the Adobe eBook Reader calls these controls
8076 <quote>permissions</quote>&mdash; as if the publisher has the power to control how
8077 you use these works. For works under copyright, the copyright owner
8078 certainly does have the power&mdash;up to the limits of the copyright
8079 law. But for work not under copyright, there is no such copyright
8080 power.<footnote><para>
8081 <!-- f21 -->
8082 In principle, a contract might impose a requirement on me. I might,
8083 for example, buy a book from you that includes a contract that says I
8084 will read it only three times, or that I promise to read it three
8085 times. But that obligation (and the limits for creating that
8086 obligation) would come from the contract, not from copyright law, and
8087 the obligations of contract would not necessarily pass to anyone who
8088 subsequently acquired the book.
8089 <indexterm><primary>contracts</primary></indexterm>
8090 </para></footnote>
8091 When my e-book of <citetitle>Middlemarch</citetitle> says I have the
8092 permission to copy only ten text selections into the memory every ten
8093 days, what that really means is that the eBook Reader has enabled the
8094 publisher to control how I use the book on my computer, far beyond the
8095 control that the law would enable.
8096 </para>
8097 <para>
8098 The control comes instead from the code&mdash;from the technology
8099 within which the e-book <quote>lives.</quote> Though the e-book says that these are
8100 permissions, they are not the sort of <quote>permissions</quote> that most of us
8101 deal with. When a teenager gets <quote>permission</quote> to stay out till
8102 midnight, she knows (unless she's Cinderella) that she can stay out
8103 till 2 A.M., but will suffer a punishment if she's caught. But when
8104 the Adobe eBook Reader says I have the permission to make ten copies
8105 of the text into the computer's memory, that means that after I've
8106 made ten copies, the computer will not make any more. The same with
8107 the printing restrictions: After ten pages, the eBook Reader will not
8108 print any more pages. It's the same with the silly restriction that
8109 says that you can't use the Read Aloud button to read my book
8110 aloud&mdash;it's not that the company will sue you if you do; instead,
8111 if you push the Read Aloud button with my book, the machine simply
8112 won't read aloud.
8113 </para>
8114 <indexterm><primary>Marx Brothers</primary></indexterm>
8115 <indexterm><primary>Warner Brothers</primary></indexterm>
8116 <para>
8117 <!-- PAGE BREAK 163 -->
8118 These are <emphasis>controls</emphasis>, not permissions. Imagine a
8119 world where the Marx Brothers sold word processing software that, when
8120 you tried to type <quote>Warner Brothers,</quote> erased <quote>Brothers</quote> from the
8121 sentence.
8122 </para>
8123 <para>
8124 This is the future of copyright law: not so much copyright
8125 <emphasis>law</emphasis> as copyright <emphasis>code</emphasis>. The
8126 controls over access to content will not be controls that are ratified
8127 by courts; the controls over access to content will be controls that
8128 are coded by programmers. And whereas the controls that are built into
8129 the law are always to be checked by a judge, the controls that are
8130 built into the technology have no similar built-in check.
8131 </para>
8132 <para>
8133 How significant is this? Isn't it always possible to get around the
8134 controls built into the technology? Software used to be sold with
8135 technologies that limited the ability of users to copy the software,
8136 but those were trivial protections to defeat. Why won't it be trivial
8137 to defeat these protections as well?
8138 </para>
8139 <para>
8140 We've only scratched the surface of this story. Return to the Adobe
8141 eBook Reader.
8142 </para>
8143 <indexterm id='idxalicesadventuresinwonderlandcarroll' class='startofrange'><primary>Alice's Adventures in Wonderland (Carroll)</primary></indexterm>
8144 <indexterm id='idxpublicdomainebookrestrictionson2' class='startofrange'><primary>public domain</primary><secondary>e-book restrictions on</secondary></indexterm>
8145 <para>
8146 Early in the life of the Adobe eBook Reader, Adobe suffered a public
8147 relations nightmare. Among the books that you could download for free
8148 on the Adobe site was a copy of <citetitle>Alice's Adventures in
8149 Wonderland</citetitle>. This wonderful book is in the public
8150 domain. Yet when you clicked on Permissions for that book, you got the
8151 following report:
8152 </para>
8153 <figure id="fig-1641">
8154 <title></title>
8155 <graphic fileref="images/1641.png" align="center" width="50%"></graphic>
8156 </figure>
8157 <!-- PAGE BREAK 164-->
8158 <para>
8159 Here was a public domain children's book that you were not allowed to
8160 copy, not allowed to lend, not allowed to give, and, as the
8161 <quote>permissions</quote> indicated, not allowed to <quote>read aloud</quote>!
8162 </para>
8163 <para>
8164 The public relations nightmare attached to that final permission.
8165 For the text did not say that you were not permitted to use the Read
8166 Aloud button; it said you did not have the permission to read the book
8167 aloud. That led some people to think that Adobe was restricting the
8168 right of parents, for example, to read the book to their children, which
8169 seemed, to say the least, absurd.
8170 </para>
8171 <para>
8172 Adobe responded quickly that it was absurd to think that it was trying
8173 to restrict the right to read a book aloud. Obviously it was only
8174 restricting the ability to use the Read Aloud button to have the book
8175 read aloud. But the question Adobe never did answer is this: Would
8176 Adobe thus agree that a consumer was free to use software to hack
8177 around the restrictions built into the eBook Reader? If some company
8178 (call it Elcomsoft) developed a program to disable the technological
8179 protection built into an Adobe eBook so that a blind person, say,
8180 could use a computer to read the book aloud, would Adobe agree that
8181 such a use of an eBook Reader was fair? Adobe didn't answer because
8182 the answer, however absurd it might seem, is no.
8183 </para>
8184 <indexterm startref='idxalicesadventuresinwonderlandcarroll' class='endofrange'/>
8185 <indexterm startref='idxpublicdomainebookrestrictionson2' class='endofrange'/>
8186 <para>
8187 The point is not to blame Adobe. Indeed, Adobe is among the most
8188 innovative companies developing strategies to balance open access to
8189 content with incentives for companies to innovate. But Adobe's
8190 technology enables control, and Adobe has an incentive to defend this
8191 control. That incentive is understandable, yet what it creates is
8192 often crazy.
8193 </para>
8194 <indexterm startref='idxadobeebookreader' class='endofrange'/>
8195 <indexterm startref='idxinternetbookson3' class='endofrange'/>
8196 <indexterm startref='idxbooksoninternet2' class='endofrange'/>
8197 <para>
8198 To see the point in a particularly absurd context, consider a favorite
8199 story of mine that makes the same point.
8200 </para>
8201 <indexterm id='idxaibo1' class='startofrange'><primary>Aibo robotic dog</primary></indexterm>
8202 <indexterm id='idxroboticdog1' class='startofrange'><primary>robotic dog</primary></indexterm>
8203 <indexterm id='idxsonyaibo1' class='startofrange'><primary>Sony</primary><secondary>Aibo robotic dog produced by</secondary></indexterm>
8204 <para>
8205 Consider the robotic dog made by Sony named <quote>Aibo.</quote> The Aibo
8206 learns tricks, cuddles, and follows you around. It eats only electricity
8207 and that doesn't leave that much of a mess (at least in your house).
8208 </para>
8209 <para>
8210 The Aibo is expensive and popular. Fans from around the world
8211 have set up clubs to trade stories. One fan in particular set up a Web
8212 site to enable information about the Aibo dog to be shared. This fan set
8213 <!-- PAGE BREAK 165-->
8214 up aibopet.com (and aibohack.com, but that resolves to the same site),
8215 and on that site he provided information about how to teach an Aibo
8216 to do tricks in addition to the ones Sony had taught it.
8217 </para>
8218 <para>
8219 <quote>Teach</quote> here has a special meaning. Aibos are just cute computers.
8220 You teach a computer how to do something by programming it
8221 differently. So to say that aibopet.com was giving information about
8222 how to teach the dog to do new tricks is just to say that aibopet.com
8223 was giving information to users of the Aibo pet about how to hack
8224 their computer <quote>dog</quote> to make it do new tricks (thus, aibohack.com).
8225 </para>
8226 <indexterm><primary>hacks</primary></indexterm>
8227 <para>
8228 If you're not a programmer or don't know many programmers, the word
8229 <citetitle>hack</citetitle> has a particularly unfriendly
8230 connotation. Nonprogrammers hack bushes or weeds. Nonprogrammers in
8231 horror movies do even worse. But to programmers, or coders, as I call
8232 them, <citetitle>hack</citetitle> is a much more positive
8233 term. <citetitle>Hack</citetitle> just means code that enables the
8234 program to do something it wasn't originally intended or enabled to
8235 do. If you buy a new printer for an old computer, you might find the
8236 old computer doesn't run, or <quote>drive,</quote> the printer. If you discovered
8237 that, you'd later be happy to discover a hack on the Net by someone
8238 who has written a driver to enable the computer to drive the printer
8239 you just bought.
8240 </para>
8241 <para>
8242 Some hacks are easy. Some are unbelievably hard. Hackers as a
8243 community like to challenge themselves and others with increasingly
8244 difficult tasks. There's a certain respect that goes with the talent to hack
8245 well. There's a well-deserved respect that goes with the talent to hack
8246 ethically.
8247 </para>
8248 <para>
8249 The Aibo fan was displaying a bit of both when he hacked the program
8250 and offered to the world a bit of code that would enable the Aibo to
8251 dance jazz. The dog wasn't programmed to dance jazz. It was a clever
8252 bit of tinkering that turned the dog into a more talented creature
8253 than Sony had built.
8254 </para>
8255 <indexterm startref='idxsonyaibo1' class='endofrange'/>
8256 <indexterm startref='idxroboticdog1' class='endofrange'/>
8257 <indexterm startref='idxaibo1' class='endofrange'/>
8258 <para>
8259 I've told this story in many contexts, both inside and outside the
8260 United States. Once I was asked by a puzzled member of the audience,
8261 is it permissible for a dog to dance jazz in the United States? We
8262 forget that stories about the backcountry still flow across much of
8263 the
8264
8265 <!-- PAGE BREAK 166 -->
8266 world. So let's just be clear before we continue: It's not a crime
8267 anywhere (anymore) to dance jazz. Nor is it a crime to teach your dog
8268 to dance jazz. Nor should it be a crime (though we don't have a lot to
8269 go on here) to teach your robot dog to dance jazz. Dancing jazz is a
8270 completely legal activity. One imagines that the owner of aibopet.com
8271 thought, <emphasis>What possible problem could there be with teaching
8272 a robot dog to dance?</emphasis>
8273 </para>
8274 <indexterm><primary>Microsoft</primary><secondary>government case against</secondary></indexterm>
8275 <para>
8276 Let's put the dog to sleep for a minute, and turn to a pony show&mdash;
8277 not literally a pony show, but rather a paper that a Princeton academic
8278 named Ed Felten prepared for a conference. This Princeton academic
8279 is well known and respected. He was hired by the government in the
8280 Microsoft case to test Microsoft's claims about what could and could
8281 not be done with its own code. In that trial, he demonstrated both his
8282 brilliance and his coolness. Under heavy badgering by Microsoft
8283 lawyers, Ed Felten stood his ground. He was not about to be bullied
8284 into being silent about something he knew very well.
8285 </para>
8286 <para>
8287 But Felten's bravery was really tested in April 2001.<footnote><para>
8288 <!-- f22 -->
8289 See Pamela Samuelson, <quote>Anticircumvention Rules: Threat to Science,</quote>
8290 <citetitle>Science</citetitle> 293 (2001): 2028; Brendan I. Koerner, <quote>Play Dead: Sony Muzzles
8291 the Techies Who Teach a Robot Dog New Tricks,</quote> <citetitle>American Prospect</citetitle>,
8292 January 2002; <quote>Court Dismisses Computer Scientists' Challenge to
8293 DMCA,</quote> <citetitle>Intellectual Property Litigation Reporter</citetitle>, 11 December 2001; Bill
8294 Holland, <quote>Copyright Act Raising Free-Speech Concerns,</quote> <citetitle>Billboard</citetitle>,
8295 May 2001; Janelle Brown, <quote>Is the RIAA Running Scared?</quote> Salon.com,
8296 April 2001; Electronic Frontier Foundation, <quote>Frequently Asked
8297 Questions about <citetitle>Felten and USENIX</citetitle> v. <citetitle>RIAA</citetitle> Legal Case,</quote> available at
8298 <ulink url="http://free-culture.cc/notes/">link #27</ulink>.
8299 <indexterm><primary>Electronic Frontier Foundation</primary></indexterm>
8300 </para></footnote>
8301 He and a group of colleagues were working on a paper to be submitted
8302 at conference. The paper was intended to describe the weakness in an
8303 encryption system being developed by the Secure Digital Music
8304 Initiative as a technique to control the distribution of music.
8305 </para>
8306 <para>
8307 The SDMI coalition had as its goal a technology to enable content
8308 owners to exercise much better control over their content than the
8309 Internet, as it originally stood, granted them. Using encryption, SDMI
8310 hoped to develop a standard that would allow the content owner to say
8311 <quote>this music cannot be copied,</quote> and have a computer respect that
8312 command. The technology was to be part of a <quote>trusted system</quote> of
8313 control that would get content owners to trust the system of the
8314 Internet much more.
8315 </para>
8316 <para>
8317 When SDMI thought it was close to a standard, it set up a competition.
8318 In exchange for providing contestants with the code to an
8319 SDMI-encrypted bit of content, contestants were to try to crack it
8320 and, if they did, report the problems to the consortium.
8321 </para>
8322 <para>
8323 <!-- PAGE BREAK 167 -->
8324 Felten and his team figured out the encryption system quickly. He and
8325 the team saw the weakness of this system as a type: Many encryption
8326 systems would suffer the same weakness, and Felten and his team
8327 thought it worthwhile to point this out to those who study encryption.
8328 </para>
8329 <para>
8330 Let's review just what Felten was doing. Again, this is the United
8331 States. We have a principle of free speech. We have this principle not
8332 just because it is the law, but also because it is a really great
8333 idea. A strongly protected tradition of free speech is likely to
8334 encourage a wide range of criticism. That criticism is likely, in
8335 turn, to improve the systems or people or ideas criticized.
8336 </para>
8337 <para>
8338 What Felten and his colleagues were doing was publishing a paper
8339 describing the weakness in a technology. They were not spreading free
8340 music, or building and deploying this technology. The paper was an
8341 academic essay, unintelligible to most people. But it clearly showed the
8342 weakness in the SDMI system, and why SDMI would not, as presently
8343 constituted, succeed.
8344 </para>
8345 <indexterm id='idxaibo2' class='startofrange'><primary>Aibo robotic dog</primary></indexterm>
8346 <indexterm id='idxroboticdog2' class='startofrange'><primary>robotic dog</primary></indexterm>
8347 <indexterm id='idxsonyaibo2' class='startofrange'><primary>Sony</primary><secondary>Aibo robotic dog produced by</secondary></indexterm>
8348 <para>
8349 What links these two, aibopet.com and Felten, is the letters they
8350 then received. Aibopet.com received a letter from Sony about the
8351 aibopet.com hack. Though a jazz-dancing dog is perfectly legal, Sony
8352 wrote:
8353 </para>
8354 <blockquote>
8355 <para>
8356 Your site contains information providing the means to circumvent
8357 AIBO-ware's copy protection protocol constituting a violation of the
8358 anti-circumvention provisions of the Digital Millennium Copyright Act.
8359 </para>
8360 </blockquote>
8361 <indexterm startref='idxsonyaibo2' class='endofrange'/>
8362 <indexterm startref='idxroboticdog2' class='endofrange'/>
8363 <indexterm startref='idxaibo2' class='endofrange'/>
8364 <para>
8365 And though an academic paper describing the weakness in a system
8366 of encryption should also be perfectly legal, Felten received a letter
8367 from an RIAA lawyer that read:
8368 </para>
8369 <blockquote>
8370 <para>
8371 Any disclosure of information gained from participating in the
8372 <!-- PAGE BREAK 168 -->
8373 Public Challenge would be outside the scope of activities permitted by
8374 the Agreement and could subject you and your research team to actions
8375 under the Digital Millennium Copyright Act (<quote>DMCA</quote>).
8376 </para>
8377 </blockquote>
8378 <para>
8379 In both cases, this weirdly Orwellian law was invoked to control the
8380 spread of information. The Digital Millennium Copyright Act made
8381 spreading such information an offense.
8382 </para>
8383 <para>
8384 The DMCA was enacted as a response to copyright owners' first fear
8385 about cyberspace. The fear was that copyright control was effectively
8386 dead; the response was to find technologies that might compensate.
8387 These new technologies would be copyright protection
8388 technologies&mdash; technologies to control the replication and
8389 distribution of copyrighted material. They were designed as
8390 <emphasis>code</emphasis> to modify the original
8391 <emphasis>code</emphasis> of the Internet, to reestablish some
8392 protection for copyright owners.
8393 </para>
8394 <para>
8395 The DMCA was a bit of law intended to back up the protection of this
8396 code designed to protect copyrighted material. It was, we could say,
8397 <emphasis>legal code</emphasis> intended to buttress
8398 <emphasis>software code</emphasis> which itself was intended to
8399 support the <emphasis>legal code of copyright</emphasis>.
8400 </para>
8401 <para>
8402 But the DMCA was not designed merely to protect copyrighted works to
8403 the extent copyright law protected them. Its protection, that is, did
8404 not end at the line that copyright law drew. The DMCA regulated
8405 devices that were designed to circumvent copyright protection
8406 measures. It was designed to ban those devices, whether or not the use
8407 of the copyrighted material made possible by that circumvention would
8408 have been a copyright violation.
8409 </para>
8410 <indexterm><primary>Aibo robotic dog</primary></indexterm>
8411 <indexterm><primary>robotic dog</primary></indexterm>
8412 <indexterm><primary>Sony</primary><secondary>Aibo robotic dog produced by</secondary></indexterm>
8413 <para>
8414 Aibopet.com and Felten make the point. The Aibo hack circumvented a
8415 copyright protection system for the purpose of enabling the dog to
8416 dance jazz. That enablement no doubt involved the use of copyrighted
8417 material. But as aibopet.com's site was noncommercial, and the use did
8418 not enable subsequent copyright infringements, there's no doubt that
8419 aibopet.com's hack was fair use of Sony's copyrighted material. Yet
8420 fair use is not a defense to the DMCA. The question is not whether the
8421 <!-- PAGE BREAK 169 -->
8422 use of the copyrighted material was a copyright violation. The question
8423 is whether a copyright protection system was circumvented.
8424 </para>
8425 <para>
8426 The threat against Felten was more attenuated, but it followed the
8427 same line of reasoning. By publishing a paper describing how a
8428 copyright protection system could be circumvented, the RIAA lawyer
8429 suggested, Felten himself was distributing a circumvention technology.
8430 Thus, even though he was not himself infringing anyone's copyright,
8431 his academic paper was enabling others to infringe others' copyright.
8432 </para>
8433 <indexterm><primary>Rogers, Fred</primary></indexterm>
8434 <indexterm id='idxcassettevcrs2' class='startofrange'><primary>cassette recording</primary><secondary>VCRs</secondary></indexterm>
8435 <para>
8436 The bizarreness of these arguments is captured in a cartoon drawn in
8437 1981 by Paul Conrad. At that time, a court in California had held that
8438 the VCR could be banned because it was a copyright-infringing
8439 technology: It enabled consumers to copy films without the permission
8440 of the copyright owner. No doubt there were uses of the technology
8441 that were legal: Fred Rogers, aka <quote><citetitle>Mr. Rogers</citetitle>,</quote>
8442 for example, had testified in that case that he wanted people to feel
8443 free to tape Mr. Rogers' Neighborhood.
8444 <indexterm><primary>Conrad, Paul</primary></indexterm>
8445 </para>
8446 <blockquote>
8447 <para>
8448 Some public stations, as well as commercial stations, program the
8449 <quote>Neighborhood</quote> at hours when some children cannot use it. I think that
8450 it's a real service to families to be able to record such programs and
8451 show them at appropriate times. I have always felt that with the
8452 advent of all of this new technology that allows people to tape the
8453 <quote>Neighborhood</quote> off-the-air, and I'm speaking for the <quote>Neighborhood</quote>
8454 because that's what I produce, that they then become much more active
8455 in the programming of their family's television life. Very frankly, I
8456 am opposed to people being programmed by others. My whole approach in
8457 broadcasting has always been <quote>You are an important person just the way
8458 you are. You can make healthy decisions.</quote> Maybe I'm going on too long,
8459 but I just feel that anything that allows a person to be more active
8460 in the control of his or her life, in a healthy way, is
8461 important.<footnote><para>
8462 <!-- f23 -->
8463 <indexterm><primary>cassette recording</primary><secondary>VCRs</secondary></indexterm>
8464 <citetitle>Sony Corporation of America</citetitle> v. <citetitle>Universal City Studios, Inc</citetitle>., 464 U.S. 417,
8465 455 fn. 27 (1984). Rogers never changed his view about the VCR. See
8466 James Lardner, <citetitle>Fast Forward: Hollywood, the Japanese, and the Onslaught of
8467 the VCR</citetitle> (New York: W. W. Norton, 1987), 270&ndash;71.
8468 <indexterm><primary>Rogers, Fred</primary></indexterm>
8469 </para></footnote>
8470 </para>
8471 </blockquote>
8472 <para>
8473 <!-- PAGE BREAK 170 -->
8474 Even though there were uses that were legal, because there were
8475 some uses that were illegal, the court held the companies producing
8476 the VCR responsible.
8477 </para>
8478 <para>
8479 This led Conrad to draw the cartoon in figure
8480 <xref xrefstyle="template:%n"
8481 linkend="fig-1711-vcr-handgun-cartoonfig"/>, which we can adopt to the
8482 DMCA.
8483 <indexterm><primary>Conrad, Paul</primary></indexterm>
8484 </para>
8485 <para>
8486 No argument I have can top this picture, but let me try to get close.
8487 </para>
8488 <figure id="fig-1711-vcr-handgun-cartoonfig" float="1">
8489 <title>&mdash; On which item have the courts ruled that manufacturers and
8490 retailers be held responsible for having supplied the
8491 equipment?</title>
8492 <graphic fileref="images/vcr-comic.png" align="center" width="55%"></graphic>
8493 </figure>
8494 <para>
8495 The anticircumvention provisions of the DMCA target copyright
8496 circumvention technologies. Circumvention technologies can be used for
8497 different ends. They can be used, for example, to enable massive
8498 pirating of copyrighted material&mdash;a bad end. Or they can be used
8499 to enable the use of particular copyrighted materials in ways that
8500 would be considered fair use&mdash;a good end.
8501 </para>
8502 <indexterm id='idxhandguns' class='startofrange'><primary>handguns</primary></indexterm>
8503 <para>
8504 A handgun can be used to shoot a police officer or a child. Most
8505 <!-- PAGE BREAK 171 -->
8506 would agree such a use is bad. Or a handgun can be used for target
8507 practice or to protect against an intruder. At least some would say that
8508 such a use would be good. It, too, is a technology that has both good
8509 and bad uses.
8510 </para>
8511 <indexterm><primary>Conrad, Paul</primary></indexterm>
8512 <para>
8513 The obvious point of Conrad's cartoon is the weirdness of a world
8514 where guns are legal, despite the harm they can do, while VCRs (and
8515 circumvention technologies) are illegal. Flash: <emphasis>No one ever
8516 died from copyright circumvention</emphasis>. Yet the law bans circumvention
8517 technologies absolutely, despite the potential that they might do some
8518 good, but permits guns, despite the obvious and tragic harm they do.
8519 </para>
8520 <indexterm startref='idxhandguns' class='endofrange'/>
8521 <indexterm startref='idxcassettevcrs2' class='endofrange'/>
8522 <indexterm><primary>Aibo robotic dog</primary></indexterm>
8523 <indexterm><primary>robotic dog</primary></indexterm>
8524 <indexterm><primary>Sony</primary><secondary>Aibo robotic dog produced by</secondary></indexterm>
8525 <para>
8526 The Aibo and RIAA examples demonstrate how copyright owners are
8527 changing the balance that copyright law grants. Using code, copyright
8528 owners restrict fair use; using the DMCA, they punish those who would
8529 attempt to evade the restrictions on fair use that they impose through
8530 code. Technology becomes a means by which fair use can be erased; the
8531 law of the DMCA backs up that erasing.
8532 </para>
8533 <para>
8534 This is how <emphasis>code</emphasis> becomes
8535 <emphasis>law</emphasis>. The controls built into the technology of
8536 copy and access protection become rules the violation of which is also
8537 a violation of the law. In this way, the code extends the
8538 law&mdash;increasing its regulation, even if the subject it regulates
8539 (activities that would otherwise plainly constitute fair use) is
8540 beyond the reach of the law. Code becomes law; code extends the law;
8541 code thus extends the control that copyright owners effect&mdash;at
8542 least for those copyright holders with the lawyers who can write the
8543 nasty letters that Felten and aibopet.com received.
8544 </para>
8545 <para>
8546 There is one final aspect of the interaction between architecture and
8547 law that contributes to the force of copyright's regulation. This is
8548 the ease with which infringements of the law can be detected. For
8549 contrary to the rhetoric common at the birth of cyberspace that on the
8550 Internet, no one knows you're a dog, increasingly, given changing
8551 technologies deployed on the Internet, it is easy to find the dog who
8552 committed a legal wrong. The technologies of the Internet are open to
8553 snoops as well as sharers, and the snoops are increasingly good at
8554 tracking down the identity of those who violate the rules.
8555 </para>
8556 <para>
8557
8558 <!-- PAGE BREAK 172 -->
8559 For example, imagine you were part of a <citetitle>Star Trek</citetitle> fan club. You
8560 gathered every month to share trivia, and maybe to enact a kind of fan
8561 fiction about the show. One person would play Spock, another, Captain
8562 Kirk. The characters would begin with a plot from a real story, then
8563 simply continue it.<footnote><para>
8564 <!-- f24 -->
8565 For an early and prescient analysis, see Rebecca Tushnet, <quote>Legal Fictions,
8566 Copyright, Fan Fiction, and a New Common Law,</quote> <citetitle>Loyola of Los Angeles
8567 Entertainment Law Journal</citetitle> 17 (1997): 651.
8568 </para></footnote>
8569 </para>
8570 <para>
8571 Before the Internet, this was, in effect, a totally unregulated
8572 activity. No matter what happened inside your club room, you would
8573 never be interfered with by the copyright police. You were free in
8574 that space to do as you wished with this part of our culture. You were
8575 allowed to build on it as you wished without fear of legal control.
8576 </para>
8577 <indexterm><primary>bots</primary></indexterm>
8578 <para>
8579 But if you moved your club onto the Internet, and made it generally
8580 available for others to join, the story would be very different. Bots
8581 scouring the Net for trademark and copyright infringement would
8582 quickly find your site. Your posting of fan fiction, depending upon
8583 the ownership of the series that you're depicting, could well inspire
8584 a lawyer's threat. And ignoring the lawyer's threat would be extremely
8585 costly indeed. The law of copyright is extremely efficient. The
8586 penalties are severe, and the process is quick.
8587 </para>
8588 <para>
8589 This change in the effective force of the law is caused by a change
8590 in the ease with which the law can be enforced. That change too shifts
8591 the law's balance radically. It is as if your car transmitted the speed at
8592 which you traveled at every moment that you drove; that would be just
8593 one step before the state started issuing tickets based upon the data you
8594 transmitted. That is, in effect, what is happening here.
8595 </para>
8596 </section>
8597 <section id="marketconcentration">
8598 <title>Market: Concentration</title>
8599 <para>
8600 So copyright's duration has increased dramatically&mdash;tripled in
8601 the past thirty years. And copyright's scope has increased as
8602 well&mdash;from regulating only publishers to now regulating just
8603 about everyone. And copyright's reach has changed, as every action
8604 becomes a copy and hence presumptively regulated. And as technologists
8605 find better ways
8606 <!-- PAGE BREAK 173 -->
8607 to control the use of content, and as copyright is increasingly
8608 enforced through technology, copyright's force changes, too. Misuse is
8609 easier to find and easier to control. This regulation of the creative
8610 process, which began as a tiny regulation governing a tiny part of the
8611 market for creative work, has become the single most important
8612 regulator of creativity there is. It is a massive expansion in the
8613 scope of the government's control over innovation and creativity; it
8614 would be totally unrecognizable to those who gave birth to copyright's
8615 control.
8616 </para>
8617 <para>
8618 Still, in my view, all of these changes would not matter much if it
8619 weren't for one more change that we must also consider. This is a
8620 change that is in some sense the most familiar, though its significance
8621 and scope are not well understood. It is the one that creates precisely the
8622 reason to be concerned about all the other changes I have described.
8623 </para>
8624 <para>
8625 This is the change in the concentration and integration of the media.
8626 In the past twenty years, the nature of media ownership has undergone
8627 a radical alteration, caused by changes in legal rules governing the
8628 media. Before this change happened, the different forms of media were
8629 owned by separate media companies. Now, the media is increasingly
8630 owned by only a few companies. Indeed, after the changes that the FCC
8631 announced in June 2003, most expect that within a few years, we will
8632 live in a world where just three companies control more than 85 percent
8633 of the media.
8634 </para>
8635 <para>
8636 These changes are of two sorts: the scope of concentration, and its
8637 nature.
8638 </para>
8639 <indexterm><primary>cable television</primary></indexterm>
8640 <indexterm><primary>BMG</primary></indexterm>
8641 <indexterm><primary>EMI</primary></indexterm>
8642 <indexterm><primary>McCain, John</primary></indexterm>
8643 <indexterm><primary>Universal Music Group</primary></indexterm>
8644 <indexterm><primary>Warner Music Group</primary></indexterm>
8645 <para>
8646 Changes in scope are the easier ones to describe. As Senator John
8647 McCain summarized the data produced in the FCC's review of media
8648 ownership, <quote>five companies control 85 percent of our media sources.</quote><footnote><para>
8649 <!-- f25 -->
8650 FCC Oversight: Hearing Before the Senate Commerce, Science and
8651 Transportation Committee, 108th Cong., 1st sess. (22 May 2003)
8652 (statement of Senator John McCain). </para></footnote>
8653 The five recording labels of Universal Music Group, BMG, Sony Music
8654 Entertainment, Warner Music Group, and EMI control 84.8 percent of the
8655 U.S. music market.<footnote><para>
8656 <!-- f26 -->
8657 Lynette Holloway, <quote>Despite a Marketing Blitz, CD Sales Continue to
8658 Slide,</quote> <citetitle>New York Times</citetitle>, 23 December 2002.
8659 </para></footnote>
8660 The <quote>five largest cable companies pipe
8661 programming to 74 percent of the cable subscribers nationwide.</quote><footnote><para>
8662 <!-- f27 -->
8663 Molly Ivins, <quote>Media Consolidation Must Be Stopped,</quote> <citetitle>Charleston Gazette</citetitle>,
8664 31 May 2003.
8665 </para></footnote>
8666 </para>
8667 <indexterm id='idxradioownershipconsolidationin' class='startofrange'><primary>radio</primary><secondary>ownership consolidation in</secondary></indexterm>
8668 <para>
8669 The story with radio is even more dramatic. Before deregulation,
8670 the nation's largest radio broadcasting conglomerate owned fewer than
8671 <!-- PAGE BREAK 174 -->
8672 seventy-five stations. Today <emphasis>one</emphasis> company owns
8673 more than 1,200 stations. During that period of consolidation, the
8674 total number of radio owners dropped by 34 percent. Today, in most
8675 markets, the two largest broadcasters control 74 percent of that
8676 market's revenues. Overall, just four companies control 90 percent of
8677 the nation's radio advertising revenues.
8678 </para>
8679 <indexterm><primary>cable television</primary></indexterm>
8680 <indexterm id='idxnewspapersownershipconsolidationof' class='startofrange'><primary>newspapers</primary><secondary>ownership consolidation of</secondary></indexterm>
8681 <para>
8682 Newspaper ownership is becoming more concentrated as well. Today,
8683 there are six hundred fewer daily newspapers in the United States than
8684 there were eighty years ago, and ten companies control half of the
8685 nation's circulation. There are twenty major newspaper publishers in
8686 the United States. The top ten film studios receive 99 percent of all
8687 film revenue. The ten largest cable companies account for 85 percent
8688 of all cable revenue. This is a market far from the free press the
8689 framers sought to protect. Indeed, it is a market that is quite well
8690 protected&mdash; by the market.
8691 </para>
8692 <indexterm><primary>Fallows, James</primary></indexterm>
8693 <para>
8694 Concentration in size alone is one thing. The more invidious
8695 change is in the nature of that concentration. As author James Fallows
8696 put it in a recent article about Rupert Murdoch,
8697 </para>
8698 <blockquote>
8699 <para>
8700 Murdoch's companies now constitute a production system
8701 unmatched in its integration. They supply content&mdash;Fox movies
8702 &hellip; Fox TV shows &hellip; Fox-controlled sports broadcasts, plus
8703 newspapers and books. They sell the content to the public and to
8704 advertisers&mdash;in newspapers, on the broadcast network, on the
8705 cable channels. And they operate the physical distribution system
8706 through which the content reaches the customers. Murdoch's satellite
8707 systems now distribute News Corp. content in Europe and Asia; if
8708 Murdoch becomes DirecTV's largest single owner, that system will serve
8709 the same function in the United States.<footnote><para>
8710 <!-- f28 -->
8711 James Fallows, <quote>The Age of Murdoch,</quote> <citetitle>Atlantic Monthly</citetitle> (September
8712 2003): 89.
8713 <indexterm><primary>Fallows, James</primary></indexterm>
8714 </para></footnote>
8715 </para>
8716 </blockquote>
8717 <indexterm startref='idxnewspapersownershipconsolidationof' class='endofrange'/>
8718 <indexterm startref='idxradioownershipconsolidationin' class='endofrange'/>
8719 <para>
8720 The pattern with Murdoch is the pattern of modern media. Not
8721 just large companies owning many radio stations, but a few companies
8722 owning as many outlets of media as possible. A picture describes this
8723 pattern better than a thousand words could do:
8724 </para>
8725 <figure id="fig-1761-pattern-modern-media-ownership">
8726 <title></title>
8727 <graphic fileref="images/pattern-modern-media-ownership.png" align="center" width="100%"></graphic>
8728 </figure>
8729 <para>
8730 <!-- PAGE BREAK 175 -->
8731 Does this concentration matter? Will it affect what is made, or
8732 what is distributed? Or is it merely a more efficient way to produce and
8733 distribute content?
8734 </para>
8735 <para>
8736 My view was that concentration wouldn't matter. I thought it was
8737 nothing more than a more efficient financial structure. But now, after
8738 reading and listening to a barrage of creators try to convince me to the
8739 contrary, I am beginning to change my mind.
8740 </para>
8741 <para>
8742 Here's a representative story that begins to suggest how this
8743 integration may matter.
8744 </para>
8745 <indexterm><primary>Lear, Norman</primary></indexterm>
8746 <indexterm><primary>ABC</primary></indexterm>
8747 <indexterm><primary>All in the Family</primary></indexterm>
8748 <para>
8749 In 1969, Norman Lear created a pilot for <citetitle>All in the Family</citetitle>. He took
8750 the pilot to ABC. The network didn't like it. It was too edgy, they told
8751 Lear. Make it again. Lear made a second pilot, more edgy than the
8752 first. ABC was exasperated. You're missing the point, they told Lear.
8753 We wanted less edgy, not more.
8754 </para>
8755 <para>
8756 Rather than comply, Lear simply took the show elsewhere. CBS
8757 was happy to have the series; ABC could not stop Lear from walking.
8758 The copyrights that Lear held assured an independence from network
8759 control.<footnote><para>
8760 <!-- f29 -->
8761 Leonard Hill, <quote>The Axis of Access,</quote> remarks before Weidenbaum Center
8762 Forum, <quote>Entertainment Economics: The Movie Industry,</quote> St. Louis,
8763 Missouri, 3 April 2003 (transcript of prepared remarks available at
8764 <ulink url="http://free-culture.cc/notes/">link #28</ulink>;
8765 for the Lear story, not included in the prepared remarks, see
8766 <ulink url="http://free-culture.cc/notes/">link #29</ulink>).
8767 </para></footnote>
8768 </para>
8769 <para>
8770
8771 <!-- PAGE BREAK 176 -->
8772 The network did not control those copyrights because the law forbade
8773 the networks from controlling the content they syndicated. The law
8774 required a separation between the networks and the content producers;
8775 that separation would guarantee Lear freedom. And as late as 1992,
8776 because of these rules, the vast majority of prime time
8777 television&mdash;75 percent of it&mdash;was <quote>independent</quote> of the
8778 networks.
8779 </para>
8780 <para>
8781 In 1994, the FCC abandoned the rules that required this independence.
8782 After that change, the networks quickly changed the balance. In 1985,
8783 there were twenty-five independent television production studios; in
8784 2002, only five independent television studios remained. <quote>In 1992,
8785 only 15 percent of new series were produced for a network by a company
8786 it controlled. Last year, the percentage of shows produced by
8787 controlled companies more than quintupled to 77 percent.</quote> <quote>In 1992, 16
8788 new series were produced independently of conglomerate control, last
8789 year there was one.</quote><footnote><para>
8790 <!-- f30 -->
8791 NewsCorp./DirecTV Merger and Media Consolidation: Hearings on Media
8792 Ownership Before the Senate Commerce Committee, 108th Cong., 1st
8793 sess. (2003) (testimony of Gene Kimmelman on behalf of Consumers Union
8794 and the Consumer Federation of America), available at
8795 <ulink url="http://free-culture.cc/notes/">link #30</ulink>. Kimmelman
8796 quotes Victoria Riskin, president of Writers Guild of America, West,
8797 in her Remarks at FCC En Banc Hearing, Richmond, Virginia, 27 February
8798 2003.
8799 </para></footnote>
8800 In 2002, 75 percent of prime time television was owned by the networks
8801 that ran it. <quote>In the ten-year period between 1992 and 2002, the number
8802 of prime time television hours per week produced by network studios
8803 increased over 200%, whereas the number of prime time television hours
8804 per week produced by independent studios decreased
8805 63%.</quote><footnote><para>
8806 <!-- f31 -->
8807 Ibid.
8808 </para></footnote>
8809 </para>
8810 <indexterm><primary>All in the Family</primary></indexterm>
8811 <para>
8812 Today, another Norman Lear with another <citetitle>All in the Family</citetitle> would
8813 find that he had the choice either to make the show less edgy or to be
8814 fired: The content of any show developed for a network is increasingly
8815 owned by the network.
8816 </para>
8817 <indexterm><primary>Diller, Barry</primary></indexterm>
8818 <indexterm><primary>Moyers, Bill</primary></indexterm>
8819 <para>
8820 While the number of channels has increased dramatically, the ownership
8821 of those channels has narrowed to an ever smaller and smaller few. As
8822 Barry Diller said to Bill Moyers,
8823 </para>
8824 <blockquote>
8825 <para>
8826 Well, if you have companies that produce, that finance, that air on
8827 their channel and then distribute worldwide everything that goes
8828 through their controlled distribution system, then what you get is
8829 fewer and fewer actual voices participating in the process. [We
8830 <!-- PAGE BREAK 177 -->
8831 u]sed to have dozens and dozens of thriving independent production
8832 companies producing television programs. Now you have less than a
8833 handful.<footnote><para>
8834 <!-- f32 -->
8835 <quote>Barry Diller Takes on Media Deregulation,</quote> <citetitle>Now with Bill Moyers</citetitle>, Bill
8836 Moyers, 25 April 2003, edited transcript available at
8837 <ulink url="http://free-culture.cc/notes/">link #31</ulink>.
8838 </para></footnote>
8839 </para>
8840 </blockquote>
8841 <indexterm><primary>democracy</primary><secondary>media concentration and</secondary></indexterm>
8842 <para>
8843 This narrowing has an effect on what is produced. The product of such
8844 large and concentrated networks is increasingly homogenous.
8845 Increasingly safe. Increasingly sterile. The product of news shows
8846 from networks like this is increasingly tailored to the message the
8847 network wants to convey. This is not the communist party, though from
8848 the inside, it must feel a bit like the communist party. No one can
8849 question without risk of consequence&mdash;not necessarily banishment
8850 to Siberia, but punishment nonetheless. Independent, critical,
8851 different views are quashed. This is not the environment for a
8852 democracy.
8853 </para>
8854 <indexterm><primary>Clark, Kim B.</primary></indexterm>
8855 <para>
8856 Economics itself offers a parallel that explains why this integration
8857 affects creativity. Clay Christensen has written about the <quote>Innovator's
8858 Dilemma</quote>: the fact that large traditional firms find it rational to ignore
8859 new, breakthrough technologies that compete with their core business.
8860 The same analysis could help explain why large, traditional media
8861 companies would find it rational to ignore new cultural trends.<footnote><para>
8862 <!-- f33 -->
8863 Clayton M. Christensen, <citetitle>The Innovator's Dilemma: The
8864 Revolutionary National Bestseller that Changed the Way We Do Business</citetitle>
8865 (Cambridge: Harvard Business School Press, 1997). Christensen
8866 acknowledges that the idea was first suggested by Dean Kim Clark. See
8867 Kim B. Clark, <quote>The Interaction of Design Hierarchies and Market
8868 Concepts in Technological Evolution,</quote> <citetitle>Research Policy</citetitle> 14 (1985):
8869 235&ndash;51. For a more recent study, see Richard Foster and Sarah
8870 Kaplan, <citetitle>Creative Destruction: Why Companies That Are Built to Last
8871 Underperform the Market&mdash;and How to Successfully Transform Them</citetitle>
8872 (New York: Currency/Doubleday, 2001). </para></footnote>
8873
8874 Lumbering giants not only don't, but should not, sprint. Yet if the
8875 field is only open to the giants, there will be far too little
8876 sprinting.
8877 <indexterm><primary>Christensen, Clayton M.</primary></indexterm>
8878 </para>
8879 <para>
8880 I don't think we know enough about the economics of the media
8881 market to say with certainty what concentration and integration will
8882 do. The efficiencies are important, and the effect on culture is hard to
8883 measure.
8884 </para>
8885 <para>
8886 But there is a quintessentially obvious example that does strongly
8887 suggest the concern.
8888 </para>
8889 <para>
8890 In addition to the copyright wars, we're in the middle of the drug
8891 wars. Government policy is strongly directed against the drug cartels;
8892 criminal and civil courts are filled with the consequences of this battle.
8893 </para>
8894 <indexterm><primary>criminal justice system</primary></indexterm>
8895 <para>
8896 Let me hereby disqualify myself from any possible appointment to
8897 any position in government by saying I believe this war is a profound
8898 mistake. I am not pro drugs. Indeed, I come from a family once
8899
8900 <!-- PAGE BREAK 178 -->
8901 wrecked by drugs&mdash;though the drugs that wrecked my family were
8902 all quite legal. I believe this war is a profound mistake because the
8903 collateral damage from it is so great as to make waging the war
8904 insane. When you add together the burdens on the criminal justice
8905 system, the desperation of generations of kids whose only real
8906 economic opportunities are as drug warriors, the queering of
8907 constitutional protections because of the constant surveillance this
8908 war requires, and, most profoundly, the total destruction of the legal
8909 systems of many South American nations because of the power of the
8910 local drug cartels, I find it impossible to believe that the marginal
8911 benefit in reduced drug consumption by Americans could possibly
8912 outweigh these costs.
8913 </para>
8914 <para>
8915 You may not be convinced. That's fine. We live in a democracy, and it
8916 is through votes that we are to choose policy. But to do that, we
8917 depend fundamentally upon the press to help inform Americans about
8918 these issues.
8919 </para>
8920 <indexterm id='idxadvertising3' class='startofrange'><primary>advertising</primary></indexterm>
8921 <indexterm id='idxcommercials' class='startofrange'><primary>commercials</primary></indexterm>
8922 <indexterm id='idxtelevisionadvertisingon' class='startofrange'><primary>television</primary><secondary>advertising on</secondary></indexterm>
8923 <indexterm><primary>Nick and Norm anti-drug campaign</primary></indexterm>
8924 <para>
8925 Beginning in 1998, the Office of National Drug Control Policy launched
8926 a media campaign as part of the <quote>war on drugs.</quote> The campaign produced
8927 scores of short film clips about issues related to illegal drugs. In
8928 one series (the Nick and Norm series) two men are in a bar, discussing
8929 the idea of legalizing drugs as a way to avoid some of the collateral
8930 damage from the war. One advances an argument in favor of drug
8931 legalization. The other responds in a powerful and effective way
8932 against the argument of the first. In the end, the first guy changes
8933 his mind (hey, it's television). The plug at the end is a damning
8934 attack on the pro-legalization campaign.
8935 </para>
8936 <para>
8937 Fair enough. It's a good ad. Not terribly misleading. It delivers its
8938 message well. It's a fair and reasonable message.
8939 </para>
8940 <para>
8941 But let's say you think it is a wrong message, and you'd like to run a
8942 countercommercial. Say you want to run a series of ads that try to
8943 demonstrate the extraordinary collateral harm that comes from the drug
8944 war. Can you do it?
8945 </para>
8946 <para>
8947 Well, obviously, these ads cost lots of money. Assume you raise the
8948 <!-- PAGE BREAK 179 -->
8949 money. Assume a group of concerned citizens donates all the money in
8950 the world to help you get your message out. Can you be sure your
8951 message will be heard then?
8952 </para>
8953 <indexterm><primary>Constitution, U.S.</primary><secondary>First Amendment to</secondary></indexterm>
8954 <indexterm><primary>First Amendment</primary></indexterm>
8955 <indexterm><primary>Supreme Court, U.S.</primary><secondary>on television advertising bans</secondary></indexterm>
8956 <indexterm><primary>television</primary><secondary>controversy avoided by</secondary></indexterm>
8957 <para>
8958 No. You cannot. Television stations have a general policy of avoiding
8959 <quote>controversial</quote> ads. Ads sponsored by the government are deemed
8960 uncontroversial; ads disagreeing with the government are
8961 controversial. This selectivity might be thought inconsistent with
8962 the First Amendment, but the Supreme Court has held that stations have
8963 the right to choose what they run. Thus, the major channels of
8964 commercial media will refuse one side of a crucial debate the
8965 opportunity to present its case. And the courts will defend the
8966 rights of the stations to be this biased.<footnote><para>
8967 <!-- f34 -->
8968 <indexterm><primary>ABC</primary></indexterm>
8969 <indexterm><primary>Comcast</primary></indexterm>
8970 <indexterm><primary>Marijuana Policy Project</primary></indexterm>
8971 <indexterm><primary>NBC</primary></indexterm>
8972 <indexterm><primary>WJOA</primary></indexterm>
8973 <indexterm><primary>WRC</primary></indexterm>
8974 <indexterm><primary>advertising</primary></indexterm>
8975 The Marijuana Policy Project, in February 2003, sought to place ads
8976 that directly responded to the Nick and Norm series on stations within
8977 the Washington, D.C., area. Comcast rejected the ads as <quote>against
8978 [their] policy.</quote> The local NBC affiliate, WRC, rejected the ads
8979 without reviewing them. The local ABC affiliate, WJOA, originally
8980 agreed to run the ads and accepted payment to do so, but later decided
8981 not to run the ads and returned the collected fees. Interview with
8982 Neal Levine, 15 October 2003. These restrictions are, of course, not
8983 limited to drug policy. See, for example, Nat Ives, <quote>On the
8984 Issue of an Iraq War, Advocacy Ads Meet with Rejection from TV
8985 Networks,</quote> <citetitle>New York Times</citetitle>, 13 March
8986 2003, C4. Outside of election-related air time there is very little
8987 that the FCC or the courts are willing to do to even the playing
8988 field. For a general overview, see Rhonda Brown, <quote>Ad Hoc Access:
8989 The Regulation of Editorial Advertising on Television and
8990 Radio,</quote> <citetitle>Yale Law and Policy Review</citetitle> 6
8991 (1988): 449&ndash;79, and for a more recent summary of the stance of
8992 the FCC and the courts, see <citetitle>Radio-Television News Directors
8993 Association</citetitle> v. <citetitle>FCC</citetitle>, 184 F. 3d 872
8994 (D.C. Cir. 1999). Municipal authorities exercise the same authority as
8995 the networks. In a recent example from San Francisco, the San
8996 Francisco transit authority rejected an ad that criticized its Muni
8997 diesel buses. Phillip Matier and Andrew Ross, <quote>Antidiesel Group
8998 Fuming After Muni Rejects Ad,</quote> SFGate.com, 16 June 2003,
8999 available at <ulink url="http://free-culture.cc/notes/">link
9000 #32</ulink>. The ground was that the criticism was <quote>too
9001 controversial.</quote>
9002 </para></footnote>
9003 </para>
9004 <indexterm startref='idxcommercials' class='endofrange'/>
9005 <indexterm startref='idxtelevisionadvertisingon' class='endofrange'/>
9006 <para>
9007 I'd be happy to defend the networks' rights, as well&mdash;if we lived
9008 in a media market that was truly diverse. But concentration in the
9009 media throws that condition into doubt. If a handful of companies
9010 control access to the media, and that handful of companies gets to
9011 decide which political positions it will allow to be promoted on its
9012 channels, then in an obvious and important way, concentration
9013 matters. You might like the positions the handful of companies
9014 selects. But you should not like a world in which a mere few get to
9015 decide which issues the rest of us get to know about.
9016 </para>
9017 <indexterm startref='idxadvertising3' class='endofrange'/>
9018 </section>
9019 <section id="together">
9020 <title>Together</title>
9021 <para>
9022 There is something innocent and obvious about the claim of the
9023 copyright warriors that the government should <quote>protect my property.</quote>
9024 In the abstract, it is obviously true and, ordinarily, totally
9025 harmless. No sane sort who is not an anarchist could disagree.
9026 </para>
9027 <para>
9028 But when we see how dramatically this <quote>property</quote> has changed&mdash;
9029 when we recognize how it might now interact with both technology and
9030 markets to mean that the effective constraint on the liberty to
9031 cultivate our culture is dramatically different&mdash;the claim begins
9032 to seem
9033
9034 <!-- PAGE BREAK 180 -->
9035 less innocent and obvious. Given (1) the power of technology to
9036 supplement the law's control, and (2) the power of concentrated
9037 markets to weaken the opportunity for dissent, if strictly enforcing
9038 the massively expanded <quote>property</quote> rights granted by copyright
9039 fundamentally changes the freedom within this culture to cultivate and
9040 build upon our past, then we have to ask whether this property should
9041 be redefined.
9042 </para>
9043 <para>
9044 Not starkly. Or absolutely. My point is not that we should abolish
9045 copyright or go back to the eighteenth century. That would be a total
9046 mistake, disastrous for the most important creative enterprises within
9047 our culture today.
9048 </para>
9049 <para>
9050 But there is a space between zero and one, Internet culture
9051 notwithstanding. And these massive shifts in the effective power of
9052 copyright regulation, tied to increased concentration of the content
9053 industry and resting in the hands of technology that will increasingly
9054 enable control over the use of culture, should drive us to consider
9055 whether another adjustment is called for. Not an adjustment that
9056 increases copyright's power. Not an adjustment that increases its
9057 term. Rather, an adjustment to restore the balance that has
9058 traditionally defined copyright's regulation&mdash;a weakening of that
9059 regulation, to strengthen creativity.
9060 </para>
9061 <para>
9062 Copyright law has not been a rock of Gibraltar. It's not a set of
9063 constant commitments that, for some mysterious reason, teenagers and
9064 geeks now flout. Instead, copyright power has grown dramatically in a
9065 short period of time, as the technologies of distribution and creation
9066 have changed and as lobbyists have pushed for more control by
9067 copyright holders. Changes in the past in response to changes in
9068 technology suggest that we may well need similar changes in the
9069 future. And these changes have to be <emphasis>reductions</emphasis>
9070 in the scope of copyright, in response to the extraordinary increase
9071 in control that technology and the market enable.
9072 </para>
9073 <para>
9074 For the single point that is lost in this war on pirates is a point that
9075 we see only after surveying the range of these changes. When you add
9076 <!-- PAGE BREAK 181 -->
9077 together the effect of changing law, concentrated markets, and
9078 changing technology, together they produce an astonishing conclusion:
9079 <emphasis>Never in our history have fewer had a legal right to control
9080 more of the development of our culture than now</emphasis>.
9081 </para>
9082 <para>
9083 Not when copyrights were perpetual, for when copyrights were
9084 perpetual, they affected only that precise creative work. Not when
9085 only publishers had the tools to publish, for the market then was much
9086 more diverse. Not when there were only three television networks, for
9087 even then, newspapers, film studios, radio stations, and publishers
9088 were independent of the networks. <emphasis>Never</emphasis> has
9089 copyright protected such a wide range of rights, against as broad a
9090 range of actors, for a term that was remotely as long. This form of
9091 regulation&mdash;a tiny regulation of a tiny part of the creative
9092 energy of a nation at the founding&mdash;is now a massive regulation
9093 of the overall creative process. Law plus technology plus the market
9094 now interact to turn this historically benign regulation into the most
9095 significant regulation of culture that our free society has
9096 known.<footnote><para>
9097 <!-- f35 -->
9098 <indexterm><primary>Vaidhyanathan, Siva</primary></indexterm>
9099 Siva Vaidhyanathan captures a similar point in his <quote>four surrenders</quote> of
9100 copyright law in the digital age. See Vaidhyanathan, 159&ndash;60.
9101 </para></footnote>
9102 </para>
9103 <para>
9104 <emphasis role='strong'>This has been</emphasis> a long chapter. Its
9105 point can now be briefly stated.
9106 </para>
9107 <para>
9108 At the start of this book, I distinguished between commercial and
9109 noncommercial culture. In the course of this chapter, I have
9110 distinguished between copying a work and transforming it. We can now
9111 combine these two distinctions and draw a clear map of the changes
9112 that copyright law has undergone. In 1790, the law looked like this:
9113 </para>
9114
9115 <informaltable id="t2">
9116 <tgroup cols="3" align="left">
9117 <thead>
9118 <row>
9119 <entry></entry>
9120 <entry>PUBLISH</entry>
9121 <entry>TRANSFORM</entry>
9122 </row>
9123 </thead>
9124 <tbody>
9125 <row>
9126 <entry>Commercial</entry>
9127 <entry>&copy;</entry>
9128 <entry>Free</entry>
9129 </row>
9130 <row>
9131 <entry>Noncommercial</entry>
9132 <entry>Free</entry>
9133 <entry>Free</entry>
9134 </row>
9135 </tbody>
9136 </tgroup>
9137 </informaltable>
9138
9139 <para>
9140 The act of publishing a map, chart, and book was regulated by
9141 copyright law. Nothing else was. Transformations were free. And as
9142 copyright attached only with registration, and only those who intended
9143
9144 <!-- PAGE BREAK 182 -->
9145 to benefit commercially would register, copying through publishing of
9146 noncommercial work was also free.
9147 </para>
9148 <para>
9149 By the end of the nineteenth century, the law had changed to this:
9150 </para>
9151
9152 <informaltable id="t3">
9153 <tgroup cols="3" align="left">
9154 <thead>
9155 <row>
9156 <entry></entry>
9157 <entry>PUBLISH</entry>
9158 <entry>TRANSFORM</entry>
9159 </row>
9160 </thead>
9161 <tbody>
9162 <row>
9163 <entry>Commercial</entry>
9164 <entry>&copy;</entry>
9165 <entry>&copy;</entry>
9166 </row>
9167 <row>
9168 <entry>Noncommercial</entry>
9169 <entry>Free</entry>
9170 <entry>Free</entry>
9171 </row>
9172 </tbody>
9173 </tgroup>
9174 </informaltable>
9175
9176 <para>
9177 Derivative works were now regulated by copyright law&mdash;if
9178 published, which again, given the economics of publishing at the time,
9179 means if offered commercially. But noncommercial publishing and
9180 transformation were still essentially free.
9181 </para>
9182 <para>
9183 In 1909 the law changed to regulate copies, not publishing, and after
9184 this change, the scope of the law was tied to technology. As the
9185 technology of copying became more prevalent, the reach of the law
9186 expanded. Thus by 1975, as photocopying machines became more common,
9187 we could say the law began to look like this:
9188 </para>
9189
9190 <informaltable id="t4">
9191 <tgroup cols="3" align="left">
9192 <thead>
9193 <row>
9194 <entry></entry>
9195 <entry>COPY</entry>
9196 <entry>TRANSFORM</entry>
9197 </row>
9198 </thead>
9199 <tbody>
9200 <row>
9201 <entry>Commercial</entry>
9202 <entry>&copy;</entry>
9203 <entry>&copy;</entry>
9204 </row>
9205 <row>
9206 <entry>Noncommercial</entry>
9207 <entry>&copy; / Free</entry>
9208 <entry>Free</entry>
9209 </row>
9210 </tbody>
9211 </tgroup>
9212 </informaltable>
9213
9214 <para>
9215 The law was interpreted to reach noncommercial copying through, say,
9216 copy machines, but still much of copying outside of the commercial
9217 market remained free. But the consequence of the emergence of digital
9218 technologies, especially in the context of a digital network, means
9219 that the law now looks like this:
9220 </para>
9221
9222 <informaltable id="t5">
9223 <tgroup cols="3" align="left">
9224 <thead>
9225 <row>
9226 <entry></entry>
9227 <entry>COPY</entry>
9228 <entry>TRANSFORM</entry>
9229 </row>
9230 </thead>
9231 <tbody>
9232 <row>
9233 <entry>Commercial</entry>
9234 <entry>&copy;</entry>
9235 <entry>&copy;</entry>
9236 </row>
9237 <row>
9238 <entry>Noncommercial</entry>
9239 <entry>&copy;</entry>
9240 <entry>&copy;</entry>
9241 </row>
9242 </tbody>
9243 </tgroup>
9244 </informaltable>
9245
9246 <para>
9247 Every realm is governed by copyright law, whereas before most
9248 creativity was not. The law now regulates the full range of
9249 creativity&mdash;
9250 <!-- PAGE BREAK 183 -->
9251 commercial or not, transformative or not&mdash;with the same rules
9252 designed to regulate commercial publishers.
9253 </para>
9254 <para>
9255 Obviously, copyright law is not the enemy. The enemy is regulation
9256 that does no good. So the question that we should be asking just now
9257 is whether extending the regulations of copyright law into each of
9258 these domains actually does any good.
9259 </para>
9260 <para>
9261 I have no doubt that it does good in regulating commercial copying.
9262 But I also have no doubt that it does more harm than good when
9263 regulating (as it regulates just now) noncommercial copying and,
9264 especially, noncommercial transformation. And increasingly, for the
9265 reasons sketched especially in chapters
9266 <xref xrefstyle="select: labelnumber" linkend="recorders"/> and
9267 <xref xrefstyle="select: labelnumber" linkend="transformers"/>, one
9268 might well wonder whether it does more harm than good for commercial
9269 transformation. More commercial transformative work would be created
9270 if derivative rights were more sharply restricted.
9271 </para>
9272 <para>
9273 The issue is therefore not simply whether copyright is property. Of
9274 course copyright is a kind of <quote>property,</quote> and of course, as with any
9275 property, the state ought to protect it. But first impressions
9276 notwithstanding, historically, this property right (as with all
9277 property rights<footnote><para>
9278 <!-- f36 -->
9279 <indexterm><primary>legal realist movement</primary></indexterm>
9280 It was the single most important contribution of the legal realist
9281 movement to demonstrate that all property rights are always crafted to
9282 balance public and private interests. See Thomas C. Grey, <quote>The
9283 Disintegration of Property,</quote> in <citetitle>Nomos XXII: Property</citetitle>, J. Roland
9284 Pennock and John W. Chapman, eds. (New York: New York University
9285 Press, 1980).
9286 </para></footnote>)
9287 has been crafted to balance the important need to give authors and
9288 artists incentives with the equally important need to assure access to
9289 creative work. This balance has always been struck in light of new
9290 technologies. And for almost half of our tradition, the <quote>copyright</quote>
9291 did not control <emphasis>at all</emphasis> the freedom of others to
9292 build upon or transform a creative work. American culture was born
9293 free, and for almost 180 years our country consistently protected a
9294 vibrant and rich free culture.
9295 </para>
9296 <indexterm><primary>archives, digital</primary></indexterm>
9297 <para>
9298 We achieved that free culture because our law respected important
9299 limits on the scope of the interests protected by <quote>property.</quote> The very
9300 birth of <quote>copyright</quote> as a statutory right recognized those limits, by
9301 granting copyright owners protection for a limited time only (the
9302 story of chapter <xref xrefstyle="select: labelnumber"
9303 linkend="founders"/>). The tradition of <quote>fair use</quote> is
9304 animated by a similar concern that is increasingly under strain as the
9305 costs of exercising any fair use right become unavoidably high (the
9306 story of chapter <xref xrefstyle="select: labelnumber"
9307 linkend="recorders"/>). Adding
9308 <!-- PAGE BREAK 184 -->
9309 statutory rights where markets might stifle innovation is another
9310 familiar limit on the property right that copyright is (chapter <xref
9311 xrefstyle="select: labelnumber" linkend="transformers"/>). And
9312 granting archives and libraries a broad freedom to collect, claims of
9313 property notwithstanding, is a crucial part of guaranteeing the soul
9314 of a culture (chapter <xref xrefstyle="select: labelnumber"
9315 linkend="collectors"/>). Free cultures, like free markets, are built
9316 with property. But the nature of the property that builds a free
9317 culture is very different from the extremist vision that dominates the
9318 debate today.
9319 </para>
9320 <para>
9321 Free culture is increasingly the casualty in this war on piracy. In
9322 response to a real, if not yet quantified, threat that the
9323 technologies of the Internet present to twentieth-century business
9324 models for producing and distributing culture, the law and technology
9325 are being transformed in a way that will undermine our tradition of
9326 free culture. The property right that is copyright is no longer the
9327 balanced right that it was, or was intended to be. The property right
9328 that is copyright has become unbalanced, tilted toward an extreme. The
9329 opportunity to create and transform becomes weakened in a world in
9330 which creation requires permission and creativity must check with a
9331 lawyer.
9332 </para>
9333 <!-- PAGE BREAK 185 -->
9334 </section>
9335 </chapter>
9336 </part>
9337 <part id="c-puzzles">
9338 <title>Puzzles</title>
9339
9340 <!-- PAGE BREAK 186 -->
9341 <chapter label="11" id="chimera">
9342 <title>Chapter Eleven: Chimera</title>
9343 <indexterm id='idxchimera' class='startofrange'><primary>chimeras</primary></indexterm>
9344 <indexterm id='idxwells' class='startofrange'><primary>Wells, H. G.</primary></indexterm>
9345 <indexterm id='idxtcotb' class='startofrange'><primary><quote>Country of the Blind, The</quote> (Wells)</primary></indexterm>
9346
9347 <para>
9348 <emphasis role='strong'>In a well-known</emphasis> short story by
9349 H. G. Wells, a mountain climber named Nunez trips (literally, down an
9350 ice slope) into an unknown and isolated valley in the Peruvian
9351 Andes.<footnote><para>
9352 <!-- f1. -->
9353 H. G. Wells, <quote>The Country of the Blind</quote> (1904, 1911). See H. G. Wells,
9354 <citetitle>The Country of the Blind and Other Stories</citetitle>, Michael Sherborne, ed. (New
9355 York: Oxford University Press, 1996).
9356 </para></footnote>
9357 The valley is extraordinarily beautiful, with <quote>sweet water, pasture,
9358 an even climate, slopes of rich brown soil with tangles of a shrub
9359 that bore an excellent fruit.</quote> But the villagers are all blind. Nunez
9360 takes this as an opportunity. <quote>In the Country of the Blind,</quote> he tells
9361 himself, <quote>the One-Eyed Man is King.</quote> So he resolves to live with the
9362 villagers to explore life as a king.
9363 </para>
9364 <para>
9365 Things don't go quite as he planned. He tries to explain the idea of
9366 sight to the villagers. They don't understand. He tells them they are
9367 <quote>blind.</quote> They don't have the word <citetitle>blind</citetitle>. They think he's just thick.
9368 Indeed, as they increasingly notice the things he can't do (hear the
9369 sound of grass being stepped on, for example), they increasingly try
9370 to control him. He, in turn, becomes increasingly frustrated. <quote><quote>You
9371 don't understand,</quote> he cried, in a voice that was meant to be great and
9372 resolute, and which broke. <quote>You are blind and I can see. Leave me
9373 alone!</quote></quote>
9374 </para>
9375 <para>
9376 <!-- PAGE BREAK 187 -->
9377 The villagers don't leave him alone. Nor do they see (so to speak) the
9378 virtue of his special power. Not even the ultimate target of his
9379 affection, a young woman who to him seems <quote>the most beautiful thing in
9380 the whole of creation,</quote> understands the beauty of sight. Nunez's
9381 description of what he sees <quote>seemed to her the most poetical of
9382 fancies, and she listened to his description of the stars and the
9383 mountains and her own sweet white-lit beauty as though it was a guilty
9384 indulgence.</quote> <quote>She did not believe,</quote> Wells tells us, and <quote>she could
9385 only half understand, but she was mysteriously delighted.</quote>
9386 </para>
9387 <para>
9388 When Nunez announces his desire to marry his <quote>mysteriously delighted</quote>
9389 love, the father and the village object. <quote>You see, my dear,</quote> her
9390 father instructs, <quote>he's an idiot. He has delusions. He can't do
9391 anything right.</quote> They take Nunez to the village doctor.
9392 </para>
9393 <para>
9394 After a careful examination, the doctor gives his opinion. <quote>His brain
9395 is affected,</quote> he reports.
9396 </para>
9397 <para>
9398 <quote>What affects it?</quote> the father asks. <quote>Those queer things that are
9399 called the eyes &hellip; are diseased &hellip; in such a way as to affect
9400 his brain.</quote>
9401 </para>
9402 <para>
9403 The doctor continues: <quote>I think I may say with reasonable certainty
9404 that in order to cure him completely, all that we need to do is a
9405 simple and easy surgical operation&mdash;namely, to remove these
9406 irritant bodies [the eyes].</quote>
9407 </para>
9408 <para>
9409 <quote>Thank Heaven for science!</quote> says the father to the doctor. They inform
9410 Nunez of this condition necessary for him to be allowed his bride.
9411 (You'll have to read the original to learn what happens in the end. I
9412 believe in free culture, but never in giving away the end of a story.)
9413 </para>
9414 <para>
9415 <emphasis role='strong'>It sometimes</emphasis> happens that the eggs
9416 of twins fuse in the mother's womb. That fusion produces a
9417 <quote>chimera.</quote> A chimera is a single creature with two sets
9418 of DNA. The DNA in the blood, for example, might be different from the
9419 DNA of the skin. This possibility is an underused
9420
9421 <!-- PAGE BREAK 188 -->
9422 plot for murder mysteries. <quote>But the DNA shows with 100 percent
9423 certainty that she was not the person whose blood was at the
9424 scene. &hellip;</quote>
9425 </para>
9426 <indexterm startref='idxtcotb' class='endofrange'/>
9427 <indexterm startref='idxwells' class="endofrange"/>
9428 <para>
9429 Before I had read about chimeras, I would have said they were
9430 impossible. A single person can't have two sets of DNA. The very idea
9431 of DNA is that it is the code of an individual. Yet in fact, not only
9432 can two individuals have the same set of DNA (identical twins), but
9433 one person can have two different sets of DNA (a chimera). Our
9434 understanding of a <quote>person</quote> should reflect this reality.
9435 </para>
9436 <para>
9437 The more I work to understand the current struggle over copyright and
9438 culture, which I've sometimes called unfairly, and sometimes not
9439 unfairly enough, <quote>the copyright wars,</quote> the more I think we're dealing
9440 with a chimera. For example, in the battle over the question <quote>What is
9441 p2p file sharing?</quote> both sides have it right, and both sides have it
9442 wrong. One side says, <quote>File sharing is just like two kids taping each
9443 others' records&mdash;the sort of thing we've been doing for the last
9444 thirty years without any question at all.</quote> That's true, at least in
9445 part. When I tell my best friend to try out a new CD that I've bought,
9446 but rather than just send the CD, I point him to my p2p server, that
9447 is, in all relevant respects, just like what every executive in every
9448 recording company no doubt did as a kid: sharing music.
9449 </para>
9450 <para>
9451 But the description is also false in part. For when my p2p server is
9452 on a p2p network through which anyone can get access to my music, then
9453 sure, my friends can get access, but it stretches the meaning of
9454 <quote>friends</quote> beyond recognition to say <quote>my ten thousand best friends</quote> can
9455 get access. Whether or not sharing my music with my best friend is
9456 what <quote>we have always been allowed to do,</quote> we have not always been
9457 allowed to share music with <quote>our ten thousand best friends.</quote>
9458 </para>
9459 <para>
9460 Likewise, when the other side says, <quote>File sharing is just like walking
9461 into a Tower Records and taking a CD off the shelf and walking out
9462 with it,</quote> that's true, at least in part. If, after Lyle Lovett
9463 (finally) releases a new album, rather than buying it, I go to Kazaa
9464 and find a free copy to take, that is very much like stealing a copy
9465 from Tower.
9466 <indexterm><primary>Lovett, Lyle</primary></indexterm>
9467 </para>
9468 <para>
9469
9470 <!-- PAGE BREAK 189 -->
9471 But it is not quite stealing from Tower. After all, when I take a CD
9472 from Tower Records, Tower has one less CD to sell. And when I take a
9473 CD from Tower Records, I get a bit of plastic and a cover, and
9474 something to show on my shelves. (And, while we're at it, we could
9475 also note that when I take a CD from Tower Records, the maximum fine
9476 that might be imposed on me, under California law, at least, is
9477 $1,000. According to the RIAA, by contrast, if I download a ten-song
9478 CD, I'm liable for $1,500,000 in damages.)
9479 </para>
9480 <para>
9481 The point is not that it is as neither side describes. The point is
9482 that it is both&mdash;both as the RIAA describes it and as Kazaa
9483 describes it. It is a chimera. And rather than simply denying what the
9484 other side asserts, we need to begin to think about how we should
9485 respond to this chimera. What rules should govern it?
9486 </para>
9487 <para>
9488 We could respond by simply pretending that it is not a chimera. We
9489 could, with the RIAA, decide that every act of file sharing should be
9490 a felony. We could prosecute families for millions of dollars in
9491 damages just because file sharing occurred on a family computer. And
9492 we can get universities to monitor all computer traffic to make sure
9493 that no computer is used to commit this crime. These responses might
9494 be extreme, but each of them has either been proposed or actually
9495 implemented.<footnote><para>
9496 <!-- f2. -->
9497 <indexterm><primary>ISPs (Internet service providers), user identities revealed by</primary></indexterm>
9498 For an excellent summary, see the report prepared by GartnerG2 and the
9499 Berkman Center for Internet and Society at Harvard Law School,
9500 <quote>Copyright and Digital Media in a Post-Napster World,</quote> 27 June 2003,
9501 available at
9502 <ulink url="http://free-culture.cc/notes/">link
9503 #33</ulink>. Reps. John Conyers Jr. (D-Mich.) and Howard L. Berman
9504 (D-Calif.) have introduced a bill that would treat unauthorized
9505 on-line copying as a felony offense with punishments ranging as high
9506 as five years imprisonment; see Jon Healey, <quote>House Bill Aims to Up
9507 Stakes on Piracy,</quote> <citetitle>Los Angeles Times</citetitle>, 17 July 2003, available at
9508 <ulink url="http://free-culture.cc/notes/">link #34</ulink>. Civil
9509 penalties are currently set at $150,000 per copied song. For a recent
9510 (and unsuccessful) legal challenge to the RIAA's demand that an ISP
9511 reveal the identity of a user accused of sharing more than 600 songs
9512 through a family computer, see <citetitle>RIAA</citetitle> v. <citetitle>Verizon Internet Services (In
9513 re. Verizon Internet Services)</citetitle>, 240 F. Supp. 2d 24
9514 (D.D.C. 2003). Such a user could face liability ranging as high as $90
9515 million. Such astronomical figures furnish the RIAA with a powerful
9516 arsenal in its prosecution of file sharers. Settlements ranging from
9517 $12,000 to $17,500 for four students accused of heavy file sharing on
9518 university networks must have seemed a mere pittance next to the $98
9519 billion the RIAA could seek should the matter proceed to court. See
9520 Elizabeth Young, <quote>Downloading Could Lead to Fines,</quote> redandblack.com,
9521 August 2003, available at
9522 <ulink url="http://free-culture.cc/notes/">link #35</ulink>. For an
9523 example of the RIAA's targeting of student file sharing, and of the
9524 subpoenas issued to universities to reveal student file-sharer
9525 identities, see James Collins, <quote>RIAA Steps Up Bid to Force BC, MIT to
9526 Name Students,</quote> <citetitle>Boston Globe</citetitle>, 8 August 2003, D3, available at
9527 <ulink url="http://free-culture.cc/notes/">link #36</ulink>.
9528 <indexterm><primary>Conyers, John, Jr.</primary></indexterm>
9529 <indexterm><primary>Berman, Howard L.</primary></indexterm>
9530 </para></footnote>
9531
9532 </para>
9533 <indexterm startref='idxchimera' class='endofrange'/>
9534 <para>
9535 Alternatively, we could respond to file sharing the way many kids act
9536 as though we've responded. We could totally legalize it. Let there be
9537 no copyright liability, either civil or criminal, for making
9538 copyrighted content available on the Net. Make file sharing like
9539 gossip: regulated, if at all, by social norms but not by law.
9540 </para>
9541 <para>
9542 Either response is possible. I think either would be a mistake.
9543 Rather than embrace one of these two extremes, we should embrace
9544 something that recognizes the truth in both. And while I end this book
9545 with a sketch of a system that does just that, my aim in the next
9546 chapter is to show just how awful it would be for us to adopt the
9547 zero-tolerance extreme. I believe <emphasis>either</emphasis> extreme
9548 would be worse than a reasonable alternative. But I believe the
9549 zero-tolerance solution would be the worse of the two extremes.
9550 </para>
9551 <para>
9552
9553 <!-- PAGE BREAK 190 -->
9554 Yet zero tolerance is increasingly our government's policy. In the
9555 middle of the chaos that the Internet has created, an extraordinary
9556 land grab is occurring. The law and technology are being shifted to
9557 give content holders a kind of control over our culture that they have
9558 never had before. And in this extremism, many an opportunity for new
9559 innovation and new creativity will be lost.
9560 </para>
9561 <para>
9562 I'm not talking about the opportunities for kids to <quote>steal</quote> music. My
9563 focus instead is the commercial and cultural innovation that this war
9564 will also kill. We have never seen the power to innovate spread so
9565 broadly among our citizens, and we have just begun to see the
9566 innovation that this power will unleash. Yet the Internet has already
9567 seen the passing of one cycle of innovation around technologies to
9568 distribute content. The law is responsible for this passing. As the
9569 vice president for global public policy at one of these new
9570 innovators, eMusic.com, put it when criticizing the DMCA's added
9571 protection for copyrighted material,
9572 </para>
9573 <blockquote>
9574 <para>
9575 eMusic opposes music piracy. We are a distributor of copyrighted
9576 material, and we want to protect those rights.
9577 </para>
9578 <para>
9579 But building a technology fortress that locks in the clout of the
9580 major labels is by no means the only way to protect copyright
9581 interests, nor is it necessarily the best. It is simply too early to
9582 answer that question. Market forces operating naturally may very well
9583 produce a totally different industry model.
9584 </para>
9585 <para>
9586 This is a critical point. The choices that industry sectors make
9587 with respect to these systems will in many ways directly shape the
9588 market for digital media and the manner in which digital media
9589 are distributed. This in turn will directly influence the options
9590 that are available to consumers, both in terms of the ease with
9591 which they will be able to access digital media and the equipment
9592 that they will require to do so. Poor choices made this early in the
9593 game will retard the growth of this market, hurting everyone's
9594 interests.<footnote><para>
9595 <!-- f3. -->
9596 WIPO and the DMCA One Year Later: Assessing Consumer Access to Digital
9597 Entertainment on the Internet and Other Media: Hearing Before the
9598 Subcommittee on Telecommunications, Trade, and Consumer Protection,
9599 House Committee on Commerce, 106th Cong. 29 (1999) (statement of Peter
9600 Harter, vice president, Global Public Policy and Standards,
9601 EMusic.com), available in LEXIS, Federal Document Clearing House
9602 Congressional Testimony File. </para></footnote>
9603 </para>
9604 </blockquote>
9605 <!-- PAGE BREAK 191 -->
9606 <para>
9607 In April 2001, eMusic.com was purchased by Vivendi Universal,
9608 one of <quote>the major labels.</quote> Its position on these matters has now
9609 changed.
9610 <indexterm><primary>Vivendi Universal</primary></indexterm>
9611 </para>
9612 <para>
9613 Reversing our tradition of tolerance now will not merely quash
9614 piracy. It will sacrifice values that are important to this culture,
9615 and will kill opportunities that could be extraordinarily valuable.
9616 </para>
9617
9618 <!-- PAGE BREAK 192 -->
9619 </chapter>
9620 <chapter label="12" id="harms">
9621 <title>Chapter Twelve: Harms</title>
9622 <para>
9623 <emphasis role='strong'>To fight</emphasis> <quote>piracy,</quote> to
9624 protect <quote>property,</quote> the content industry has launched a
9625 war. Lobbying and lots of campaign contributions have now brought the
9626 government into this war. As with any war, this one will have both
9627 direct and collateral damage. As with any war of prohibition, these
9628 damages will be suffered most by our own people.
9629 </para>
9630 <para>
9631 My aim so far has been to describe the consequences of this war, in
9632 particular, the consequences for <quote>free culture.</quote> But my aim now is to
9633 extend this description of consequences into an argument. Is this war
9634 justified?
9635 </para>
9636 <para>
9637 In my view, it is not. There is no good reason why this time, for the
9638 first time, the law should defend the old against the new, just when the
9639 power of the property called <quote>intellectual property</quote> is at its greatest in
9640 our history.
9641 </para>
9642 <indexterm><primary>Causby, Thomas Lee</primary></indexterm>
9643 <indexterm><primary>Causby, Tinie</primary></indexterm>
9644 <para>
9645 Yet <quote>common sense</quote> does not see it this way. Common sense is still on
9646 the side of the Causbys and the content industry. The extreme claims
9647 of control in the name of property still resonate; the uncritical
9648 rejection of <quote>piracy</quote> still has play.
9649 </para>
9650 <indexterm><primary>Armstrong, Edwin Howard</primary></indexterm>
9651 <para>
9652 <!-- PAGE BREAK 193 -->
9653 There will be many consequences of continuing this war. I want to
9654 describe just three. All three might be said to be unintended. I am quite
9655 confident the third is unintended. I'm less sure about the first two. The
9656 first two protect modern RCAs, but there is no Howard Armstrong in
9657 the wings to fight today's monopolists of culture.
9658 </para>
9659 <section id="constrain">
9660 <title>Constraining Creators</title>
9661 <para>
9662 In the next ten years we will see an explosion of digital
9663 technologies. These technologies will enable almost anyone to capture
9664 and share content. Capturing and sharing content, of course, is what
9665 humans have done since the dawn of man. It is how we learn and
9666 communicate. But capturing and sharing through digital technology is
9667 different. The fidelity and power are different. You could send an
9668 e-mail telling someone about a joke you saw on Comedy Central, or you
9669 could send the clip. You could write an essay about the
9670 inconsistencies in the arguments of the politician you most love to
9671 hate, or you could make a short film that puts statement against
9672 statement. You could write a poem to express your love, or you could
9673 weave together a string&mdash;a mash-up&mdash; of songs from your
9674 favorite artists in a collage and make it available on the Net.
9675 </para>
9676 <indexterm><primary>democracy</primary><secondary>digital sharing within</secondary></indexterm>
9677 <indexterm><primary>Kodak cameras</primary></indexterm>
9678 <para>
9679 This digital <quote>capturing and sharing</quote> is in part an extension of the
9680 capturing and sharing that has always been integral to our culture,
9681 and in part it is something new. It is continuous with the Kodak, but
9682 it explodes the boundaries of Kodak-like technologies. The technology
9683 of digital <quote>capturing and sharing</quote> promises a world of extraordinarily
9684 diverse creativity that can be easily and broadly shared. And as that
9685 creativity is applied to democracy, it will enable a broad range of
9686 citizens to use technology to express and criticize and contribute to
9687 the culture all around.
9688 </para>
9689 <para>
9690 Technology has thus given us an opportunity to do something with
9691 culture that has only ever been possible for individuals in small groups,
9692
9693 <!-- PAGE BREAK 194 -->
9694
9695 isolated from others. Think about an old man telling a story to a
9696 collection of neighbors in a small town. Now imagine that same
9697 storytelling extended across the globe.
9698 </para>
9699 <para>
9700 Yet all this is possible only if the activity is presumptively legal. In
9701 the current regime of legal regulation, it is not. Forget file sharing for
9702 a moment. Think about your favorite amazing sites on the Net. Web
9703 sites that offer plot summaries from forgotten television shows; sites
9704 that catalog cartoons from the 1960s; sites that mix images and sound
9705 to criticize politicians or businesses; sites that gather newspaper articles
9706 on remote topics of science or culture. There is a vast amount of creative
9707 work spread across the Internet. But as the law is currently crafted, this
9708 work is presumptively illegal.
9709 </para>
9710 <indexterm><primary>WorldCom</primary></indexterm>
9711 <indexterm><primary>copyright infringement lawsuits</primary><secondary>exaggerated claims of</secondary></indexterm>
9712 <indexterm><primary>copyright infringement lawsuits</primary><secondary>in recording industry</secondary></indexterm>
9713 <indexterm><primary>doctors malpractice claims against</primary></indexterm>
9714 <indexterm><primary>Jordan, Jesse</primary></indexterm>
9715 <para>
9716 That presumption will increasingly chill creativity, as the
9717 examples of extreme penalties for vague infringements continue to
9718 proliferate. It is impossible to get a clear sense of what's allowed
9719 and what's not, and at the same time, the penalties for crossing the
9720 line are astonishingly harsh. The four students who were threatened
9721 by the RIAA (Jesse Jordan of chapter <xref xrefstyle="select:
9722 labelnumber" linkend="catalogs"/> was just one) were threatened with a
9723 $98 billion lawsuit for building search engines that permitted songs
9724 to be copied. Yet World-Com&mdash;which defrauded investors of $11
9725 billion, resulting in a loss to investors in market capitalization of
9726 over $200 billion&mdash;received a fine of a mere $750
9727 million.<footnote><para>
9728 <!-- f1. -->
9729 See Lynne W. Jeter, <citetitle>Disconnected: Deceit and Betrayal at WorldCom</citetitle>
9730 (Hoboken, N.J.: John Wiley &amp; Sons, 2003), 176, 204; for details of
9731 the settlement, see MCI press release, <quote>MCI Wins U.S. District Court
9732 Approval for SEC Settlement</quote> (7 July 2003), available at
9733 <ulink url="http://free-culture.cc/notes/">link #37</ulink>.
9734 <indexterm><primary>WorldCom</primary></indexterm>
9735 </para></footnote>
9736 And under legislation being pushed in Congress right now, a doctor who
9737 negligently removes the wrong leg in an operation would be liable for
9738 no more than $250,000 in damages for pain and
9739 suffering.<footnote>
9740 <para>
9741 <!-- f2. -->
9742 The bill, modeled after California's tort reform model, was passed in the
9743 House of Representatives but defeated in a Senate vote in July 2003. For
9744 an overview, see Tanya Albert, <quote>Measure Stalls in Senate: <quote>We'll Be Back,</quote>
9745 Say Tort Reformers,</quote> amednews.com, 28 July 2003, available at
9746 <ulink url="http://free-culture.cc/notes/">link #38</ulink>,
9747 and <quote>Senate Turns Back Malpractice Caps,</quote> CBSNews.com, 9 July 2003,
9748 available at
9749 <ulink url="http://free-culture.cc/notes/">link #39</ulink>. President Bush has continued to urge tort reform in
9750 recent months.
9751 <indexterm><primary>tort reform</primary></indexterm>
9752 <indexterm><primary>Bush, George W.</primary></indexterm>
9753 </para></footnote>
9754 Can common sense recognize the absurdity in a world where
9755 the maximum fine for downloading two songs off the Internet is more
9756 than the fine for a doctor's negligently butchering a patient?
9757 </para>
9758 <indexterm><primary>art, underground</primary></indexterm>
9759 <para>
9760 The consequence of this legal uncertainty, tied to these extremely
9761 high penalties, is that an extraordinary amount of creativity will
9762 either never be exercised, or never be exercised in the open. We drive
9763 this creative process underground by branding the modern-day Walt
9764 Disneys <quote>pirates.</quote> We make it impossible for businesses to rely upon a
9765 public domain, because the boundaries of the public domain are
9766 designed to
9767
9768 <!-- PAGE BREAK 195 -->
9769 be unclear. It never pays to do anything except pay for the right
9770 to create, and hence only those who can pay are allowed to create. As
9771 was the case in the Soviet Union, though for very different reasons,
9772 we will begin to see a world of underground art&mdash;not because the
9773 message is necessarily political, or because the subject is
9774 controversial, but because the very act of creating the art is legally
9775 fraught. Already, exhibits of <quote>illegal art</quote> tour the United
9776 States.<footnote><para>
9777 <!-- f3. -->
9778
9779 See Danit Lidor, <quote>Artists Just Wanna Be Free,</quote> <citetitle>Wired</citetitle>, 7 July
9780 2003, available at
9781 <ulink url="http://free-culture.cc/notes/">link #40</ulink>. For an overview of the exhibition, see
9782 <ulink url="http://free-culture.cc/notes/">link #41</ulink>.
9783 </para></footnote>
9784 In what does their <quote>illegality</quote> consist?
9785 In the act of mixing the culture around us with an expression that is
9786 critical or reflective.
9787 </para>
9788 <indexterm><primary>ISPs (Internet service providers), user identities revealed by</primary></indexterm>
9789 <para>
9790 Part of the reason for this fear of illegality has to do with the
9791 changing law. I described that change in detail in chapter
9792 <xref xrefstyle="select: labelnumber" linkend="property-i"/>. But an
9793 even bigger part has to do with the increasing ease with which
9794 infractions can be tracked. As users of file-sharing systems
9795 discovered in 2002, it is a trivial matter for copyright owners to get
9796 courts to order Internet service providers to reveal who has what
9797 content. It is as if your cassette tape player transmitted a list of
9798 the songs that you played in the privacy of your own home that anyone
9799 could tune into for whatever reason they chose.
9800 </para>
9801 <indexterm><primary>images, ownership of</primary></indexterm>
9802 <para>
9803 Never in our history has a painter had to worry about whether
9804 his painting infringed on someone else's work; but the modern-day
9805 painter, using the tools of Photoshop, sharing content on the Web,
9806 must worry all the time. Images are all around, but the only safe images
9807 to use in the act of creation are those purchased from Corbis or another
9808 image farm. And in purchasing, censoring happens. There is a free
9809 market in pencils; we needn't worry about its effect on creativity. But
9810 there is a highly regulated, monopolized market in cultural icons; the
9811 right to cultivate and transform them is not similarly free.
9812 </para>
9813 <para>
9814 Lawyers rarely see this because lawyers are rarely empirical. As I
9815 described in chapter
9816 <xref xrefstyle="select: labelnumber" linkend="recorders"/>, in
9817 response to the story about documentary filmmaker Jon Else, I have
9818 been lectured again and again by lawyers who insist Else's use was
9819 fair use, and hence I am wrong to say that the law regulates such a
9820 use.
9821 </para>
9822 <para>
9823
9824 <!-- PAGE BREAK 196 -->
9825 But fair use in America simply means the right to hire a lawyer to
9826 defend your right to create. And as lawyers love to forget, our system
9827 for defending rights such as fair use is astonishingly bad&mdash;in
9828 practically every context, but especially here. It costs too much, it
9829 delivers too slowly, and what it delivers often has little connection
9830 to the justice underlying the claim. The legal system may be tolerable
9831 for the very rich. For everyone else, it is an embarrassment to a
9832 tradition that prides itself on the rule of law.
9833 </para>
9834 <para>
9835 Judges and lawyers can tell themselves that fair use provides adequate
9836 <quote>breathing room</quote> between regulation by the law and the access the law
9837 should allow. But it is a measure of how out of touch our legal system
9838 has become that anyone actually believes this. The rules that
9839 publishers impose upon writers, the rules that film distributors
9840 impose upon filmmakers, the rules that newspapers impose upon
9841 journalists&mdash; these are the real laws governing creativity. And
9842 these rules have little relationship to the <quote>law</quote> with which judges
9843 comfort themselves.
9844 </para>
9845 <para>
9846 For in a world that threatens $150,000 for a single willful
9847 infringement of a copyright, and which demands tens of thousands of
9848 dollars to even defend against a copyright infringement claim, and
9849 which would never return to the wrongfully accused defendant anything
9850 of the costs she suffered to defend her right to speak&mdash;in that
9851 world, the astonishingly broad regulations that pass under the name
9852 <quote>copyright</quote> silence speech and creativity. And in that world, it takes
9853 a studied blindness for people to continue to believe they live in a
9854 culture that is free.
9855 </para>
9856 <para>
9857 As Jed Horovitz, the businessman behind Video Pipeline, said to me,
9858 </para>
9859 <blockquote>
9860 <para>
9861 We're losing [creative] opportunities right and left. Creative people
9862 are being forced not to express themselves. Thoughts are not being
9863 expressed. And while a lot of stuff may [still] be created, it still
9864 won't get distributed. Even if the stuff gets made &hellip; you're not
9865 going to get it distributed in the mainstream media unless
9866 <!-- PAGE BREAK 197 -->
9867 you've got a little note from a lawyer saying, <quote>This has been
9868 cleared.</quote> You're not even going to get it on PBS without that kind of
9869 permission. That's the point at which they control it.
9870 </para>
9871 </blockquote>
9872 </section>
9873 <section id="innovators">
9874 <title>Constraining Innovators</title>
9875 <indexterm id='idxcopyrightlawinnovationhamperedby' class='startofrange'><primary>copyright law</primary><secondary>innovation hampered by</secondary></indexterm>
9876 <indexterm id='idxinnovationindustryestablishmentopposedto2' class='startofrange'><primary>innovation</primary><secondary>industry establishment opposed to</secondary></indexterm>
9877 <indexterm id='idxregulationasestablishmentprotectionism2' class='startofrange'><primary>regulation</primary><secondary>as establishment protectionism</secondary></indexterm>
9878 <para>
9879 The story of the last section was a crunchy-lefty
9880 story&mdash;creativity quashed, artists who can't speak, yada yada
9881 yada. Maybe that doesn't get you going. Maybe you think there's enough
9882 weird art out there, and enough expression that is critical of what
9883 seems to be just about everything. And if you think that, you might
9884 think there's little in this story to worry you.
9885 </para>
9886 <indexterm id='idxmarketconstraints2' class='startofrange'><primary>market constraints</primary></indexterm>
9887 <para>
9888 But there's an aspect of this story that is not lefty in any sense.
9889 Indeed, it is an aspect that could be written by the most extreme
9890 promarket ideologue. And if you're one of these sorts (and a special
9891 one at that, <xref xrefstyle="select: pagenumber"
9892 linkend="innovators"/> pages into a book like this), then you
9893 can see this other aspect by substituting <quote>free market</quote>
9894 every place I've spoken of <quote>free culture.</quote> The point is
9895 the same, even if the interests affecting culture are more
9896 fundamental.
9897 </para>
9898 <para>
9899 The charge I've been making about the regulation of culture is the
9900 same charge free marketers make about regulating markets. Everyone, of
9901 course, concedes that some regulation of markets is necessary&mdash;at
9902 a minimum, we need rules of property and contract, and courts to
9903 enforce both. Likewise, in this culture debate, everyone concedes that
9904 at least some framework of copyright is also required. But both
9905 perspectives vehemently insist that just because some regulation is
9906 good, it doesn't follow that more regulation is better. And both
9907 perspectives are constantly attuned to the ways in which regulation
9908 simply enables the powerful industries of today to protect themselves
9909 against the competitors of tomorrow.
9910 </para>
9911 <indexterm startref='idxmarketconstraints2' class='endofrange'/>
9912 <indexterm><primary>Barry, Hank</primary></indexterm>
9913 <indexterm><primary>venture capitalists</primary></indexterm>
9914 <para>
9915 This is the single most dramatic effect of the shift in regulatory
9916 <!-- PAGE BREAK 198 -->
9917 strategy that I described in chapter <xref xrefstyle="select:
9918 labelnumber" linkend="property-i"/>. The consequence of this massive
9919 threat of liability tied to the murky boundaries of copyright law is
9920 that innovators who want to innovate in this space can safely innovate
9921 only if they have the sign-off from last generation's dominant
9922 industries. That lesson has been taught through a series of cases
9923 that were designed and executed to teach venture capitalists a
9924 lesson. That lesson&mdash;what former Napster CEO Hank Barry calls a
9925 <quote>nuclear pall</quote> that has fallen over the Valley&mdash;has been learned.
9926 </para>
9927 <indexterm><primary>Future of Ideas, The (Lessig)</primary></indexterm>
9928 <indexterm><primary>Lessig, Lawrence</primary></indexterm>
9929 <para>
9930 Consider one example to make the point, a story whose beginning
9931 I told in <citetitle>The Future of Ideas</citetitle> and which has progressed in a way that
9932 even I (pessimist extraordinaire) would never have predicted.
9933 </para>
9934 <indexterm id='idxmpcom' class='startofrange'><primary>MP3.com</primary></indexterm>
9935 <indexterm id='idxmympcom' class='startofrange'><primary>my.mp3.com</primary></indexterm>
9936 <indexterm><primary>Roberts, Michael</primary></indexterm>
9937 <para>
9938 In 1997, Michael Roberts launched a company called MP3.com. MP3.com
9939 was keen to remake the music business. Their goal was not just to
9940 facilitate new ways to get access to content. Their goal was also to
9941 facilitate new ways to create content. Unlike the major labels,
9942 MP3.com offered creators a venue to distribute their creativity,
9943 without demanding an exclusive engagement from the creators.
9944 </para>
9945 <indexterm><primary>Lovett, Lyle</primary></indexterm>
9946 <indexterm id='idxcdsprefdata' class='startofrange'><primary>CDs</primary><secondary>preference data on</secondary></indexterm>
9947 <para>
9948 To make this system work, however, MP3.com needed a reliable way to
9949 recommend music to its users. The idea behind this alternative was to
9950 leverage the revealed preferences of music listeners to recommend new
9951 artists. If you like Lyle Lovett, you're likely to enjoy Bonnie
9952 Raitt. And so on.
9953 </para>
9954 <para>
9955 This idea required a simple way to gather data about user preferences.
9956 MP3.com came up with an extraordinarily clever way to gather this
9957 preference data. In January 2000, the company launched a service
9958 called my.mp3.com. Using software provided by MP3.com, a user would
9959 sign into an account and then insert into her computer a CD. The
9960 software would identify the CD, and then give the user access to that
9961 content. So, for example, if you inserted a CD by Jill Sobule, then
9962 wherever you were&mdash;at work or at home&mdash;you could get access
9963 to that music once you signed into your account. The system was
9964 therefore a kind of music-lockbox.
9965 </para>
9966 <para>
9967 No doubt some could use this system to illegally copy content. But
9968 that opportunity existed with or without MP3.com. The aim of the
9969
9970 <!-- PAGE BREAK 199 -->
9971 my.mp3.com service was to give users access to their own content, and
9972 as a by-product, by seeing the content they already owned, to discover
9973 the kind of content the users liked.
9974 </para>
9975 <indexterm startref='idxcdsprefdata' class='endofrange'/>
9976 <para>
9977 To make this system function, however, MP3.com needed to copy 50,000
9978 CDs to a server. (In principle, it could have been the user who
9979 uploaded the music, but that would have taken a great deal of time,
9980 and would have produced a product of questionable quality.) It
9981 therefore purchased 50,000 CDs from a store, and started the process
9982 of making copies of those CDs. Again, it would not serve the content
9983 from those copies to anyone except those who authenticated that they
9984 had a copy of the CD they wanted to access. So while this was 50,000
9985 copies, it was 50,000 copies directed at giving customers something
9986 they had already bought.
9987 </para>
9988 <indexterm id='idxvivendiuniversal' class='startofrange'><primary>Vivendi Universal</primary></indexterm>
9989 <indexterm><primary>copyright infringement lawsuits</primary><secondary>distribution technology targeted in</secondary></indexterm>
9990 <indexterm><primary>copyright infringement lawsuits</primary><secondary>exaggerated claims of</secondary></indexterm>
9991 <indexterm id='idxcopyrightinfringementlawsuitsinrecordingindustry3' class='startofrange'><primary>copyright infringement lawsuits</primary><secondary>in recording industry</secondary></indexterm>
9992 <indexterm><primary>recording industry</primary><secondary>copyright infringement lawsuits of</secondary></indexterm>
9993 <indexterm><primary>Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA)</primary><secondary>copyright infringement lawsuits filed by</secondary></indexterm>
9994 <indexterm><primary>regulation</primary><secondary>outsize penalties of</secondary></indexterm>
9995 <para>
9996 Nine days after MP3.com launched its service, the five major labels,
9997 headed by the RIAA, brought a lawsuit against MP3.com. MP3.com settled
9998 with four of the five. Nine months later, a federal judge found
9999 MP3.com to have been guilty of willful infringement with respect to
10000 the fifth. Applying the law as it is, the judge imposed a fine against
10001 MP3.com of $118 million. MP3.com then settled with the remaining
10002 plaintiff, Vivendi Universal, paying over $54 million. Vivendi
10003 purchased MP3.com just about a year later.
10004 </para>
10005 <para>
10006 That part of the story I have told before. Now consider its conclusion.
10007 </para>
10008 <para>
10009 After Vivendi purchased MP3.com, Vivendi turned around and filed a
10010 malpractice lawsuit against the lawyers who had advised it that they
10011 had a good faith claim that the service they wanted to offer would be
10012 considered legal under copyright law. This lawsuit alleged that it
10013 should have been obvious that the courts would find this behavior
10014 illegal; therefore, this lawsuit sought to punish any lawyer who had
10015 dared to suggest that the law was less restrictive than the labels
10016 demanded.
10017 </para>
10018 <indexterm startref='idxvivendiuniversal' class='endofrange'/>
10019 <para>
10020 The clear purpose of this lawsuit (which was settled for an
10021 unspecified amount shortly after the story was no longer covered in
10022 the press) was to send an unequivocal message to lawyers advising
10023 clients in this
10024 <!-- PAGE BREAK 200 -->
10025 space: It is not just your clients who might suffer if the content
10026 industry directs its guns against them. It is also you. So those of
10027 you who believe the law should be less restrictive should realize that
10028 such a view of the law will cost you and your firm dearly.
10029 </para>
10030 <indexterm startref='idxmpcom' class='endofrange'/>
10031 <indexterm startref='idxmympcom' class='endofrange'/>
10032 <indexterm startref='idxcopyrightinfringementlawsuitsinrecordingindustry3' class='endofrange'/>
10033 <indexterm><primary>Barry, Hank</primary></indexterm>
10034 <indexterm><primary>copyright infringement lawsuits</primary><secondary>distribution technology targeted in</secondary></indexterm>
10035 <indexterm id='idxbmw' class='startofrange'><primary>BMW</primary></indexterm>
10036 <indexterm id='idxcarsmpsoundsystemsin' class='startofrange'><primary>cars, MP3 sound systems in</primary></indexterm>
10037 <indexterm><primary>EMI</primary></indexterm>
10038 <indexterm><primary>Hummer, John</primary></indexterm>
10039 <indexterm><primary>Barry, Hank</primary></indexterm>
10040 <indexterm><primary>Hummer Winblad</primary></indexterm>
10041 <indexterm><primary>MP3 players</primary></indexterm>
10042 <indexterm><primary>Napster</primary><secondary>venture capital for</secondary></indexterm>
10043 <indexterm id='idxneedlemanrafe' class='startofrange'><primary>Needleman, Rafe</primary></indexterm>
10044 <indexterm><primary>Universal Music Group</primary></indexterm>
10045 <indexterm><primary>venture capitalists</primary></indexterm>
10046 <para>
10047 This strategy is not just limited to the lawyers. In April 2003,
10048 Universal and EMI brought a lawsuit against Hummer Winblad, the
10049 venture capital firm (VC) that had funded Napster at a certain stage of
10050 its development, its cofounder (John Hummer), and general partner
10051 (Hank Barry).<footnote><para>
10052 <!-- f4. -->
10053 See Joseph Menn, <quote>Universal, EMI Sue Napster Investor,</quote> <citetitle>Los Angeles
10054 Times</citetitle>, 23 April 2003. For a parallel argument about the effects on
10055 innovation in the distribution of music, see Janelle Brown, <quote>The Music
10056 Revolution Will Not Be Digitized,</quote> Salon.com, 1 June 2001, available
10057 at <ulink url="http://free-culture.cc/notes/">link #42</ulink>.
10058 See also Jon Healey, <quote>Online Music Services Besieged,</quote> <citetitle>Los Angeles
10059 Times</citetitle>, 28 May 2001.
10060 </para></footnote>
10061 The claim here, as well, was that the VC should have recognized the
10062 right of the content industry to control how the industry should
10063 develop. They should be held personally liable for funding a company
10064 whose business turned out to be beyond the law. Here again, the aim of
10065 the lawsuit is transparent: Any VC now recognizes that if you fund a
10066 company whose business is not approved of by the dinosaurs, you are at
10067 risk not just in the marketplace, but in the courtroom as well. Your
10068 investment buys you not only a company, it also buys you a lawsuit.
10069 So extreme has the environment become that even car manufacturers are
10070 afraid of technologies that touch content. In an article in
10071 <citetitle>Business 2.0</citetitle>, Rafe Needleman describes a
10072 discussion with BMW:
10073 </para>
10074 <blockquote>
10075 <para>
10076 I asked why, with all the storage capacity and computer power in
10077 the car, there was no way to play MP3 files. I was told that BMW
10078 engineers in Germany had rigged a new vehicle to play MP3s via
10079 the car's built-in sound system, but that the company's marketing
10080 and legal departments weren't comfortable with pushing this
10081 forward for release stateside. Even today, no new cars are sold in the
10082 United States with bona fide MP3 players. &hellip; <footnote>
10083 <para>
10084 <!-- f5. -->
10085 Rafe Needleman, <quote>Driving in Cars with MP3s,</quote> <citetitle>Business 2.0</citetitle>, 16 June
10086 2003, available at
10087 <ulink url="http://free-culture.cc/notes/">link #43</ulink>. I am grateful
10088 to Dr. Mohammad Al-Ubaydli for this example.
10089 <indexterm><primary>Needleman, Rafe</primary></indexterm>
10090 </para></footnote>
10091 </para>
10092 </blockquote>
10093 <indexterm startref='idxbmw' class='endofrange'/>
10094 <indexterm startref='idxcarsmpsoundsystemsin' class='endofrange'/>
10095 <indexterm startref='idxneedlemanrafe' class='endofrange'/>
10096 <para>
10097 This is the world of the mafia&mdash;filled with <quote>your money or your
10098 life</quote> offers, governed in the end not by courts but by the threats
10099 that the law empowers copyright holders to exercise. It is a system
10100 that will obviously and necessarily stifle new innovation. It is hard
10101 enough to start a company. It is impossibly hard if that company is
10102 constantly threatened by litigation.
10103 </para>
10104 <indexterm id='idxmarketconstraints3' class='startofrange'><primary>market constraints</primary></indexterm>
10105 <indexterm id='idxpermissionculturetransactioncostof' class='startofrange'><primary>permission culture</primary><secondary>transaction cost of</secondary></indexterm>
10106 <indexterm><primary>regulation</primary><secondary>outsize penalties of</secondary></indexterm>
10107 <indexterm><primary>technology</primary><secondary>legal murkiness on</secondary></indexterm>
10108 <para>
10109
10110 <!-- PAGE BREAK 201 -->
10111 The point is not that businesses should have a right to start illegal
10112 enterprises. The point is the definition of <quote>illegal.</quote> The law is a
10113 mess of uncertainty. We have no good way to know how it should apply
10114 to new technologies. Yet by reversing our tradition of judicial
10115 deference, and by embracing the astonishingly high penalties that
10116 copyright law imposes, that uncertainty now yields a reality which is
10117 far more conservative than is right. If the law imposed the death
10118 penalty for parking tickets, we'd not only have fewer parking tickets,
10119 we'd also have much less driving. The same principle applies to
10120 innovation. If innovation is constantly checked by this uncertain and
10121 unlimited liability, we will have much less vibrant innovation and
10122 much less creativity.
10123 </para>
10124 <para>
10125 The point is directly parallel to the crunchy-lefty point about fair
10126 use. Whatever the <quote>real</quote> law is, realism about the effect of law in
10127 both contexts is the same. This wildly punitive system of regulation
10128 will systematically stifle creativity and innovation. It will protect
10129 some industries and some creators, but it will harm industry and
10130 creativity generally. Free market and free culture depend upon vibrant
10131 competition. Yet the effect of the law today is to stifle just this
10132 kind of competition. The effect is to produce an overregulated
10133 culture, just as the effect of too much control in the market is to
10134 produce an overregulated-regulated market.
10135 </para>
10136 <para>
10137 The building of a permission culture, rather than a free culture, is
10138 the first important way in which the changes I have described will
10139 burden innovation. A permission culture means a lawyer's
10140 culture&mdash;a culture in which the ability to create requires a call
10141 to your lawyer. Again, I am not antilawyer, at least when they're kept
10142 in their proper place. I am certainly not antilaw. But our profession
10143 has lost the sense of its limits. And leaders in our profession have
10144 lost an appreciation of the high costs that our profession imposes
10145 upon others. The inefficiency of the law is an embarrassment to our
10146 tradition. And while I believe our profession should therefore do
10147 everything it can to make the law more efficient, it should at least
10148 do everything it can to limit the reach of the
10149 <!-- PAGE BREAK 202 -->
10150 law where the law is not doing any good. The transaction costs buried
10151 within a permission culture are enough to bury a wide range of
10152 creativity. Someone needs to do a lot of justifying to justify that
10153 result.
10154 </para>
10155 <indexterm startref='idxmarketconstraints3' class='endofrange'/>
10156 <indexterm startref='idxpermissionculturetransactioncostof' class='endofrange'/>
10157 <para>
10158 <emphasis role='strong'>The uncertainty</emphasis> of the law is one
10159 burden on innovation. There is a second burden that operates more
10160 directly. This is the effort by many in the content industry to use
10161 the law to directly regulate the technology of the Internet so that it
10162 better protects their content.
10163 </para>
10164 <para>
10165 The motivation for this response is obvious. The Internet enables the
10166 efficient spread of content. That efficiency is a feature of the
10167 Internet's design. But from the perspective of the content industry,
10168 this feature is a <quote>bug.</quote> The efficient spread of content means that
10169 content distributors have a harder time controlling the distribution
10170 of content. One obvious response to this efficiency is thus to make
10171 the Internet less efficient. If the Internet enables <quote>piracy,</quote> then,
10172 this response says, we should break the kneecaps of the Internet.
10173 </para>
10174 <indexterm><primary>broadcast flag</primary></indexterm>
10175 <para>
10176 The examples of this form of legislation are many. At the urging of
10177 the content industry, some in Congress have threatened legislation that
10178 would require computers to determine whether the content they access
10179 is protected or not, and to disable the spread of protected content.<footnote><para>
10180 <!-- f6. --> <quote>Copyright and Digital Media in a Post-Napster World,</quote> GartnerG2 and
10181 the Berkman Center for Internet and Society at Harvard Law School
10182 (2003), 33&ndash;35, available at
10183 <ulink url="http://free-culture.cc/notes/">link #44</ulink>.
10184 </para></footnote>
10185 Congress has already launched proceedings to explore a mandatory
10186 <quote>broadcast flag</quote> that would be required on any device capable of
10187 transmitting digital video (i.e., a computer), and that would disable
10188 the copying of any content that is marked with a broadcast flag. Other
10189 members of Congress have proposed immunizing content providers from
10190 liability for technology they might deploy that would hunt down
10191 copyright violators and disable their machines.<footnote><para>
10192 <!-- f7. -->
10193 GartnerG2, 26&ndash;27.
10194 </para></footnote>
10195 </para>
10196 <para>
10197 In one sense, these solutions seem sensible. If the problem is the
10198 code, why not regulate the code to remove the problem. But any
10199 regulation of technical infrastructure will always be tuned to the
10200 particular technology of the day. It will impose significant burdens
10201 and costs on
10202 <!-- PAGE BREAK 203 -->
10203 the technology, but will likely be eclipsed by advances around exactly
10204 those requirements.
10205 </para>
10206 <indexterm><primary>Intel</primary></indexterm>
10207 <para>
10208 In March 2002, a broad coalition of technology companies, led by
10209 Intel, tried to get Congress to see the harm that such legislation
10210 would impose.<footnote><para>
10211 <!-- f8. -->
10212 See David McGuire, <quote>Tech Execs Square Off Over Piracy,</quote> Newsbytes,
10213 February 2002 (Entertainment).
10214 </para></footnote>
10215 Their argument was obviously not that copyright should not be
10216 protected. Instead, they argued, any protection should not do more
10217 harm than good.
10218 </para>
10219 <para>
10220 <emphasis role='strong'>There is one</emphasis> more obvious way in
10221 which this war has harmed innovation&mdash;again, a story that will be
10222 quite familiar to the free market crowd.
10223 </para>
10224 <para>
10225 Copyright may be property, but like all property, it is also a form
10226 of regulation. It is a regulation that benefits some and harms others.
10227 When done right, it benefits creators and harms leeches. When done
10228 wrong, it is regulation the powerful use to defeat competitors.
10229 </para>
10230 <indexterm><primary>cassette recording</primary><secondary>VCRs</secondary></indexterm>
10231 <indexterm><primary>VCRs</primary></indexterm>
10232 <indexterm><primary>statutory licenses</primary></indexterm>
10233 <indexterm><primary>copyright law</primary><secondary>statutory licenses in</secondary></indexterm>
10234 <para>
10235 As I described in chapter <xref xrefstyle="select: labelnumber"
10236 linkend="property-i"/>, despite this feature of copyright as
10237 regulation, and subject to important qualifications outlined by
10238 Jessica Litman in her book <citetitle>Digital
10239 Copyright</citetitle>,<footnote><para>
10240 <!-- f9. -->
10241 Jessica Litman, <citetitle>Digital Copyright</citetitle> (Amherst,
10242 N.Y.: Prometheus Books, 2001).
10243 <indexterm><primary>Digital Copyright (Litman)</primary></indexterm>
10244 <indexterm><primary>Litman, Jessica</primary></indexterm>
10245 </para></footnote>
10246 overall this history of copyright is not bad. As chapter
10247 <xref xrefstyle="select: labelnumber" linkend="property-i"/> details,
10248 when new technologies have come along, Congress has struck a balance
10249 to assure that the new is protected from the old. Compulsory, or
10250 statutory, licenses have been one part of that strategy. Free use (as
10251 in the case of the VCR) has been another.
10252 </para>
10253 <para>
10254 But that pattern of deference to new technologies has now changed
10255 with the rise of the Internet. Rather than striking a balance between
10256 the claims of a new technology and the legitimate rights of content
10257 creators, both the courts and Congress have imposed legal restrictions
10258 that will have the effect of smothering the new to benefit the old.
10259 </para>
10260 <indexterm id='idxinternetradioon' class='startofrange'><primary>Internet</primary><secondary>radio on</secondary></indexterm>
10261 <indexterm id='idxradiooninternet' class='startofrange'><primary>radio</primary><secondary>on Internet</secondary></indexterm>
10262 <para>
10263 The response by the courts has been fairly universal.<footnote><para>
10264 <!-- f10. -->
10265 <indexterm><primary>Grokster, Ltd.</primary></indexterm>
10266 The only circuit court exception is found in <citetitle>Recording Industry
10267 Association of America (RIAA)</citetitle> v. <citetitle>Diamond Multimedia Systems</citetitle>, 180 F. 3d
10268 1072 (9th Cir. 1999). There the court of appeals for the Ninth Circuit
10269 reasoned that makers of a portable MP3 player were not liable for
10270 contributory copyright infringement for a device that is unable to
10271 record or redistribute music (a device whose only copying function is
10272 to render portable a music file already stored on a user's hard
10273 drive). At the district court level, the only exception is found in
10274 <citetitle>Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Studios, Inc</citetitle>. v. <citetitle>Grokster, Ltd</citetitle>., 259 F. Supp. 2d
10275 1029 (C.D. Cal., 2003), where the court found the link between the
10276 distributor and any given user's conduct too attenuated to make the
10277 distributor liable for contributory or vicarious infringement
10278 liability.
10279 </para></footnote>
10280 It has been mirrored in the responses threatened and actually
10281 implemented by Congress. I won't catalog all of those responses
10282 here.<footnote><para>
10283 <!-- f11. -->
10284 <indexterm><primary>Tauzin, Billy</primary></indexterm>
10285 <indexterm><primary>Berman, Howard L.</primary></indexterm>
10286 <indexterm><primary>Hollings, Fritz</primary></indexterm>
10287 <indexterm><primary>broadcast flag</primary></indexterm>
10288 For example, in July 2002, Representative Howard Berman introduced the
10289 Peer-to-Peer Piracy Prevention Act (H.R. 5211), which would immunize
10290 copyright holders from liability for damage done to computers when the
10291 copyright holders use technology to stop copyright infringement. In
10292 August 2002, Representative Billy Tauzin introduced a bill to mandate
10293 that technologies capable of rebroadcasting digital copies of films
10294 broadcast on TV (i.e., computers) respect a <quote>broadcast flag</quote> that
10295 would disable copying of that content. And in March of the same year,
10296 Senator Fritz Hollings introduced the Consumer Broadband and Digital
10297 Television Promotion Act, which mandated copyright protection
10298 technology in all digital media devices. See GartnerG2, <quote>Copyright and
10299 Digital Media in a Post-Napster World,</quote> 27 June 2003, 33&ndash;34,
10300 available at
10301 <ulink url="http://free-culture.cc/notes/">link #44</ulink>.
10302 </para></footnote>
10303 But there is one example that captures the flavor of them all. This is
10304 the story of the demise of Internet radio.
10305 </para>
10306 <indexterm><primary>artists</primary><secondary>recording industry payments to</secondary></indexterm>
10307 <indexterm><primary>Kennedy, John F.</primary></indexterm>
10308 <indexterm><primary>Monroe, Marilyn</primary></indexterm>
10309 <indexterm id='idxradiomusicrecordingsplayedon2' class='startofrange'><primary>radio</primary><secondary>music recordings played on</secondary></indexterm>
10310 <para>
10311
10312 <!-- PAGE BREAK 204 -->
10313 As I described in chapter <xref xrefstyle="select: labelnumber"
10314 linkend="pirates"/>, when a radio station plays a song, the recording
10315 artist doesn't get paid for that <quote>radio performance</quote> unless he or she
10316 is also the composer. So, for example if Marilyn Monroe had recorded a
10317 version of <quote>Happy Birthday</quote>&mdash;to memorialize her famous
10318 performance before President Kennedy at Madison Square Garden&mdash;
10319 then whenever that recording was played on the radio, the current
10320 copyright owners of <quote>Happy Birthday</quote> would get some money, whereas
10321 Marilyn Monroe would not.
10322 </para>
10323 <para>
10324 The reasoning behind this balance struck by Congress makes some
10325 sense. The justification was that radio was a kind of advertising. The
10326 recording artist thus benefited because by playing her music, the
10327 radio station was making it more likely that her records would be
10328 purchased. Thus, the recording artist got something, even if only
10329 indirectly. Probably this reasoning had less to do with the result
10330 than with the power of radio stations: Their lobbyists were quite good
10331 at stopping any efforts to get Congress to require compensation to the
10332 recording artists.
10333 </para>
10334 <indexterm startref='idxradiomusicrecordingsplayedon2' class='endofrange'/>
10335 <para>
10336 Enter Internet radio. Like regular radio, Internet radio is a
10337 technology to stream content from a broadcaster to a listener. The
10338 broadcast travels across the Internet, not across the ether of radio
10339 spectrum. Thus, I can <quote>tune in</quote> to an Internet radio station in
10340 Berlin while sitting in San Francisco, even though there's no way for
10341 me to tune in to a regular radio station much beyond the San Francisco
10342 metropolitan area.
10343 </para>
10344 <para>
10345 This feature of the architecture of Internet radio means that there
10346 are potentially an unlimited number of radio stations that a user
10347 could tune in to using her computer, whereas under the existing
10348 architecture for broadcast radio, there is an obvious limit to the
10349 number of broadcasters and clear broadcast frequencies. Internet radio
10350 could therefore be more competitive than regular radio; it could
10351 provide a wider range of selections. And because the potential
10352 audience for Internet radio is the whole world, niche stations could
10353 easily develop and market their content to a relatively large number
10354 of users worldwide. According to some estimates, more than eighty
10355 million users worldwide have tuned in to this new form of radio.
10356 </para>
10357 <indexterm><primary>Armstrong, Edwin Howard</primary></indexterm>
10358 <para>
10359
10360 <!-- PAGE BREAK 205 -->
10361 Internet radio is thus to radio what FM was to AM. It is an
10362 improvement potentially vastly more significant than the FM
10363 improvement over AM, since not only is the technology better, so, too,
10364 is the competition. Indeed, there is a direct parallel between the
10365 fight to establish FM radio and the fight to protect Internet
10366 radio. As one author describes Howard Armstrong's struggle to enable
10367 FM radio,
10368 </para>
10369 <blockquote>
10370 <para>
10371 An almost unlimited number of FM stations was possible in the
10372 shortwaves, thus ending the unnatural restrictions imposed on radio in
10373 the crowded longwaves. If FM were freely developed, the number of
10374 stations would be limited only by economics and competition rather
10375 than by technical restrictions. &hellip; Armstrong likened the situation
10376 that had grown up in radio to that following the invention of the
10377 printing press, when governments and ruling interests attempted to
10378 control this new instrument of mass communications by imposing
10379 restrictive licenses on it. This tyranny was broken only when it
10380 became possible for men freely to acquire printing presses and freely
10381 to run them. FM in this sense was as great an invention as the
10382 printing presses, for it gave radio the opportunity to strike off its
10383 shackles.<footnote><para>
10384 <!-- f12. -->
10385 Lessing, 239.
10386 </para></footnote>
10387 </para>
10388 </blockquote>
10389 <para>
10390 This potential for FM radio was never realized&mdash;not
10391 because Armstrong was wrong about the technology, but because he
10392 underestimated the power of <quote>vested interests, habits, customs and
10393 legislation</quote><footnote><para>
10394 <!-- f13. -->
10395 Ibid., 229.
10396 </para></footnote>
10397 to retard the growth of this competing technology.
10398 </para>
10399 <para>
10400 Now the very same claim could be made about Internet radio. For
10401 again, there is no technical limitation that could restrict the number of
10402 Internet radio stations. The only restrictions on Internet radio are
10403 those imposed by the law. Copyright law is one such law. So the first
10404 question we should ask is, what copyright rules would govern Internet
10405 radio?
10406 </para>
10407 <indexterm id='idxartistsrecordingindustrypaymentsto3' class='startofrange'><primary>artists</primary><secondary>recording industry payments to</secondary></indexterm>
10408 <indexterm><primary>Congress, U.S.</primary><secondary>on copyright laws</secondary></indexterm>
10409 <indexterm><primary>Congress, U.S.</primary><secondary>on radio</secondary></indexterm>
10410 <indexterm><primary>Congress, U.S.</primary><secondary>on recording industry</secondary></indexterm>
10411 <indexterm id='idxrecordingindustryartistremunerationin3' class='startofrange'><primary>recording industry</primary><secondary>artist remuneration in</secondary></indexterm>
10412 <indexterm id='idxrecordingindustryradiobroadcastand2' class='startofrange'><primary>recording industry</primary><secondary>radio broadcast and</secondary></indexterm>
10413 <indexterm id='idxrecordingindustryinternetradiohamperedby' class='startofrange'><primary>recording industry</primary><secondary>Internet radio hampered by</secondary></indexterm>
10414 <indexterm id='idxrecordingindustryassociationofamericariaaoninternetradiofees' class='startofrange'><primary>Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA)</primary><secondary>on Internet radio fees</secondary></indexterm>
10415 <indexterm id='idxrecordingindustryassociationofamericariaalobbyingpowerof' class='startofrange'><primary>Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA)</primary><secondary>lobbying power of</secondary></indexterm>
10416 <para>
10417 But here the power of the lobbyists is reversed. Internet radio is a
10418 new industry. The recording artists, on the other hand, have a very
10419
10420 <!-- PAGE BREAK 206 -->
10421 powerful lobby, the RIAA. Thus when Congress considered the phenomenon
10422 of Internet radio in 1995, the lobbyists had primed Congress to adopt
10423 a different rule for Internet radio than the rule that applies to
10424 terrestrial radio. While terrestrial radio does not have to pay our
10425 hypothetical Marilyn Monroe when it plays her hypothetical recording
10426 of <quote>Happy Birthday</quote> on the air, <emphasis>Internet radio
10427 does</emphasis>. Not only is the law not neutral toward Internet
10428 radio&mdash;the law actually burdens Internet radio more than it
10429 burdens terrestrial radio.
10430 </para>
10431 <para>
10432 This financial burden is not slight. As Harvard law professor
10433 William Fisher estimates, if an Internet radio station distributed adfree
10434 popular music to (on average) ten thousand listeners, twenty-four
10435 hours a day, the total artist fees that radio station would owe would be
10436 over $1 million a year.<footnote>
10437 <para>
10438 <!-- f14. -->
10439 This example was derived from fees set by the original Copyright
10440 Arbitration Royalty Panel (CARP) proceedings, and is drawn from an
10441 example offered by Professor William Fisher. Conference Proceedings,
10442 iLaw (Stanford), 3 July 2003, on file with author. Professors Fisher
10443 and Zittrain submitted testimony in the CARP proceeding that was
10444 ultimately rejected. See Jonathan Zittrain, Digital Performance Right
10445 in Sound Recordings and Ephemeral Recordings, Docket No. 2000-9, CARP
10446 DTRA 1 and 2, available at
10447 <ulink url="http://free-culture.cc/notes/">link #45</ulink>.
10448 For an excellent analysis making a similar point, see Randal
10449 C. Picker, <quote>Copyright as Entry Policy: The Case of Digital
10450 Distribution,</quote> <citetitle>Antitrust Bulletin</citetitle> (Summer/Fall 2002): 461: <quote>This was
10451 not confusion, these are just old-fashioned entry barriers. Analog
10452 radio stations are protected from digital entrants, reducing entry in
10453 radio and diversity. Yes, this is done in the name of getting
10454 royalties to copyright holders, but, absent the play of powerful
10455 interests, that could have been done in a media-neutral way.</quote>
10456 <indexterm><primary>CARP (Copyright Arbitration Royalty Panel)</primary></indexterm>
10457 <indexterm><primary>Picker, Randal C.</primary></indexterm>
10458 </para></footnote>
10459 A regular radio station broadcasting the same content would pay no
10460 equivalent fee.
10461 </para>
10462 <indexterm startref='idxartistsrecordingindustrypaymentsto3' class='endofrange'/>
10463 <indexterm startref='idxrecordingindustryartistremunerationin3' class='endofrange'/>
10464 <indexterm startref='idxrecordingindustryradiobroadcastand2' class='endofrange'/>
10465 <indexterm startref='idxrecordingindustryassociationofamericariaaoninternetradiofees' class='endofrange'/>
10466 <indexterm startref='idxrecordingindustryassociationofamericariaalobbyingpowerof' class='endofrange'/>
10467 <para>
10468 The burden is not financial only. Under the original rules that were
10469 proposed, an Internet radio station (but not a terrestrial radio
10470 station) would have to collect the following data from <emphasis>every
10471 listening transaction</emphasis>:
10472 </para>
10473 <!-- PAGE BREAK 207 -->
10474 <orderedlist numeration="arabic">
10475 <listitem><para>
10476 name of the service;
10477 </para></listitem>
10478 <listitem><para>
10479 channel of the program (AM/FM stations use station ID);
10480 </para></listitem>
10481 <listitem><para>
10482 type of program (archived/looped/live);
10483 </para></listitem>
10484 <listitem><para>
10485 date of transmission;
10486 </para></listitem>
10487 <listitem><para>
10488 time of transmission;
10489 </para></listitem>
10490 <listitem><para>
10491 time zone of origination of transmission;
10492 </para></listitem>
10493 <listitem><para>
10494 numeric designation of the place of the sound recording within the program;
10495 </para></listitem>
10496 <listitem><para>
10497 duration of transmission (to nearest second);
10498 </para></listitem>
10499 <listitem><para>
10500 sound recording title;
10501 </para></listitem>
10502 <listitem><para>
10503 ISRC code of the recording;
10504 </para></listitem>
10505 <listitem><para>
10506 release year of the album per copyright notice and in the case of compilation albums, the release year of the album and copy- right date of the track;
10507 </para></listitem>
10508 <listitem><para>
10509 featured recording artist;
10510 </para></listitem>
10511 <listitem><para>
10512 retail album title;
10513 </para></listitem>
10514 <listitem><para>
10515 recording label;
10516 </para></listitem>
10517 <listitem><para>
10518 UPC code of the retail album;
10519 </para></listitem>
10520 <listitem><para>
10521 catalog number;
10522 </para></listitem>
10523 <listitem><para>
10524 copyright owner information;
10525 </para></listitem>
10526 <listitem><para>
10527 musical genre of the channel or program (station format);
10528 </para></listitem>
10529 <listitem><para>
10530 name of the service or entity;
10531 </para></listitem>
10532 <listitem><para>
10533 channel or program;
10534 </para></listitem>
10535 <listitem><para>
10536 date and time that the user logged in (in the user's time zone);
10537 </para></listitem>
10538 <listitem><para>
10539 date and time that the user logged out (in the user's time zone);
10540 </para></listitem>
10541 <listitem><para>
10542 time zone where the signal was received (user);
10543 </para></listitem>
10544 <listitem><para>
10545 unique user identifier;
10546 </para></listitem>
10547 <listitem><para>
10548 the country in which the user received the transmissions.
10549 </para></listitem>
10550 </orderedlist>
10551 <indexterm><primary>Library of Congress</primary></indexterm>
10552 <para>
10553 The Librarian of Congress eventually suspended these reporting
10554 requirements, pending further study. And he also changed the original
10555 rates set by the arbitration panel charged with setting rates. But the
10556 basic difference between Internet radio and terrestrial radio remains:
10557 Internet radio has to pay a <emphasis>type of copyright fee</emphasis>
10558 that terrestrial radio does not.
10559 </para>
10560 <para>
10561 Why? What justifies this difference? Was there any study of the
10562 economic consequences from Internet radio that would justify these
10563 differences? Was the motive to protect artists against piracy?
10564 </para>
10565 <indexterm><primary>Real Networks</primary></indexterm>
10566 <indexterm id='idxalbenalex2' class='startofrange'><primary>Alben, Alex</primary></indexterm>
10567 <indexterm id='idxrecordingindustryassociationofamericariaaoninternetradiofees2' class='startofrange'><primary>Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA)</primary><secondary>on Internet radio fees</secondary></indexterm>
10568 <indexterm id='idxartistsrecordingindustrypaymentsto4' class='startofrange'><primary>artists</primary><secondary>recording industry payments to</secondary></indexterm>
10569 <indexterm id='idxrecordingindustryartistremunerationin4' class='startofrange'><primary>recording industry</primary><secondary>artist remuneration in</secondary></indexterm>
10570 <para>
10571 In a rare bit of candor, one RIAA expert admitted what seemed obvious
10572 to everyone at the time. As Alex Alben, vice president for Public
10573 Policy at Real Networks, told me,
10574 </para>
10575 <blockquote>
10576 <para>
10577 The RIAA, which was representing the record labels, presented
10578 some testimony about what they thought a willing buyer would
10579 pay to a willing seller, and it was much higher. It was ten times
10580 higher than what radio stations pay to perform the same songs for
10581 the same period of time. And so the attorneys representing the
10582 webcasters asked the RIAA, &hellip; <quote>How do you come up with a
10583
10584 <!-- PAGE BREAK 208 -->
10585 rate that's so much higher? Why is it worth more than radio? Because
10586 here we have hundreds of thousands of webcasters who want to pay, and
10587 that should establish the market rate, and if you set the rate so
10588 high, you're going to drive the small webcasters out of
10589 business. &hellip;</quote>
10590 </para>
10591 <indexterm><primary>artists</primary><secondary>recording industry payments to</secondary></indexterm>
10592 <para>
10593 And the RIAA experts said, <quote>Well, we don't really model this as an
10594 industry with thousands of webcasters, <emphasis>we think it should be
10595 an industry with, you know, five or seven big players who can pay a
10596 high rate and it's a stable, predictable market</emphasis>.</quote> (Emphasis
10597 added.)
10598 </para>
10599 </blockquote>
10600 <indexterm startref='idxalbenalex2' class='endofrange'/>
10601 <indexterm startref='idxrecordingindustryassociationofamericariaaoninternetradiofees2' class='endofrange'/>
10602 <indexterm startref='idxartistsrecordingindustrypaymentsto4' class='endofrange'/>
10603 <indexterm startref='idxrecordingindustryartistremunerationin4' class='endofrange'/>
10604 <para>
10605 Translation: The aim is to use the law to eliminate competition, so
10606 that this platform of potentially immense competition, which would
10607 cause the diversity and range of content available to explode, would not
10608 cause pain to the dinosaurs of old. There is no one, on either the right
10609 or the left, who should endorse this use of the law. And yet there is
10610 practically no one, on either the right or the left, who is doing anything
10611 effective to prevent it.
10612 </para>
10613 <indexterm startref='idxcopyrightlawinnovationhamperedby' class='endofrange'/>
10614 <indexterm startref='idxinnovationindustryestablishmentopposedto2' class='endofrange'/>
10615 <indexterm startref='idxregulationasestablishmentprotectionism2' class='endofrange'/>
10616 <indexterm startref='idxinternetradioon' class='endofrange'/>
10617 <indexterm startref='idxradiooninternet' class='endofrange'/>
10618 <indexterm startref='idxrecordingindustryinternetradiohamperedby' class='endofrange'/>
10619 </section>
10620 <section id="corruptingcitizens">
10621 <title>Corrupting Citizens</title>
10622 <para>
10623 Overregulation stifles creativity. It smothers innovation. It gives
10624 dinosaurs
10625 a veto over the future. It wastes the extraordinary opportunity
10626 for a democratic creativity that digital technology enables.
10627 </para>
10628 <para>
10629 In addition to these important harms, there is one more that was
10630 important to our forebears, but seems forgotten today. Overregulation
10631 corrupts citizens and weakens the rule of law.
10632 </para>
10633 <para>
10634 The war that is being waged today is a war of prohibition. As with
10635 every war of prohibition, it is targeted against the behavior of a very
10636 large number of citizens. According to <citetitle>The New York Times</citetitle>, 43 million
10637 Americans downloaded music in May 2002.<footnote><para>
10638 <!-- f15. --> Mike Graziano and Lee Rainie, <quote>The Music Downloading Deluge,</quote> Pew
10639 Internet and American Life Project (24 April 2001), available at
10640 <ulink url="http://free-culture.cc/notes/">link #46</ulink>.
10641 The Pew Internet and American Life Project reported that 37 million
10642 Americans had downloaded music files from the Internet by early 2001.
10643 </para></footnote>
10644 According to the RIAA,
10645 the behavior of those 43 million Americans is a felony. We thus have a
10646 set of rules that transform 20 percent of America into criminals. As the
10647
10648 <!-- PAGE BREAK 209 -->
10649 RIAA launches lawsuits against not only the Napsters and Kazaas of
10650 the world, but against students building search engines, and
10651 increasingly
10652 against ordinary users downloading content, the technologies for
10653 sharing will advance to further protect and hide illegal use. It is an arms
10654 race or a civil war, with the extremes of one side inviting a more
10655 extreme
10656 response by the other.
10657 </para>
10658 <para>
10659 The content industry's tactics exploit the failings of the American
10660 legal system. When the RIAA brought suit against Jesse Jordan, it
10661 knew that in Jordan it had found a scapegoat, not a defendant. The
10662 threat of having to pay either all the money in the world in damages
10663 ($15,000,000) or almost all the money in the world to defend against
10664 paying all the money in the world in damages ($250,000 in legal fees)
10665 led Jordan to choose to pay all the money he had in the world
10666 ($12,000) to make the suit go away. The same strategy animates the
10667 RIAA's suits against individual users. In September 2003, the RIAA
10668 sued 261 individuals&mdash;including a twelve-year-old girl living in public
10669 housing and a seventy-year-old man who had no idea what file sharing
10670 was.<footnote><para>
10671 <!-- f16. -->
10672 Alex Pham, <quote>The Labels Strike Back: N.Y. Girl Settles RIAA Case,</quote> <citetitle>Los
10673 Angeles Times</citetitle>, 10 September 2003, Business.
10674 </para></footnote>
10675 As these scapegoats discovered, it will always cost more to defend
10676 against these suits than it would cost to simply settle. (The twelve
10677 year old, for example, like Jesse Jordan, paid her life savings of $2,000
10678 to settle the case.) Our law is an awful system for defending rights. It
10679 is an embarrassment to our tradition. And the consequence of our law
10680 as it is, is that those with the power can use the law to quash any rights
10681 they oppose.
10682 </para>
10683 <indexterm><primary>alcohol prohibition</primary></indexterm>
10684 <para>
10685 Wars of prohibition are nothing new in America. This one is just
10686 something more extreme than anything we've seen before. We
10687 experimented with alcohol prohibition, at a time when the per capita
10688 consumption of alcohol was 1.5 gallons per capita per year. The war
10689 against drinking initially reduced that consumption to just 30 percent
10690 of its preprohibition levels, but by the end of prohibition,
10691 consumption was up to 70 percent of the preprohibition
10692 level. Americans were drinking just about as much, but now, a vast
10693 number were criminals.<footnote><para>
10694 <!-- f17. -->
10695 Jeffrey A. Miron and Jeffrey Zwiebel, <quote>Alcohol Consumption During
10696 Prohibition,</quote> <citetitle>American Economic Review</citetitle> 81, no. 2 (1991): 242.
10697 </para></footnote>
10698 We have
10699 <!-- PAGE BREAK 210 -->
10700 launched a war on drugs aimed at reducing the consumption of regulated
10701 narcotics that 7 percent (or 16 million) Americans now use.<footnote><para>
10702 <!-- f18. -->
10703 National Drug Control Policy: Hearing Before the House Government
10704 Reform Committee, 108th Cong., 1st sess. (5 March 2003) (statement of
10705 John P. Walters, director of National Drug Control Policy).
10706 </para></footnote>
10707 That is a drop from the high (so to speak) in 1979 of 14 percent of
10708 the population. We regulate automobiles to the point where the vast
10709 majority of Americans violate the law every day. We run such a complex
10710 tax system that a majority of cash businesses regularly
10711 cheat.<footnote><para>
10712 <!-- f19. -->
10713 See James Andreoni, Brian Erard, and Jonathon Feinstein, <quote>Tax
10714 Compliance,</quote> <citetitle>Journal of Economic Literature</citetitle> 36 (1998): 818 (survey of
10715 compliance literature).
10716 </para></footnote>
10717 We pride ourselves on our <quote>free society,</quote> but an endless array of
10718 ordinary behavior is regulated within our society. And as a result, a
10719 huge proportion of Americans regularly violate at least some law.
10720 </para>
10721 <indexterm><primary>law schools</primary></indexterm>
10722 <para>
10723 This state of affairs is not without consequence. It is a particularly
10724 salient issue for teachers like me, whose job it is to teach law
10725 students about the importance of <quote>ethics.</quote> As my colleague Charlie
10726 Nesson told a class at Stanford, each year law schools admit thousands
10727 of students who have illegally downloaded music, illegally consumed
10728 alcohol and sometimes drugs, illegally worked without paying taxes,
10729 illegally driven cars. These are kids for whom behaving illegally is
10730 increasingly the norm. And then we, as law professors, are supposed to
10731 teach them how to behave ethically&mdash;how to say no to bribes, or
10732 keep client funds separate, or honor a demand to disclose a document
10733 that will mean that your case is over. Generations of
10734 Americans&mdash;more significantly in some parts of America than in
10735 others, but still, everywhere in America today&mdash;can't live their
10736 lives both normally and legally, since <quote>normally</quote> entails a certain
10737 degree of illegality.
10738 </para>
10739 <para>
10740 The response to this general illegality is either to enforce the law
10741 more severely or to change the law. We, as a society, have to learn
10742 how to make that choice more rationally. Whether a law makes sense
10743 depends, in part, at least, upon whether the costs of the law, both
10744 intended and collateral, outweigh the benefits. If the costs, intended
10745 and collateral, do outweigh the benefits, then the law ought to be
10746 changed. Alternatively, if the costs of the existing system are much
10747 greater than the costs of an alternative, then we have a good reason
10748 to consider the alternative.
10749 </para>
10750 <para>
10751
10752 <!-- PAGE BREAK 211 -->
10753 My point is not the idiotic one: Just because people violate a law, we
10754 should therefore repeal it. Obviously, we could reduce murder statistics
10755 dramatically by legalizing murder on Wednesdays and Fridays. But
10756 that wouldn't make any sense, since murder is wrong every day of the
10757 week. A society is right to ban murder always and everywhere.
10758 </para>
10759 <para>
10760 My point is instead one that democracies understood for generations,
10761 but that we recently have learned to forget. The rule of law depends
10762 upon people obeying the law. The more often, and more repeatedly, we
10763 as citizens experience violating the law, the less we respect the
10764 law. Obviously, in most cases, the important issue is the law, not
10765 respect for the law. I don't care whether the rapist respects the law
10766 or not; I want to catch and incarcerate the rapist. But I do care
10767 whether my students respect the law. And I do care if the rules of law
10768 sow increasing disrespect because of the extreme of regulation they
10769 impose. Twenty million Americans have come of age since the Internet
10770 introduced this different idea of <quote>sharing.</quote> We need to be able to
10771 call these twenty million Americans <quote>citizens,</quote> not <quote>felons.</quote>
10772 </para>
10773 <para>
10774 When at least forty-three million citizens download content from the
10775 Internet, and when they use tools to combine that content in ways
10776 unauthorized by copyright holders, the first question we should be
10777 asking is not how best to involve the FBI. The first question should
10778 be whether this particular prohibition is really necessary in order to
10779 achieve the proper ends that copyright law serves. Is there another
10780 way to assure that artists get paid without transforming forty-three
10781 million Americans into felons? Does it make sense if there are other
10782 ways to assure that artists get paid without transforming America into
10783 a nation of felons?
10784 </para>
10785 <para>
10786 This abstract point can be made more clear with a particular example.
10787 </para>
10788 <para>
10789 We all own CDs. Many of us still own phonograph records. These pieces
10790 of plastic encode music that in a certain sense we have bought. The
10791 law protects our right to buy and sell that plastic: It is not a
10792 copyright infringement for me to sell all my classical records at a
10793 used
10794
10795 <!-- PAGE BREAK 212 -->
10796 record store and buy jazz records to replace them. That <quote>use</quote> of the
10797 recordings is free.
10798 </para>
10799 <para>
10800 But as the MP3 craze has demonstrated, there is another use of
10801 phonograph records that is effectively free. Because these recordings
10802 were made without copy-protection technologies, I am <quote>free</quote> to copy,
10803 or <quote>rip,</quote> music from my records onto a computer hard disk. Indeed,
10804 Apple Corporation went so far as to suggest that <quote>freedom</quote> was a
10805 right: In a series of commercials, Apple endorsed the <quote>Rip, Mix, Burn</quote>
10806 capacities of digital technologies.
10807 </para>
10808 <indexterm><primary>Andromeda</primary></indexterm>
10809 <indexterm id='idxcdsmix' class='startofrange'><primary>CDs</primary><secondary>mix technology and</secondary></indexterm>
10810 <para>
10811 This <quote>use</quote> of my records is certainly valuable. I have begun a large
10812 process at home of ripping all of my and my wife's CDs, and storing
10813 them in one archive. Then, using Apple's iTunes, or a wonderful
10814 program called Andromeda, we can build different play lists of our
10815 music: Bach, Baroque, Love Songs, Love Songs of Significant
10816 Others&mdash;the potential is endless. And by reducing the costs of
10817 mixing play lists, these technologies help build a creativity with
10818 play lists that is itself independently valuable. Compilations of
10819 songs are creative and meaningful in their own right.
10820 </para>
10821 <para>
10822 This use is enabled by unprotected media&mdash;either CDs or records.
10823 But unprotected media also enable file sharing. File sharing threatens
10824 (or so the content industry believes) the ability of creators to earn
10825 a fair return from their creativity. And thus, many are beginning to
10826 experiment with technologies to eliminate unprotected media. These
10827 technologies, for example, would enable CDs that could not be
10828 ripped. Or they might enable spy programs to identify ripped content
10829 on people's machines.
10830 </para>
10831 <para>
10832 If these technologies took off, then the building of large archives of
10833 your own music would become quite difficult. You might hang in hacker
10834 circles, and get technology to disable the technologies that protect
10835 the content. Trading in those technologies is illegal, but maybe that
10836 doesn't bother you much. In any case, for the vast majority of people,
10837 these protection technologies would effectively destroy the archiving
10838
10839 <!-- PAGE BREAK 213 -->
10840 use of CDs. The technology, in other words, would force us all back to
10841 the world where we either listened to music by manipulating pieces of
10842 plastic or were part of a massively complex <quote>digital rights
10843 management</quote> system.
10844 </para>
10845 <indexterm startref='idxcdsmix' class='endofrange'/>
10846 <para>
10847 If the only way to assure that artists get paid were the elimination
10848 of the ability to freely move content, then these technologies to
10849 interfere with the freedom to move content would be justifiable. But
10850 what if there were another way to assure that artists are paid,
10851 without locking down any content? What if, in other words, a different
10852 system could assure compensation to artists while also preserving the
10853 freedom to move content easily?
10854 </para>
10855 <para>
10856 My point just now is not to prove that there is such a system. I offer
10857 a version of such a system in the last chapter of this book. For now,
10858 the only point is the relatively uncontroversial one: If a different
10859 system achieved the same legitimate objectives that the existing
10860 copyright system achieved, but left consumers and creators much more
10861 free, then we'd have a very good reason to pursue this
10862 alternative&mdash;namely, freedom. The choice, in other words, would
10863 not be between property and piracy; the choice would be between
10864 different property systems and the freedoms each allowed.
10865 </para>
10866 <para>
10867 I believe there is a way to assure that artists are paid without
10868 turning forty-three million Americans into felons. But the salient
10869 feature of this alternative is that it would lead to a very different
10870 market for producing and distributing creativity. The dominant few,
10871 who today control the vast majority of the distribution of content in
10872 the world, would no longer exercise this extreme of control. Rather,
10873 they would go the way of the horse-drawn buggy.
10874 </para>
10875 <para>
10876 Except that this generation's buggy manufacturers have already saddled
10877 Congress, and are riding the law to protect themselves against this
10878 new form of competition. For them the choice is between fortythree
10879 million Americans as criminals and their own survival.
10880 </para>
10881 <para>
10882 It is understandable why they choose as they do. It is not
10883 understandable why we as a democracy continue to choose as we do. Jack
10884
10885 <!-- PAGE BREAK 214 -->
10886
10887 Valenti is charming; but not so charming as to justify giving up a
10888 tradition as deep and important as our tradition of free culture.
10889 </para>
10890 <indexterm><primary>Electronic Frontier Foundation</primary></indexterm>
10891 <indexterm id='idxisps' class='startofrange'><primary>ISPs (Internet service providers), user identities revealed by</primary></indexterm>
10892 <para>
10893 <emphasis role='strong'>There's one more</emphasis> aspect to this
10894 corruption that is particularly important to civil liberties, and
10895 follows directly from any war of prohibition. As Electronic Frontier
10896 Foundation attorney Fred von Lohmann describes, this is the
10897 <quote>collateral damage</quote> that <quote>arises whenever you turn
10898 a very large percentage of the population into criminals.</quote> This
10899 is the collateral damage to civil liberties generally.
10900 </para>
10901 <indexterm><primary>von Lohmann, Fred</primary></indexterm>
10902 <para>
10903 <quote>If you can treat someone as a putative lawbreaker,</quote> von Lohmann
10904 explains,
10905 </para>
10906 <blockquote>
10907 <para>
10908 then all of a sudden a lot of basic civil liberty protections
10909 evaporate to one degree or another. &hellip; If you're a copyright
10910 infringer, how can you hope to have any privacy rights? If you're a
10911 copyright infringer, how can you hope to be secure against seizures of
10912 your computer? How can you hope to continue to receive Internet
10913 access? &hellip; Our sensibilities change as soon as we think, <quote>Oh, well,
10914 but that person's a criminal, a lawbreaker.</quote> Well, what this campaign
10915 against file sharing has done is turn a remarkable percentage of the
10916 American Internet-using population into <quote>lawbreakers.</quote>
10917 </para>
10918 </blockquote>
10919 <para>
10920 And the consequence of this transformation of the American public
10921 into criminals is that it becomes trivial, as a matter of due process, to
10922 effectively erase much of the privacy most would presume.
10923 </para>
10924 <para>
10925 Users of the Internet began to see this generally in 2003 as the RIAA
10926 launched its campaign to force Internet service providers to turn over
10927 the names of customers who the RIAA believed were violating copyright
10928 law. Verizon fought that demand and lost. With a simple request to a
10929 judge, and without any notice to the customer at all, the identity of
10930 an Internet user is revealed.
10931 </para>
10932 <para>
10933 <!-- PAGE BREAK 215 -->
10934 The RIAA then expanded this campaign, by announcing a general strategy
10935 to sue individual users of the Internet who are alleged to have
10936 downloaded copyrighted music from file-sharing systems. But as we've
10937 seen, the potential damages from these suits are astronomical: If a
10938 family's computer is used to download a single CD's worth of music,
10939 the family could be liable for $2 million in damages. That didn't stop
10940 the RIAA from suing a number of these families, just as they had sued
10941 Jesse Jordan.<footnote><para>
10942 <!-- f20. -->
10943 See Frank Ahrens, <quote>RIAA's Lawsuits Meet Surprised Targets; Single
10944 Mother in Calif., 12-Year-Old Girl in N.Y. Among Defendants,</quote>
10945 <citetitle>Washington Post</citetitle>, 10 September 2003, E1; Chris Cobbs, <quote>Worried Parents
10946 Pull Plug on File <quote>Stealing</quote>; With the Music Industry Cracking Down on
10947 File Swapping, Parents are Yanking Software from Home PCs to Avoid
10948 Being Sued,</quote> <citetitle>Orlando Sentinel Tribune</citetitle>, 30 August 2003, C1; Jefferson
10949 Graham, <quote>Recording Industry Sues Parents,</quote> <citetitle>USA Today</citetitle>, 15 September
10950 2003, 4D; John Schwartz, <quote>She Says She's No Music Pirate. No Snoop
10951 Fan, Either,</quote> <citetitle>New York Times</citetitle>, 25 September 2003, C1; Margo Varadi, <quote>Is
10952 Brianna a Criminal?</quote> <citetitle>Toronto Star</citetitle>, 18 September 2003, P7.
10953 </para></footnote>
10954
10955 </para>
10956 <indexterm id='idxnapsterrecordingindustrytrackingusersof' class='startofrange'><primary>Napster</primary><secondary>recording industry tracking users of</secondary></indexterm>
10957 <para>
10958 Even this understates the espionage that is being waged by the
10959 RIAA. A report from CNN late last summer described a strategy the
10960 RIAA had adopted to track Napster users.<footnote><para>
10961 <!-- f21. -->
10962 See <quote>Revealed: How RIAA Tracks Downloaders: Music Industry Discloses
10963 Some Methods Used,</quote> CNN.com, available at
10964 <ulink url="http://free-culture.cc/notes/">link #47</ulink>.
10965 </para></footnote>
10966 Using a sophisticated hashing algorithm, the RIAA took what is in
10967 effect a fingerprint of every song in the Napster catalog. Any copy of
10968 one of those MP3s will have the same <quote>fingerprint.</quote>
10969 </para>
10970 <para>
10971 So imagine the following not-implausible scenario: Imagine a
10972 friend gives a CD to your daughter&mdash;a collection of songs just
10973 like the cassettes you used to make as a kid. You don't know, and
10974 neither does your daughter, where these songs came from. But she
10975 copies these songs onto her computer. She then takes her computer to
10976 college and connects it to a college network, and if the college
10977 network is <quote>cooperating</quote> with the RIAA's espionage, and she hasn't
10978 properly protected her content from the network (do you know how to do
10979 that yourself ?), then the RIAA will be able to identify your daughter
10980 as a <quote>criminal.</quote> And under the rules that universities are beginning
10981 to deploy,<footnote><para>
10982 <!-- f22. -->
10983 See Jeff Adler, <quote>Cambridge: On Campus, Pirates Are Not Penitent,</quote>
10984 <citetitle>Boston Globe</citetitle>, 18 May 2003, City Weekly, 1; Frank Ahrens, <quote>Four
10985 Students Sued over Music Sites; Industry Group Targets File Sharing at
10986 Colleges,</quote> <citetitle>Washington Post</citetitle>, 4 April 2003, E1; Elizabeth Armstrong,
10987 <quote>Students <quote>Rip, Mix, Burn</quote> at Their Own Risk,</quote> <citetitle>Christian Science
10988 Monitor</citetitle>, 2 September 2003, 20; Robert Becker and Angela Rozas, <quote>Music
10989 Pirate Hunt Turns to Loyola; Two Students Names Are Handed Over;
10990 Lawsuit Possible,</quote> <citetitle>Chicago Tribune</citetitle>, 16 July 2003, 1C; Beth Cox, <quote>RIAA
10991 Trains Antipiracy Guns on Universities,</quote> <citetitle>Internet News</citetitle>, 30 January
10992 2003, available at <ulink url="http://free-culture.cc/notes/">link
10993 #48</ulink>; Benny Evangelista, <quote>Download Warning 101: Freshman
10994 Orientation This Fall to Include Record Industry Warnings Against File
10995 Sharing,</quote> <citetitle>San Francisco Chronicle</citetitle>, 11 August 2003, E11; <quote>Raid, Letters
10996 Are Weapons at Universities,</quote> <citetitle>USA Today</citetitle>, 26 September 2000, 3D.
10997 </para></footnote>
10998 your daughter can lose the right to use the university's computer
10999 network. She can, in some cases, be expelled.
11000 </para>
11001 <indexterm startref='idxisps' class='endofrange'/>
11002 <indexterm><primary>von Lohmann, Fred</primary></indexterm>
11003 <para>
11004 Now, of course, she'll have the right to defend herself. You can hire
11005 a lawyer for her (at $300 per hour, if you're lucky), and she can
11006 plead that she didn't know anything about the source of the songs or
11007 that they came from Napster. And it may well be that the university
11008 believes her. But the university might not believe her. It might treat
11009 this <quote>contraband</quote> as presumptive of guilt. And as any number of
11010 college students
11011
11012 <!-- PAGE BREAK 216 -->
11013 have already learned, our presumptions about innocence disappear in
11014 the middle of wars of prohibition. This war is no different.
11015 Says von Lohmann,
11016 </para>
11017 <indexterm startref='idxnapsterrecordingindustrytrackingusersof' class='endofrange'/>
11018 <blockquote>
11019 <para>
11020 So when we're talking about numbers like forty to sixty million
11021 Americans that are essentially copyright infringers, you create a
11022 situation where the civil liberties of those people are very much in
11023 peril in a general matter. [I don't] think [there is any] analog where
11024 you could randomly choose any person off the street and be confident
11025 that they were committing an unlawful act that could put them on the
11026 hook for potential felony liability or hundreds of millions of dollars
11027 of civil liability. Certainly we all speed, but speeding isn't the
11028 kind of an act for which we routinely forfeit civil liberties. Some
11029 people use drugs, and I think that's the closest analog, [but] many
11030 have noted that the war against drugs has eroded all of our civil
11031 liberties because it's treated so many Americans as criminals. Well, I
11032 think it's fair to say that file sharing is an order of magnitude
11033 larger number of Americans than drug use. &hellip; If forty to sixty
11034 million Americans have become lawbreakers, then we're really on a
11035 slippery slope to lose a lot of civil liberties for all forty to sixty
11036 million of them.
11037 </para>
11038 </blockquote>
11039 <para>
11040 When forty to sixty million Americans are considered <quote>criminals</quote> under
11041 the law, and when the law could achieve the same objective&mdash;
11042 securing rights to authors&mdash;without these millions being
11043 considered <quote>criminals,</quote> who is the villain? Americans or the law?
11044 Which is American, a constant war on our own people or a concerted
11045 effort through our democracy to change our law?
11046 </para>
11047
11048 <!-- PAGE BREAK 217 -->
11049 </section>
11050 </chapter>
11051 </part>
11052 <part id="c-balances">
11053 <title>Balances</title>
11054 <partintro>
11055
11056 <!-- PAGE BREAK 218 -->
11057 <para>
11058 <emphasis role='strong'>So here's</emphasis> the picture: You're
11059 standing at the side of the road. Your car is on fire. You are angry
11060 and upset because in part you helped start the fire. Now you don't
11061 know how to put it out. Next to you is a bucket, filled with
11062 gasoline. Obviously, gasoline won't put the fire out.
11063 </para>
11064 <para>
11065 As you ponder the mess, someone else comes along. In a panic, she
11066 grabs the bucket. Before you have a chance to tell her to
11067 stop&mdash;or before she understands just why she should
11068 stop&mdash;the bucket is in the air. The gasoline is about to hit the
11069 blazing car. And the fire that gasoline will ignite is about to ignite
11070 everything around.
11071 </para>
11072 <para>
11073 <emphasis role='strong'>A war</emphasis> about copyright rages all
11074 around&mdash;and we're all focusing on the wrong thing. No doubt,
11075 current technologies threaten existing businesses. No doubt they may
11076 threaten artists. But technologies change. The industry and
11077 technologists have plenty of ways to use technology to protect
11078 themselves against the current threats of the Internet. This is a fire
11079 that if let alone would burn itself out.
11080 </para>
11081 <para>
11082 <!-- PAGE BREAK 219 -->
11083 Yet policy makers are not willing to leave this fire to itself. Primed
11084 with plenty of lobbyists' money, they are keen to intervene to
11085 eliminate the problem they perceive. But the problem they perceive is
11086 not the real threat this culture faces. For while we watch this small
11087 fire in the corner, there is a massive change in the way culture is
11088 made that is happening all around.
11089 </para>
11090 <para>
11091 Somehow we have to find a way to turn attention to this more important
11092 and fundamental issue. Somehow we have to find a way to avoid pouring
11093 gasoline onto this fire.
11094 </para>
11095 <para>
11096 We have not found that way yet. Instead, we seem trapped in a simpler,
11097 binary view. However much many people push to frame this debate more
11098 broadly, it is the simple, binary view that remains. We rubberneck to
11099 look at the fire when we should be keeping our eyes on the road.
11100 </para>
11101 <para>
11102 This challenge has been my life these last few years. It has also been
11103 my failure. In the two chapters that follow, I describe one small
11104 brace of efforts, so far failed, to find a way to refocus this
11105 debate. We must understand these failures if we're to understand what
11106 success will require.
11107 </para>
11108 </partintro>
11109
11110 <!-- PAGE BREAK 220 -->
11111 <chapter label="13" id="eldred">
11112 <title>Chapter Thirteen: Eldred</title>
11113 <indexterm id='idxeldrederic' class='startofrange'><primary>Eldred, Eric</primary></indexterm>
11114 <indexterm id='idxhawthornenathaniel' class='startofrange'><primary>Hawthorne, Nathaniel</primary></indexterm>
11115 <para>
11116 <emphasis role='strong'>In 1995</emphasis>, a father was frustrated
11117 that his daughters didn't seem to like Hawthorne. No doubt there was
11118 more than one such father, but at least one did something about
11119 it. Eric Eldred, a retired computer programmer living in New
11120 Hampshire, decided to put Hawthorne on the Web. An electronic version,
11121 Eldred thought, with links to pictures and explanatory text, would
11122 make this nineteenth-century author's work come alive.
11123 </para>
11124 <indexterm id='idxlibrariesofpublicdomainliterature' class='startofrange'><primary>libraries</primary><secondary>of public-domain literature</secondary></indexterm>
11125 <indexterm id='idxpublicdomainlibraryofworksderivedfrom' class='startofrange'><primary>public domain</primary><secondary>library of works derived from</secondary></indexterm>
11126 <para>
11127 It didn't work&mdash;at least for his daughters. They didn't find
11128 Hawthorne any more interesting than before. But Eldred's experiment
11129 gave birth to a hobby, and his hobby begat a cause: Eldred would build
11130 a library of public domain works by scanning these works and making
11131 them available for free.
11132 </para>
11133 <indexterm id='idxdisneywalt5' class='startofrange'><primary>Disney, Walt</primary></indexterm>
11134 <indexterm><primary>Grimm fairy tales</primary></indexterm>
11135 <para>
11136 Eldred's library was not simply a copy of certain public domain
11137 works, though even a copy would have been of great value to people
11138 across the world who can't get access to printed versions of these
11139 works. Instead, Eldred was producing derivative works from these
11140 public domain works. Just as Disney turned Grimm into stories more
11141 <!-- PAGE BREAK 221 -->
11142 accessible to the twentieth century, Eldred transformed Hawthorne, and
11143 many others, into a form more accessible&mdash;technically
11144 accessible&mdash;today.
11145 </para>
11146 <indexterm><primary>Scarlet Letter, The (Hawthorne)</primary></indexterm>
11147 <para>
11148 Eldred's freedom to do this with Hawthorne's work grew from the same
11149 source as Disney's. Hawthorne's <citetitle>Scarlet Letter</citetitle> had passed into the
11150 public domain in 1907. It was free for anyone to take without the
11151 permission of the Hawthorne estate or anyone else. Some, such as Dover
11152 Press and Penguin Classics, take works from the public domain and
11153 produce printed editions, which they sell in bookstores across the
11154 country. Others, such as Disney, take these stories and turn them into
11155 animated cartoons, sometimes successfully (<citetitle>Cinderella</citetitle>), sometimes not
11156 (<citetitle>The Hunchback of Notre Dame</citetitle>, <citetitle>Treasure Planet</citetitle>). These are all
11157 commercial publications of public domain works.
11158 </para>
11159 <indexterm startref='idxhawthornenathaniel' class='endofrange'/>
11160 <indexterm startref='idxdisneywalt5' class='endofrange'/>
11161 <para>
11162 The Internet created the possibility of noncommercial publications of
11163 public domain works. Eldred's is just one example. There are literally
11164 thousands of others. Hundreds of thousands from across the world have
11165 discovered this platform of expression and now use it to share works
11166 that are, by law, free for the taking. This has produced what we might
11167 call the <quote>noncommercial publishing industry,</quote> which before the
11168 Internet was limited to people with large egos or with political or
11169 social causes. But with the Internet, it includes a wide range of
11170 individuals and groups dedicated to spreading culture
11171 generally.<footnote><para>
11172 <!-- f1. -->
11173 <indexterm><primary>pornography</primary></indexterm>
11174 There's a parallel here with pornography that is a bit hard to
11175 describe, but it's a strong one. One phenomenon that the Internet
11176 created was a world of noncommercial pornographers&mdash;people who
11177 were distributing porn but were not making money directly or
11178 indirectly from that distribution. Such a class didn't exist before
11179 the Internet came into being because the costs of distributing porn
11180 were so high. Yet this new class of distributors got special attention
11181 in the Supreme Court, when the Court struck down the Communications
11182 Decency Act of 1996. It was partly because of the burden on
11183 noncommercial speakers that the statute was found to exceed Congress's
11184 power. The same point could have been made about noncommercial
11185 publishers after the advent of the Internet. The Eric Eldreds of the
11186 world before the Internet were extremely few. Yet one would think it
11187 at least as important to protect the Eldreds of the world as to
11188 protect noncommercial pornographers.</para></footnote>
11189 </para>
11190 <indexterm id='idxcongressuscopyrighttermsextendedby2' class='startofrange'><primary>Congress, U.S.</primary><secondary>copyright terms extended by</secondary></indexterm>
11191 <indexterm id='idxcopyrightdurationof6' class='startofrange'><primary>copyright</primary><secondary>duration of</secondary></indexterm>
11192 <indexterm id='idxcopyrightlawtermextensionsin2' class='startofrange'><primary>copyright law</primary><secondary>term extensions in</secondary></indexterm>
11193 <indexterm><primary>Frost, Robert</primary></indexterm>
11194 <indexterm><primary>New Hampshire (Frost)</primary></indexterm>
11195 <indexterm><primary>patents</primary><secondary>in public domain</secondary></indexterm>
11196 <indexterm id='idxpatentsfuturepatentsvsfuturecopyrightsin' class='startofrange'><primary>patents</primary><secondary>future patents vs. future copyrights in</secondary></indexterm>
11197 <para>
11198 As I said, Eldred lives in New Hampshire. In 1998, Robert Frost's
11199 collection of poems <citetitle>New Hampshire</citetitle> was slated to
11200 pass into the public domain. Eldred wanted to post that collection in
11201 his free public library. But Congress got in the way. As I described
11202 in chapter <xref xrefstyle="select: labelnumber"
11203 linkend="property-i"/>, in 1998, for the eleventh time in forty years,
11204 Congress extended the terms of existing copyrights&mdash;this time by
11205 twenty years. Eldred would not be free to add any works more recent
11206 than 1923 to his collection until 2019. Indeed, no copyrighted work
11207 would pass into the public domain until that year (and not even then,
11208 if Congress extends the term again). By contrast, in the same period,
11209 more than 1 million patents will pass into the public domain.
11210 </para>
11211 <indexterm startref='idxlibrariesofpublicdomainliterature' class='endofrange'/>
11212 <indexterm startref='idxpublicdomainlibraryofworksderivedfrom' class='endofrange'/>
11213 <indexterm><primary>Bono, Mary</primary></indexterm>
11214 <indexterm><primary>Bono, Sonny</primary></indexterm>
11215 <indexterm id='idxcopyrightinperpetuity4' class='startofrange'><primary>copyright</primary><secondary>in perpetuity</secondary></indexterm>
11216 <indexterm id='idxsonnybonocopyrighttermextensionactctea2' class='startofrange'><primary>Sonny Bono Copyright Term Extension Act (CTEA) (1998)</primary></indexterm>
11217 <para>
11218
11219 <!-- PAGE BREAK 222 -->
11220 This was the Sonny Bono Copyright Term Extension Act
11221 (CTEA), enacted in memory of the congressman and former musician
11222 Sonny Bono, who, his widow, Mary Bono, says, believed that
11223 <quote>copyrights should be forever.</quote><footnote><para>
11224 <!-- f2. -->
11225 <indexterm><primary>Bono, Mary</primary></indexterm>
11226 <indexterm><primary>Bono, Sonny</primary></indexterm>
11227 <indexterm><primary>Valenti, Jack</primary><secondary>perpetual copyright term proposed by</secondary></indexterm>
11228 The full text is: <quote>Sonny [Bono] wanted the term of copyright
11229 protection to last forever. I am informed by staff that such a change
11230 would violate the Constitution. I invite all of you to work with me to
11231 strengthen our copyright laws in all of the ways available to us. As
11232 you know, there is also Jack Valenti's proposal for a term to last
11233 forever less one day. Perhaps the Committee may look at that next
11234 Congress,</quote> 144 Cong. Rec. H9946, 9951-2 (October 7, 1998).
11235 </para></footnote>
11236 </para>
11237 <indexterm startref='idxpatentsfuturepatentsvsfuturecopyrightsin' class='endofrange'/>
11238 <indexterm><primary>copyright law</primary><secondary>felony punishment for infringement of</secondary></indexterm>
11239 <indexterm><primary>NET (No Electronic Theft) Act (1998)</primary></indexterm>
11240 <indexterm><primary>No Electronic Theft (NET) Act (1998)</primary></indexterm>
11241 <indexterm><primary>peer-to-peer (p2p) file sharing</primary><secondary>felony punishments for</secondary></indexterm>
11242 <para>
11243 Eldred decided to fight this law. He first resolved to fight it through
11244 civil disobedience. In a series of interviews, Eldred announced that he
11245 would publish as planned, CTEA notwithstanding. But because of a
11246 second law passed in 1998, the NET (No Electronic Theft) Act, his act
11247 of publishing would make Eldred a felon&mdash;whether or not anyone
11248 complained. This was a dangerous strategy for a disabled programmer
11249 to undertake.
11250 </para>
11251 <indexterm startref='idxsonnybonocopyrighttermextensionactctea2' class='endofrange'/>
11252 <indexterm id='idxcongressusconstitutionalpowersof' class='startofrange'><primary>Congress, U.S.</primary><secondary>constitutional powers of</secondary></indexterm>
11253 <indexterm id='idxconstitutionusprogressclauseof2' class='startofrange'><primary>Constitution, U.S.</primary><secondary>Progress Clause of</secondary></indexterm>
11254 <indexterm id='idxprogressclause2' class='startofrange'><primary>Progress Clause</primary></indexterm>
11255 <indexterm id='idxlessiglawrenceeldredcaseinvolvementof' class='startofrange'><primary>Lessig, Lawrence</primary><secondary>Eldred case involvement of</secondary></indexterm>
11256 <para>
11257 It was here that I became involved in Eldred's battle. I was a
11258 constitutional
11259 scholar whose first passion was constitutional
11260 interpretation.
11261 And though constitutional law courses never focus upon the
11262 Progress Clause of the Constitution, it had always struck me as
11263 importantly
11264 different. As you know, the Constitution says,
11265 </para>
11266 <blockquote>
11267 <para>
11268 Congress has the power to promote the Progress of Science &hellip;
11269 by securing for limited Times to Authors &hellip; exclusive Right to
11270 their &hellip; Writings. &hellip;
11271 </para>
11272 </blockquote>
11273 <indexterm startref='idxeldrederic' class='endofrange'/>
11274 <para>
11275 As I've described, this clause is unique within the power-granting
11276 clause of Article I, section 8 of our Constitution. Every other clause
11277 granting power to Congress simply says Congress has the power to do
11278 something&mdash;for example, to regulate <quote>commerce among the several
11279 states</quote> or <quote>declare War.</quote> But here, the <quote>something</quote> is something quite
11280 specific&mdash;to <quote>promote &hellip; Progress</quote>&mdash;through means that
11281 are also specific&mdash; by <quote>securing</quote> <quote>exclusive Rights</quote> (i.e.,
11282 copyrights) <quote>for limited Times.</quote>
11283 </para>
11284 <indexterm startref='idxconstitutionusprogressclauseof2' class='endofrange'/>
11285 <indexterm startref='idxprogressclause2' class='endofrange'/>
11286 <indexterm startref='idxlessiglawrenceeldredcaseinvolvementof' class='endofrange'/>
11287 <indexterm><primary>Jaszi, Peter</primary></indexterm>
11288 <para>
11289 In the past forty years, Congress has gotten into the practice of
11290 extending existing terms of copyright protection. What puzzled me
11291 about this was, if Congress has the power to extend existing terms,
11292 then the Constitution's requirement that terms be <quote>limited</quote> will have
11293 <!-- PAGE BREAK 223 -->
11294 no practical effect. If every time a copyright is about to expire,
11295 Congress has the power to extend its term, then Congress can achieve
11296 what the Constitution plainly forbids&mdash;perpetual terms <quote>on the
11297 installment plan,</quote> as Professor Peter Jaszi so nicely put it.
11298 </para>
11299 <indexterm startref='idxcopyrightinperpetuity4' class='endofrange'/>
11300 <indexterm startref='idxcongressusconstitutionalpowersof' class='endofrange'/>
11301 <indexterm><primary>Lessig, Lawrence</primary><secondary>Eldred case involvement of</secondary></indexterm>
11302 <para>
11303 As an academic, my first response was to hit the books. I remember
11304 sitting late at the office, scouring on-line databases for any serious
11305 consideration of the question. No one had ever challenged Congress's
11306 practice of extending existing terms. That failure may in part be why
11307 Congress seemed so untroubled in its habit. That, and the fact that
11308 the practice had become so lucrative for Congress. Congress knows that
11309 copyright owners will be willing to pay a great deal of money to see
11310 their copyright terms extended. And so Congress is quite happy to keep
11311 this gravy train going.
11312 </para>
11313 <para>
11314 For this is the core of the corruption in our present system of
11315 government. <quote>Corruption</quote> not in the sense that representatives are
11316 bribed. Rather, <quote>corruption</quote> in the sense that the system induces the
11317 beneficiaries of Congress's acts to raise and give money to Congress
11318 to induce it to act. There's only so much time; there's only so much
11319 Congress can do. Why not limit its actions to those things it must
11320 do&mdash;and those things that pay? Extending copyright terms pays.
11321 </para>
11322 <para>
11323 If that's not obvious to you, consider the following: Say you're one
11324 of the very few lucky copyright owners whose copyright continues to
11325 make money one hundred years after it was created. The Estate of
11326 Robert Frost is a good example. Frost died in 1963. His poetry
11327 continues to be extraordinarily valuable. Thus the Robert Frost estate
11328 benefits greatly from any extension of copyright, since no publisher
11329 would pay the estate any money if the poems Frost wrote could be
11330 published by anyone for free.
11331 </para>
11332 <para>
11333 So imagine the Robert Frost estate is earning $100,000 a year from
11334 three of Frost's poems. And imagine the copyright for those poems
11335 is about to expire. You sit on the board of the Robert Frost estate.
11336 Your financial adviser comes to your board meeting with a very grim
11337 report:
11338 </para>
11339 <para>
11340 <quote>Next year,</quote> the adviser announces, <quote>our copyrights in works A, B,
11341
11342 <!-- PAGE BREAK 224 -->
11343 and C will expire. That means that after next year, we will no longer be
11344 receiving the annual royalty check of $100,000 from the publishers of
11345 those works.</quote>
11346 </para>
11347 <para>
11348 <quote>There's a proposal in Congress, however,</quote> she continues, <quote>that
11349 could change this. A few congressmen are floating a bill to extend the
11350 terms of copyright by twenty years. That bill would be extraordinarily
11351 valuable to us. So we should hope this bill passes.</quote>
11352 </para>
11353 <para>
11354 <quote>Hope?</quote> a fellow board member says. <quote>Can't we be doing something
11355 about it?</quote>
11356 </para>
11357 <para>
11358 <quote>Well, obviously, yes,</quote> the adviser responds. <quote>We could contribute
11359 to the campaigns of a number of representatives to try to assure that
11360 they support the bill.</quote>
11361 </para>
11362 <para>
11363 You hate politics. You hate contributing to campaigns. So you want
11364 to know whether this disgusting practice is worth it. <quote>How much
11365 would we get if this extension were passed?</quote> you ask the adviser. <quote>How
11366 much is it worth?</quote>
11367 </para>
11368 <para>
11369 <quote>Well,</quote> the adviser says, <quote>if you're confident that you will continue
11370 to get at least $100,000 a year from these copyrights, and you use the
11371 <quote>discount rate</quote> that we use to evaluate estate investments (6 percent),
11372 then this law would be worth $1,146,000 to the estate.</quote>
11373 </para>
11374 <para>
11375 You're a bit shocked by the number, but you quickly come to the
11376 correct conclusion:
11377 </para>
11378 <para>
11379 <quote>So you're saying it would be worth it for us to pay more than
11380 $1,000,000 in campaign contributions if we were confident those
11381 contributions
11382 would assure that the bill was passed?</quote>
11383 </para>
11384 <para>
11385 <quote>Absolutely,</quote> the adviser responds. <quote>It is worth it to you to
11386 contribute
11387 up to the <quote>present value</quote> of the income you expect from these
11388 copyrights. Which for us means over $1,000,000.</quote>
11389 </para>
11390 <para>
11391 You quickly get the point&mdash;you as the member of the board and, I
11392 trust, you the reader. Each time copyrights are about to expire, every
11393 beneficiary in the position of the Robert Frost estate faces the same
11394 choice: If they can contribute to get a law passed to extend copyrights,
11395 <!-- PAGE BREAK 225 -->
11396 they will benefit greatly from that extension. And so each time
11397 copyrights
11398 are about to expire, there is a massive amount of lobbying to get
11399 the copyright term extended.
11400 </para>
11401 <para>
11402 Thus a congressional perpetual motion machine: So long as legislation
11403 can be bought (albeit indirectly), there will be all the incentive in
11404 the world to buy further extensions of copyright.
11405 </para>
11406 <para>
11407 In the lobbying that led to the passage of the Sonny Bono
11408 Copyright
11409 Term Extension Act, this <quote>theory</quote> about incentives was proved
11410 real. Ten of the thirteen original sponsors of the act in the House
11411 received the maximum contribution from Disney's political action
11412 committee; in the Senate, eight of the twelve sponsors received
11413 contributions.<footnote><para>
11414 <!-- f3. --> Associated Press, <quote>Disney Lobbying for Copyright Extension No Mickey
11415 Mouse Effort; Congress OKs Bill Granting Creators 20 More Years,</quote>
11416 <citetitle>Chicago Tribune</citetitle>, 17 October 1998, 22.
11417 </para></footnote>
11418 The RIAA and the MPAA are estimated to have spent over
11419 $1.5 million lobbying in the 1998 election cycle. They paid out more
11420 than $200,000 in campaign contributions.<footnote><para>
11421 <!-- f4. --> See Nick Brown, <quote>Fair Use No More?: Copyright in the Information
11422 Age,</quote> available at
11423 <ulink url="http://free-culture.cc/notes/">link #49</ulink>.
11424 </para></footnote>
11425 Disney is estimated to have
11426 contributed more than $800,000 to reelection campaigns in the
11427 cycle.<footnote><para>
11428 <!-- f5. -->
11429 Alan K. Ota, <quote>Disney in Washington: The Mouse That Roars,</quote>
11430 <citetitle>Congressional Quarterly This Week</citetitle>, 8 August 1990, available at
11431 <ulink url="http://free-culture.cc/notes/">link #50</ulink>.
11432 </para></footnote>
11433
11434 </para>
11435 <para>
11436 <emphasis role='strong'>Constitutional law</emphasis> is not oblivious
11437 to the obvious. Or at least, it need not be. So when I was considering
11438 Eldred's complaint, this reality about the never-ending incentives to
11439 increase the copyright term was central to my thinking. In my view, a
11440 pragmatic court committed to interpreting and applying the
11441 Constitution of our framers would see that if Congress has the power
11442 to extend existing terms, then there would be no effective
11443 constitutional requirement that terms be <quote>limited.</quote> If
11444 they could extend it once, they would extend it again and again and
11445 again.
11446 </para>
11447 <indexterm startref='idxcongressuscopyrighttermsextendedby2' class='endofrange'/>
11448 <indexterm startref='idxcopyrightdurationof6' class='endofrange'/>
11449 <indexterm startref='idxcopyrightlawtermextensionsin2' class='endofrange'/>
11450 <para>
11451 It was also my judgment that <emphasis>this</emphasis> Supreme Court
11452 would not allow Congress to extend existing terms. As anyone close to
11453 the Supreme Court's work knows, this Court has increasingly restricted
11454 the power of Congress when it has viewed Congress's actions as
11455 exceeding the power granted to it by the Constitution. Among
11456 constitutional scholars, the most famous example of this trend was the
11457 Supreme Court's
11458
11459 <!-- PAGE BREAK 226 -->
11460 decision in 1995 to strike down a law that banned the possession of
11461 guns near schools.
11462 </para>
11463 <indexterm id='idxcommerceinterstate' class='startofrange'><primary>commerce, interstate</primary></indexterm>
11464 <indexterm id='idxcongressusconstitutionalpowersof2' class='startofrange'><primary>Congress, U.S.</primary><secondary>constitutional powers of</secondary></indexterm>
11465 <indexterm id='idxinterstatecommerce' class='startofrange'><primary>interstate commerce</primary></indexterm>
11466 <para>
11467 Since 1937, the Supreme Court had interpreted Congress's granted
11468 powers very broadly; so, while the Constitution grants Congress the
11469 power to regulate only <quote>commerce among the several states</quote> (aka
11470 <quote>interstate
11471 commerce</quote>), the Supreme Court had interpreted that power to
11472 include the power to regulate any activity that merely affected
11473 interstate
11474 commerce.
11475 </para>
11476 <para>
11477 As the economy grew, this standard increasingly meant that there was
11478 no limit to Congress's power to regulate, since just about every
11479 activity, when considered on a national scale, affects interstate
11480 commerce. A Constitution designed to limit Congress's power was
11481 instead interpreted to impose no limit.
11482 </para>
11483 <indexterm><primary>Rehnquist, William H.</primary></indexterm>
11484 <indexterm id='idxunitedstatesvlopez' class='startofrange'><primary>United States v. Lopez</primary></indexterm>
11485 <para>
11486 The Supreme Court, under Chief Justice Rehnquist's command, changed
11487 that in <citetitle>United States</citetitle> v. <citetitle>Lopez</citetitle>. The government had
11488 argued that possessing guns near schools affected interstate
11489 commerce. Guns near schools increase crime, crime lowers property
11490 values, and so on. In the oral argument, the Chief Justice asked the
11491 government whether there was any activity that would not affect
11492 interstate commerce under the reasoning the government advanced. The
11493 government said there was not; if Congress says an activity affects
11494 interstate commerce, then that activity affects interstate
11495 commerce. The Supreme Court, the government said, was not in the
11496 position to second-guess Congress.
11497 </para>
11498 <para>
11499 <quote>We pause to consider the implications of the government's arguments,</quote>
11500 the Chief Justice wrote.<footnote><para>
11501 <!-- f6. --> <citetitle>United States</citetitle> v. <citetitle>Lopez</citetitle>, 514 U.S. 549, 564 (1995).
11502 </para></footnote>
11503 If anything Congress says is interstate commerce must therefore be
11504 considered interstate commerce, then there would be no limit to
11505 Congress's power. The decision in <citetitle>Lopez</citetitle> was reaffirmed five years
11506 later in <citetitle>United States</citetitle> v. <citetitle>Morrison</citetitle>.<footnote><para>
11507 <!-- f7. -->
11508 <citetitle>United States</citetitle> v. <citetitle>Morrison</citetitle>, 529 U.S. 598 (2000).
11509 <indexterm><primary>United States v. Morrison</primary></indexterm>
11510 </para></footnote>
11511 </para>
11512 <indexterm startref='idxcommerceinterstate' class='endofrange'/>
11513 <indexterm startref='idxunitedstatesvlopez' class='endofrange'/>
11514 <para>
11515 If a principle were at work here, then it should apply to the Progress
11516 Clause as much as the Commerce Clause.<footnote><para>
11517 <!-- f8. -->
11518 If it is a principle about enumerated powers, then the principle
11519 carries from one enumerated power to another. The animating point in
11520 the context of the Commerce Clause was that the interpretation offered
11521 by the government would allow the government unending power to
11522 regulate commerce&mdash;the limitation to interstate commerce
11523 notwithstanding. The same point is true in the context of the
11524 Copyright Clause. Here, too, the government's interpretation would
11525 allow the government unending power to regulate copyrights&mdash;the
11526 limitation to <quote>limited times</quote> notwithstanding.
11527 </para></footnote>
11528 And if it is applied to the Progress Clause, the principle should
11529 yield the conclusion that Congress
11530 <!-- PAGE BREAK 227 -->
11531 can't extend an existing term. If Congress could extend an existing
11532 term, then there would be no <quote>stopping point</quote> to Congress's power over
11533 terms, though the Constitution expressly states that there is such a
11534 limit. Thus, the same principle applied to the power to grant
11535 copyrights should entail that Congress is not allowed to extend the
11536 term of existing copyrights.
11537 </para>
11538 <indexterm startref='idxinterstatecommerce' class='endofrange'/>
11539 <indexterm id='idxcongressussupremecourtrestrainton2' class='startofrange'><primary>Congress, U.S.</primary><secondary>Supreme Court restraint on</secondary></indexterm>
11540 <indexterm><primary>United States v. Lopez</primary></indexterm>
11541 <para>
11542 <emphasis>If</emphasis>, that is, the principle announced in <citetitle>Lopez</citetitle>
11543 stood for a principle. Many believed the decision in <citetitle>Lopez</citetitle> stood for
11544 politics&mdash;a conservative Supreme Court, which believed in states'
11545 rights, using its power over Congress to advance its own personal
11546 political preferences. But I rejected that view of the Supreme Court's
11547 decision. Indeed, shortly after the decision, I wrote an article
11548 demonstrating the <quote>fidelity</quote> in such an interpretation of the
11549 Constitution. The idea that the Supreme Court decides cases based upon
11550 its politics struck me as extraordinarily boring. I was not going to
11551 devote my life to teaching constitutional law if these nine Justices
11552 were going to be petty politicians.
11553 </para>
11554 <indexterm startref='idxcongressusconstitutionalpowersof2' class='endofrange'/>
11555 <indexterm><primary>Constitution, U.S.</primary><secondary>copyright purpose established in</secondary></indexterm>
11556 <indexterm><primary>copyright</primary><secondary>constitutional purpose of</secondary></indexterm>
11557 <indexterm><primary>copyright</primary><secondary>duration of</secondary></indexterm>
11558 <indexterm><primary>Disney, Walt</primary></indexterm>
11559 <para>
11560 <emphasis role='strong'>Now let's pause</emphasis> for a moment to
11561 make sure we understand what the argument in
11562 <citetitle>Eldred</citetitle> was not about. By insisting on the
11563 Constitution's limits to copyright, obviously Eldred was not endorsing
11564 piracy. Indeed, in an obvious sense, he was fighting a kind of
11565 piracy&mdash;piracy of the public domain. When Robert Frost wrote his
11566 work and when Walt Disney created Mickey Mouse, the maximum copyright
11567 term was just fifty-six years. Because of interim changes, Frost and
11568 Disney had already enjoyed a seventy-five-year monopoly for their
11569 work. They had gotten the benefit of the bargain that the Constitution
11570 envisions: In exchange for a monopoly protected for fifty-six years,
11571 they created new work. But now these entities were using their
11572 power&mdash;expressed through the power of lobbyists' money&mdash;to
11573 get another twenty-year dollop of monopoly. That twenty-year dollop
11574 would be taken from the public domain. Eric Eldred was fighting a
11575 piracy that affects us all.
11576 </para>
11577 <indexterm><primary>Nashville Songwriters Association</primary></indexterm>
11578 <para>
11579 Some people view the public domain with contempt. In their brief
11580
11581 <!-- PAGE BREAK 228 -->
11582 before the Supreme Court, the Nashville Songwriters Association
11583 wrote that the public domain is nothing more than <quote>legal piracy.</quote><footnote><para>
11584 <!-- f9. -->
11585 Brief of the Nashville Songwriters Association, <citetitle>Eldred</citetitle>
11586 v. <citetitle>Ashcroft</citetitle>, 537 U.S. 186 (2003) (No. 01-618), n.10, available
11587 at <ulink url="http://free-culture.cc/notes/">link #51</ulink>.
11588 </para></footnote>
11589 But it is not piracy when the law allows it; and in our constitutional
11590 system, our law requires it. Some may not like the Constitution's
11591 requirements, but that doesn't make the Constitution a pirate's
11592 charter.
11593 </para>
11594 <para>
11595 As we've seen, our constitutional system requires limits on
11596 copyright
11597 as a way to assure that copyright holders do not too heavily
11598 influence
11599 the development and distribution of our culture. Yet, as Eric
11600 Eldred discovered, we have set up a system that assures that copyright
11601 terms will be repeatedly extended, and extended, and extended. We
11602 have created the perfect storm for the public domain. Copyrights have
11603 not expired, and will not expire, so long as Congress is free to be
11604 bought to extend them again.
11605 </para>
11606 <indexterm startref='idxcongressussupremecourtrestrainton2' class='endofrange'/>
11607
11608 <para>
11609 <emphasis role='strong'>It is valuable</emphasis> copyrights that are
11610 responsible for terms being extended. Mickey Mouse and
11611 <quote>Rhapsody in Blue.</quote> These works are too valuable for
11612 copyright owners to ignore. But the real harm to our society from
11613 copyright extensions is not that Mickey Mouse remains Disney's.
11614 Forget Mickey Mouse. Forget Robert Frost. Forget all the works from
11615 the 1920s and 1930s that have continuing commercial value. The real
11616 harm of term extension comes not from these famous works. The real
11617 harm is to the works that are not famous, not commercially exploited,
11618 and no longer available as a result.
11619 </para>
11620 <para>
11621 If you look at the work created in the first twenty years (1923 to
11622 1942) affected by the Sonny Bono Copyright Term Extension Act,
11623 2 percent of that work has any continuing commercial value. It was the
11624 copyright holders for that 2 percent who pushed the CTEA through.
11625 But the law and its effect were not limited to that 2 percent. The law
11626 extended the terms of copyright generally.<footnote><para>
11627 <!-- f10. --> The figure of 2 percent is an extrapolation from the study by the
11628 Congressional
11629 Research Service, in light of the estimated renewal ranges. See Brief
11630 of Petitioners, <citetitle>Eldred</citetitle> v. <citetitle>Ashcroft</citetitle>, 7, available at
11631 <ulink url="http://free-culture.cc/notes/">link #52</ulink>.
11632 </para></footnote>
11633
11634 </para>
11635 <indexterm><primary>Kahle, Brewster</primary></indexterm>
11636 <para>
11637 Think practically about the consequence of this
11638 extension&mdash;practically,
11639 as a businessperson, and not as a lawyer eager for more legal
11640
11641 <!-- PAGE BREAK 229 -->
11642 work. In 1930, 10,047 books were published. In 2000, 174 of those
11643 books were still in print. Let's say you were Brewster Kahle, and you
11644 wanted to make available to the world in your iArchive project the
11645 remaining
11646 9,873. What would you have to do?
11647 </para>
11648 <indexterm><primary>archives, digital</primary></indexterm>
11649 <para>
11650 Well, first, you'd have to determine which of the 9,873 books were
11651 still under copyright. That requires going to a library (these data are
11652 not on-line) and paging through tomes of books, cross-checking the
11653 titles and authors of the 9,873 books with the copyright registration
11654 and renewal records for works published in 1930. That will produce a
11655 list of books still under copyright.
11656 </para>
11657 <para>
11658 Then for the books still under copyright, you would need to locate
11659 the current copyright owners. How would you do that?
11660 </para>
11661 <para>
11662 Most people think that there must be a list of these copyright
11663 owners
11664 somewhere. Practical people think this way. How could there be
11665 thousands and thousands of government monopolies without there
11666 being at least a list?
11667 </para>
11668 <para>
11669 But there is no list. There may be a name from 1930, and then in
11670 1959, of the person who registered the copyright. But just think
11671 practically
11672 about how impossibly difficult it would be to track down
11673 thousands
11674 of such records&mdash;especially since the person who registered is
11675 not necessarily the current owner. And we're just talking about 1930!
11676 </para>
11677 <para>
11678 <quote>But there isn't a list of who owns property generally,</quote> the
11679 apologists for the system respond. <quote>Why should there be a list of
11680 copyright owners?</quote>
11681 </para>
11682 <para>
11683 Well, actually, if you think about it, there <emphasis>are</emphasis>
11684 plenty of lists of who owns what property. Think about deeds on
11685 houses, or titles to cars. And where there isn't a list, the code of
11686 real space is pretty good at suggesting who the owner of a bit of
11687 property is. (A swing set in your backyard is probably yours.) So
11688 formally or informally, we have a pretty good way to know who owns
11689 what tangible property.
11690 </para>
11691 <para>
11692 So: You walk down a street and see a house. You can know who
11693 owns the house by looking it up in the courthouse registry. If you see
11694 a car, there is ordinarily a license plate that will link the owner to the
11695
11696 <!-- PAGE BREAK 230 -->
11697 car. If you see a bunch of children's toys sitting on the front lawn of a
11698 house, it's fairly easy to determine who owns the toys. And if you
11699 happen
11700 to see a baseball lying in a gutter on the side of the road, look
11701 around for a second for some kids playing ball. If you don't see any
11702 kids, then okay: Here's a bit of property whose owner we can't easily
11703 determine. It is the exception that proves the rule: that we ordinarily
11704 know quite well who owns what property.
11705 </para>
11706 <para>
11707 Compare this story to intangible property. You go into a library.
11708 The library owns the books. But who owns the copyrights? As I've
11709 already
11710 described, there's no list of copyright owners. There are authors'
11711 names, of course, but their copyrights could have been assigned, or
11712 passed down in an estate like Grandma's old jewelry. To know who
11713 owns what, you would have to hire a private detective. The bottom
11714 line: The owner cannot easily be located. And in a regime like ours, in
11715 which it is a felony to use such property without the property owner's
11716 permission, the property isn't going to be used.
11717 </para>
11718 <para>
11719 The consequence with respect to old books is that they won't be
11720 digitized, and hence will simply rot away on shelves. But the
11721 consequence
11722 for other creative works is much more dire.
11723 </para>
11724 <indexterm id='idxageemichael' class='startofrange'><primary>Agee, Michael</primary></indexterm>
11725 <indexterm><primary>Hal Roach Studios</primary></indexterm>
11726 <indexterm><primary>Laurel and Hardy Films</primary></indexterm>
11727 <indexterm><primary>Lucky Dog, The</primary></indexterm>
11728 <para>
11729 Consider the story of Michael Agee, chairman of Hal Roach Studios,
11730 which owns the copyrights for the Laurel and Hardy films. Agee is a
11731 direct beneficiary of the Bono Act. The Laurel and Hardy films were
11732 made between 1921 and 1951. Only one of these films, <citetitle>The Lucky Dog</citetitle>, is
11733 currently out of copyright. But for the CTEA, films made after 1923
11734 would have begun entering the public domain. Because Agee controls the
11735 exclusive rights for these popular films, he makes a great deal of
11736 money. According to one estimate, <quote>Roach has sold about 60,000
11737 videocassettes and 50,000 DVDs of the duo's silent
11738 films.</quote><footnote><para>
11739 <!-- f11. -->
11740 See David G. Savage, <quote>High Court Scene of Showdown on Copyright Law,</quote>
11741 <citetitle>Los Angeles Times</citetitle>, 6 October 2002; David Streitfeld, <quote>Classic Movies,
11742 Songs, Books at Stake; Supreme Court Hears Arguments Today on Striking
11743 Down Copyright Extension,</quote> <citetitle>Orlando Sentinel Tribune</citetitle>, 9 October 2002.
11744 </para></footnote>
11745 </para>
11746 <para>
11747 Yet Agee opposed the CTEA. His reasons demonstrate a rare virtue in
11748 this culture: selflessness. He argued in a brief before the Supreme
11749 Court that the Sonny Bono Copyright Term Extension Act will, if left
11750 standing, destroy a whole generation of American film.
11751 </para>
11752 <para>
11753 His argument is straightforward. A tiny fraction of this work has
11754
11755 <!-- PAGE BREAK 231 -->
11756 any continuing commercial value. The rest&mdash;to the extent it
11757 survives at all&mdash;sits in vaults gathering dust. It may be that
11758 some of this work not now commercially valuable will be deemed to be
11759 valuable by the owners of the vaults. For this to occur, however, the
11760 commercial benefit from the work must exceed the costs of making the
11761 work available for distribution.
11762 </para>
11763 <para>
11764 We can't know the benefits, but we do know a lot about the costs.
11765 For most of the history of film, the costs of restoring film were very
11766 high; digital technology has lowered these costs substantially. While
11767 it cost more than $10,000 to restore a ninety-minute black-and-white
11768 film in 1993, it can now cost as little as $100 to digitize one hour of
11769 8 mm film.<footnote><para>
11770 <!-- f12. -->
11771 Brief of Hal Roach Studios and Michael Agee as Amicus Curiae
11772 Supporting the Petitoners, <citetitle>Eldred</citetitle> v. <citetitle>Ashcroft</citetitle>, 537
11773 U.S. 186 (2003) (No. 01- 618), 12. See also Brief of Amicus Curiae
11774 filed on behalf of Petitioners by the Internet Archive, <citetitle>Eldred</citetitle>
11775 v. <citetitle>Ashcroft</citetitle>, available at
11776 <ulink url="http://free-culture.cc/notes/">link #53</ulink>.
11777 </para></footnote>
11778
11779 </para>
11780 <para>
11781 Restoration technology is not the only cost, nor the most
11782 important.
11783 Lawyers, too, are a cost, and increasingly, a very important one. In
11784 addition to preserving the film, a distributor needs to secure the rights.
11785 And to secure the rights for a film that is under copyright, you need to
11786 locate the copyright owner.
11787 </para>
11788 <para>
11789 Or more accurately, <emphasis>owners</emphasis>. As we've seen, there
11790 isn't only a single copyright associated with a film; there are
11791 many. There isn't a single person whom you can contact about those
11792 copyrights; there are as many as can hold the rights, which turns out
11793 to be an extremely large number. Thus the costs of clearing the rights
11794 to these films is exceptionally high.
11795 </para>
11796 <para>
11797 <quote>But can't you just restore the film, distribute it, and then pay the
11798 copyright owner when she shows up?</quote> Sure, if you want to commit a
11799 felony. And even if you're not worried about committing a felony, when
11800 she does show up, she'll have the right to sue you for all the profits you
11801 have made. So, if you're successful, you can be fairly confident you'll be
11802 getting a call from someone's lawyer. And if you're not successful, you
11803 won't make enough to cover the costs of your own lawyer. Either way,
11804 you have to talk to a lawyer. And as is too often the case, saying you have
11805 to talk to a lawyer is the same as saying you won't make any money.
11806 </para>
11807 <para>
11808 For some films, the benefit of releasing the film may well exceed
11809
11810 <!-- PAGE BREAK 232 -->
11811 these costs. But for the vast majority of them, there is no way the
11812 benefit
11813 would outweigh the legal costs. Thus, for the vast majority of old
11814 films, Agee argued, the film will not be restored and distributed until
11815 the copyright expires.
11816 </para>
11817 <indexterm startref='idxageemichael' class='endofrange'/>
11818 <para>
11819 But by the time the copyright for these films expires, the film will
11820 have expired. These films were produced on nitrate-based stock, and
11821 nitrate stock dissolves over time. They will be gone, and the metal
11822 canisters
11823 in which they are now stored will be filled with nothing more
11824 than dust.
11825 </para>
11826 <para>
11827 <emphasis role='strong'>Of all the</emphasis> creative work produced
11828 by humans anywhere, a tiny fraction has continuing commercial
11829 value. For that tiny fraction, the copyright is a crucially important
11830 legal device. For that tiny fraction, the copyright creates incentives
11831 to produce and distribute the creative work. For that tiny fraction,
11832 the copyright acts as an <quote>engine of free expression.</quote>
11833 </para>
11834 <para>
11835 But even for that tiny fraction, the actual time during which the
11836 creative work has a commercial life is extremely short. As I've
11837 indicated,
11838 most books go out of print within one year. The same is true of
11839 music and film. Commercial culture is sharklike. It must keep moving.
11840 And when a creative work falls out of favor with the commercial
11841 distributors,
11842 the commercial life ends.
11843 </para>
11844 <para>
11845 Yet that doesn't mean the life of the creative work ends. We don't
11846 keep libraries of books in order to compete with Barnes &amp; Noble, and
11847 we don't have archives of films because we expect people to choose
11848 between
11849 spending Friday night watching new movies and spending
11850 Friday
11851 night watching a 1930 news documentary. The noncommercial life
11852 of culture is important and valuable&mdash;for entertainment but also, and
11853 more importantly, for knowledge. To understand who we are, and
11854 where we came from, and how we have made the mistakes that we
11855 have, we need to have access to this history.
11856 </para>
11857 <para>
11858 Copyrights in this context do not drive an engine of free expression.
11859
11860 <!-- PAGE BREAK 233 -->
11861 In this context, there is no need for an exclusive right. Copyrights in
11862 this context do no good.
11863 </para>
11864 <para>
11865 Yet, for most of our history, they also did little harm. For most of
11866 our history, when a work ended its commercial life, there was no
11867 <emphasis>copyright-related use</emphasis> that would be inhibited by
11868 an exclusive right. When a book went out of print, you could not buy
11869 it from a publisher. But you could still buy it from a used book
11870 store, and when a used book store sells it, in America, at least,
11871 there is no need to pay the copyright owner anything. Thus, the
11872 ordinary use of a book after its commercial life ended was a use that
11873 was independent of copyright law.
11874 </para>
11875 <para>
11876 The same was effectively true of film. Because the costs of restoring
11877 a film&mdash;the real economic costs, not the lawyer costs&mdash;were
11878 so high, it was never at all feasible to preserve or restore
11879 film. Like the remains of a great dinner, when it's over, it's
11880 over. Once a film passed out of its commercial life, it may have been
11881 archived for a bit, but that was the end of its life so long as the
11882 market didn't have more to offer.
11883 </para>
11884 <para>
11885 In other words, though copyright has been relatively short for most
11886 of our history, long copyrights wouldn't have mattered for the works
11887 that lost their commercial value. Long copyrights for these works
11888 would not have interfered with anything.
11889 </para>
11890 <para>
11891 But this situation has now changed.
11892 </para>
11893 <indexterm id='idxkahlebrewster2' class='startofrange'><primary>Kahle, Brewster</primary></indexterm>
11894 <indexterm id='idxarchivesdigital2' class='startofrange'><primary>archives, digital</primary></indexterm>
11895 <para>
11896 One crucially important consequence of the emergence of digital
11897 technologies is to enable the archive that Brewster Kahle dreams of.
11898 Digital technologies now make it possible to preserve and give access
11899 to all sorts of knowledge. Once a book goes out of print, we can now
11900 imagine digitizing it and making it available to everyone,
11901 forever. Once a film goes out of distribution, we could digitize it
11902 and make it available to everyone, forever. Digital technologies give
11903 new life to copyrighted material after it passes out of its commercial
11904 life. It is now possible to preserve and assure universal access to
11905 this knowledge and culture, whereas before it was not.
11906 </para>
11907 <para>
11908 <!-- PAGE BREAK 234 -->
11909 And now copyright law does get in the way. Every step of producing
11910 this digital archive of our culture infringes on the exclusive right
11911 of copyright. To digitize a book is to copy it. To do that requires
11912 permission of the copyright owner. The same with music, film, or any
11913 other aspect of our culture protected by copyright. The effort to make
11914 these things available to history, or to researchers, or to those who
11915 just want to explore, is now inhibited by a set of rules that were
11916 written for a radically different context.
11917 </para>
11918 <para>
11919 Here is the core of the harm that comes from extending terms: Now that
11920 technology enables us to rebuild the library of Alexandria, the law
11921 gets in the way. And it doesn't get in the way for any useful
11922 <emphasis>copyright</emphasis> purpose, for the purpose of copyright
11923 is to enable the commercial market that spreads culture. No, we are
11924 talking about culture after it has lived its commercial life. In this
11925 context, copyright is serving no purpose <emphasis>at all</emphasis>
11926 related to the spread of knowledge. In this context, copyright is not
11927 an engine of free expression. Copyright is a brake.
11928 </para>
11929 <para>
11930 You may well ask, <quote>But if digital technologies lower the costs for
11931 Brewster Kahle, then they will lower the costs for Random House, too.
11932 So won't Random House do as well as Brewster Kahle in spreading
11933 culture widely?</quote>
11934 </para>
11935 <indexterm startref='idxkahlebrewster2' class='endofrange'/>
11936 <para>
11937 Maybe. Someday. But there is absolutely no evidence to suggest that
11938 publishers would be as complete as libraries. If Barnes &amp; Noble
11939 offered to lend books from its stores for a low price, would that
11940 eliminate the need for libraries? Only if you think that the only role
11941 of a library is to serve what <quote>the market</quote> would demand. But if you
11942 think the role of a library is bigger than this&mdash;if you think its
11943 role is to archive culture, whether there's a demand for any
11944 particular bit of that culture or not&mdash;then we can't count on the
11945 commercial market to do our library work for us.
11946 </para>
11947 <indexterm startref='idxarchivesdigital2' class='endofrange'/>
11948 <para>
11949 I would be the first to agree that it should do as much as it can: We
11950 should rely upon the market as much as possible to spread and enable
11951 culture. My message is absolutely not antimarket. But where we see the
11952 market is not doing the job, then we should allow nonmarket forces the
11953
11954 <!-- PAGE BREAK 235 -->
11955 freedom to fill the gaps. As one researcher calculated for American
11956 culture, 94 percent of the films, books, and music produced between
11957 1923 and 1946 is not commercially available. However much you love the
11958 commercial market, if access is a value, then 6 percent is a failure
11959 to provide that value.<footnote><para>
11960 <!-- f13. -->
11961 Jason Schultz, <quote>The Myth of the 1976 Copyright
11962 <quote>Chaos</quote> Theory,</quote> 20 December 2002, available at
11963 <ulink url="http://free-culture.cc/notes/">link #54</ulink>.
11964 </para></footnote>
11965
11966 </para>
11967 <para>
11968 <emphasis role='strong'>In January 1999</emphasis>, we filed a lawsuit
11969 on Eric Eldred's behalf in federal district court in Washington, D.C.,
11970 asking the court to declare the Sonny Bono Copyright Term Extension
11971 Act unconstitutional. The two central claims that we made were (1)
11972 that extending existing terms violated the Constitution's
11973 <quote>limited Times</quote> requirement, and (2) that extending terms
11974 by another twenty years violated the First Amendment.
11975 </para>
11976 <para>
11977 The district court dismissed our claims without even hearing an
11978 argument. A panel of the Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit also
11979 dismissed our claims, though after hearing an extensive argument. But
11980 that decision at least had a dissent, by one of the most conservative
11981 judges on that court. That dissent gave our claims life.
11982 </para>
11983 <para>
11984 Judge David Sentelle said the CTEA violated the requirement that
11985 copyrights be for <quote>limited Times</quote> only. His argument was as elegant as
11986 it was simple: If Congress can extend existing terms, then there is no
11987 <quote>stopping point</quote> to Congress's power under the Copyright Clause. The
11988 power to extend existing terms means Congress is not required to grant
11989 terms that are <quote>limited.</quote> Thus, Judge Sentelle argued, the court had
11990 to interpret the term <quote>limited Times</quote> to give it meaning. And the best
11991 interpretation, Judge Sentelle argued, would be to deny Congress the
11992 power to extend existing terms.
11993 </para>
11994 <para>
11995 We asked the Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit as a whole to
11996 hear the case. Cases are ordinarily heard in panels of three, except for
11997 important cases or cases that raise issues specific to the circuit as a
11998 whole, where the court will sit <quote>en banc</quote> to hear the case.
11999 </para>
12000 <indexterm><primary>Tatel, David</primary></indexterm>
12001 <para>
12002 The Court of Appeals rejected our request to hear the case en banc.
12003 This time, Judge Sentelle was joined by the most liberal member of the
12004
12005 <!-- PAGE BREAK 236 -->
12006 D.C. Circuit, Judge David Tatel. Both the most conservative and the
12007 most liberal judges in the D.C. Circuit believed Congress had
12008 overstepped its bounds.
12009 </para>
12010 <para>
12011 It was here that most expected <citetitle>Eldred</citetitle>
12012 v. <citetitle>Ashcroft</citetitle> would die, for the Supreme Court
12013 rarely reviews any decision by a court of appeals. (It hears about one
12014 hundred cases a year, out of more than five thousand appeals.) And it
12015 practically never reviews a decision that upholds a statute when no
12016 other court has yet reviewed the statute.
12017 </para>
12018 <para>
12019 But in February 2002, the Supreme Court surprised the world by
12020 granting our petition to review the D.C. Circuit opinion. Argument
12021 was set for October of 2002. The summer would be spent writing
12022 briefs and preparing for argument.
12023 </para>
12024 <para>
12025 <emphasis role='strong'>It is over</emphasis> a year later as I write
12026 these words. It is still astonishingly hard. If you know anything at
12027 all about this story, you know that we lost the appeal. And if you
12028 know something more than just the minimum, you probably think there
12029 was no way this case could have been won. After our defeat, I received
12030 literally thousands of missives by well-wishers and supporters,
12031 thanking me for my work on behalf of this noble but doomed cause. And
12032 none from this pile was more significant to me than the e-mail from my
12033 client, Eric Eldred.
12034 </para>
12035 <para>
12036 But my client and these friends were wrong. This case could have
12037 been won. It should have been won. And no matter how hard I try to
12038 retell this story to myself, I can never escape believing that my own
12039 mistake lost it.
12040 </para>
12041 <indexterm><primary>Steward, Geoffrey</primary></indexterm>
12042 <indexterm id='idxjonesdayreavisandpoguejonesday' class='startofrange'><primary>Jones, Day, Reavis and Pogue (Jones Day)</primary></indexterm>
12043 <para>
12044 <emphasis role='strong'>The mistake</emphasis> was made early, though
12045 it became obvious only at the very end. Our case had been supported
12046 from the very beginning by an extraordinary lawyer, Geoffrey Stewart,
12047 and by the law firm he had moved to, Jones, Day, Reavis and
12048 Pogue. Jones Day took a great deal of heat
12049 <!-- PAGE BREAK 237 -->
12050 from its copyright-protectionist clients for supporting us. They
12051 ignored this pressure (something that few law firms today would ever
12052 do), and throughout the case, they gave it everything they could.
12053 </para>
12054 <indexterm><primary>Ayer, Don</primary></indexterm>
12055 <indexterm><primary>Bromberg, Dan</primary></indexterm>
12056 <indexterm><primary>Steward, Geoffrey</primary></indexterm>
12057 <para>
12058 There were three key lawyers on the case from Jones Day. Geoff
12059 Stewart was the first, but then Dan Bromberg and Don Ayer became
12060 quite involved. Bromberg and Ayer in particular had a common view
12061 about how this case would be won: We would only win, they repeatedly
12062 told me, if we could make the issue seem <quote>important</quote> to the Supreme
12063 Court. It had to seem as if dramatic harm were being done to free
12064 speech and free culture; otherwise, they would never vote against <quote>the
12065 most powerful media companies in the world.</quote>
12066 </para>
12067 <indexterm startref='idxjonesdayreavisandpoguejonesday' class='endofrange'/>
12068 <para>
12069 I hate this view of the law. Of course I thought the Sonny Bono Act
12070 was a dramatic harm to free speech and free culture. Of course I still
12071 think it is. But the idea that the Supreme Court decides the law based
12072 on how important they believe the issues are is just wrong. It might be
12073 <quote>right</quote> as in <quote>true,</quote> I thought, but it is <quote>wrong</quote> as in <quote>it just shouldn't be
12074 that way.</quote> As I believed that any faithful interpretation of what the
12075 framers of our Constitution did would yield the conclusion that the
12076 CTEA was unconstitutional, and as I believed that any faithful
12077 interpretation
12078 of what the First Amendment means would yield the
12079 conclusion that the power to extend existing copyright terms is
12080 unconstitutional,
12081 I was not persuaded that we had to sell our case like soap.
12082 Just as a law that bans the swastika is unconstitutional not because the
12083 Court likes Nazis but because such a law would violate the
12084 Constitution,
12085 so too, in my view, would the Court decide whether Congress's
12086 law was constitutional based on the Constitution, not based on whether
12087 they liked the values that the framers put in the Constitution.
12088 </para>
12089 <para>
12090 In any case, I thought, the Court must already see the danger and
12091 the harm caused by this sort of law. Why else would they grant review?
12092 There was no reason to hear the case in the Supreme Court if they
12093 weren't convinced that this regulation was harmful. So in my view, we
12094 didn't need to persuade them that this law was bad, we needed to show
12095 why it was unconstitutional.
12096 </para>
12097 <para>
12098 There was one way, however, in which I felt politics would matter
12099
12100 <!-- PAGE BREAK 238 -->
12101 and in which I thought a response was appropriate. I was convinced
12102 that the Court would not hear our arguments if it thought these were
12103 just the arguments of a group of lefty loons. This Supreme Court was
12104 not about to launch into a new field of judicial review if it seemed
12105 that this field of review was simply the preference of a small
12106 political minority. Although my focus in the case was not to
12107 demonstrate how bad the Sonny Bono Act was but to demonstrate that it
12108 was unconstitutional, my hope was to make this argument against a
12109 background of briefs that covered the full range of political
12110 views. To show that this claim against the CTEA was grounded in
12111 <emphasis>law</emphasis> and not politics, then, we tried to gather
12112 the widest range of credible critics&mdash;credible not because they
12113 were rich and famous, but because they, in the aggregate, demonstrated
12114 that this law was unconstitutional regardless of one's politics.
12115 </para>
12116 <indexterm><primary>Eagle Forum</primary></indexterm>
12117 <indexterm><primary>Schlafly, Phyllis</primary></indexterm>
12118 <para>
12119 The first step happened all by itself. Phyllis Schlafly's
12120 organization, Eagle Forum, had been an opponent of the CTEA from the
12121 very beginning. Mrs. Schlafly viewed the CTEA as a sellout by
12122 Congress. In November 1998, she wrote a stinging editorial attacking
12123 the Republican Congress for allowing the law to pass. As she wrote,
12124 <quote>Do you sometimes wonder why bills that create a financial windfall to
12125 narrow special interests slide easily through the intricate
12126 legislative process, while bills that benefit the general public seem
12127 to get bogged down?</quote> The answer, as the editorial documented, was the
12128 power of money. Schlafly enumerated Disney's contributions to the key
12129 players on the committees. It was money, not justice, that gave Mickey
12130 Mouse twenty more years in Disney's control, Schlafly argued.
12131 </para>
12132 <para>
12133 In the Court of Appeals, Eagle Forum was eager to file a brief
12134 supporting our position. Their brief made the argument that became the
12135 core claim in the Supreme Court: If Congress can extend the term of
12136 existing copyrights, there is no limit to Congress's power to set
12137 terms. That strong conservative argument persuaded a strong
12138 conservative judge, Judge Sentelle.
12139 </para>
12140 <indexterm><primary>GNU/Linux operating system</primary></indexterm>
12141 <indexterm><primary>Intel</primary></indexterm>
12142 <indexterm><primary>Linux operating system</primary></indexterm>
12143 <indexterm><primary>Eagle Forum</primary></indexterm>
12144 <para>
12145 In the Supreme Court, the briefs on our side were about as diverse as
12146 it gets. They included an extraordinary historical brief by the Free
12147
12148 <!-- PAGE BREAK 239 -->
12149 Software Foundation (home of the GNU project that made GNU/Linux
12150 possible). They included a powerful brief about the costs of
12151 uncertainty by Intel. There were two law professors' briefs, one by
12152 copyright scholars and one by First Amendment scholars. There was an
12153 exhaustive and uncontroverted brief by the world's experts in the
12154 history of the Progress Clause. And of course, there was a new brief
12155 by Eagle Forum, repeating and strengthening its arguments.
12156 </para>
12157 <indexterm><primary>American Association of Law Libraries</primary></indexterm>
12158 <indexterm><primary>National Writers Union</primary></indexterm>
12159 <para>
12160 Those briefs framed a legal argument. Then to support the legal
12161 argument, there were a number of powerful briefs by libraries and
12162 archives, including the Internet Archive, the American Association of
12163 Law Libraries, and the National Writers Union.
12164 </para>
12165 <indexterm><primary>Hal Roach Studios</primary></indexterm>
12166 <para>
12167 But two briefs captured the policy argument best. One made the
12168 argument I've already described: A brief by Hal Roach Studios argued
12169 that unless the law was struck, a whole generation of American film
12170 would disappear. The other made the economic argument absolutely
12171 clear.
12172 </para>
12173 <indexterm><primary>Akerlof, George</primary></indexterm>
12174 <indexterm><primary>Arrow, Kenneth</primary></indexterm>
12175 <indexterm><primary>Buchanan, James</primary></indexterm>
12176 <indexterm><primary>Coase, Ronald</primary></indexterm>
12177 <indexterm><primary>Friedman, Milton</primary></indexterm>
12178 <para>
12179 This economists' brief was signed by seventeen economists, including
12180 five Nobel Prize winners, including Ronald Coase, James Buchanan,
12181 Milton Friedman, Kenneth Arrow, and George Akerlof. The economists, as
12182 the list of Nobel winners demonstrates, spanned the political
12183 spectrum. Their conclusions were powerful: There was no plausible
12184 claim that extending the terms of existing copyrights would do
12185 anything to increase incentives to create. Such extensions were
12186 nothing more than <quote>rent-seeking</quote>&mdash;the fancy term economists use
12187 to describe special-interest legislation gone wild.
12188 </para>
12189 <indexterm><primary>Fried, Charles</primary></indexterm>
12190 <indexterm><primary>Morrison, Alan</primary></indexterm>
12191 <indexterm><primary>Public Citizen</primary></indexterm>
12192 <indexterm><primary>Reagan, Ronald</primary></indexterm>
12193 <indexterm><primary>Jones, Day, Reavis and Pogue (Jones Day)</primary></indexterm>
12194 <para>
12195 The same effort at balance was reflected in the legal team we gathered
12196 to write our briefs in the case. The Jones Day lawyers had been with
12197 us from the start. But when the case got to the Supreme Court, we
12198 added three lawyers to help us frame this argument to this Court: Alan
12199 Morrison, a lawyer from Public Citizen, a Washington group that had
12200 made constitutional history with a series of seminal victories in the
12201 Supreme Court defending individual rights; my colleague and dean,
12202 Kathleen Sullivan, who had argued many cases in the Court, and
12203
12204 <!-- PAGE BREAK 240 -->
12205 who had advised us early on about a First Amendment strategy; and
12206 finally, former solicitor general Charles Fried.
12207 </para>
12208 <indexterm><primary>Fried, Charles</primary></indexterm>
12209 <indexterm><primary>Congress, U.S.</primary><secondary>constitutional powers of</secondary></indexterm>
12210 <indexterm><primary>Constitution, U.S.</primary><secondary>Commerce Clause of</secondary></indexterm>
12211 <para>
12212 Fried was a special victory for our side. Every other former solicitor
12213 general was hired by the other side to defend Congress's power to give
12214 media companies the special favor of extended copyright terms. Fried
12215 was the only one who turned down that lucrative assignment to stand up
12216 for something he believed in. He had been Ronald Reagan's chief lawyer
12217 in the Supreme Court. He had helped craft the line of cases that
12218 limited Congress's power in the context of the Commerce Clause. And
12219 while he had argued many positions in the Supreme Court that I
12220 personally disagreed with, his joining the cause was a vote of
12221 confidence in our argument.
12222 </para>
12223 <para>
12224 The government, in defending the statute, had its collection of
12225 friends, as well. Significantly, however, none of these <quote>friends</quote> included
12226 historians or economists. The briefs on the other side of the case were
12227 written exclusively by major media companies, congressmen, and
12228 copyright holders.
12229 </para>
12230 <para>
12231 The media companies were not surprising. They had the most to gain
12232 from the law. The congressmen were not surprising either&mdash;they
12233 were defending their power and, indirectly, the gravy train of
12234 contributions such power induced. And of course it was not surprising
12235 that the copyright holders would defend the idea that they should
12236 continue to have the right to control who did what with content they
12237 wanted to control.
12238 </para>
12239 <indexterm><primary>Gershwin, George</primary></indexterm>
12240 <indexterm><primary>Porgy and Bess</primary></indexterm>
12241 <indexterm><primary>pornography</primary></indexterm>
12242 <para>
12243 Dr. Seuss's representatives, for example, argued that it was
12244 better for the Dr. Seuss estate to control what happened to
12245 Dr. Seuss's work&mdash; better than allowing it to fall into the
12246 public domain&mdash;because if this creativity were in the public
12247 domain, then people could use it to <quote>glorify drugs or to create
12248 pornography.</quote><footnote><para>
12249 <!-- f14. -->
12250 Brief of Amici Dr. Seuss Enterprise et al., <citetitle>Eldred</citetitle> v. <citetitle>Ashcroft</citetitle>, 537
12251 U.S. (2003) (No. 01-618), 19.
12252 </para></footnote>
12253 That was also the motive of the Gershwin estate, which defended its
12254 <quote>protection</quote> of the work of George Gershwin. They refuse, for example,
12255 to license <citetitle>Porgy and Bess</citetitle> to anyone who refuses to use African
12256 Americans in the cast.<footnote><para>
12257 <!-- f15. -->
12258 Dinitia Smith, <quote>Immortal Words, Immortal Royalties? Even Mickey
12259 Mouse Joins the Fray,</quote> <citetitle>New York Times</citetitle>, 28 March 1998, B7.
12260 </para></footnote>
12261 That's
12262 <!-- PAGE BREAK 241 -->
12263 their view of how this part of American culture should be controlled,
12264 and they wanted this law to help them effect that control.
12265 </para>
12266 <para>
12267 This argument made clear a theme that is rarely noticed in this
12268 debate. When Congress decides to extend the term of existing
12269 copyrights, Congress is making a choice about which speakers it will
12270 favor. Famous and beloved copyright owners, such as the Gershwin
12271 estate and Dr. Seuss, come to Congress and say, <quote>Give us twenty years
12272 to control the speech about these icons of American culture. We'll do
12273 better with them than anyone else.</quote> Congress of course likes to reward
12274 the popular and famous by giving them what they want. But when
12275 Congress gives people an exclusive right to speak in a certain way,
12276 that's just what the First Amendment is traditionally meant to block.
12277 </para>
12278 <para>
12279 We argued as much in a final brief. Not only would upholding the CTEA
12280 mean that there was no limit to the power of Congress to extend
12281 copyrights&mdash;extensions that would further concentrate the market;
12282 it would also mean that there was no limit to Congress's power to play
12283 favorites, through copyright, with who has the right to speak.
12284 </para>
12285 <para>
12286 <emphasis role='strong'>Between February</emphasis> and October, there
12287 was little I did beyond preparing for this case. Early on, as I said,
12288 I set the strategy.
12289 </para>
12290 <indexterm><primary>Kennedy, Anthony</primary></indexterm>
12291 <indexterm><primary>O'Connor, Sandra Day</primary></indexterm>
12292 <indexterm><primary>Rehnquist, William H.</primary></indexterm>
12293 <indexterm><primary>O'Connor, Sandra Day</primary></indexterm>
12294 <indexterm><primary>Thomas, Clarence</primary></indexterm>
12295 <indexterm><primary>United States v. Lopez</primary></indexterm>
12296 <indexterm><primary>United States v. Morrison</primary></indexterm>
12297 <indexterm><primary>Scalia, Antonin</primary></indexterm>
12298 <indexterm><primary>Congress, U.S.</primary><secondary>Supreme Court restraint on</secondary></indexterm>
12299 <indexterm><primary>Supreme Court, U.S.</primary><secondary>congressional actions restrained by</secondary></indexterm>
12300 <indexterm id='idxsupremecourtusfactionsof' class='startofrange'><primary>Supreme Court, U.S.</primary><secondary>factions of</secondary></indexterm>
12301 <para>
12302 The Supreme Court was divided into two important camps. One camp we
12303 called <quote>the Conservatives.</quote> The other we called <quote>the Rest.</quote> The
12304 Conservatives included Chief Justice Rehnquist, Justice O'Connor,
12305 Justice Scalia, Justice Kennedy, and Justice Thomas. These five had
12306 been the most consistent in limiting Congress's power. They were the
12307 five who had supported the <citetitle>Lopez/Morrison</citetitle> line
12308 of cases that said that an enumerated power had to be interpreted to
12309 assure that Congress's powers had limits.
12310 </para>
12311 <indexterm><primary>Breyer, Stephen</primary></indexterm>
12312 <indexterm id='idxginsburg' class='startofrange'><primary>Ginsburg, Ruth Bader</primary></indexterm>
12313 <para>
12314 The Rest were the four Justices who had strongly opposed limits on
12315 Congress's power. These four&mdash;Justice Stevens, Justice Souter,
12316 Justice Ginsburg, and Justice Breyer&mdash;had repeatedly argued that
12317 the Constitution
12318 <!-- PAGE BREAK 242 -->
12319 gives Congress broad discretion to decide how best to implement its
12320 powers. In case after case, these justices had argued that the Court's
12321 role should be one of deference. Though the votes of these four
12322 justices were the votes that I personally had most consistently agreed
12323 with, they were also the votes that we were least likely to get.
12324 </para>
12325 <para>
12326 In particular, the least likely was Justice Ginsburg's. In addition to
12327 her general view about deference to Congress (except where issues of
12328 gender are involved), she had been particularly deferential in the
12329 context of intellectual property protections. She and her daughter (an
12330 excellent and well-known intellectual property scholar) were cut from
12331 the same intellectual property cloth. We expected she would agree with
12332 the writings of her daughter: that Congress had the power in this
12333 context to do as it wished, even if what Congress wished made little
12334 sense.
12335 </para>
12336 <indexterm><primary>Breyer, Stephen</primary></indexterm>
12337 <para>
12338 Close behind Justice Ginsburg were two justices whom we also viewed as
12339 unlikely allies, though possible surprises. Justice Souter strongly
12340 favored deference to Congress, as did Justice Breyer. But both were
12341 also very sensitive to free speech concerns. And as we strongly
12342 believed, there was a very important free speech argument against
12343 these retrospective extensions.
12344 </para>
12345 <indexterm startref='idxsupremecourtusfactionsof' class='endofrange'/>
12346 <indexterm startref='idxginsburg' class='endofrange'/>
12347 <para>
12348 The only vote we could be confident about was that of Justice
12349 Stevens. History will record Justice Stevens as one of the greatest
12350 judges on this Court. His votes are consistently eclectic, which just
12351 means that no simple ideology explains where he will stand. But he
12352 had consistently argued for limits in the context of intellectual property
12353 generally. We were fairly confident he would recognize limits here.
12354 </para>
12355 <para>
12356 This analysis of <quote>the Rest</quote> showed most clearly where our focus had to
12357 be: on the Conservatives. To win this case, we had to crack open these
12358 five and get at least a majority to go our way. Thus, the single
12359 overriding argument that animated our claim rested on the
12360 Conservatives' most important jurisprudential innovation&mdash;the
12361 argument that Judge Sentelle had relied upon in the Court of Appeals,
12362 that Congress's power must be interpreted so that its enumerated
12363 powers have limits.
12364 </para>
12365 <indexterm><primary>United States v. Lopez</primary></indexterm>
12366 <indexterm><primary>commerce, interstate</primary></indexterm>
12367 <indexterm><primary>interstate commerce</primary></indexterm>
12368 <indexterm><primary>Congress, U.S.</primary><secondary>in constitutional Progress Clause</secondary></indexterm>
12369 <indexterm><primary>Progress Clause</primary></indexterm>
12370 <indexterm id='idxcongressuscopyrighttermsextendedby5' class='startofrange'><primary>Congress, U.S.</primary><secondary>copyright terms extended by</secondary></indexterm>
12371 <indexterm><primary>Constitution, U.S.</primary><secondary>Progress Clause of</secondary></indexterm>
12372 <para>
12373 This then was the core of our strategy&mdash;a strategy for which I am
12374 responsible. We would get the Court to see that just as with the
12375 <citetitle>Lopez</citetitle>
12376 <!-- PAGE BREAK 243 -->
12377 case, under the government's argument here, Congress would always have
12378 unlimited power to extend existing terms. If anything was plain about
12379 Congress's power under the Progress Clause, it was that this power was
12380 supposed to be <quote>limited.</quote> Our aim would be to get the Court to
12381 reconcile <citetitle>Eldred</citetitle> with
12382 <citetitle>Lopez</citetitle>: If Congress's power to regulate commerce
12383 was limited, then so, too, must Congress's power to regulate copyright
12384 be limited.
12385 </para>
12386 <para>
12387 <emphasis role='strong'>The argument</emphasis> on the government's
12388 side came down to this: Congress has done it before. It should be
12389 allowed to do it again. The government claimed that from the very
12390 beginning, Congress has been extending the term of existing
12391 copyrights. So, the government argued, the Court should not now say
12392 that practice is unconstitutional.
12393 </para>
12394 <indexterm startref='idxcongressuscopyrighttermsextendedby5' class='endofrange'/>
12395 <para>
12396 There was some truth to the government's claim, but not much. We
12397 certainly agreed that Congress had extended existing terms in 1831
12398 and in 1909. And of course, in 1962, Congress began extending
12399 existing
12400 terms regularly&mdash;eleven times in forty years.
12401 </para>
12402 <para>
12403 But this <quote>consistency</quote> should be kept in perspective. Congress
12404 extended
12405 existing terms once in the first hundred years of the Republic.
12406 It then extended existing terms once again in the next fifty. Those rare
12407 extensions are in contrast to the now regular practice of extending
12408 existing
12409 terms. Whatever restraint Congress had had in the past, that
12410 restraint
12411 was now gone. Congress was now in a cycle of extensions; there
12412 was no reason to expect that cycle would end. This Court had not
12413 hesitated
12414 to intervene where Congress was in a similar cycle of extension.
12415 There was no reason it couldn't intervene here.
12416 </para>
12417 <para>
12418 <emphasis role='strong'>Oral argument</emphasis> was scheduled for the
12419 first week in October. I arrived in D.C. two weeks before the
12420 argument. During those two weeks, I was repeatedly
12421 <quote>mooted</quote> by lawyers who had volunteered to
12422
12423 <!-- PAGE BREAK 244 -->
12424 help in the case. Such <quote>moots</quote> are basically practice rounds, where
12425 wannabe justices fire questions at wannabe winners.
12426 </para>
12427 <para>
12428 I was convinced that to win, I had to keep the Court focused on a
12429 single point: that if this extension is permitted, then there is no limit to
12430 the power to set terms. Going with the government would mean that
12431 terms would be effectively unlimited; going with us would give
12432 Congress
12433 a clear line to follow: Don't extend existing terms. The moots
12434 were an effective practice; I found ways to take every question back to
12435 this central idea.
12436 </para>
12437 <indexterm><primary>Ayer, Don</primary></indexterm>
12438 <indexterm><primary>Reagan, Ronald</primary></indexterm>
12439 <indexterm><primary>Fried, Charles</primary></indexterm>
12440 <indexterm><primary>Jones, Day, Reavis and Pogue (Jones Day)</primary></indexterm>
12441 <para>
12442 One moot was before the lawyers at Jones Day. Don Ayer was the
12443 skeptic. He had served in the Reagan Justice Department with Solicitor
12444 General Charles Fried. He had argued many cases before the Supreme
12445 Court. And in his review of the moot, he let his concern speak:
12446 </para>
12447 <para>
12448 <quote>I'm just afraid that unless they really see the harm, they won't be
12449 willing to upset this practice that the government says has been a
12450 consistent practice for two hundred years. You have to make them see
12451 the harm&mdash;passionately get them to see the harm. For if they
12452 don't see that, then we haven't any chance of winning.</quote>
12453 </para>
12454 <indexterm><primary>Ayer, Don</primary></indexterm>
12455 <para>
12456 He may have argued many cases before this Court, I thought, but
12457 he didn't understand its soul. As a clerk, I had seen the Justices do the
12458 right thing&mdash;not because of politics but because it was right. As a law
12459 professor, I had spent my life teaching my students that this Court
12460 does the right thing&mdash;not because of politics but because it is right. As
12461 I listened to Ayer's plea for passion in pressing politics, I understood
12462 his point, and I rejected it. Our argument was right. That was enough.
12463 Let the politicians learn to see that it was also good.
12464 </para>
12465 <para>
12466 <emphasis role='strong'>The night before</emphasis> the argument, a
12467 line of people began to form in front of the Supreme Court. The case
12468 had become a focus of the press and of the movement to free
12469 culture. Hundreds stood in line
12470
12471 <!-- PAGE BREAK 245 -->
12472 for the chance to see the proceedings. Scores spent the night on the
12473 Supreme Court steps so that they would be assured a seat.
12474 </para>
12475 <para>
12476 Not everyone has to wait in line. People who know the Justices can
12477 ask for seats they control. (I asked Justice Scalia's chambers for seats for
12478 my parents, for example.) Members of the Supreme Court bar can get
12479 a seat in a special section reserved for them. And senators and
12480 congressmen
12481 have a special place where they get to sit, too. And finally, of
12482 course, the press has a gallery, as do clerks working for the Justices on
12483 the Court. As we entered that morning, there was no place that was
12484 not taken. This was an argument about intellectual property law, yet
12485 the halls were filled. As I walked in to take my seat at the front of the
12486 Court, I saw my parents sitting on the left. As I sat down at the table,
12487 I saw Jack Valenti sitting in the special section ordinarily reserved for
12488 family of the Justices.
12489 </para>
12490 <para>
12491 When the Chief Justice called me to begin my argument, I began
12492 where I intended to stay: on the question of the limits on Congress's
12493 power. This was a case about enumerated powers, I said, and whether
12494 those enumerated powers had any limit.
12495 </para>
12496 <indexterm><primary>O'Connor, Sandra Day</primary></indexterm>
12497 <para>
12498 Justice O'Connor stopped me within one minute of my opening.
12499 The history was bothering her.
12500 </para>
12501 <blockquote>
12502 <para>
12503 justice o'connor: Congress has extended the term so often
12504 through the years, and if you are right, don't we run the risk of
12505 upsetting previous extensions of time? I mean, this seems to be a
12506 practice that began with the very first act.
12507 </para>
12508 </blockquote>
12509 <para>
12510 She was quite willing to concede <quote>that this flies directly in the face
12511 of what the framers had in mind.</quote> But my response again and again
12512 was to emphasize limits on Congress's power.
12513 </para>
12514 <blockquote>
12515 <para>
12516 mr. lessig: Well, if it flies in the face of what the framers had in
12517 mind, then the question is, is there a way of interpreting their
12518 <!-- PAGE BREAK 246 -->
12519 words that gives effect to what they had in mind, and the answer
12520 is yes.
12521 </para>
12522 </blockquote>
12523 <para>
12524 There were two points in this argument when I should have seen
12525 where the Court was going. The first was a question by Justice
12526 Kennedy, who observed,
12527 </para>
12528 <blockquote>
12529 <para>
12530 justice kennedy: Well, I suppose implicit in the argument that
12531 the '76 act, too, should have been declared void, and that we
12532 might leave it alone because of the disruption, is that for all these
12533 years the act has impeded progress in science and the useful arts.
12534 I just don't see any empirical evidence for that.
12535 </para>
12536 </blockquote>
12537 <para>
12538 Here follows my clear mistake. Like a professor correcting a
12539 student,
12540 I answered,
12541 </para>
12542 <blockquote>
12543 <para>
12544 mr. lessig: Justice, we are not making an empirical claim at all.
12545 Nothing in our Copyright Clause claim hangs upon the empirical
12546 assertion about impeding progress. Our only argument is this is a
12547 structural limit necessary to assure that what would be an effectively
12548 perpetual term not be permitted under the copyright laws.
12549 </para>
12550 </blockquote>
12551 <indexterm><primary>Ayer, Don</primary></indexterm>
12552 <para>
12553 That was a correct answer, but it wasn't the right answer. The right
12554 answer was instead that there was an obvious and profound harm. Any
12555 number of briefs had been written about it. He wanted to hear it. And
12556 here was the place Don Ayer's advice should have mattered. This was a
12557 softball; my answer was a swing and a miss.
12558 </para>
12559 <indexterm><primary>United States v. Lopez</primary></indexterm>
12560 <para>
12561 The second came from the Chief, for whom the whole case had been
12562 crafted. For the Chief Justice had crafted the <citetitle>Lopez</citetitle> ruling,
12563 and we hoped that he would see this case as its second cousin.
12564 </para>
12565 <para>
12566 It was clear a second into his question that he wasn't at all
12567 sympathetic. To him, we were a bunch of anarchists. As he asked:
12568
12569 <!-- PAGE BREAK 247 -->
12570 </para>
12571 <blockquote>
12572 <para>
12573 chief justice: Well, but you want more than that. You want the
12574 right to copy verbatim other people's books, don't you?
12575 </para>
12576 <para>
12577 mr. lessig: We want the right to copy verbatim works that
12578 should be in the public domain and would be in the public
12579 domain
12580 but for a statute that cannot be justified under ordinary First
12581 Amendment analysis or under a proper reading of the limits built
12582 into the Copyright Clause.
12583 </para>
12584 </blockquote>
12585 <indexterm><primary>Olson, Theodore B.</primary></indexterm>
12586 <para>
12587 Things went better for us when the government gave its argument;
12588 for now the Court picked up on the core of our claim. As Justice Scalia
12589 asked Solicitor General Olson,
12590 </para>
12591 <blockquote>
12592 <para>
12593 justice scalia: You say that the functional equivalent of an unlimited
12594 time would be a violation [of the Constitution], but that's precisely
12595 the argument that's being made by petitioners here, that a limited
12596 time which is extendable is the functional equivalent of an unlimited
12597 time.
12598 </para>
12599 </blockquote>
12600 <para>
12601 When Olson was finished, it was my turn to give a closing rebuttal.
12602 Olson's flailing had revived my anger. But my anger still was directed
12603 to the academic, not the practical. The government was arguing as if
12604 this were the first case ever to consider limits on Congress's
12605 Copyright and Patent Clause power. Ever the professor and not the
12606 advocate, I closed by pointing out the long history of the Court
12607 imposing limits on Congress's power in the name of the Copyright and
12608 Patent Clause&mdash; indeed, the very first case striking a law of
12609 Congress as exceeding a specific enumerated power was based upon the
12610 Copyright and Patent Clause. All true. But it wasn't going to move the
12611 Court to my side.
12612 </para>
12613 <para>
12614 <emphasis role='strong'>As I left</emphasis> the court that day, I
12615 knew there were a hundred points I wished I could remake. There were a
12616 hundred questions I wished I had
12617
12618 <!-- PAGE BREAK 248 -->
12619 answered differently. But one way of thinking about this case left me
12620 optimistic.
12621 </para>
12622 <para>
12623 The government had been asked over and over again, what is the limit?
12624 Over and over again, it had answered there is no limit. This was
12625 precisely the answer I wanted the Court to hear. For I could not
12626 imagine how the Court could understand that the government believed
12627 Congress's power was unlimited under the terms of the Copyright
12628 Clause, and sustain the government's argument. The solicitor general
12629 had made my argument for me. No matter how often I tried, I could not
12630 understand how the Court could find that Congress's power under the
12631 Commerce Clause was limited, but under the Copyright Clause,
12632 unlimited. In those rare moments when I let myself believe that we may
12633 have prevailed, it was because I felt this Court&mdash;in particular,
12634 the Conservatives&mdash;would feel itself constrained by the rule of
12635 law that it had established elsewhere.
12636 </para>
12637 <para>
12638 <emphasis role='strong'>The morning</emphasis> of January 15, 2003, I
12639 was five minutes late to the office and missed the 7:00 A.M. call from
12640 the Supreme Court clerk. Listening to the message, I could tell in an
12641 instant that she had bad news to report.The Supreme Court had affirmed
12642 the decision of the Court of Appeals. Seven justices had voted in the
12643 majority. There were two dissents.
12644 </para>
12645 <para>
12646 A few seconds later, the opinions arrived by e-mail. I took the
12647 phone off the hook, posted an announcement to our blog, and sat
12648 down to see where I had been wrong in my reasoning.
12649 </para>
12650 <para>
12651 My <emphasis>reasoning</emphasis>. Here was a case that pitted all the
12652 money in the world against <emphasis>reasoning</emphasis>. And here
12653 was the last naïve law professor, scouring the pages, looking for
12654 reasoning.
12655 </para>
12656 <indexterm id='idxunitedstatesvlopez2' class='startofrange'><primary>United States v. Lopez</primary></indexterm>
12657 <para>
12658 I first scoured the opinion, looking for how the Court would
12659 distinguish the principle in this case from the principle in
12660 <citetitle>Lopez</citetitle>. The argument was nowhere to be found. The case was not even
12661 cited. The argument that was the core argument of our case did not
12662 even appear in the Court's opinion.
12663 </para>
12664 <indexterm><primary>Ginsburg, Ruth Bader</primary></indexterm>
12665 <para>
12666
12667 <!-- PAGE BREAK 249 -->
12668 Justice Ginsburg simply ignored the enumerated powers argument.
12669 Consistent with her view that Congress's power was not limited
12670 generally, she had found Congress's power not limited here.
12671 </para>
12672 <para>
12673 Her opinion was perfectly reasonable&mdash;for her, and for Justice
12674 Souter. Neither believes in <citetitle>Lopez</citetitle>. It would be too much to expect them
12675 to write an opinion that recognized, much less explained, the doctrine
12676 they had worked so hard to defeat.
12677 </para>
12678 <para>
12679 But as I realized what had happened, I couldn't quite believe what I
12680 was reading. I had said there was no way this Court could reconcile
12681 limited powers with the Commerce Clause and unlimited powers with the
12682 Progress Clause. It had never even occurred to me that they could
12683 reconcile the two simply <emphasis>by not addressing the
12684 argument</emphasis>. There was no inconsistency because they would not
12685 talk about the two together. There was therefore no principle that
12686 followed from the <citetitle>Lopez</citetitle> case: In that context, Congress's power would
12687 be limited, but in this context it would not.
12688 </para>
12689 <indexterm startref='idxunitedstatesvlopez2' class='endofrange'/>
12690 <para>
12691 Yet by what right did they get to choose which of the framers' values
12692 they would respect? By what right did they&mdash;the silent
12693 five&mdash;get to select the part of the Constitution they would
12694 enforce based on the values they thought important? We were right back
12695 to the argument that I said I hated at the start: I had failed to
12696 convince them that the issue here was important, and I had failed to
12697 recognize that however much I might hate a system in which the Court
12698 gets to pick the constitutional values that it will respect, that is
12699 the system we have.
12700 </para>
12701 <indexterm><primary>Breyer, Stephen</primary></indexterm>
12702 <para>
12703 Justices Breyer and Stevens wrote very strong dissents. Stevens's
12704 opinion was crafted internal to the law: He argued that the tradition
12705 of intellectual property law should not support this unjustified
12706 extension of terms. He based his argument on a parallel analysis that
12707 had governed in the context of patents (so had we). But the rest of
12708 the Court discounted the parallel&mdash;without explaining how the
12709 very same words in the Progress Clause could come to mean totally
12710 different things depending upon whether the words were about patents
12711 or copyrights. The Court let Justice Stevens's charge go unanswered.
12712 </para>
12713 <indexterm><primary>Breyer, Stephen</primary></indexterm>
12714 <para>
12715 <!-- PAGE BREAK 250 -->
12716 Justice Breyer's opinion, perhaps the best opinion he has ever
12717 written, was external to the Constitution. He argued that the term of
12718 copyrights has become so long as to be effectively unlimited. We had
12719 said that under the current term, a copyright gave an author 99.8
12720 percent of the value of a perpetual term. Breyer said we were wrong,
12721 that the actual number was 99.9997 percent of a perpetual term. Either
12722 way, the point was clear: If the Constitution said a term had to be
12723 <quote>limited,</quote> and the existing term was so long as to be effectively
12724 unlimited, then it was unconstitutional.
12725 </para>
12726 <indexterm id='idxunitedstatesvlopez3' class='startofrange'><primary>United States v. Lopez</primary></indexterm>
12727 <para>
12728 These two justices understood all the arguments we had made. But
12729 because neither believed in the <citetitle>Lopez</citetitle> case, neither was willing to push
12730 it as a reason to reject this extension. The case was decided without
12731 anyone having addressed the argument that we had carried from Judge
12732 Sentelle. It was <citetitle>Hamlet</citetitle> without the Prince.
12733 </para>
12734 <para>
12735 <emphasis role='strong'>Defeat brings depression</emphasis>. They say
12736 it is a sign of health when depression gives way to anger. My anger
12737 came quickly, but it didn't cure the depression. This anger was of two
12738 sorts.
12739 </para>
12740 <indexterm><primary>originalism</primary></indexterm>
12741 <para>
12742 It was first anger with the five <quote>Conservatives.</quote> It would have been
12743 one thing for them to have explained why the principle of <citetitle>Lopez</citetitle> didn't
12744 apply in this case. That wouldn't have been a very convincing
12745 argument, I don't believe, having read it made by others, and having
12746 tried to make it myself. But it at least would have been an act of
12747 integrity. These justices in particular have repeatedly said that the
12748 proper mode of interpreting the Constitution is <quote>originalism</quote>&mdash;to
12749 first understand the framers' text, interpreted in their context, in
12750 light of the structure of the Constitution. That method had produced
12751 <citetitle>Lopez</citetitle> and many other <quote>originalist</quote> rulings. Where was their
12752 <quote>originalism</quote> now?
12753 </para>
12754 <indexterm startref='idxunitedstatesvlopez3' class='endofrange'/>
12755 <para>
12756 Here, they had joined an opinion that never once tried to explain
12757 what the framers had meant by crafting the Progress Clause as they
12758 did; they joined an opinion that never once tried to explain how the
12759 structure of that clause would affect the interpretation of Congress's
12760
12761 <!-- PAGE BREAK 251 -->
12762 power. And they joined an opinion that didn't even try to explain why
12763 this grant of power could be unlimited, whereas the Commerce Clause
12764 would be limited. In short, they had joined an opinion that did not
12765 apply to, and was inconsistent with, their own method for interpreting
12766 the Constitution. This opinion may well have yielded a result that
12767 they liked. It did not produce a reason that was consistent with their
12768 own principles.
12769 </para>
12770 <para>
12771 My anger with the Conservatives quickly yielded to anger with
12772 myself.
12773 For I had let a view of the law that I liked interfere with a view of
12774 the law as it is.
12775 </para>
12776 <indexterm><primary>Ayer, Don</primary></indexterm>
12777 <para>
12778 Most lawyers, and most law professors, have little patience for
12779 idealism about courts in general and this Supreme Court in particular.
12780 Most have a much more pragmatic view. When Don Ayer said that this
12781 case would be won based on whether I could convince the Justices that
12782 the framers' values were important, I fought the idea, because I
12783 didn't want to believe that that is how this Court decides. I insisted
12784 on arguing this case as if it were a simple application of a set of
12785 principles. I had an argument that followed in logic. I didn't need
12786 to waste my time showing it should also follow in popularity.
12787 </para>
12788 <para>
12789 As I read back over the transcript from that argument in October, I
12790 can see a hundred places where the answers could have taken the
12791 conversation in different directions, where the truth about the harm
12792 that this unchecked power will cause could have been made clear to
12793 this Court. Justice Kennedy in good faith wanted to be shown. I,
12794 idiotically, corrected his question. Justice Souter in good faith
12795 wanted to be shown the First Amendment harms. I, like a math teacher,
12796 reframed the question to make the logical point. I had shown them how
12797 they could strike this law of Congress if they wanted to. There were a
12798 hundred places where I could have helped them want to, yet my
12799 stubbornness, my refusal to give in, stopped me. I have stood before
12800 hundreds of audiences trying to persuade; I have used passion in that
12801 effort to persuade; but I
12802 <!-- PAGE BREAK 252 -->
12803 refused to stand before this audience and try to persuade with the
12804 passion I had used elsewhere. It was not the basis on which a court
12805 should decide the issue.
12806 </para>
12807 <indexterm><primary>Ayer, Don</primary></indexterm>
12808 <indexterm><primary>Fried, Charles</primary></indexterm>
12809 <para>
12810 Would it have been different if I had argued it differently? Would it
12811 have been different if Don Ayer had argued it? Or Charles Fried? Or
12812 Kathleen Sullivan?
12813 </para>
12814 <para>
12815 My friends huddled around me to insist it would not. The Court
12816 was not ready, my friends insisted. This was a loss that was destined. It
12817 would take a great deal more to show our society why our framers were
12818 right. And when we do that, we will be able to show that Court.
12819 </para>
12820 <para>
12821 Maybe, but I doubt it. These Justices have no financial interest in
12822 doing anything except the right thing. They are not lobbied. They have
12823 little reason to resist doing right. I can't help but think that if I had
12824 stepped down from this pretty picture of dispassionate justice, I could
12825 have persuaded.
12826 </para>
12827 <indexterm><primary>Jaszi, Peter</primary></indexterm>
12828 <para>
12829 And even if I couldn't, then that doesn't excuse what happened in
12830 January. For at the start of this case, one of America's leading
12831 intellectual property professors stated publicly that my bringing this
12832 case was a mistake. <quote>The Court is not ready,</quote> Peter Jaszi said; this
12833 issue should not be raised until it is.
12834 </para>
12835 <para>
12836 After the argument and after the decision, Peter said to me, and
12837 publicly, that he was wrong. But if indeed that Court could not have
12838 been persuaded, then that is all the evidence that's needed to know that
12839 here again Peter was right. Either I was not ready to argue this case in
12840 a way that would do some good or they were not ready to hear this case
12841 in a way that would do some good. Either way, the decision to bring
12842 this case&mdash;a decision I had made four years before&mdash;was wrong.
12843 </para>
12844 <para>
12845 <emphasis role='strong'>While the reaction</emphasis> to the Sonny
12846 Bono Act itself was almost unanimously negative, the reaction to the
12847 Court's decision was mixed. No one, at least in the press, tried to
12848 say that extending the term of copyright was a good idea. We had won
12849 that battle over ideas. Where
12850
12851 <!-- PAGE BREAK 253 -->
12852 the decision was praised, it was praised by papers that had been
12853 skeptical of the Court's activism in other cases. Deference was a good
12854 thing, even if it left standing a silly law. But where the decision
12855 was attacked, it was attacked because it left standing a silly and
12856 harmful law. <citetitle>The New York Times</citetitle> wrote in its editorial,
12857 </para>
12858 <blockquote>
12859 <para>
12860 In effect, the Supreme Court's decision makes it likely that we are
12861 seeing the beginning of the end of public domain and the birth of
12862 copyright perpetuity. The public domain has been a grand experiment,
12863 one that should not be allowed to die. The ability to draw freely on
12864 the entire creative output of humanity is one of the reasons we live
12865 in a time of such fruitful creative ferment.
12866 </para>
12867 </blockquote>
12868 <para>
12869 The best responses were in the cartoons. There was a gaggle of
12870 hilarious images&mdash;of Mickey in jail and the like. The best, from
12871 my view of the case, was Ruben Bolling's, reproduced in figure
12872 <xref xrefstyle="template:%n" linkend="fig-18"/>. The <quote>powerful
12873 and wealthy</quote> line is a bit unfair. But the punch in the face
12874 felt exactly like that.
12875 <indexterm><primary>Bolling, Ruben</primary></indexterm>
12876 </para>
12877 <figure id="fig-18" float="1">
12878 <title></title>
12879 <graphic fileref="images/tom-the-dancing-bug.png" align="center" width="100%"></graphic>
12880 <indexterm><primary>Bolling, Ruben</primary></indexterm>
12881 </figure>
12882 <para>
12883 The image that will always stick in my head is that evoked by the
12884 quote from <citetitle>The New York Times</citetitle>. That <quote>grand experiment</quote> we call the
12885 <quote>public domain</quote> is over? When I can make light of it, I think, <quote>Honey,
12886 I shrunk the Constitution.</quote> But I can rarely make light of it. We had
12887 in our Constitution a commitment to free culture. In the case that I
12888 fathered, the Supreme Court effectively renounced that commitment. A
12889 better lawyer would have made them see differently.
12890 </para>
12891 <!-- PAGE BREAK 254 -->
12892 </chapter>
12893 <chapter label="14" id="eldred-ii">
12894 <title>Chapter Fourteen: Eldred II</title>
12895 <para>
12896 <emphasis role='strong'>The day</emphasis>
12897 <citetitle>Eldred</citetitle> was decided, fate would have it that I
12898 was to travel to Washington, D.C. (The day the rehearing petition in
12899 <citetitle>Eldred</citetitle> was denied&mdash;meaning the case was
12900 really finally over&mdash;fate would have it that I was giving a
12901 speech to technologists at Disney World.) This was a particularly
12902 long flight to my least favorite city. The drive into the city from
12903 Dulles was delayed because of traffic, so I opened up my computer and
12904 wrote an op-ed piece.
12905 </para>
12906 <indexterm><primary>Ayer, Don</primary></indexterm>
12907 <para>
12908 It was an act of contrition. During the whole of the flight from San
12909 Francisco to Washington, I had heard over and over again in my head
12910 the same advice from Don Ayer: You need to make them see why it is
12911 important. And alternating with that command was the question of
12912 Justice Kennedy: <quote>For all these years the act has impeded progress in
12913 science and the useful arts. I just don't see any empirical evidence for
12914 that.</quote> And so, having failed in the argument of constitutional principle,
12915 finally, I turned to an argument of politics.
12916 </para>
12917 <para>
12918 <citetitle>The New York Times</citetitle> published the piece. In it, I proposed a simple
12919 fix: Fifty years after a work has been published, the copyright owner
12920 <!-- PAGE BREAK 256 -->
12921 would be required to register the work and pay a small fee. If he paid
12922 the fee, he got the benefit of the full term of copyright. If he did not,
12923 the work passed into the public domain.
12924 </para>
12925 <para>
12926 We called this the Eldred Act, but that was just to give it a name.
12927 Eric Eldred was kind enough to let his name be used once again, but as
12928 he said early on, it won't get passed unless it has another name.
12929 </para>
12930 <para>
12931 Or another two names. For depending upon your perspective, this
12932 is either the <quote>Public Domain Enhancement Act</quote> or the <quote>Copyright
12933 Term Deregulation Act.</quote> Either way, the essence of the idea is clear
12934 and obvious: Remove copyright where it is doing nothing except
12935 blocking access and the spread of knowledge. Leave it for as long as
12936 Congress allows for those works where its worth is at least $1. But for
12937 everything else, let the content go.
12938 </para>
12939 <indexterm><primary>Forbes, Steve</primary></indexterm>
12940 <indexterm><primary>Democratic Party</primary></indexterm>
12941 <indexterm><primary>Republican Party</primary></indexterm>
12942 <para>
12943 The reaction to this idea was amazingly strong. Steve Forbes endorsed
12944 it in an editorial. I received an avalanche of e-mail and letters
12945 expressing support. When you focus the issue on lost creativity,
12946 people can see the copyright system makes no sense. As a good
12947 Republican might say, here government regulation is simply getting in
12948 the way of innovation and creativity. And as a good Democrat might
12949 say, here the government is blocking access and the spread of
12950 knowledge for no good reason. Indeed, there is no real difference
12951 between Democrats and Republicans on this issue. Anyone can recognize
12952 the stupid harm of the present system.
12953 </para>
12954 <para>
12955 Indeed, many recognized the obvious benefit of the registration
12956 requirement. For one of the hardest things about the current system
12957 for people who want to license content is that there is no obvious
12958 place to look for the current copyright owners. Since registration is
12959 not required, since marking content is not required, since no
12960 formality at all is required, it is often impossibly hard to locate
12961 copyright owners to ask permission to use or license their work. This
12962 system would lower these costs, by establishing at least one registry
12963 where copyright owners could be identified.
12964 </para>
12965 <indexterm><primary>Berlin Act (1908)</primary></indexterm>
12966 <indexterm><primary>Berne Convention (1908)</primary></indexterm>
12967 <para>
12968 <!-- PAGE BREAK 257 -->
12969 As I described in chapter <xref xrefstyle="select: labelnumber"
12970 linkend="property-i"/>, formalities in copyright law were
12971 removed in 1976, when Congress followed the Europeans by abandoning
12972 any formal requirement before a copyright is granted.<footnote><para>
12973 <!-- f1. -->
12974 <indexterm><primary>German copyright law</primary></indexterm>
12975 Until the 1908 Berlin Act of the Berne Convention, national copyright
12976 legislation sometimes made protection depend upon compliance with
12977 formalities such as registration, deposit, and affixation of notice of
12978 the author's claim of copyright. However, starting with the 1908 act,
12979 every text of the Convention has provided that <quote>the enjoyment and the
12980 exercise</quote> of rights guaranteed by the Convention <quote>shall not be subject
12981 to any formality.</quote> The prohibition against formalities is presently
12982 embodied in Article 5(2) of the Paris Text of the Berne
12983 Convention. Many countries continue to impose some form of deposit or
12984 registration requirement, albeit not as a condition of
12985 copyright. French law, for example, requires the deposit of copies of
12986 works in national repositories, principally the National Museum.
12987 Copies of books published in the United Kingdom must be deposited in
12988 the British Library. The German Copyright Act provides for a Registrar
12989 of Authors where the author's true name can be filed in the case of
12990 anonymous or pseudonymous works. Paul Goldstein, <citetitle>International
12991 Intellectual Property Law, Cases and Materials</citetitle> (New York: Foundation
12992 Press, 2001), 153&ndash;54. </para></footnote>
12993 The Europeans are said to view copyright as a <quote>natural right.</quote> Natural
12994 rights don't need forms to exist. Traditions, like the Anglo-American
12995 tradition that required copyright owners to follow form if their
12996 rights were to be protected, did not, the Europeans thought, properly
12997 respect the dignity of the author. My right as a creator turns on my
12998 creativity, not upon the special favor of the government.
12999 </para>
13000 <para>
13001 That's great rhetoric. It sounds wonderfully romantic. But it is
13002 absurd copyright policy. It is absurd especially for authors, because
13003 a world without formalities harms the creator. The ability to spread
13004 <quote>Walt Disney creativity</quote> is destroyed when there is no simple way to
13005 know what's protected and what's not.
13006 </para>
13007 <indexterm><primary>Berne Convention (1908)</primary></indexterm>
13008 <para>
13009 The fight against formalities achieved its first real victory in
13010 Berlin in 1908. International copyright lawyers amended the Berne
13011 Convention in 1908, to require copyright terms of life plus fifty
13012 years, as well as the abolition of copyright formalities. The
13013 formalities were hated because the stories of inadvertent loss were
13014 increasingly common. It was as if a Charles Dickens character ran all
13015 copyright offices, and the failure to dot an <citetitle>i</citetitle> or cross a
13016 <citetitle>t</citetitle> resulted in the loss of widows' only income.
13017 </para>
13018 <para>
13019 These complaints were real and sensible. And the strictness of the
13020 formalities, especially in the United States, was absurd. The law
13021 should always have ways of forgiving innocent mistakes. There is no
13022 reason copyright law couldn't, as well. Rather than abandoning
13023 formalities totally, the response in Berlin should have been to
13024 embrace a more equitable system of registration.
13025 </para>
13026 <para>
13027 Even that would have been resisted, however, because registration
13028 in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries was still expensive. It was
13029 also a hassle. The abolishment of formalities promised not only to save
13030 the starving widows, but also to lighten an unnecessary regulatory
13031 burden
13032 imposed upon creators.
13033 </para>
13034 <para>
13035 In addition to the practical complaint of authors in 1908, there was
13036 a moral claim as well. There was no reason that creative property
13037
13038 <!-- PAGE BREAK 258 -->
13039 should be a second-class form of property. If a carpenter builds a
13040 table, his rights over the table don't depend upon filing a form with
13041 the government. He has a property right over the table <quote>naturally,</quote>
13042 and he can assert that right against anyone who would steal the table,
13043 whether or not he has informed the government of his ownership of the
13044 table.
13045 </para>
13046 <para>
13047 This argument is correct, but its implications are misleading. For the
13048 argument in favor of formalities does not depend upon creative
13049 property being second-class property. The argument in favor of
13050 formalities turns upon the special problems that creative property
13051 presents. The law of formalities responds to the special physics of
13052 creative property, to assure that it can be efficiently and fairly
13053 spread.
13054 </para>
13055 <para>
13056 No one thinks, for example, that land is second-class property just
13057 because you have to register a deed with a court if your sale of land
13058 is to be effective. And few would think a car is second-class property
13059 just because you must register the car with the state and tag it with
13060 a license. In both of those cases, everyone sees that there is an
13061 important reason to secure registration&mdash;both because it makes
13062 the markets more efficient and because it better secures the rights of
13063 the owner. Without a registration system for land, landowners would
13064 perpetually have to guard their property. With registration, they can
13065 simply point the police to a deed. Without a registration system for
13066 cars, auto theft would be much easier. With a registration system, the
13067 thief has a high burden to sell a stolen car. A slight burden is
13068 placed on the property owner, but those burdens produce a much better
13069 system of protection for property generally.
13070 </para>
13071 <para>
13072 It is similarly special physics that makes formalities important in
13073 copyright law. Unlike a carpenter's table, there's nothing in nature that
13074 makes it relatively obvious who might own a particular bit of creative
13075 property. A recording of Lyle Lovett's latest album can exist in a billion
13076 places without anything necessarily linking it back to a particular
13077 owner. And like a car, there's no way to buy and sell creative property
13078 with confidence unless there is some simple way to authenticate who is
13079 the author and what rights he has. Simple transactions are destroyed in
13080
13081 <!-- PAGE BREAK 259 -->
13082 a world without formalities. Complex, expensive,
13083 <emphasis>lawyer</emphasis> transactions take their place.
13084 <indexterm><primary>Lovett, Lyle</primary></indexterm>
13085 </para>
13086 <para>
13087 This was the understanding of the problem with the Sonny Bono
13088 Act that we tried to demonstrate to the Court. This was the part it
13089 didn't <quote>get.</quote> Because we live in a system without formalities, there is no
13090 way easily to build upon or use culture from our past. If copyright
13091 terms were, as Justice Story said they would be, <quote>short,</quote> then this
13092 wouldn't matter much. For fourteen years, under the framers' system, a
13093 work would be presumptively controlled. After fourteen years, it would
13094 be presumptively uncontrolled.
13095 </para>
13096 <para>
13097 But now that copyrights can be just about a century long, the
13098 inability to know what is protected and what is not protected becomes
13099 a huge and obvious burden on the creative process. If the only way a
13100 library can offer an Internet exhibit about the New Deal is to hire a
13101 lawyer to clear the rights to every image and sound, then the
13102 copyright system is burdening creativity in a way that has never been
13103 seen before <emphasis>because there are no formalities</emphasis>.
13104 </para>
13105 <para>
13106 The Eldred Act was designed to respond to exactly this problem. If
13107 it is worth $1 to you, then register your work and you can get the
13108 longer term. Others will know how to contact you and, therefore, how
13109 to get your permission if they want to use your work. And you will get
13110 the benefit of an extended copyright term.
13111 </para>
13112 <para>
13113 If it isn't worth it to you to register to get the benefit of an extended
13114 term, then it shouldn't be worth it for the government to defend your
13115 monopoly over that work either. The work should pass into the public
13116 domain where anyone can copy it, or build archives with it, or create a
13117 movie based on it. It should become free if it is not worth $1 to you.
13118 </para>
13119 <para>
13120 Some worry about the burden on authors. Won't the burden of
13121 registering the work mean that the $1 is really misleading? Isn't the
13122 hassle worth more than $1? Isn't that the real problem with
13123 registration?
13124 </para>
13125 <para>
13126 It is. The hassle is terrible. The system that exists now is awful. I
13127 completely agree that the Copyright Office has done a terrible job (no
13128 doubt because they are terribly funded) in enabling simple and cheap
13129
13130 <!-- PAGE BREAK 260 -->
13131 registrations. Any real solution to the problem of formalities must
13132 address the real problem of <emphasis>governments</emphasis> standing
13133 at the core of any system of formalities. In this book, I offer such a
13134 solution. That solution essentially remakes the Copyright Office. For
13135 now, assume it was Amazon that ran the registration system. Assume it
13136 was one-click registration. The Eldred Act would propose a simple,
13137 one-click registration fifty years after a work was published. Based
13138 upon historical data, that system would move up to 98 percent of
13139 commercial work, commercial work that no longer had a commercial life,
13140 into the public domain within fifty years. What do you think?
13141 </para>
13142 <indexterm><primary>Forbes, Steve</primary></indexterm>
13143 <para>
13144 <emphasis role='strong'>When Steve Forbes</emphasis> endorsed the
13145 idea, some in Washington began to pay attention. Many people contacted
13146 me pointing to representatives who might be willing to introduce the
13147 Eldred Act. And I had a few who directly suggested that they might be
13148 willing to take the first step.
13149 </para>
13150 <indexterm><primary>Lofgren, Zoe</primary></indexterm>
13151 <para>
13152 One representative, Zoe Lofgren of California, went so far as to get
13153 the bill drafted. The draft solved any problem with international
13154 law. It imposed the simplest requirement upon copyright owners
13155 possible. In May 2003, it looked as if the bill would be
13156 introduced. On May 16, I posted on the Eldred Act blog, <quote>we are
13157 close.</quote> There was a general reaction in the blog community that
13158 something good might happen here.
13159 </para>
13160 <indexterm><primary>Valenti, Jack</primary><secondary>Eldred Act opposed by</secondary></indexterm>
13161 <para>
13162 But at this stage, the lobbyists began to intervene. Jack Valenti and
13163 the MPAA general counsel came to the congresswoman's office to give
13164 the view of the MPAA. Aided by his lawyer, as Valenti told me, Valenti
13165 informed the congresswoman that the MPAA would oppose the Eldred
13166 Act. The reasons are embarrassingly thin. More importantly, their
13167 thinness shows something clear about what this debate is really about.
13168 </para>
13169 <para>
13170 The MPAA argued first that Congress had <quote>firmly rejected the central
13171 concept in the proposed bill</quote>&mdash;that copyrights be renewed. That
13172 was true, but irrelevant, as Congress's <quote>firm rejection</quote> had occurred
13173 <!-- PAGE BREAK 261 -->
13174 long before the Internet made subsequent uses much more likely.
13175 Second, they argued that the proposal would harm poor copyright
13176 owners&mdash;apparently those who could not afford the $1 fee. Third,
13177 they argued that Congress had determined that extending a copyright
13178 term would encourage restoration work. Maybe in the case of the small
13179 percentage of work covered by copyright law that is still commercially
13180 valuable, but again this was irrelevant, as the proposal would not cut
13181 off the extended term unless the $1 fee was not paid. Fourth, the MPAA
13182 argued that the bill would impose <quote>enormous</quote> costs, since a
13183 registration system is not free. True enough, but those costs are
13184 certainly less than the costs of clearing the rights for a copyright
13185 whose owner is not known. Fifth, they worried about the risks if the
13186 copyright to a story underlying a film were to pass into the public
13187 domain. But what risk is that? If it is in the public domain, then the
13188 film is a valid derivative use.
13189 </para>
13190 <para>
13191 Finally, the MPAA argued that existing law enabled copyright owners to
13192 do this if they wanted. But the whole point is that there are
13193 thousands of copyright owners who don't even know they have a
13194 copyright to give. Whether they are free to give away their copyright
13195 or not&mdash;a controversial claim in any case&mdash;unless they know
13196 about a copyright, they're not likely to.
13197 </para>
13198 <para>
13199 <emphasis role='strong'>At the beginning</emphasis> of this book, I
13200 told two stories about the law reacting to changes in technology. In
13201 the one, common sense prevailed. In the other, common sense was
13202 delayed. The difference between the two stories was the power of the
13203 opposition&mdash;the power of the side that fought to defend the
13204 status quo. In both cases, a new technology threatened old
13205 interests. But in only one case did those interest's have the power to
13206 protect themselves against this new competitive threat.
13207 </para>
13208 <para>
13209 I used these two cases as a way to frame the war that this book has
13210 been about. For here, too, a new technology is forcing the law to react.
13211 And here, too, we should ask, is the law following or resisting common
13212 sense? If common sense supports the law, what explains this common
13213 sense?
13214 </para>
13215 <para>
13216
13217 <!-- PAGE BREAK 262 -->
13218 When the issue is piracy, it is right for the law to back the
13219 copyright owners. The commercial piracy that I described is wrong and
13220 harmful, and the law should work to eliminate it. When the issue is
13221 p2p sharing, it is easy to understand why the law backs the owners
13222 still: Much of this sharing is wrong, even if much is harmless. When
13223 the issue is copyright terms for the Mickey Mouses of the world, it is
13224 possible still to understand why the law favors Hollywood: Most people
13225 don't recognize the reasons for limiting copyright terms; it is thus
13226 still possible to see good faith within the resistance.
13227 </para>
13228 <indexterm><primary>Kelly, Kevin</primary></indexterm>
13229 <para>
13230 But when the copyright owners oppose a proposal such as the Eldred
13231 Act, then, finally, there is an example that lays bare the naked
13232 selfinterest driving this war. This act would free an extraordinary
13233 range of content that is otherwise unused. It wouldn't interfere with
13234 any copyright owner's desire to exercise continued control over his
13235 content. It would simply liberate what Kevin Kelly calls the <quote>Dark
13236 Content</quote> that fills archives around the world. So when the warriors
13237 oppose a change like this, we should ask one simple question:
13238 </para>
13239 <para>
13240 What does this industry really want?
13241 </para>
13242 <para>
13243 With very little effort, the warriors could protect their content. So
13244 the effort to block something like the Eldred Act is not really about
13245 protecting <emphasis>their</emphasis> content. The effort to block the
13246 Eldred Act is an effort to assure that nothing more passes into the
13247 public domain. It is another step to assure that the public domain
13248 will never compete, that there will be no use of content that is not
13249 commercially controlled, and that there will be no commercial use of
13250 content that doesn't require <emphasis>their</emphasis> permission
13251 first.
13252 </para>
13253 <para>
13254 The opposition to the Eldred Act reveals how extreme the other side
13255 is. The most powerful and sexy and well loved of lobbies really has as
13256 its aim not the protection of <quote>property</quote> but the rejection of a
13257 tradition. Their aim is not simply to protect what is
13258 theirs. <emphasis>Their aim is to assure that all there is is what is
13259 theirs</emphasis>.
13260 </para>
13261 <para>
13262 It is not hard to understand why the warriors take this view. It is not
13263 hard to see why it would benefit them if the competition of the public
13264
13265 <!-- PAGE BREAK 263 -->
13266 domain tied to the Internet could somehow be quashed. Just as RCA
13267 feared the competition of FM, they fear the competition of a public
13268 domain connected to a public that now has the means to create with it
13269 and to share its own creation.
13270 </para>
13271 <indexterm><primary>Causby, Thomas Lee</primary></indexterm>
13272 <indexterm><primary>Causby, Tinie</primary></indexterm>
13273 <para>
13274 What is hard to understand is why the public takes this view. It is
13275 as if the law made airplanes trespassers. The MPAA stands with the
13276 Causbys and demands that their remote and useless property rights be
13277 respected, so that these remote and forgotten copyright holders might
13278 block the progress of others.
13279 </para>
13280 <para>
13281 All this seems to follow easily from this untroubled acceptance of the
13282 <quote>property</quote> in intellectual property. Common sense supports it, and so
13283 long as it does, the assaults will rain down upon the technologies of
13284 the Internet. The consequence will be an increasing <quote>permission
13285 society.</quote> The past can be cultivated only if you can identify the
13286 owner and gain permission to build upon his work. The future will be
13287 controlled by this dead (and often unfindable) hand of the past.
13288 </para>
13289 <!-- PAGE BREAK 264 -->
13290 </chapter>
13291 </part>
13292 <chapter label="" id="c-conclusion">
13293 <title>Conclusion</title>
13294 <indexterm id='idxafricamedicationsforhivpatientsin' class='startofrange'><primary>Africa, medications for HIV patients in</primary></indexterm>
13295 <indexterm id='idxaidsmedications' class='startofrange'><primary>AIDS medications</primary></indexterm>
13296 <indexterm id='idxantiretroviraldrugs' class='startofrange'><primary>antiretroviral drugs</primary></indexterm>
13297 <indexterm id='idxdevelopingcountriesforeignpatentcostsin2' class='startofrange'><primary>developing countries, foreign patent costs in</primary></indexterm>
13298 <indexterm id='idxdrugspharmaceutical' class='startofrange'><primary>drugs</primary><secondary>pharmaceutical</secondary></indexterm>
13299 <indexterm id='idxhivaidstherapies' class='startofrange'><primary>HIV/AIDS therapies</primary></indexterm>
13300 <para>
13301 <emphasis role='strong'>There are more</emphasis> than 35 million
13302 people with the AIDS virus worldwide. Twenty-five million of them live
13303 in sub-Saharan Africa. Seventeen million have already died. Seventeen
13304 million Africans is proportional percentage-wise to seven million
13305 Americans. More importantly, it is seventeen million Africans.
13306 </para>
13307 <para>
13308 There is no cure for AIDS, but there are drugs to slow its
13309 progression. These antiretroviral therapies are still experimental,
13310 but they have already had a dramatic effect. In the United States,
13311 AIDS patients who regularly take a cocktail of these drugs increase
13312 their life expectancy by ten to twenty years. For some, the drugs make
13313 the disease almost invisible.
13314 </para>
13315 <para>
13316 These drugs are expensive. When they were first introduced in the
13317 United States, they cost between $10,000 and $15,000 per person per
13318 year. Today, some cost $25,000 per year. At these prices, of course, no
13319 African nation can afford the drugs for the vast majority of its
13320 population:
13321 $15,000 is thirty times the per capita gross national product of
13322 Zimbabwe. At these prices, the drugs are totally unavailable.<footnote><para>
13323 <!-- f1. --> Commission on Intellectual Property Rights, <quote>Final Report: Integrating
13324 Intellectual Property Rights and Development Policy</quote> (London, 2002),
13325 available at
13326 <ulink url="http://free-culture.cc/notes/">link #55</ulink>. According to a World Health Organization press
13327 release
13328 issued 9 July 2002, only 230,000 of the 6 million who need drugs in
13329 the developing world receive them&mdash;and half of them are in Brazil.
13330 </para></footnote>
13331 </para>
13332 <indexterm id='idxpatentsonpharmaceuticals' class='startofrange'><primary>patents</primary><secondary>on pharmaceuticals</secondary></indexterm>
13333 <indexterm id='idxpharmaceuticalpatents' class='startofrange'><primary>pharmaceutical patents</primary></indexterm>
13334 <para>
13335 <!-- PAGE BREAK 265 -->
13336 These prices are not high because the ingredients of the drugs are
13337 expensive. These prices are high because the drugs are protected by
13338 patents. The drug companies that produced these life-saving mixes
13339 enjoy at least a twenty-year monopoly for their inventions. They use
13340 that monopoly power to extract the most they can from the market. That
13341 power is in turn used to keep the prices high.
13342 </para>
13343 <para>
13344 There are many who are skeptical of patents, especially drug
13345 patents. I am not. Indeed, of all the areas of research that might be
13346 supported by patents, drug research is, in my view, the clearest case
13347 where patents are needed. The patent gives the drug company some
13348 assurance that if it is successful in inventing a new drug to treat a
13349 disease, it will be able to earn back its investment and more. This is
13350 socially an extremely valuable incentive. I am the last person who
13351 would argue that the law should abolish it, at least without other
13352 changes.
13353 </para>
13354 <para>
13355 But it is one thing to support patents, even drug patents. It is
13356 another thing to determine how best to deal with a crisis. And as
13357 African leaders began to recognize the devastation that AIDS was
13358 bringing, they started looking for ways to import HIV treatments at
13359 costs significantly below the market price.
13360 </para>
13361 <indexterm id='idxinternationallaw2' class='startofrange'><primary>international law</primary></indexterm>
13362 <indexterm id='idxparallelimportation' class='startofrange'><primary>parallel importation</primary></indexterm>
13363 <indexterm id='idxsouthafricarepublicofpharmaceuticalimportsby' class='startofrange'><primary>South Africa, Republic of, pharmaceutical imports by</primary></indexterm>
13364 <para>
13365 In 1997, South Africa tried one tack. It passed a law to allow the
13366 importation of patented medicines that had been produced or sold in
13367 another nation's market with the consent of the patent owner. For
13368 example, if the drug was sold in India, it could be imported into
13369 Africa from India. This is called <quote>parallel importation,</quote> and it is
13370 generally permitted under international trade law and is specifically
13371 permitted within the European Union.<footnote>
13372 <para>
13373 <!-- f2. -->
13374 See Peter Drahos with John Braithwaite, <citetitle>Information Feudalism: Who
13375 Owns the Knowledge Economy?</citetitle> (New York: The New Press, 2003), 37.
13376 <indexterm><primary>Braithwaite, John</primary></indexterm>
13377 <indexterm><primary>Drahos, Peter</primary></indexterm>
13378 </para></footnote>
13379 </para>
13380 <indexterm><primary>United States Trade Representative (USTR)</primary></indexterm>
13381 <para>
13382 However, the United States government opposed the bill. Indeed, more
13383 than opposed. As the International Intellectual Property Association
13384 characterized it, <quote>The U.S. government pressured South Africa &hellip;
13385 not to permit compulsory licensing or parallel
13386 imports.</quote><footnote><para>
13387 <!-- f3. -->
13388 International Intellectual Property Institute (IIPI), <citetitle>Patent
13389 Protection and Access to HIV/AIDS Pharmaceuticals in Sub-Saharan
13390 Africa, a Report Prepared for the World Intellectual Property
13391 Organization</citetitle> (Washington, D.C., 2000), 14, available at
13392 <ulink url="http://free-culture.cc/notes/">link #56</ulink>. For a
13393 firsthand account of the struggle over South Africa, see Hearing
13394 Before the Subcommittee on Criminal Justice, Drug Policy, and Human
13395 Resources, House Committee on Government Reform, H. Rep., 1st sess.,
13396 Ser. No. 106-126 (22 July 1999), 150&ndash;57 (statement of James
13397 Love).
13398 </para></footnote>
13399 Through the Office of the United States Trade Representative, the
13400 government asked South Africa to change the law&mdash;and to add
13401 pressure to that request, in 1998, the USTR listed South Africa for
13402 possible trade sanctions.
13403 <!-- PAGE BREAK 266 -->
13404 That same year, more than forty pharmaceutical companies began
13405 proceedings in the South African courts to challenge the government's
13406 actions. The United States was then joined by other governments from
13407 the EU. Their claim, and the claim of the pharmaceutical companies,
13408 was that South Africa was violating its obligations under
13409 international law by discriminating against a particular kind of
13410 patent&mdash; pharmaceutical patents. The demand of these governments,
13411 with the United States in the lead, was that South Africa respect
13412 these patents as it respects any other patent, regardless of any
13413 effect on the treatment of AIDS within South Africa.<footnote><para>
13414 <!-- f4. -->
13415 International Intellectual Property Institute (IIPI), <citetitle>Patent
13416 Protection and Access to HIV/AIDS Pharmaceuticals in Sub-Saharan
13417 Africa, a Report Prepared for the World Intellectual Property
13418 Organization</citetitle> (Washington, D.C., 2000), 15. </para></footnote>
13419 </para>
13420 <indexterm startref='idxparallelimportation' class='endofrange'/>
13421 <para>
13422 We should place the intervention by the United States in context. No
13423 doubt patents are not the most important reason that Africans don't
13424 have access to drugs. Poverty and the total absence of an effective
13425 health care infrastructure matter more. But whether patents are the
13426 most important reason or not, the price of drugs has an effect on
13427 their demand, and patents affect price. And so, whether massive or
13428 marginal, there was an effect from our government's intervention to
13429 stop the flow of medications into Africa.
13430 </para>
13431 <para>
13432 By stopping the flow of HIV treatment into Africa, the United
13433 States government was not saving drugs for United States citizens.
13434 This is not like wheat (if they eat it, we can't); instead, the flow that the
13435 United States intervened to stop was, in effect, a flow of knowledge:
13436 information about how to take chemicals that exist within Africa, and
13437 turn those chemicals into drugs that would save 15 to 30 million lives.
13438 </para>
13439 <para>
13440 Nor was the intervention by the United States going to protect the
13441 profits of United States drug companies&mdash;at least, not substantially. It
13442 was not as if these countries were in the position to buy the drugs for
13443 the prices the drug companies were charging. Again, the Africans are
13444 wildly too poor to afford these drugs at the offered prices. Stopping the
13445 parallel import of these drugs would not substantially increase the sales
13446 by U.S. companies.
13447 </para>
13448 <para>
13449 Instead, the argument in favor of restricting this flow of
13450 information, which was needed to save the lives of millions, was an
13451 argument
13452 <!-- PAGE BREAK 267 -->
13453 about the sanctity of property.<footnote><para>
13454 <!-- f5. -->
13455 See Sabin Russell, <quote>New Crusade to Lower AIDS Drug Costs: Africa's
13456 Needs at Odds with Firms' Profit Motive,</quote> <citetitle>San Francisco Chronicle</citetitle>, 24
13457 May 1999, A1, available at
13458 <ulink url="http://free-culture.cc/notes/">link #57</ulink>
13459 (<quote>compulsory licenses and gray markets pose a threat to the entire
13460 system of intellectual property protection</quote>); Robert Weissman, <quote>AIDS
13461 and Developing Countries: Democratizing Access to Essential
13462 Medicines,</quote> <citetitle>Foreign Policy in Focus</citetitle> 4:23 (August 1999), available at
13463 <ulink url="http://free-culture.cc/notes/">link #58</ulink>
13464 (describing U.S. policy); John A. Harrelson, <quote>TRIPS, Pharmaceutical
13465 Patents, and the HIV/AIDS Crisis: Finding the Proper Balance Between
13466 Intellectual Property Rights and Compassion, a Synopsis,</quote> <citetitle>Widener Law
13467 Symposium Journal</citetitle> (Spring 2001): 175.
13468 <!-- PAGE BREAK 333 -->
13469 </para></footnote>
13470 It was because <quote>intellectual property</quote> would be violated that these
13471 drugs should not flow into Africa. It was a principle about the
13472 importance of <quote>intellectual property</quote> that led these government actors
13473 to intervene against the South African response to AIDS.
13474 </para>
13475 <indexterm startref='idxsouthafricarepublicofpharmaceuticalimportsby' class='endofrange'/>
13476 <para>
13477 Now just step back for a moment. There will be a time thirty years
13478 from now when our children look back at us and ask, how could we have
13479 let this happen? How could we allow a policy to be pursued whose
13480 direct cost would be to speed the death of 15 to 30 million Africans,
13481 and whose only real benefit would be to uphold the <quote>sanctity</quote> of an
13482 idea? What possible justification could there ever be for a policy
13483 that results in so many deaths? What exactly is the insanity that
13484 would allow so many to die for such an abstraction?
13485 </para>
13486 <indexterm id='idxcorporationsinpharmaceuticalindustry' class='startofrange'><primary>corporations</primary><secondary>in pharmaceutical industry</secondary></indexterm>
13487 <para>
13488 Some blame the drug companies. I don't. They are corporations.
13489 Their managers are ordered by law to make money for the corporation.
13490 They push a certain patent policy not because of ideals, but because it is
13491 the policy that makes them the most money. And it only makes them the
13492 most money because of a certain corruption within our political system&mdash;
13493 a corruption the drug companies are certainly not responsible for.
13494 </para>
13495 <para>
13496 The corruption is our own politicians' failure of integrity. For the
13497 drug companies would love&mdash;they say, and I believe them&mdash;to
13498 sell their drugs as cheaply as they can to countries in Africa and
13499 elsewhere. There are issues they'd have to resolve to make sure the
13500 drugs didn't get back into the United States, but those are mere
13501 problems of technology. They could be overcome.
13502 </para>
13503 <indexterm id='idxintellectualpropertyrightsofdrugpatents' class='startofrange'><primary>intellectual property rights</primary><secondary>of drug patents</secondary></indexterm>
13504 <para>
13505 A different problem, however, could not be overcome. This is the
13506 fear of the grandstanding politician who would call the presidents of
13507 the drug companies before a Senate or House hearing, and ask, <quote>How
13508 is it you can sell this HIV drug in Africa for only $1 a pill, but the same
13509 drug would cost an American $1,500?</quote> Because there is no <quote>sound
13510 bite</quote> answer to that question, its effect would be to induce regulation
13511 of prices in America. The drug companies thus avoid this spiral by
13512 avoiding the first step. They reinforce the idea that property should be
13513 <!-- PAGE BREAK 268 -->
13514 sacred. They adopt a rational strategy in an irrational context, with the
13515 unintended consequence that perhaps millions die. And that rational
13516 strategy thus becomes framed in terms of this ideal&mdash;the sanctity of an
13517 idea called <quote>intellectual property.</quote>
13518 </para>
13519 <indexterm startref='idxafricamedicationsforhivpatientsin' class='endofrange'/>
13520 <indexterm startref='idxaidsmedications' class='endofrange'/>
13521 <indexterm startref='idxantiretroviraldrugs' class='endofrange'/>
13522 <indexterm startref='idxdevelopingcountriesforeignpatentcostsin2' class='endofrange'/>
13523 <indexterm startref='idxdrugspharmaceutical' class='endofrange'/>
13524 <indexterm startref='idxhivaidstherapies' class='endofrange'/>
13525 <indexterm startref='idxcorporationsinpharmaceuticalindustry' class='endofrange'/>
13526 <para>
13527 So when the common sense of your child confronts you, what will
13528 you say? When the common sense of a generation finally revolts
13529 against what we have done, how will we justify what we have done?
13530 What is the argument?
13531 </para>
13532 <para>
13533 A sensible patent policy could endorse and strongly support the patent
13534 system without having to reach everyone everywhere in exactly the same
13535 way. Just as a sensible copyright policy could endorse and strongly
13536 support a copyright system without having to regulate the spread of
13537 culture perfectly and forever, a sensible patent policy could endorse
13538 and strongly support a patent system without having to block the
13539 spread of drugs to a country not rich enough to afford market prices
13540 in any case. A sensible policy, in other words, could be a balanced
13541 policy. For most of our history, both copyright and patent policies
13542 were balanced in just this sense.
13543 </para>
13544 <indexterm startref='idxpatentsonpharmaceuticals' class='endofrange'/>
13545 <indexterm startref='idxpharmaceuticalpatents' class='endofrange'/>
13546 <indexterm startref='idxinternationallaw2' class='endofrange'/>
13547 <para>
13548 But we as a culture have lost this sense of balance. We have lost the
13549 critical eye that helps us see the difference between truth and
13550 extremism. A certain property fundamentalism, having no connection to
13551 our tradition, now reigns in this culture&mdash;bizarrely, and with
13552 consequences more grave to the spread of ideas and culture than almost
13553 any other single policy decision that we as a democracy will make.
13554 </para>
13555 <indexterm startref='idxintellectualpropertyrightsofdrugpatents' class='endofrange'/>
13556 <para>
13557 <emphasis role='strong'>A simple idea</emphasis> blinds us, and under
13558 the cover of darkness, much happens that most of us would reject if
13559 any of us looked. So uncritically do we accept the idea of property in
13560 ideas that we don't even notice how monstrous it is to deny ideas to a
13561 people who are dying without them. So uncritically do we accept the
13562 idea of property in culture that we don't even question when the
13563 control of that property removes our
13564 <!-- PAGE BREAK 269 -->
13565 ability, as a people, to develop our culture democratically. Blindness
13566 becomes our common sense. And the challenge for anyone who would
13567 reclaim the right to cultivate our culture is to find a way to make
13568 this common sense open its eyes.
13569 </para>
13570 <para>
13571 So far, common sense sleeps. There is no revolt. Common sense
13572 does not yet see what there could be to revolt about. The extremism
13573 that now dominates this debate fits with ideas that seem natural, and
13574 that fit is reinforced by the RCAs of our day. They wage a frantic war
13575 to fight <quote>piracy,</quote> and devastate a culture for creativity. They defend
13576 the idea of <quote>creative property,</quote> while transforming real creators into
13577 modern-day sharecroppers. They are insulted by the idea that rights
13578 should be balanced, even though each of the major players in this
13579 content war was itself a beneficiary of a more balanced ideal. The
13580 hypocrisy reeks. Yet in a city like Washington, hypocrisy is not even
13581 noticed. Powerful lobbies, complex issues, and MTV attention spans
13582 produce the <quote>perfect storm</quote> for free culture.
13583 </para>
13584 <indexterm><primary>academic journals</primary></indexterm>
13585 <indexterm><primary>biomedical research</primary></indexterm>
13586 <indexterm id='idxintellectualpropertyrightsinternationalorganizationonissuesof' class='startofrange'><primary>intellectual property rights</primary><secondary>international organization on issues of</secondary></indexterm>
13587 <indexterm><primary>Internet</primary><secondary>development of</secondary></indexterm>
13588 <indexterm><primary>IBM</primary></indexterm>
13589 <indexterm><primary>PLoS (Public Library of Science)</primary></indexterm>
13590 <indexterm><primary>Public Library of Science (PLoS)</primary></indexterm>
13591 <indexterm><primary>public domain</primary><secondary>public projects in</secondary></indexterm>
13592 <indexterm><primary>single nucleotied polymorphisms (SNPs)</primary></indexterm>
13593 <indexterm><primary>Wellcome Trust</primary></indexterm>
13594 <indexterm id='idxworldintellectualpropertyorganizationwipo' class='startofrange'><primary>World Intellectual Property Organization (WIPO)</primary></indexterm>
13595 <indexterm><primary>World Wide Web</primary></indexterm>
13596 <indexterm><primary>Global Positioning System</primary></indexterm>
13597 <indexterm><primary>Reagan, Ronald</primary></indexterm>
13598 <indexterm id='idxbiomedicalresearch' class='startofrange'><primary>biomedical research</primary></indexterm>
13599 <para>
13600 <emphasis role='strong'>In August 2003</emphasis>, a fight broke out
13601 in the United States about a decision by the World Intellectual
13602 Property Organization to cancel a meeting.<footnote><para>
13603 <!-- f6. --> Jonathan Krim, <quote>The Quiet War over Open-Source,</quote> <citetitle>Washington Post</citetitle>,
13604 August 2003, E1, available at
13605 <ulink url="http://free-culture.cc/notes/">link #59</ulink>; William New, <quote>Global Group's
13606 Shift on <quote>Open Source</quote> Meeting Spurs Stir,</quote> <citetitle>National Journal's Technology
13607 Daily</citetitle>, 19 August 2003, available at
13608 <ulink url="http://free-culture.cc/notes/">link #60</ulink>; William New, <quote>U.S. Official
13609 Opposes <quote>Open Source</quote> Talks at WIPO,</quote> <citetitle>National Journal's Technology
13610 Daily</citetitle>, 19 August 2003, available at
13611 <ulink url="http://free-culture.cc/notes/">link #61</ulink>.
13612 </para></footnote>
13613 At the request of a wide range of interests, WIPO had decided to hold
13614 a meeting to discuss <quote>open and collaborative projects to create public
13615 goods.</quote> These are projects that have been successful in producing
13616 public goods without relying exclusively upon a proprietary use of
13617 intellectual property. Examples include the Internet and the World
13618 Wide Web, both of which were developed on the basis of protocols in
13619 the public domain. It included an emerging trend to support open
13620 academic journals, including the Public Library of Science project
13621 that I describe in chapter
13622 <xref xrefstyle="select: labelnumber" linkend="c-afterword"/>. It
13623 included a project to develop single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs),
13624 which are thought to have great significance in biomedical
13625 research. (That nonprofit project comprised a consortium of the
13626 Wellcome Trust and pharmaceutical and technological companies,
13627 including Amersham Biosciences, AstraZeneca,
13628 <!-- PAGE BREAK 270 -->
13629 Aventis, Bayer, Bristol-Myers Squibb, Hoffmann-La Roche,
13630 Glaxo-SmithKline, IBM, Motorola, Novartis, Pfizer, and Searle.) It
13631 included the Global Positioning System, which Ronald Reagan set free
13632 in the early 1980s. And it included <quote>open source and free software.</quote>
13633 </para>
13634 <indexterm startref='idxbiomedicalresearch' class='endofrange'/>
13635 <para>
13636 The aim of the meeting was to consider this wide range of projects
13637 from one common perspective: that none of these projects relied upon
13638 intellectual property extremism. Instead, in all of them, intellectual
13639 property was balanced by agreements to keep access open or to impose
13640 limitations on the way in which proprietary claims might be used.
13641 </para>
13642 <indexterm id='idxlessiglawrenceininternationaldebateonintellectualproperty' class='startofrange'><primary>Lessig, Lawrence</primary><secondary>in international debate on intellectual property</secondary></indexterm>
13643 <para>
13644 From the perspective of this book, then, the conference was ideal.<footnote><para>
13645 <!-- f7. --> I should disclose that I was one of the people who asked WIPO for the
13646 meeting.
13647 </para></footnote>
13648 The projects within its scope included both commercial and
13649 noncommercial work. They primarily involved science, but from many
13650 perspectives. And WIPO was an ideal venue for this discussion, since
13651 WIPO is the preeminent international body dealing with intellectual
13652 property issues.
13653 </para>
13654 <indexterm id='idxworldsummitontheinformationsocietywsis' class='startofrange'><primary>World Summit on the Information Society (WSIS)</primary></indexterm>
13655 <para>
13656 Indeed, I was once publicly scolded for not recognizing this fact
13657 about WIPO. In February 2003, I delivered a keynote address to a
13658 preparatory conference for the World Summit on the Information Society
13659 (WSIS). At a press conference before the address, I was asked what I
13660 would say. I responded that I would be talking a little about the
13661 importance of balance in intellectual property for the development of
13662 an information society. The moderator for the event then promptly
13663 interrupted to inform me and the assembled reporters that no question
13664 about intellectual property would be discussed by WSIS, since those
13665 questions were the exclusive domain of WIPO. In the talk that I had
13666 prepared, I had actually made the issue of intellectual property
13667 relatively minor. But after this astonishing statement, I made
13668 intellectual property the sole focus of my talk. There was no way to
13669 talk about an <quote>Information Society</quote> unless one also talked about the
13670 range of information and culture that would be free. My talk did not
13671 make my immoderate moderator very happy. And she was no doubt correct
13672 that the scope of intellectual property protections was ordinarily the
13673 stuff of
13674 <!-- PAGE BREAK 271 -->
13675 WIPO. But in my view, there couldn't be too much of a conversation
13676 about how much intellectual property is needed, since in my view, the
13677 very idea of balance in intellectual property had been lost.
13678 </para>
13679 <para>
13680 So whether or not WSIS can discuss balance in intellectual property, I
13681 had thought it was taken for granted that WIPO could and should. And
13682 thus the meeting about <quote>open and collaborative projects to create
13683 public goods</quote> seemed perfectly appropriate within the WIPO agenda.
13684 </para>
13685 <indexterm startref='idxintellectualpropertyrightsinternationalorganizationonissuesof' class='endofrange'/>
13686 <indexterm startref='idxworldintellectualpropertyorganizationwipo' class='endofrange'/>
13687 <indexterm startref='idxworldsummitontheinformationsocietywsis' class='endofrange'/>
13688 <indexterm id='idxfreesoftwareopensourcesoftwarefsoss' class='startofrange'><primary>free software/open-source software (FS/OSS)</primary></indexterm>
13689 <indexterm><primary>Apple Corporation</primary></indexterm>
13690 <indexterm id='idxmicrosoftonfreesoftware' class='startofrange'><primary>Microsoft</primary><secondary>on free software</secondary></indexterm>
13691 <para>
13692 But there is one project within that list that is highly
13693 controversial, at least among lobbyists. That project is <quote>open source
13694 and free software.</quote> Microsoft in particular is wary of discussion of
13695 the subject. From its perspective, a conference to discuss open source
13696 and free software would be like a conference to discuss Apple's
13697 operating system. Both open source and free software compete with
13698 Microsoft's software. And internationally, many governments have begun
13699 to explore requirements that they use open source or free software,
13700 rather than <quote>proprietary software,</quote> for their own internal uses.
13701 </para>
13702 <indexterm><primary><quote>copyleft</quote> licenses</primary></indexterm>
13703 <indexterm><primary>GNU/Linux operating system</primary></indexterm>
13704 <indexterm><primary>Linux operating system</primary></indexterm>
13705 <indexterm><primary>IBM</primary></indexterm>
13706 <para>
13707 I don't mean to enter that debate here. It is important only to
13708 make clear that the distinction is not between commercial and
13709 noncommercial software. There are many important companies that depend
13710 fundamentally upon open source and free software, IBM being the most
13711 prominent. IBM is increasingly shifting its focus to the GNU/Linux
13712 operating system, the most famous bit of <quote>free software</quote>&mdash;and IBM
13713 is emphatically a commercial entity. Thus, to support <quote>open source and
13714 free software</quote> is not to oppose commercial entities. It is, instead,
13715 to support a mode of software development that is different from
13716 Microsoft's.<footnote><para>
13717 <!-- f8. -->
13718 Microsoft's position about free and open source software is more
13719 sophisticated. As it has repeatedly asserted, it has no problem with
13720 <quote>open source</quote> software or software in the public domain. Microsoft's
13721 principal opposition is to <quote>free software</quote> licensed under a <quote>copyleft</quote>
13722 license, meaning a license that requires the licensee to adopt the
13723 same terms on any derivative work. See Bradford L. Smith, <quote>The Future
13724 of Software: Enabling the Marketplace to Decide,</quote> <citetitle>Government Policy
13725 Toward Open Source Software</citetitle> (Washington, D.C.: AEI-Brookings Joint
13726 Center for Regulatory Studies, American Enterprise Institute for
13727 Public Policy Research, 2002), 69, available at
13728 <ulink url="http://free-culture.cc/notes/">link #62</ulink>. See also
13729 Craig Mundie, Microsoft senior vice president, <citetitle>The Commercial Software
13730 Model</citetitle>, discussion at New York University Stern School of Business (3
13731 May 2001), available at
13732 <ulink url="http://free-culture.cc/notes/">link #63</ulink>.
13733 </para></footnote>
13734 </para>
13735 <indexterm startref='idxlessiglawrenceininternationaldebateonintellectualproperty' class='endofrange'/>
13736 <indexterm><primary>General Public License (GPL)</primary></indexterm>
13737 <indexterm><primary>GPL (General Public License)</primary></indexterm>
13738 <para>
13739 More important for our purposes, to support <quote>open source and free
13740 software</quote> is not to oppose copyright. <quote>Open source and free software</quote>
13741 is not software in the public domain. Instead, like Microsoft's
13742 software, the copyright owners of free and open source software insist
13743 quite strongly that the terms of their software license be respected
13744 by
13745 <!-- PAGE BREAK 272 -->
13746 adopters of free and open source software. The terms of that license
13747 are no doubt different from the terms of a proprietary software
13748 license. Free software licensed under the General Public License
13749 (GPL), for example, requires that the source code for the software be
13750 made available by anyone who modifies and redistributes the
13751 software. But that requirement is effective only if copyright governs
13752 software. If copyright did not govern software, then free software
13753 could not impose the same kind of requirements on its adopters. It
13754 thus depends upon copyright law just as Microsoft does.
13755 </para>
13756 <indexterm id='idxintellectualpropertyrightsinternationalorganizationonissuesof2' class='startofrange'><primary>intellectual property rights</primary><secondary>international organization on issues of</secondary></indexterm>
13757 <indexterm id='idxworldintellectualpropertyorganizationwipo2' class='startofrange'><primary>World Intellectual Property Organization (WIPO)</primary></indexterm>
13758 <indexterm id='idxkrimjonathan' class='startofrange'><primary>Krim, Jonathan</primary></indexterm>
13759 <indexterm><primary>Microsoft</primary><secondary>WIPO meeting opposed by</secondary></indexterm>
13760 <para>
13761 It is therefore understandable that as a proprietary software
13762 developer, Microsoft would oppose this WIPO meeting, and
13763 understandable that it would use its lobbyists to get the United
13764 States government to oppose it, as well. And indeed, that is just what
13765 was reported to have happened. According to Jonathan Krim of the
13766 <citetitle>Washington Post</citetitle>, Microsoft's lobbyists succeeded in getting the United
13767 States government to veto the meeting.<footnote><para>
13768 <!-- f9. -->
13769 Krim, <quote>The Quiet War over Open-Source,</quote> available at <ulink
13770 url="http://free-culture.cc/notes/">link #64</ulink>.
13771 </para></footnote>
13772 And without U.S. backing, the meeting was canceled.
13773 </para>
13774 <para>
13775 I don't blame Microsoft for doing what it can to advance its own
13776 interests, consistent with the law. And lobbying governments is
13777 plainly consistent with the law. There was nothing surprising about
13778 its lobbying here, and nothing terribly surprising about the most
13779 powerful software producer in the United States having succeeded in
13780 its lobbying efforts.
13781 </para>
13782 <indexterm startref='idxmicrosoftonfreesoftware' class='endofrange'/>
13783 <indexterm><primary>Boland, Lois</primary></indexterm>
13784 <indexterm id='idxpatentandtrademarkofficeus' class='startofrange'><primary>Patent and Trademark Office, U.S.</primary></indexterm>
13785 <para>
13786 What was surprising was the United States government's reason for
13787 opposing the meeting. Again, as reported by Krim, Lois Boland, acting
13788 director of international relations for the U.S. Patent and Trademark
13789 Office, explained that <quote>open-source software runs counter to the
13790 mission of WIPO, which is to promote intellectual-property rights.</quote>
13791 She is quoted as saying, <quote>To hold a meeting which has as its purpose
13792 to disclaim or waive such rights seems to us to be contrary to the
13793 goals of WIPO.</quote>
13794 </para>
13795 <indexterm startref='idxkrimjonathan' class='endofrange'/>
13796 <para>
13797 These statements are astonishing on a number of levels.
13798 </para>
13799 <indexterm startref='idxfreesoftwareopensourcesoftwarefsoss' class='endofrange'/>
13800 <!-- PAGE BREAK 273 -->
13801 <para>
13802 First, they are just flat wrong. As I described, most open source and
13803 free software relies fundamentally upon the intellectual property
13804 right called <quote>copyright</quote>. Without it, restrictions imposed by those
13805 licenses wouldn't work. Thus, to say it <quote>runs counter</quote> to the mission
13806 of promoting intellectual property rights reveals an extraordinary gap
13807 in understanding&mdash;the sort of mistake that is excusable in a
13808 first-year law student, but an embarrassment from a high government
13809 official dealing with intellectual property issues.
13810 </para>
13811 <indexterm><primary>World Summit on the Information Society (WSIS)</primary></indexterm>
13812 <indexterm><primary>drugs</primary><secondary>pharmaceutical</secondary></indexterm>
13813 <indexterm><primary>generic drugs</primary></indexterm>
13814 <indexterm><primary>patents</primary><secondary>on pharmaceuticals</secondary></indexterm>
13815 <para>
13816 Second, who ever said that WIPO's exclusive aim was to <quote>promote</quote>
13817 intellectual property maximally? As I had been scolded at the
13818 preparatory conference of WSIS, WIPO is to consider not only how best
13819 to protect intellectual property, but also what the best balance of
13820 intellectual property is. As every economist and lawyer knows, the
13821 hard question in intellectual property law is to find that
13822 balance. But that there should be limits is, I had thought,
13823 uncontested. One wants to ask Ms. Boland, are generic drugs (drugs
13824 based on drugs whose patent has expired) contrary to the WIPO mission?
13825 Does the public domain weaken intellectual property? Would it have
13826 been better if the protocols of the Internet had been patented?
13827 </para>
13828 <indexterm><primary>Gates, Bill</primary></indexterm>
13829 <para>
13830 Third, even if one believed that the purpose of WIPO was to maximize
13831 intellectual property rights, in our tradition, intellectual property
13832 rights are held by individuals and corporations. They get to decide
13833 what to do with those rights because, again, they are
13834 <emphasis>their</emphasis> rights. If they want to <quote>waive</quote> or
13835 <quote>disclaim</quote> their rights, that is, within our tradition, totally
13836 appropriate. When Bill Gates gives away more than $20 billion to do
13837 good in the world, that is not inconsistent with the objectives of the
13838 property system. That is, on the contrary, just what a property system
13839 is supposed to be about: giving individuals the right to decide what
13840 to do with <emphasis>their</emphasis> property.
13841 </para>
13842 <indexterm id='idxbolandlois' class='startofrange'><primary>Boland, Lois</primary></indexterm>
13843 <para>
13844 When Ms. Boland says that there is something wrong with a meeting
13845 <quote>which has as its purpose to disclaim or waive such rights,</quote> she's
13846 saying that WIPO has an interest in interfering with the choices of
13847 <!-- PAGE BREAK 274 -->
13848 the individuals who own intellectual property rights. That somehow,
13849 WIPO's objective should be to stop an individual from <quote>waiving</quote> or
13850 <quote>disclaiming</quote> an intellectual property right. That the interest of
13851 WIPO is not just that intellectual property rights be maximized, but
13852 that they also should be exercised in the most extreme and restrictive
13853 way possible.
13854 </para>
13855 <indexterm id='idxfeudalsystem' class='startofrange'><primary>feudal system</primary></indexterm>
13856 <indexterm id='idxpropertyrightsfeudalsystemof' class='startofrange'><primary>property rights</primary><secondary>feudal system of</secondary></indexterm>
13857 <para>
13858 There is a history of just such a property system that is well known
13859 in the Anglo-American tradition. It is called <quote>feudalism.</quote> Under
13860 feudalism, not only was property held by a relatively small number of
13861 individuals and entities. And not only were the rights that ran with
13862 that property powerful and extensive. But the feudal system had a
13863 strong interest in assuring that property holders within that system
13864 not weaken feudalism by liberating people or property within their
13865 control to the free market. Feudalism depended upon maximum control
13866 and concentration. It fought any freedom that might interfere with
13867 that control.
13868 </para>
13869 <indexterm><primary>Drahos, Peter</primary></indexterm>
13870 <indexterm><primary>Braithwaite, John</primary></indexterm>
13871 <para>
13872 As Peter Drahos and John Braithwaite relate, this is precisely the
13873 choice we are now making about intellectual property.<footnote><para>
13874 <!-- f10. -->
13875 See Drahos with Braithwaite, <citetitle>Information Feudalism</citetitle>, 210&ndash;20.
13876 <indexterm><primary>Drahos, Peter</primary></indexterm>
13877 </para></footnote>
13878 We will have an information society. That much is certain. Our only
13879 choice now is whether that information society will be
13880 <emphasis>free</emphasis> or <emphasis>feudal</emphasis>. The trend is
13881 toward the feudal.
13882 </para>
13883 <indexterm startref='idxfeudalsystem' class='endofrange'/>
13884 <indexterm startref='idxpropertyrightsfeudalsystemof' class='endofrange'/>
13885 <para>
13886 When this battle broke, I blogged it. A spirited debate within the
13887 comment section ensued. Ms. Boland had a number of supporters who
13888 tried to show why her comments made sense. But there was one comment
13889 that was particularly depressing for me. An anonymous poster wrote,
13890 </para>
13891 <blockquote>
13892 <indexterm startref='idxintellectualpropertyrightsinternationalorganizationonissuesof2' class='endofrange'/>
13893 <indexterm startref='idxworldintellectualpropertyorganizationwipo2' class='endofrange'/>
13894 <para>
13895 George, you misunderstand Lessig: He's only talking about the world as
13896 it should be (<quote>the goal of WIPO, and the goal of any government,
13897 should be to promote the right balance of intellectual property rights,
13898 not simply to promote intellectual property rights</quote>), not as it is. If
13899 we were talking about the world as it is, then of course Boland didn't
13900 say anything wrong. But in the world
13901 <!-- PAGE BREAK 275 -->
13902 as Lessig would have it, then of course she did. Always pay attention
13903 to the distinction between Lessig's world and ours.
13904 </para>
13905 </blockquote>
13906 <para>
13907 I missed the irony the first time I read it. I read it quickly and
13908 thought the poster was supporting the idea that seeking balance was
13909 what our government should be doing. (Of course, my criticism of Ms.
13910 Boland was not about whether she was seeking balance or not; my
13911 criticism was that her comments betrayed a first-year law student's
13912 mistake. I have no illusion about the extremism of our government,
13913 whether Republican or Democrat. My only illusion apparently is about
13914 whether our government should speak the truth or not.)
13915 </para>
13916 <indexterm startref='idxbolandlois' class='endofrange'/>
13917 <para>
13918 Obviously, however, the poster was not supporting that idea. Instead,
13919 the poster was ridiculing the very idea that in the real world, the
13920 <quote>goal</quote> of a government should be <quote>to promote the right balance</quote> of
13921 intellectual property. That was obviously silly to him. And it
13922 obviously betrayed, he believed, my own silly utopianism. <quote>Typical for
13923 an academic,</quote> the poster might well have continued.
13924 </para>
13925 <para>
13926 I understand criticism of academic utopianism. I think utopianism is
13927 silly, too, and I'd be the first to poke fun at the absurdly
13928 unrealistic ideals of academics throughout history (and not just in
13929 our own country's history).
13930 </para>
13931 <para>
13932 But when it has become silly to suppose that the role of our
13933 government should be to <quote>seek balance,</quote> then count me with the silly,
13934 for that means that this has become quite serious indeed. If it should
13935 be obvious to everyone that the government does not seek balance, that
13936 the government is simply the tool of the most powerful lobbyists, that
13937 the idea of holding the government to a different standard is absurd,
13938 that the idea of demanding of the government that it speak truth and
13939 not lies is just na&iuml;ve, then who have we, the most powerful
13940 democracy in the world, become?
13941 </para>
13942 <para>
13943 It might be crazy to expect a high government official to speak
13944 the truth. It might be crazy to believe that government policy will be
13945 something more than the handmaiden of the most powerful interests.
13946 <!-- PAGE BREAK 276 -->
13947 It might be crazy to argue that we should preserve a tradition that has
13948 been part of our tradition for most of our history&mdash;free culture.
13949 </para>
13950 <indexterm startref='idxpatentandtrademarkofficeus' class='endofrange'/>
13951 <para>
13952 If this is crazy, then let there be more crazies. Soon.
13953 </para>
13954 <indexterm><primary>CodePink Women in Peace</primary></indexterm>
13955 <indexterm><primary>Safire, William</primary></indexterm>
13956 <indexterm><primary>Turner, Ted</primary></indexterm>
13957 <para>
13958 <emphasis role='strong'>There are moments</emphasis> of hope in this
13959 struggle. And moments that surprise. When the FCC was considering
13960 relaxing ownership rules, which would thereby further increase the
13961 concentration in media ownership, an extraordinary bipartisan
13962 coalition formed to fight this change. For perhaps the first time in
13963 history, interests as diverse as the NRA, the ACLU, Moveon.org,
13964 William Safire, Ted Turner, and CodePink Women for Peace organized to
13965 oppose this change in FCC policy. An astonishing 700,000 letters were
13966 sent to the FCC, demanding more hearings and a different result.
13967 </para>
13968 <para>
13969 This activism did not stop the FCC, but soon after, a broad coalition
13970 in the Senate voted to reverse the FCC decision. The hostile hearings
13971 leading up to that vote revealed just how powerful this movement had
13972 become. There was no substantial support for the FCC's decision, and
13973 there was broad and sustained support for fighting further
13974 concentration in the media.
13975 </para>
13976 <para>
13977 But even this movement misses an important piece of the puzzle.
13978 Largeness as such is not bad. Freedom is not threatened just because
13979 some become very rich, or because there are only a handful of big
13980 players. The poor quality of Big Macs or Quarter Pounders does not
13981 mean that you can't get a good hamburger from somewhere else.
13982 </para>
13983 <para>
13984 The danger in media concentration comes not from the concentration,
13985 but instead from the feudalism that this concentration, tied to the
13986 change in copyright, produces. It is not just that there are a few
13987 powerful companies that control an ever expanding slice of the
13988 media. It is that this concentration can call upon an equally bloated
13989 range of rights&mdash;property rights of a historically extreme
13990 form&mdash;that makes their bigness bad.
13991 </para>
13992 <!-- PAGE BREAK 277 -->
13993 <para>
13994 It is therefore significant that so many would rally to demand
13995 competition and increased diversity. Still, if the rally is understood
13996 as being about bigness alone, it is not terribly surprising. We
13997 Americans have a long history of fighting <quote>big,</quote> wisely or not. That
13998 we could be motivated to fight <quote>big</quote> again is not something new.
13999 </para>
14000 <para>
14001 It would be something new, and something very important, if an equal
14002 number could be rallied to fight the increasing extremism built within
14003 the idea of <quote>intellectual property.</quote> Not because balance is alien to
14004 our tradition; indeed, as I've argued, balance is our tradition. But
14005 because the muscle to think critically about the scope of anything
14006 called <quote>property</quote> is not well exercised within this tradition anymore.
14007 </para>
14008 <para>
14009 If we were Achilles, this would be our heel. This would be the place
14010 of our tragedy.
14011 </para>
14012 <indexterm><primary>Dylan, Bob</primary></indexterm>
14013 <para>
14014 <emphasis role='strong'>As I write</emphasis> these final words, the
14015 news is filled with stories about the RIAA lawsuits against almost
14016 three hundred individuals.<footnote><para>
14017 <!-- f11. -->
14018 John Borland, <quote>RIAA Sues 261 File Swappers,</quote> CNET News.com, September
14019 2003, available at
14020 <ulink url="http://free-culture.cc/notes/">link #65</ulink>; Paul
14021 R. La Monica, <quote>Music Industry Sues Swappers,</quote> CNN/Money, 8 September
14022 2003, available at
14023 <ulink url="http://free-culture.cc/notes/">link #66</ulink>; Soni
14024 Sangha and Phyllis Furman with Robert Gearty, <quote>Sued for a Song,
14025 N.Y.C. 12-Yr-Old Among 261 Cited as Sharers,</quote> <citetitle>New York Daily News</citetitle>, 9
14026 September 2003, 3; Frank Ahrens, <quote>RIAA's Lawsuits Meet Surprised
14027 Targets; Single Mother in Calif., 12-Year-Old Girl in N.Y. Among
14028 Defendants,</quote> <citetitle>Washington Post</citetitle>, 10 September 2003, E1; Katie Dean,
14029 <quote>Schoolgirl Settles with RIAA,</quote> <citetitle>Wired News</citetitle>, 10 September 2003,
14030 available at
14031 <ulink url="http://free-culture.cc/notes/">link #67</ulink>.
14032 </para></footnote>
14033 Eminem has just been sued for <quote>sampling</quote> someone else's
14034 music.<footnote><para>
14035 <!-- f12. -->
14036 Jon Wiederhorn, <quote>Eminem Gets Sued &hellip; by a Little Old Lady,</quote>
14037 mtv.com, 17 September 2003, available at
14038 <ulink url="http://free-culture.cc/notes/">link #68</ulink>.
14039 </para></footnote>
14040 The story about Bob Dylan <quote>stealing</quote> from a Japanese author has just
14041 finished making the rounds.<footnote><para>
14042 <!-- f13. -->
14043 Kenji Hall, Associated Press, <quote>Japanese Book May Be Inspiration for
14044 Dylan Songs,</quote> Kansascity.com, 9 July 2003, available at
14045 <ulink url="http://free-culture.cc/notes/">link #69</ulink>.
14046 <!-- PAGE BREAK 334 -->
14047 </para></footnote>
14048 An insider from Hollywood&mdash;who insists he must remain
14049 anonymous&mdash;reports <quote>an amazing conversation with these studio
14050 guys. They've got extraordinary [old] content that they'd love to use
14051 but can't because they can't begin to clear the rights. They've got
14052 scores of kids who could do amazing things with the content, but it
14053 would take scores of lawyers to clean it first.</quote> Congressmen are
14054 talking about deputizing computer viruses to bring down computers
14055 thought to violate the law. Universities are threatening expulsion for
14056 kids who use a computer to share content.
14057 </para>
14058 <indexterm><primary>Causby, Thomas Lee</primary></indexterm>
14059 <indexterm><primary>Causby, Tinie</primary></indexterm>
14060 <indexterm><primary>BBC</primary></indexterm>
14061 <indexterm><primary>Brazil, free culture in</primary></indexterm>
14062 <indexterm><primary>Creative Commons</primary></indexterm>
14063 <indexterm><primary>Gil, Gilberto</primary></indexterm>
14064 <indexterm><primary>United Kingdom</primary><secondary>public creative archive in</secondary></indexterm>
14065 <para>
14066 Yet on the other side of the Atlantic, the BBC has just announced
14067 that it will build a <quote>Creative Archive,</quote> from which British citizens can
14068 download BBC content, and rip, mix, and burn it.<footnote><para>
14069 <!-- f14. --> <quote>BBC Plans to Open Up Its Archive to the Public,</quote> BBC press release,
14070 24 August 2003, available at
14071 <ulink url="http://free-culture.cc/notes/">link #70</ulink>.
14072 </para></footnote>
14073 And in Brazil, the culture minister, Gilberto Gil, himself a folk hero
14074 of Brazilian music, has joined with Creative Commons to release
14075 content and free licenses in that Latin American
14076 country.<footnote><para>
14077 <!-- f15. -->
14078 <quote>Creative Commons and Brazil,</quote> Creative Commons Weblog, 6 August 2003,
14079 available at
14080 <ulink url="http://free-culture.cc/notes/">link #71</ulink>.
14081 </para></footnote>
14082 <!-- PAGE BREAK 278 -->
14083 I've told a dark story. The truth is more mixed. A technology has
14084 given us a new freedom. Slowly, some begin to understand that this
14085 freedom need not mean anarchy. We can carry a free culture into the
14086 twenty-first century, without artists losing and without the potential of
14087 digital technology being destroyed. It will take some thought, and
14088 more importantly, it will take some will to transform the RCAs of our
14089 day into the Causbys.
14090 </para>
14091 <para>
14092 Common sense must revolt. It must act to free culture. Soon, if this
14093 potential is ever to be realized.
14094
14095 <!-- PAGE BREAK 279 -->
14096
14097 </para>
14098 </chapter>
14099 <chapter label="" id="c-afterword">
14100 <title>Afterword</title>
14101 <indexterm id='idxcopyrightvoluntaryreformeffortson' class='startofrange'><primary>copyright</primary><secondary>voluntary reform efforts on</secondary></indexterm>
14102 <para>
14103
14104 <!-- PAGE BREAK 280 -->
14105 <emphasis role='strong'>At least some</emphasis> who have read this
14106 far will agree with me that something must be done to change where we
14107 are heading. The balance of this book maps what might be done.
14108 </para>
14109 <para>
14110 I divide this map into two parts: that which anyone can do now,
14111 and that which requires the help of lawmakers. If there is one lesson
14112 that we can draw from the history of remaking common sense, it is that
14113 it requires remaking how many people think about the very same issue.
14114 </para>
14115 <para>
14116 That means this movement must begin in the streets. It must recruit a
14117 significant number of parents, teachers, librarians, creators,
14118 authors, musicians, filmmakers, scientists&mdash;all to tell this
14119 story in their own words, and to tell their neighbors why this battle
14120 is so important.
14121 </para>
14122 <indexterm><primary>RCA</primary></indexterm>
14123 <indexterm startref='idxcopyrightvoluntaryreformeffortson' class='endofrange'/>
14124 <para>
14125 Once this movement has its effect in the streets, it has some hope of
14126 having an effect in Washington. We are still a democracy. What people
14127 think matters. Not as much as it should, at least when an RCA stands
14128 opposed, but still, it matters. And thus, in the second part below, I
14129 sketch changes that Congress could make to better secure a free culture.
14130 </para>
14131 <!-- PAGE BREAK 281 -->
14132
14133 <section id="usnow">
14134 <title>Us, now</title>
14135 <indexterm id='idxcopyrightvoluntaryreformeffortson2' class='startofrange'><primary>copyright</primary><secondary>voluntary reform efforts on</secondary></indexterm>
14136 <para>
14137 <emphasis role='strong'>Common sense</emphasis> is with the copyright
14138 warriors because the debate so far has been framed at the
14139 extremes&mdash;as a grand either/or: either property or anarchy,
14140 either total control or artists won't be paid. If that really is the
14141 choice, then the warriors should win.
14142 </para>
14143 <para>
14144 The mistake here is the error of the excluded middle. There are
14145 extremes in this debate, but the extremes are not all that there
14146 is. There are those who believe in maximal copyright&mdash;<quote>All Rights
14147 Reserved</quote>&mdash; and those who reject copyright&mdash;<quote>No Rights
14148 Reserved.</quote> The <quote>All Rights Reserved</quote> sorts believe that you should ask
14149 permission before you <quote>use</quote> a copyrighted work in any way. The <quote>No
14150 Rights Reserved</quote> sorts believe you should be able to do with content
14151 as you wish, regardless of whether you have permission or not.
14152 </para>
14153 <indexterm id='idxinternetdevelopmentof2' class='startofrange'><primary>Internet</primary><secondary>development of</secondary></indexterm>
14154 <indexterm id='idxinternetinitialfreecharacterof' class='startofrange'><primary>Internet</primary><secondary>initial free character of</secondary></indexterm>
14155 <para>
14156 When the Internet was first born, its initial architecture effectively
14157 tilted in the <quote>no rights reserved</quote> direction. Content could be copied
14158 perfectly and cheaply; rights could not easily be controlled. Thus,
14159 regardless of anyone's desire, the effective regime of copyright under
14160 the
14161
14162 <!-- PAGE BREAK 282 -->
14163 original design of the Internet was <quote>no rights reserved.</quote> Content was
14164 <quote>taken</quote> regardless of the rights. Any rights were effectively
14165 unprotected.
14166 </para>
14167 <para>
14168 This initial character produced a reaction (opposite, but not quite
14169 equal) by copyright owners. That reaction has been the topic of this
14170 book. Through legislation, litigation, and changes to the network's
14171 design, copyright holders have been able to change the essential
14172 character of the environment of the original Internet. If the original
14173 architecture made the effective default <quote>no rights reserved,</quote> the
14174 future architecture will make the effective default <quote>all rights
14175 reserved.</quote> The architecture and law that surround the Internet's
14176 design will increasingly produce an environment where all use of
14177 content requires permission. The <quote>cut and paste</quote> world that defines
14178 the Internet today will become a <quote>get permission to cut and paste</quote>
14179 world that is a creator's nightmare.
14180 </para>
14181 <indexterm startref='idxinternetdevelopmentof2' class='endofrange'/>
14182 <indexterm startref='idxinternetinitialfreecharacterof' class='endofrange'/>
14183 <para>
14184 What's needed is a way to say something in the middle&mdash;neither
14185 <quote>all rights reserved</quote> nor <quote>no rights reserved</quote> but <quote>some rights
14186 reserved</quote>&mdash; and thus a way to respect copyrights but enable
14187 creators to free content as they see fit. In other words, we need a
14188 way to restore a set of freedoms that we could just take for granted
14189 before.
14190 </para>
14191 <section id="examples">
14192 <title>Rebuilding Freedoms Previously Presumed: Examples</title>
14193 <indexterm id='idxfreeculturerestorationeffortsonpreviousaspectsof' class='startofrange'><primary>free culture</primary><secondary>restoration efforts on previous aspects of</secondary></indexterm>
14194 <indexterm id='idxbrowsing' class='startofrange'><primary>browsing</primary></indexterm>
14195 <indexterm id='idxprivacyrights2' class='startofrange'><primary>privacy rights</primary></indexterm>
14196 <para>
14197 If you step back from the battle I've been describing here, you will
14198 recognize this problem from other contexts. Think about
14199 privacy. Before the Internet, most of us didn't have to worry much
14200 about data about our lives that we broadcast to the world. If you
14201 walked into a bookstore and browsed through some of the works of Karl
14202 Marx, you didn't need to worry about explaining your browsing habits
14203 to your neighbors or boss. The <quote>privacy</quote> of your browsing habits was
14204 assured.
14205 </para>
14206 <para>
14207 What made it assured?
14208 </para>
14209 <!-- PAGE BREAK 283 -->
14210 <para>
14211 Well, if we think in terms of the modalities I described in chapter
14212 <xref xrefstyle="select: labelnumber" linkend="property-i"/>, your
14213 privacy was assured because of an inefficient architecture for
14214 gathering data and hence a market constraint (cost) on anyone who
14215 wanted to gather that data. If you were a suspected spy for North
14216 Korea, working for the CIA, no doubt your privacy would not be
14217 assured. But that's because the CIA would (we hope) find it valuable
14218 enough to spend the thousands required to track you. But for most of
14219 us (again, we can hope), spying doesn't pay. The highly inefficient
14220 architecture of real space means we all enjoy a fairly robust amount
14221 of privacy. That privacy is guaranteed to us by friction. Not by law
14222 (there is no law protecting <quote>privacy</quote> in public places), and in many
14223 places, not by norms (snooping and gossip are just fun), but instead,
14224 by the costs that friction imposes on anyone who would want to spy.
14225 </para>
14226 <indexterm id='idxamazon' class='startofrange'><primary>Amazon</primary></indexterm>
14227 <indexterm><primary>cookies, Internet</primary></indexterm>
14228 <indexterm id='idxinternetprivacyprotectionon' class='startofrange'><primary>Internet</primary><secondary>privacy protection on</secondary></indexterm>
14229 <para>
14230 Enter the Internet, where the cost of tracking browsing in particular
14231 has become quite tiny. If you're a customer at Amazon, then as you
14232 browse the pages, Amazon collects the data about what you've looked
14233 at. You know this because at the side of the page, there's a list of
14234 <quote>recently viewed</quote> pages. Now, because of the architecture of the Net
14235 and the function of cookies on the Net, it is easier to collect the
14236 data than not. The friction has disappeared, and hence any <quote>privacy</quote>
14237 protected by the friction disappears, too.
14238 </para>
14239 <indexterm><primary>libraries</primary><secondary>privacy rights in use of</secondary></indexterm>
14240 <para>
14241 Amazon, of course, is not the problem. But we might begin to worry
14242 about libraries. If you're one of those crazy lefties who thinks that
14243 people should have the <quote>right</quote> to browse in a library without the
14244 government knowing which books you look at (I'm one of those lefties,
14245 too), then this change in the technology of monitoring might concern
14246 you. If it becomes simple to gather and sort who does what in
14247 electronic spaces, then the friction-induced privacy of yesterday
14248 disappears.
14249 </para>
14250 <indexterm startref='idxbrowsing' class='endofrange'/>
14251 <indexterm startref='idxamazon' class='endofrange'/>
14252 <para>
14253 It is this reality that explains the push of many to define <quote>privacy</quote>
14254 on the Internet. It is the recognition that technology can remove what
14255 friction before gave us that leads many to push for laws to do what
14256 friction did.<footnote><para>
14257 <!-- f1. -->
14258
14259 See, for example, Marc Rotenberg, <quote>Fair Information Practices and the
14260 Architecture of Privacy (What Larry Doesn't Get),</quote> <citetitle>Stanford Technology
14261 Law Review</citetitle> 1 (2001): par. 6&ndash;18, available at
14262
14263 <ulink url="http://free-culture.cc/notes/">link #72</ulink>
14264 (describing examples in which technology defines privacy policy). See
14265 also Jeffrey Rosen, <citetitle>The Naked Crowd: Reclaiming Security and Freedom
14266 in an Anxious Age</citetitle> (New York: Random House, 2004) (mapping tradeoffs
14267 between technology and privacy).</para></footnote>
14268 And whether you're in favor of those laws or not, it is the pattern
14269 that is important here. We must take affirmative steps to secure a
14270
14271 <!-- PAGE BREAK 284 -->
14272 kind of freedom that was passively provided before. A change in
14273 technology now forces those who believe in privacy to affirmatively
14274 act where, before, privacy was given by default.
14275 </para>
14276 <indexterm startref='idxprivacyrights2' class='endofrange'/>
14277 <indexterm startref='idxinternetprivacyprotectionon' class='endofrange'/>
14278 <indexterm><primary>Data General</primary></indexterm>
14279 <indexterm><primary>IBM</primary></indexterm>
14280 <indexterm id='idxfreesoftwareopensourcesoftwarefsoss2' class='startofrange'><primary>free software/open-source software (FS/OSS)</primary></indexterm>
14281 <para>
14282 A similar story could be told about the birth of the free software
14283 movement. When computers with software were first made available
14284 commercially, the software&mdash;both the source code and the
14285 binaries&mdash; was free. You couldn't run a program written for a
14286 Data General machine on an IBM machine, so Data General and IBM didn't
14287 care much about controlling their software.
14288 </para>
14289 <indexterm id='idxstallmanrichard' class='startofrange'><primary>Stallman, Richard</primary></indexterm>
14290 <para>
14291 That was the world Richard Stallman was born into, and while he was a
14292 researcher at MIT, he grew to love the community that developed when
14293 one was free to explore and tinker with the software that ran on
14294 machines. Being a smart sort himself, and a talented programmer,
14295 Stallman grew to depend upon the freedom to add to or modify other
14296 people's work.
14297 </para>
14298 <para>
14299 In an academic setting, at least, that's not a terribly radical
14300 idea. In a math department, anyone would be free to tinker with a
14301 proof that someone offered. If you thought you had a better way to
14302 prove a theorem, you could take what someone else did and change
14303 it. In a classics department, if you believed a colleague's
14304 translation of a recently discovered text was flawed, you were free to
14305 improve it. Thus, to Stallman, it seemed obvious that you should be
14306 free to tinker with and improve the code that ran a machine. This,
14307 too, was knowledge. Why shouldn't it be open for criticism like
14308 anything else?
14309 </para>
14310 <indexterm id='idxproprietarycode' class='startofrange'><primary>proprietary code</primary></indexterm>
14311 <para>
14312 No one answered that question. Instead, the architecture of revenue
14313 for computing changed. As it became possible to import programs from
14314 one system to another, it became economically attractive (at least in
14315 the view of some) to hide the code of your program. So, too, as
14316 companies started selling peripherals for mainframe systems. If I
14317 could just take your printer driver and copy it, then that would make
14318 it easier for me to sell a printer to the market than it was for you.
14319 </para>
14320 <para>
14321 Thus, the practice of proprietary code began to spread, and by the
14322 early 1980s, Stallman found himself surrounded by proprietary code.
14323 <!-- PAGE BREAK 285 -->
14324 The world of free software had been erased by a change in the
14325 economics of computing. And as he believed, if he did nothing about
14326 it, then the freedom to change and share software would be
14327 fundamentally weakened.
14328 </para>
14329 <indexterm startref='idxproprietarycode' class='endofrange'/>
14330 <indexterm><primary>Torvalds, Linus</primary></indexterm>
14331 <para>
14332 Therefore, in 1984, Stallman began a project to build a free operating
14333 system, so that at least a strain of free software would survive. That
14334 was the birth of the GNU project, into which Linus Torvalds's <quote>Linux</quote>
14335 kernel was added to produce the GNU/Linux operating system.
14336 <indexterm><primary>GNU/Linux operating system</primary></indexterm>
14337 <indexterm><primary>Linux operating system</primary></indexterm>
14338 </para>
14339 <para>
14340 Stallman's technique was to use copyright law to build a world of
14341 software that must be kept free. Software licensed under the Free
14342 Software Foundation's GPL cannot be modified and distributed unless
14343 the source code for that software is made available as well. Thus,
14344 anyone building upon GPL'd software would have to make their buildings
14345 free as well. This would assure, Stallman believed, that an ecology of
14346 code would develop that remained free for others to build upon. His
14347 fundamental goal was freedom; innovative creative code was a
14348 byproduct.
14349 </para>
14350 <para>
14351 Stallman was thus doing for software what privacy advocates now
14352 do for privacy. He was seeking a way to rebuild a kind of freedom that
14353 was taken for granted before. Through the affirmative use of licenses
14354 that bind copyrighted code, Stallman was affirmatively reclaiming a
14355 space where free software would survive. He was actively protecting
14356 what before had been passively guaranteed.
14357 </para>
14358 <indexterm startref='idxfreesoftwareopensourcesoftwarefsoss2' class='endofrange'/>
14359 <indexterm startref='idxstallmanrichard' class='endofrange'/>
14360 <indexterm id='idxacademicjournals' class='startofrange'><primary>academic journals</primary></indexterm>
14361 <indexterm id='idxscientificjournals' class='startofrange'><primary>scientific journals</primary></indexterm>
14362 <para>
14363 Finally, consider a very recent example that more directly resonates
14364 with the story of this book. This is the shift in the way academic and
14365 scientific journals are produced.
14366 </para>
14367 <indexterm id='idxlexisandwestlaw' class='startofrange'><primary>Lexis and Westlaw</primary></indexterm>
14368 <indexterm id='idxlawdatabasesofcasereportsin' class='startofrange'><primary>law</primary><secondary>databases of case reports in</secondary></indexterm>
14369 <indexterm><primary>libraries</primary><secondary>journals in</secondary></indexterm>
14370 <indexterm><primary>Supreme Court, U.S.</primary><secondary>access to opinions of</secondary></indexterm>
14371 <para>
14372 As digital technologies develop, it is becoming obvious to many that
14373 printing thousands of copies of journals every month and sending them
14374 to libraries is perhaps not the most efficient way to distribute
14375 knowledge. Instead, journals are increasingly becoming electronic, and
14376 libraries and their users are given access to these electronic
14377 journals through password-protected sites. Something similar to this
14378 has been happening in law for almost thirty years: Lexis and Westlaw
14379 have had electronic versions of case reports available to subscribers
14380 to their service. Although a Supreme Court opinion is not
14381 copyrighted, and anyone is free to go to a library and read it, Lexis
14382 and Westlaw are also free
14383 <!-- PAGE BREAK 286 -->
14384 to charge users for the privilege of gaining access to that Supreme
14385 Court opinion through their respective services.
14386 </para>
14387 <indexterm><primary>public domain</primary><secondary>access fees for material in</secondary></indexterm>
14388 <indexterm id='idxpublicdomainlicensesystemforrebuildingof' class='startofrange'><primary>public domain</primary><secondary>license system for rebuilding of</secondary></indexterm>
14389 <para>
14390 There's nothing wrong in general with this, and indeed, the ability to
14391 charge for access to even public domain materials is a good incentive
14392 for people to develop new and innovative ways to spread knowledge.
14393 The law has agreed, which is why Lexis and Westlaw have been allowed
14394 to flourish. And if there's nothing wrong with selling the public
14395 domain, then there could be nothing wrong, in principle, with selling
14396 access to material that is not in the public domain.
14397 </para>
14398 <indexterm startref='idxlexisandwestlaw' class='endofrange'/>
14399 <indexterm startref='idxlawdatabasesofcasereportsin' class='endofrange'/>
14400 <para>
14401 But what if the only way to get access to social and scientific data
14402 was through proprietary services? What if no one had the ability to
14403 browse this data except by paying for a subscription?
14404 </para>
14405 <indexterm id='idxlibrariesjournalsin' class='startofrange'><primary>libraries</primary><secondary>journals in</secondary></indexterm>
14406 <para>
14407 As many are beginning to notice, this is increasingly the reality with
14408 scientific journals. When these journals were distributed in paper
14409 form, libraries could make the journals available to anyone who had
14410 access to the library. Thus, patients with cancer could become cancer
14411 experts because the library gave them access. Or patients trying to
14412 understand the risks of a certain treatment could research those risks
14413 by reading all available articles about that treatment. This freedom
14414 was therefore a function of the institution of libraries (norms) and
14415 the technology of paper journals (architecture)&mdash;namely, that it
14416 was very hard to control access to a paper journal.
14417 </para>
14418 <para>
14419 As journals become electronic, however, the publishers are demanding
14420 that libraries not give the general public access to the
14421 journals. This means that the freedoms provided by print journals in
14422 public libraries begin to disappear. Thus, as with privacy and with
14423 software, a changing technology and market shrink a freedom taken for
14424 granted before.
14425 </para>
14426 <indexterm><primary>PLoS (Public Library of Science)</primary></indexterm>
14427 <indexterm><primary>Public Library of Science (PLoS)</primary></indexterm>
14428 <para>
14429 This shrinking freedom has led many to take affirmative steps to
14430 restore the freedom that has been lost. The Public Library of Science
14431 (PLoS), for example, is a nonprofit corporation dedicated to making
14432 scientific research available to anyone with a Web connection. Authors
14433 <!-- PAGE BREAK 287 -->
14434 of scientific work submit that work to the Public Library of Science.
14435 That work is then subject to peer review. If accepted, the work is
14436 then deposited in a public, electronic archive and made permanently
14437 available for free. PLoS also sells a print version of its work, but
14438 the copyright for the print journal does not inhibit the right of
14439 anyone to redistribute the work for free.
14440 </para>
14441 <indexterm startref='idxlibrariesjournalsin' class='endofrange'/>
14442 <para>
14443 This is one of many such efforts to restore a freedom taken for
14444 granted before, but now threatened by changing technology and markets.
14445 There's no doubt that this alternative competes with the traditional
14446 publishers and their efforts to make money from the exclusive
14447 distribution of content. But competition in our tradition is
14448 presumptively a good&mdash;especially when it helps spread knowledge
14449 and science.
14450 </para>
14451 <indexterm startref='idxfreeculturerestorationeffortsonpreviousaspectsof' class='endofrange'/>
14452 <indexterm startref='idxacademicjournals' class='endofrange'/>
14453 <indexterm startref='idxscientificjournals' class='endofrange'/>
14454 </section>
14455 <section id="oneidea">
14456 <title>Rebuilding Free Culture: One Idea</title>
14457 <indexterm id='idxcreativecommons' class='startofrange'><primary>Creative Commons</primary></indexterm>
14458 <para>
14459 The same strategy could be applied to culture, as a response to the
14460 increasing control effected through law and technology.
14461 </para>
14462 <indexterm><primary>Stanford University</primary></indexterm>
14463 <para>
14464 Enter the Creative Commons. The Creative Commons is a nonprofit
14465 corporation established in Massachusetts, but with its home at
14466 Stanford University. Its aim is to build a layer of
14467 <emphasis>reasonable</emphasis> copyright on top of the extremes that
14468 now reign. It does this by making it easy for people to build upon
14469 other people's work, by making it simple for creators to express the
14470 freedom for others to take and build upon their work. Simple tags,
14471 tied to human-readable descriptions, tied to bulletproof licenses,
14472 make this possible.
14473 </para>
14474 <para>
14475 <emphasis>Simple</emphasis>&mdash;which means without a middleman, or
14476 without a lawyer. By developing a free set of licenses that people
14477 can attach to their content, Creative Commons aims to mark a range of
14478 content that can easily, and reliably, be built upon. These tags are
14479 then linked to machine-readable versions of the license that enable
14480 computers automatically to identify content that can easily be
14481 shared. These three expressions together&mdash;a legal license, a
14482 human-readable description, and
14483 <!-- PAGE BREAK 288 -->
14484 machine-readable tags&mdash;constitute a Creative Commons license. A
14485 Creative Commons license constitutes a grant of freedom to anyone who
14486 accesses the license, and more importantly, an expression of the ideal
14487 that the person associated with the license believes in something
14488 different than the <quote>All</quote> or <quote>No</quote> extremes. Content is marked with the
14489 CC mark, which does not mean that copyright is waived, but that
14490 certain freedoms are given.
14491 </para>
14492 <para>
14493 These freedoms are beyond the freedoms promised by fair use. Their
14494 precise contours depend upon the choices the creator makes. The
14495 creator can choose a license that permits any use, so long as
14496 attribution is given. She can choose a license that permits only
14497 noncommercial use. She can choose a license that permits any use so
14498 long as the same freedoms are given to other uses (<quote>share and share
14499 alike</quote>). Or any use so long as no derivative use is made. Or any use
14500 at all within developing nations. Or any sampling use, so long as full
14501 copies are not made. Or lastly, any educational use.
14502 </para>
14503 <para>
14504 These choices thus establish a range of freedoms beyond the default of
14505 copyright law. They also enable freedoms that go beyond traditional
14506 fair use. And most importantly, they express these freedoms in a way
14507 that subsequent users can use and rely upon without the need to hire a
14508 lawyer. Creative Commons thus aims to build a layer of content,
14509 governed by a layer of reasonable copyright law, that others can build
14510 upon. Voluntary choice of individuals and creators will make this
14511 content available. And that content will in turn enable us to rebuild
14512 a public domain.
14513 </para>
14514 <indexterm><primary>Garlick, Mia</primary></indexterm>
14515 <para>
14516 This is just one project among many within the Creative Commons. And
14517 of course, Creative Commons is not the only organization pursuing such
14518 freedoms. But the point that distinguishes the Creative Commons from
14519 many is that we are not interested only in talking about a public
14520 domain or in getting legislators to help build a public domain. Our
14521 aim is to build a movement of consumers and producers
14522 <!-- PAGE BREAK 289 -->
14523 of content (<quote>content conducers,</quote> as attorney Mia Garlick calls them)
14524 who help build the public domain and, by their work, demonstrate the
14525 importance of the public domain to other creativity.
14526 </para>
14527 <indexterm><primary>Jefferson, Thomas</primary></indexterm>
14528 <para>
14529 The aim is not to fight the <quote>All Rights Reserved</quote> sorts. The aim is to
14530 complement them. The problems that the law creates for us as a culture
14531 are produced by insane and unintended consequences of laws written
14532 centuries ago, applied to a technology that only Jefferson could have
14533 imagined. The rules may well have made sense against a background of
14534 technologies from centuries ago, but they do not make sense against
14535 the background of digital technologies. New rules&mdash;with different
14536 freedoms, expressed in ways so that humans without lawyers can use
14537 them&mdash;are needed. Creative Commons gives people a way effectively
14538 to begin to build those rules.
14539 </para>
14540 <indexterm id='idxbooksfreeonline2' class='startofrange'><primary>books</primary><secondary>free on-line releases of</secondary></indexterm>
14541 <para>
14542 Why would creators participate in giving up total control? Some
14543 participate to better spread their content. Cory Doctorow, for
14544 example, is a science fiction author. His first novel, <citetitle>Down and Out in
14545 the Magic Kingdom</citetitle>, was released on-line and for free, under a Creative
14546 Commons license, on the same day that it went on sale in bookstores.
14547 </para>
14548 <para>
14549 Why would a publisher ever agree to this? I suspect his publisher
14550 reasoned like this: There are two groups of people out there: (1)
14551 those who will buy Cory's book whether or not it's on the Internet,
14552 and (2) those who may never hear of Cory's book, if it isn't made
14553 available for free on the Internet. Some part of (1) will download
14554 Cory's book instead of buying it. Call them bad-(1)s. Some part of (2)
14555 will download Cory's book, like it, and then decide to buy it. Call
14556 them (2)-goods. If there are more (2)-goods than bad-(1)s, the
14557 strategy of releasing Cory's book free on-line will probably
14558 <emphasis>increase</emphasis> sales of Cory's book.
14559 </para>
14560 <para>
14561 Indeed, the experience of his publisher clearly supports that
14562 conclusion. The book's first printing was exhausted months before the
14563 publisher had expected. This first novel of a science fiction author
14564 was a total success.
14565 </para>
14566 <indexterm><primary>Free for All (Wayner)</primary></indexterm>
14567 <indexterm><primary>Wayner, Peter</primary></indexterm>
14568 <para>
14569 The idea that free content might increase the value of nonfree content
14570 was confirmed by the experience of another author. Peter Wayner,
14571 <!-- PAGE BREAK 290 -->
14572 who wrote a book about the free software movement titled <citetitle>Free for All</citetitle>,
14573 made an electronic version of his book free on-line under a Creative
14574 Commons license after the book went out of print. He then monitored
14575 used book store prices for the book. As predicted, as the number of
14576 downloads increased, the used book price for his book increased, as
14577 well.
14578 </para>
14579 <indexterm startref='idxbooksfreeonline2' class='endofrange'/>
14580 <indexterm><primary>Leaphart, Walter</primary></indexterm>
14581 <indexterm><primary>Public Enemy</primary></indexterm>
14582 <indexterm startref='idxcopyrightvoluntaryreformeffortson2' class='endofrange'/>
14583 <indexterm><primary>rap music</primary></indexterm>
14584 <para>
14585 These are examples of using the Commons to better spread proprietary
14586 content. I believe that is a wonderful and common use of the
14587 Commons. There are others who use Creative Commons licenses for other
14588 reasons. Many who use the <quote>sampling license</quote> do so because anything
14589 else would be hypocritical. The sampling license says that others are
14590 free, for commercial or noncommercial purposes, to sample content from
14591 the licensed work; they are just not free to make full copies of the
14592 licensed work available to others. This is consistent with their own
14593 art&mdash;they, too, sample from others. Because the
14594 <emphasis>legal</emphasis> costs of sampling are so high (Walter
14595 Leaphart, manager of the rap group Public Enemy, which was born
14596 sampling the music of others, has stated that he does not <quote>allow</quote>
14597 Public Enemy to sample anymore, because the legal costs are so
14598 high<footnote><para>
14599 <!-- f2. -->
14600 <citetitle>Willful Infringement: A Report from the Front Lines of the Real
14601 Culture Wars</citetitle> (2003), produced by Jed Horovitz, directed by Greg
14602 Hittelman, a Fiat Lucre production, available at
14603 <ulink url="http://free-culture.cc/notes/">link #72</ulink>.
14604 </para></footnote>),
14605 these artists release into the creative environment content
14606 that others can build upon, so that their form of creativity might grow.
14607 </para>
14608 <para>
14609 Finally, there are many who mark their content with a Creative Commons
14610 license just because they want to express to others the importance of
14611 balance in this debate. If you just go along with the system as it is,
14612 you are effectively saying you believe in the <quote>All Rights Reserved</quote>
14613 model. Good for you, but many do not. Many believe that however
14614 appropriate that rule is for Hollywood and freaks, it is not an
14615 appropriate description of how most creators view the rights
14616 associated with their content. The Creative Commons license expresses
14617 this notion of <quote>Some Rights Reserved,</quote> and gives many the chance to
14618 say it to others.
14619 </para>
14620 <para>
14621 In the first six months of the Creative Commons experiment, over
14622 1 million objects were licensed with these free-culture licenses. The next
14623 step is partnerships with middleware content providers to help them
14624 build into their technologies simple ways for users to mark their content
14625
14626 <!-- PAGE BREAK 291 -->
14627 with Creative Commons freedoms. Then the next step is to watch and
14628 celebrate creators who build content based upon content set free.
14629 </para>
14630 <para>
14631 These are first steps to rebuilding a public domain. They are not
14632 mere arguments; they are action. Building a public domain is the first
14633 step to showing people how important that domain is to creativity and
14634 innovation. Creative Commons relies upon voluntary steps to achieve
14635 this rebuilding. They will lead to a world in which more than voluntary
14636 steps are possible.
14637 </para>
14638 <para>
14639 Creative Commons is just one example of voluntary efforts by
14640 individuals and creators to change the mix of rights that now govern
14641 the creative field. The project does not compete with copyright; it
14642 complements it. Its aim is not to defeat the rights of authors, but to
14643 make it easier for authors and creators to exercise their rights more
14644 flexibly and cheaply. That difference, we believe, will enable
14645 creativity to spread more easily.
14646 </para>
14647 <indexterm startref='idxpublicdomainlicensesystemforrebuildingof' class='endofrange'/>
14648 <indexterm startref='idxcreativecommons' class='endofrange'/>
14649 <!-- PAGE BREAK 292 -->
14650 </section>
14651 </section>
14652 <section id="themsoon">
14653 <title>Them, soon</title>
14654 <para>
14655 <emphasis role='strong'>We will</emphasis> not reclaim a free culture
14656 by individual action alone. It will also take important reforms of
14657 laws. We have a long way to go before the politicians will listen to
14658 these ideas and implement these reforms. But that also means that we
14659 have time to build awareness around the changes that we need.
14660 </para>
14661 <para>
14662 In this chapter, I outline five kinds of changes: four that are general,
14663 and one that's specific to the most heated battle of the day, music. Each
14664 is a step, not an end. But any of these steps would carry us a long way
14665 to our end.
14666 </para>
14667
14668 <section id="formalities">
14669 <title>1. More Formalities</title>
14670 <para>
14671 If you buy a house, you have to record the sale in a deed. If you buy land
14672 upon which to build a house, you have to record the purchase in a deed.
14673 If you buy a car, you get a bill of sale and register the car. If you buy an
14674 airplane ticket, it has your name on it.
14675 </para>
14676 <para>
14677 <!-- PAGE BREAK 293 -->
14678 These are all formalities associated with property. They are
14679 requirements that we all must bear if we want our property to be
14680 protected.
14681 </para>
14682 <para>
14683 In contrast, under current copyright law, you automatically get a
14684 copyright, regardless of whether you comply with any formality. You
14685 don't have to register. You don't even have to mark your content. The
14686 default is control, and <quote>formalities</quote> are banished.
14687 </para>
14688 <para>
14689 Why?
14690 </para>
14691 <para>
14692 As I suggested in chapter <xref xrefstyle="select: labelnumber"
14693 linkend="property-i"/>, the motivation to abolish formalities was a
14694 good one. In the world before digital technologies, formalities
14695 imposed a burden on copyright holders without much benefit. Thus, it
14696 was progress when the law relaxed the formal requirements that a
14697 copyright owner must bear to protect and secure his work. Those
14698 formalities were getting in the way.
14699 </para>
14700 <para>
14701 But the Internet changes all this. Formalities today need not be a
14702 burden. Rather, the world without formalities is the world that
14703 burdens creativity. Today, there is no simple way to know who owns
14704 what, or with whom one must deal in order to use or build upon the
14705 creative work of others. There are no records, there is no system to
14706 trace&mdash; there is no simple way to know how to get permission. Yet
14707 given the massive increase in the scope of copyright's rule, getting
14708 permission is a necessary step for any work that builds upon our
14709 past. And thus, the <emphasis>lack</emphasis> of formalities forces
14710 many into silence where they otherwise could speak.
14711 </para>
14712 <para>
14713 The law should therefore change this requirement<footnote><para>
14714 <!-- f1. -->
14715 The proposal I am advancing here would apply to American works only.
14716 Obviously, I believe it would be beneficial for the same idea to be
14717 adopted by other countries as well.</para></footnote>&mdash;but it
14718 should not change it by going back to the old, broken system. We
14719 should require formalities, but we should establish a system that will
14720 create the incentives to minimize the burden of these formalities.
14721 </para>
14722 <para>
14723 The important formalities are three: marking copyrighted work,
14724 registering copyrights, and renewing the claim to
14725 copyright. Traditionally, the first of these three was something the
14726 copyright owner did; the second two were something the government
14727 did. But a revised system of formalities would banish the government
14728 from the process, except for the sole purpose of approving standards
14729 developed by others.
14730 </para>
14731
14732 <!-- PAGE BREAK 294 -->
14733
14734 <section id="registration">
14735 <title>Registration and renewal</title>
14736 <para>
14737 Under the old system, a copyright owner had to file a registration
14738 with the Copyright Office to register or renew a copyright. When
14739 filing that registration, the copyright owner paid a fee. As with most
14740 government agencies, the Copyright Office had little incentive to
14741 minimize the burden of registration; it also had little incentive to
14742 minimize the fee. And as the Copyright Office is not a main target of
14743 government policymaking, the office has historically been terribly
14744 underfunded. Thus, when people who know something about the process
14745 hear this idea about formalities, their first reaction is
14746 panic&mdash;nothing could be worse than forcing people to deal with
14747 the mess that is the Copyright Office.
14748 </para>
14749 <para>
14750 Yet it is always astonishing to me that we, who come from a tradition
14751 of extraordinary innovation in governmental design, can no longer
14752 think innovatively about how governmental functions can be designed.
14753 Just because there is a public purpose to a government role, it
14754 doesn't follow that the government must actually administer the
14755 role. Instead, we should be creating incentives for private parties to
14756 serve the public, subject to standards that the government sets.
14757 </para>
14758 <indexterm><primary>domain names</primary></indexterm>
14759 <indexterm><primary>Internet</primary><secondary>domain name registration on</secondary></indexterm>
14760 <indexterm><primary>Web sites, domain name registration of</primary></indexterm>
14761 <para>
14762 In the context of registration, one obvious model is the Internet.
14763 There are at least 32 million Web sites registered around the world.
14764 Domain name owners for these Web sites have to pay a fee to keep their
14765 registration alive. In the main top-level domains (.com, .org, .net),
14766 there is a central registry. The actual registrations are, however,
14767 performed by many competing registrars. That competition drives the
14768 cost of registering down, and more importantly, it drives the ease
14769 with which registration occurs up.
14770 </para>
14771 <para>
14772 We should adopt a similar model for the registration and renewal of
14773 copyrights. The Copyright Office may well serve as the central
14774 registry, but it should not be in the registrar business. Instead, it
14775 should establish a database, and a set of standards for registrars. It
14776 should approve registrars that meet its standards. Those registrars
14777 would then compete with one another to deliver the cheapest and
14778 simplest systems for registering and renewing copyrights. That
14779 competition would substantially lower the burden of this
14780 formality&mdash;while producing a database
14781 <!-- PAGE BREAK 295 -->
14782 of registrations that would facilitate the licensing of content.
14783 </para>
14784
14785 </section>
14786 <section id="marking">
14787 <title>Marking</title>
14788 <para>
14789 It used to be that the failure to include a copyright notice on a
14790 creative work meant that the copyright was forfeited. That was a harsh
14791 punishment for failing to comply with a regulatory rule&mdash;akin to
14792 imposing the death penalty for a parking ticket in the world of
14793 creative rights. Here again, there is no reason that a marking
14794 requirement needs to be enforced in this way. And more importantly,
14795 there is no reason a marking requirement needs to be enforced
14796 uniformly across all media.
14797 </para>
14798 <para>
14799 The aim of marking is to signal to the public that this work is
14800 copyrighted and that the author wants to enforce his rights. The mark
14801 also makes it easy to locate a copyright owner to secure permission to
14802 use the work.
14803 </para>
14804 <para>
14805 One of the problems the copyright system confronted early on was
14806 that different copyrighted works had to be differently marked. It wasn't
14807 clear how or where a statue was to be marked, or a record, or a film. A
14808 new marking requirement could solve these problems by recognizing
14809 the differences in media, and by allowing the system of marking to
14810 evolve as technologies enable it to. The system could enable a special
14811 signal from the failure to mark&mdash;not the loss of the copyright, but the
14812 loss of the right to punish someone for failing to get permission first.
14813 </para>
14814 <para>
14815 Let's start with the last point. If a copyright owner allows his work
14816 to be published without a copyright notice, the consequence of that
14817 failure need not be that the copyright is lost. The consequence could
14818 instead be that anyone has the right to use this work, until the
14819 copyright owner complains and demonstrates that it is his work and he
14820 doesn't give permission.<footnote><para>
14821 <!-- f2. -->
14822 There would be a complication with derivative works that I have not
14823 solved here. In my view, the law of derivatives creates a more complicated
14824 system than is justified by the marginal incentive it creates.
14825 </para></footnote>
14826 The meaning of an unmarked work would therefore be <quote>use unless someone
14827 complains.</quote> If someone does complain, then the obligation would be to
14828 stop using the work in any new
14829 <!-- PAGE BREAK 296 -->
14830 work from then on though no penalty would attach for existing uses.
14831 This would create a strong incentive for copyright owners to mark
14832 their work.
14833 </para>
14834 <para>
14835 That in turn raises the question about how work should best be
14836 marked. Here again, the system needs to adjust as the technologies
14837 evolve. The best way to ensure that the system evolves is to limit the
14838 Copyright Office's role to that of approving standards for marking
14839 content that have been crafted elsewhere.
14840 </para>
14841 <indexterm><primary>CDs</primary><secondary>copyright marking of</secondary></indexterm>
14842 <para>
14843 For example, if a recording industry association devises a method for
14844 marking CDs, it would propose that to the Copyright Office. The
14845 Copyright Office would hold a hearing, at which other proposals could
14846 be made. The Copyright Office would then select the proposal that it
14847 judged preferable, and it would base that choice
14848 <emphasis>solely</emphasis> upon the consideration of which method
14849 could best be integrated into the registration and renewal system. We
14850 would not count on the government to innovate; but we would count on
14851 the government to keep the product of innovation in line with its
14852 other important functions.
14853 </para>
14854 <para>
14855 Finally, marking content clearly would simplify registration
14856 requirements. If photographs were marked by author and year, there
14857 would be little reason not to allow a photographer to reregister, for
14858 example, all photographs taken in a particular year in one quick
14859 step. The aim of the formality is not to burden the creator; the
14860 system itself should be kept as simple as possible.
14861 </para>
14862 <para>
14863 The objective of formalities is to make things clear. The existing
14864 system does nothing to make things clear. Indeed, it seems designed to
14865 make things unclear.
14866 </para>
14867 <para>
14868 If formalities such as registration were reinstated, one of the most
14869 difficult aspects of relying upon the public domain would be removed.
14870 It would be simple to identify what content is presumptively free; it
14871 would be simple to identify who controls the rights for a particular
14872 kind of content; it would be simple to assert those rights, and to renew
14873 that assertion at the appropriate time.
14874 </para>
14875
14876 <!-- PAGE BREAK 297 -->
14877 </section>
14878 </section>
14879 <section id="shortterms">
14880 <title>2. Shorter Terms</title>
14881 <para>
14882 The term of copyright has gone from fourteen years to ninety-five
14883 years for corporate authors, and life of the author plus seventy years for
14884 natural authors.
14885 </para>
14886 <para>
14887 In <citetitle>The Future of Ideas</citetitle>, I proposed a seventy-five-year term,
14888 granted in five-year increments with a requirement of renewal every
14889 five years. That seemed radical enough at the time. But after we lost
14890 <citetitle>Eldred</citetitle> v. <citetitle>Ashcroft</citetitle>, the proposals became even more
14891 radical. <citetitle>The Economist</citetitle> endorsed a proposal for a fourteen-year
14892 copyright term.<footnote><para>
14893
14894 <!-- f3. -->
14895 <quote>A Radical Rethink,</quote> <citetitle>Economist</citetitle>, 366:8308 (25 January 2003): 15,
14896 available at
14897 <ulink url="http://free-culture.cc/notes/">link #74</ulink>.
14898 </para></footnote>
14899 Others have proposed tying the term to the term for patents.
14900 </para>
14901 <para>
14902 I agree with those who believe that we need a radical change in
14903 copyright's term. But whether fourteen years or seventy-five, there
14904 are four principles that are important to keep in mind about copyright
14905 terms.
14906 </para>
14907 <orderedlist numeration="arabic">
14908 <listitem><para>
14909 <!-- (1) -->
14910 <emphasis>Keep it short:</emphasis> The term should be as long as
14911 necessary to give incentives to create, but no longer. If it were tied
14912 to very strong protections for authors (so authors were able to
14913 reclaim rights from publishers), rights to the same work (not
14914 derivative works) might be extended further. The key is not to tie the
14915 work up with legal regulations when it no longer benefits an author.
14916 </para></listitem>
14917 <listitem><para>
14918 <!-- (2) -->
14919 <emphasis>Keep it simple:</emphasis> The line between the public
14920 domain and protected content must be kept clear. Lawyers like the
14921 fuzziness of <quote>fair use,</quote> and the distinction between <quote>ideas</quote> and
14922 <quote>expression.</quote> That kind of law gives them lots of work. But our
14923 framers had a simpler idea in mind: protected versus unprotected. The
14924 value of short terms is that there is little need to build exceptions
14925 into copyright when the term itself is kept short. A clear and active
14926 <quote>lawyer-free zone</quote> makes the complexities of <quote>fair use</quote> and
14927 <quote>idea/expression</quote> less necessary to navigate.
14928 <!-- PAGE BREAK 298 -->
14929 </para></listitem>
14930 <listitem>
14931 <indexterm><primary>veterans' pensions</primary></indexterm>
14932 <para>
14933 <!-- (3) -->
14934 <emphasis>Keep it alive:</emphasis> Copyright should have to be
14935 renewed. Especially if the maximum term is long, the copyright owner
14936 should be required to signal periodically that he wants the protection
14937 continued. This need not be an onerous burden, but there is no reason
14938 this monopoly protection has to be granted for free. On average, it
14939 takes ninety minutes for a veteran to apply for a
14940 pension.<footnote><para>
14941 <!-- f4. -->
14942 Department of Veterans Affairs, Veteran's Application for Compensation
14943 and/or Pension, VA Form 21-526 (OMB Approved No. 2900-0001),
14944 available at
14945 <ulink url="http://free-culture.cc/notes/">link #75</ulink>.
14946 </para></footnote>
14947 If we make veterans suffer that burden, I don't see why we couldn't
14948 require authors to spend ten minutes every fifty years to file a
14949 single form.
14950 </para></listitem>
14951 <listitem><para>
14952 <!-- (4) -->
14953 <emphasis>Keep it prospective:</emphasis> Whatever the term of
14954 copyright should be, the clearest lesson that economists teach is that
14955 a term once given should not be extended. It might have been a mistake
14956 in 1923 for the law to offer authors only a fifty-six-year term. I
14957 don't think so, but it's possible. If it was a mistake, then the
14958 consequence was that we got fewer authors to create in 1923 than we
14959 otherwise would have. But we can't correct that mistake today by
14960 increasing the term. No matter what we do today, we will not increase
14961 the number of authors who wrote in 1923. Of course, we can increase
14962 the reward that those who write now get (or alternatively, increase
14963 the copyright burden that smothers many works that are today
14964 invisible). But increasing their reward will not increase their
14965 creativity in 1923. What's not done is not done, and there's nothing
14966 we can do about that now. </para></listitem>
14967 </orderedlist>
14968 <para>
14969 These changes together should produce an <emphasis>average</emphasis>
14970 copyright term that is much shorter than the current term. Until 1976,
14971 the average term was just 32.2 years. We should be aiming for the
14972 same.
14973 </para>
14974 <para>
14975 No doubt the extremists will call these ideas <quote>radical.</quote> (After all, I
14976 call them <quote>extremists.</quote>) But again, the term I recommended was longer
14977 than the term under Richard Nixon. How <quote>radical</quote> can it be to ask for
14978 a more generous copyright law than Richard Nixon presided over?
14979 </para>
14980
14981 <!-- PAGE BREAK 299 -->
14982
14983 </section>
14984 <section id="freefairuse">
14985 <title>3. Free Use Vs. Fair Use</title>
14986 <indexterm><primary>land ownership, air traffic and</primary></indexterm>
14987 <indexterm><primary>property rights</primary><secondary>air traffic vs.</secondary></indexterm>
14988 <para>
14989 As I observed at the beginning of this book, property law originally
14990 granted property owners the right to control their property from the
14991 ground to the heavens. The airplane came along. The scope of property
14992 rights quickly changed. There was no fuss, no constitutional
14993 challenge. It made no sense anymore to grant that much control, given
14994 the emergence of that new technology.
14995 </para>
14996 <para>
14997 Our Constitution gives Congress the power to give authors <quote>exclusive
14998 right</quote> to <quote>their writings.</quote> Congress has given authors an exclusive
14999 right to <quote>their writings</quote> plus any derivative writings (made by
15000 others) that are sufficiently close to the author's original
15001 work. Thus, if I write a book, and you base a movie on that book, I
15002 have the power to deny you the right to release that movie, even
15003 though that movie is not <quote>my writing.</quote>
15004 </para>
15005 <indexterm><primary>Kaplan, Benjamin</primary></indexterm>
15006 <para>
15007 Congress granted the beginnings of this right in 1870, when it
15008 expanded the exclusive right of copyright to include a right to
15009 control translations and dramatizations of a work.<footnote><para>
15010 <!-- f5. -->
15011 Benjamin Kaplan, <citetitle>An Unhurried View of Copyright</citetitle> (New York: Columbia
15012 University Press, 1967), 32.
15013 </para></footnote>
15014 The courts have expanded it slowly through judicial interpretation
15015 ever since. This expansion has been commented upon by one of the law's
15016 greatest judges, Judge Benjamin Kaplan.
15017 </para>
15018 <blockquote>
15019 <para>
15020 So inured have we become to the extension of the monopoly to a
15021 large range of so-called derivative works, that we no longer sense
15022 the oddity of accepting such an enlargement of copyright while
15023 yet intoning the abracadabra of idea and expression.<footnote><para>
15024 <!-- f6. --> Ibid., 56.
15025 </para></footnote>
15026 </para>
15027 </blockquote>
15028 <para>
15029 I think it's time to recognize that there are airplanes in this field and
15030 the expansiveness of these rights of derivative use no longer make
15031 sense. More precisely, they don't make sense for the period of time that
15032 a copyright runs. And they don't make sense as an amorphous grant.
15033 Consider each limitation in turn.
15034 </para>
15035 <para>
15036 <emphasis>Term:</emphasis> If Congress wants to grant a derivative
15037 right, then that right should be for a much shorter term. It makes
15038 sense to protect John
15039
15040 <!-- PAGE BREAK 300 -->
15041 Grisham's right to sell the movie rights to his latest novel (or at least
15042 I'm willing to assume it does); but it does not make sense for that right
15043 to run for the same term as the underlying copyright. The derivative
15044 right could be important in inducing creativity; it is not important long
15045 after the creative work is done.
15046 <indexterm><primary>Grisham, John</primary></indexterm>
15047 </para>
15048 <para>
15049 <emphasis>Scope:</emphasis> Likewise should the scope of derivative
15050 rights be narrowed. Again, there are some cases in which derivative
15051 rights are important. Those should be specified. But the law should
15052 draw clear lines around regulated and unregulated uses of copyrighted
15053 material. When all <quote>reuse</quote> of creative material was within the control
15054 of businesses, perhaps it made sense to require lawyers to negotiate
15055 the lines. It no longer makes sense for lawyers to negotiate the
15056 lines. Think about all the creative possibilities that digital
15057 technologies enable; now imagine pouring molasses into the
15058 machines. That's what this general requirement of permission does to
15059 the creative process. Smothers it.
15060 </para>
15061 <indexterm><primary>Alben, Alex</primary></indexterm>
15062 <para>
15063 This was the point that Alben made when describing the making of the
15064 Clint Eastwood CD. While it makes sense to require negotiation for
15065 foreseeable derivative rights&mdash;turning a book into a movie, or a
15066 poem into a musical score&mdash;it doesn't make sense to require
15067 negotiation for the unforeseeable. Here, a statutory right would make
15068 much more sense.
15069 </para>
15070 <para>
15071 In each of these cases, the law should mark the uses that are
15072 protected, and the presumption should be that other uses are not
15073 protected. This is the reverse of the recommendation of my colleague
15074 Paul Goldstein.<footnote>
15075 <para>
15076 <!-- f7. -->
15077 Paul Goldstein, <citetitle>Copyright's Highway: From Gutenberg to the Celestial
15078 Jukebox</citetitle> (Stanford: Stanford University Press, 2003), 187&ndash;216.
15079 <indexterm><primary>Goldstein, Paul</primary></indexterm>
15080 </para></footnote>
15081 His view is that the law should be written so that
15082 expanded protections follow expanded uses.
15083 </para>
15084 <para>
15085 Goldstein's analysis would make perfect sense if the cost of the legal
15086 system were small. But as we are currently seeing in the context of
15087 the Internet, the uncertainty about the scope of protection, and the
15088 incentives to protect existing architectures of revenue, combined with
15089 a strong copyright, weaken the process of innovation.
15090 </para>
15091 <para>
15092 The law could remedy this problem either by removing protection
15093 <!-- PAGE BREAK 301 -->
15094 beyond the part explicitly drawn or by granting reuse rights upon
15095 certain statutory conditions. Either way, the effect would be to free
15096 a great deal of culture to others to cultivate. And under a statutory
15097 rights regime, that reuse would earn artists more income.
15098 </para>
15099 </section>
15100
15101 <section id="liberatemusic">
15102 <title>4. Liberate the Music&mdash;Again</title>
15103 <para>
15104 The battle that got this whole war going was about music, so it
15105 wouldn't be fair to end this book without addressing the issue that
15106 is, to most people, most pressing&mdash;music. There is no other
15107 policy issue that better teaches the lessons of this book than the
15108 battles around the sharing of music.
15109 </para>
15110 <para>
15111 The appeal of file-sharing music was the crack cocaine of the
15112 Internet's growth. It drove demand for access to the Internet more
15113 powerfully than any other single application. It was the Internet's
15114 killer app&mdash;possibly in two senses of that word. It no doubt was
15115 the application that drove demand for bandwidth. It may well be the
15116 application that drives demand for regulations that in the end kill
15117 innovation on the network.
15118 </para>
15119 <para>
15120 The aim of copyright, with respect to content in general and music in
15121 particular, is to create the incentives for music to be composed,
15122 performed, and, most importantly, spread. The law does this by giving
15123 an exclusive right to a composer to control public performances of his
15124 work, and to a performing artist to control copies of her performance.
15125 </para>
15126 <para>
15127 File-sharing networks complicate this model by enabling the spread of
15128 content for which the performer has not been paid. But of course,
15129 that's not all the file-sharing networks do. As I described in chapter
15130 <xref xrefstyle="select: labelnumber" linkend="piracy"/>, they enable
15131 four different kinds of sharing:
15132 </para>
15133 <orderedlist numeration="upperalpha">
15134 <listitem><para>
15135 <!-- A. -->
15136 There are some who are using sharing networks as substitutes
15137 for purchasing CDs.
15138 </para></listitem>
15139 <listitem><para>
15140 <!-- B. -->
15141 There are also some who are using sharing networks to sample,
15142 on the way to purchasing CDs.
15143 </para></listitem>
15144 <listitem><para>
15145 <!-- PAGE BREAK 302 -->
15146 <!-- C. -->
15147 There are many who are using file-sharing networks to get access to
15148 content that is no longer sold but is still under copyright or that
15149 would have been too cumbersome to buy off the Net.
15150 </para></listitem>
15151 <listitem><para>
15152 <!-- D. -->
15153 There are many who are using file-sharing networks to get access to
15154 content that is not copyrighted or to get access that the copyright
15155 owner plainly endorses.
15156 </para></listitem>
15157 </orderedlist>
15158 <indexterm><primary>cassette recording</primary><secondary>VCRs</secondary></indexterm>
15159 <indexterm><primary>VCRs</primary></indexterm>
15160 <para>
15161 Any reform of the law needs to keep these different uses in focus. It
15162 must avoid burdening type D even if it aims to eliminate type A. The
15163 eagerness with which the law aims to eliminate type A, moreover,
15164 should depend upon the magnitude of type B. As with VCRs, if the net
15165 effect of sharing is actually not very harmful, the need for regulation is
15166 significantly weakened.
15167 </para>
15168 <para>
15169 As I said in chapter <xref xrefstyle="select: labelnumber"
15170 linkend="piracy"/>, the actual harm caused by sharing is
15171 controversial. For the purposes of this chapter, however, I assume
15172 the harm is real. I assume, in other words, that type A sharing is
15173 significantly greater than type B, and is the dominant use of sharing
15174 networks.
15175 </para>
15176 <para>
15177 Nonetheless, there is a crucial fact about the current technological
15178 context that we must keep in mind if we are to understand how the law
15179 should respond.
15180 </para>
15181 <para>
15182 Today, file sharing is addictive. In ten years, it won't be. It is
15183 addictive today because it is the easiest way to gain access to a
15184 broad range of content. It won't be the easiest way to get access to
15185 a broad range of content in ten years. Today, access to the Internet
15186 is cumbersome and slow&mdash;we in the United States are lucky to have
15187 broadband service at 1.5 MBs, and very rarely do we get service at
15188 that speed both up and down. Although wireless access is growing, most
15189 of us still get access across wires. Most only gain access through a
15190 machine with a keyboard. The idea of the always on, always connected
15191 Internet is mainly just an idea.
15192 </para>
15193 <para>
15194 But it will become a reality, and that means the way we get access to
15195 the Internet today is a technology in transition. Policy makers should
15196 not make policy on the basis of technology in transition. They should
15197 <!-- PAGE BREAK 303 -->
15198 make policy on the basis of where the technology is going. The
15199 question should not be, how should the law regulate sharing in this
15200 world? The question should be, what law will we require when the
15201 network becomes the network it is clearly becoming? That network is
15202 one in which every machine with electricity is essentially on the Net;
15203 where everywhere you are&mdash;except maybe the desert or the
15204 Rockies&mdash;you can instantaneously be connected to the
15205 Internet. Imagine the Internet as ubiquitous as the best cell-phone
15206 service, where with the flip of a device, you are connected.
15207 </para>
15208 <indexterm><primary>cell phones, music streamed over</primary></indexterm>
15209 <para>
15210 In that world, it will be extremely easy to connect to services that
15211 give you access to content on the fly&mdash;such as Internet radio,
15212 content that is streamed to the user when the user demands. Here,
15213 then, is the critical point: When it is <emphasis>extremely</emphasis>
15214 easy to connect to services that give access to content, it will be
15215 <emphasis>easier</emphasis> to connect to services that give you
15216 access to content than it will be to download and store content
15217 <emphasis>on the many devices you will have for playing
15218 content</emphasis>. It will be easier, in other words, to subscribe
15219 than it will be to be a database manager, as everyone in the
15220 download-sharing world of Napster-like technologies essentially
15221 is. Content services will compete with content sharing, even if the
15222 services charge money for the content they give access to. Already
15223 cell-phone services in Japan offer music (for a fee) streamed over
15224 cell phones (enhanced with plugs for headphones). The Japanese are
15225 paying for this content even though <quote>free</quote> content is available in the
15226 form of MP3s across the Web.<footnote><para>
15227 <!-- f8. -->
15228 See, for example, <quote>Music Media Watch,</quote> The J@pan Inc. Newsletter, 3
15229 April 2002, available at
15230 <ulink url="http://free-culture.cc/notes/">link #76</ulink>.
15231 </para></footnote>
15232
15233 </para>
15234 <para>
15235 This point about the future is meant to suggest a perspective on the
15236 present: It is emphatically temporary. The <quote>problem</quote> with file
15237 sharing&mdash;to the extent there is a real problem&mdash;is a problem
15238 that will increasingly disappear as it becomes easier to connect to
15239 the Internet. And thus it is an extraordinary mistake for policy
15240 makers today to be <quote>solving</quote> this problem in light of a technology
15241 that will be gone tomorrow. The question should not be how to
15242 regulate the Internet to eliminate file sharing (the Net will evolve
15243 that problem away). The question instead should be how to assure that
15244 artists get paid, during
15245
15246 <!-- PAGE BREAK 304 -->
15247 this transition between twentieth-century models for doing business
15248 and twenty-first-century technologies.
15249 </para>
15250 <para>
15251 The answer begins with recognizing that there are different <quote>problems</quote>
15252 here to solve. Let's start with type D content&mdash;uncopyrighted
15253 content or copyrighted content that the artist wants shared. The
15254 <quote>problem</quote> with this content is to make sure that the technology that
15255 would enable this kind of sharing is not rendered illegal. You can
15256 think of it this way: Pay phones are used to deliver ransom demands,
15257 no doubt. But there are many who need to use pay phones who have
15258 nothing to do with ransoms. It would be wrong to ban pay phones in
15259 order to eliminate kidnapping.
15260 </para>
15261 <para>
15262 Type C content raises a different <quote>problem.</quote> This is content that was,
15263 at one time, published and is no longer available. It may be
15264 unavailable because the artist is no longer valuable enough for the
15265 record label he signed with to carry his work. Or it may be
15266 unavailable because the work is forgotten. Either way, the aim of the
15267 law should be to facilitate the access to this content, ideally in a
15268 way that returns something to the artist.
15269 </para>
15270 <indexterm><primary>books</primary><secondary>out of print</secondary></indexterm>
15271 <indexterm><primary>books</primary><secondary>resales of</secondary></indexterm>
15272 <para>
15273 Again, the model here is the used book store. Once a book goes out of
15274 print, it may still be available in libraries and used book
15275 stores. But libraries and used book stores don't pay the copyright
15276 owner when someone reads or buys an out-of-print book. That makes
15277 total sense, of course, since any other system would be so burdensome
15278 as to eliminate the possibility of used book stores' existing. But
15279 from the author's perspective, this <quote>sharing</quote> of his content without
15280 his being compensated is less than ideal.
15281 </para>
15282 <para>
15283 The model of used book stores suggests that the law could simply deem
15284 out-of-print music fair game. If the publisher does not make copies of
15285 the music available for sale, then commercial and noncommercial
15286 providers would be free, under this rule, to <quote>share</quote> that content,
15287 even though the sharing involved making a copy. The copy here would be
15288 incidental to the trade; in a context where commercial publishing has
15289 ended, trading music should be as free as trading books.
15290 </para>
15291 <para>
15292
15293 <!-- PAGE BREAK 305 -->
15294 Alternatively, the law could create a statutory license that would
15295 ensure that artists get something from the trade of their work. For
15296 example, if the law set a low statutory rate for the commercial
15297 sharing of content that was not offered for sale by a commercial
15298 publisher, and if that rate were automatically transferred to a trust
15299 for the benefit of the artist, then businesses could develop around
15300 the idea of trading this content, and artists would benefit from this
15301 trade.
15302 </para>
15303 <para>
15304 This system would also create an incentive for publishers to keep
15305 works available commercially. Works that are available commercially
15306 would not be subject to this license. Thus, publishers could protect
15307 the right to charge whatever they want for content if they kept the
15308 work commercially available. But if they don't keep it available, and
15309 instead, the computer hard disks of fans around the world keep it
15310 alive, then any royalty owed for such copying should be much less than
15311 the amount owed a commercial publisher.
15312 </para>
15313 <para>
15314 The hard case is content of types A and B, and again, this case is
15315 hard only because the extent of the problem will change over time, as
15316 the technologies for gaining access to content change. The law's
15317 solution should be as flexible as the problem is, understanding that
15318 we are in the middle of a radical transformation in the technology for
15319 delivering and accessing content.
15320 </para>
15321 <para>
15322 So here's a solution that will at first seem very strange to both sides
15323 in this war, but which upon reflection, I suggest, should make some sense.
15324 </para>
15325 <para>
15326 Stripped of the rhetoric about the sanctity of property, the basic
15327 claim of the content industry is this: A new technology (the Internet)
15328 has harmed a set of rights that secure copyright. If those rights are to
15329 be protected, then the content industry should be compensated for that
15330 harm. Just as the technology of tobacco harmed the health of millions
15331 of Americans, or the technology of asbestos caused grave illness to
15332 thousands of miners, so, too, has the technology of digital networks
15333 harmed the interests of the content industry.
15334 </para>
15335 <para>
15336 <!-- PAGE BREAK 306 -->
15337 I love the Internet, and so I don't like likening it to tobacco or
15338 asbestos. But the analogy is a fair one from the perspective of the
15339 law. And it suggests a fair response: Rather than seeking to destroy
15340 the Internet, or the p2p technologies that are currently harming
15341 content providers on the Internet, we should find a relatively simple
15342 way to compensate those who are harmed.
15343 </para>
15344 <indexterm id='idxpromisestokeepfisher' class='startofrange'><primary>Promises to Keep (Fisher)</primary></indexterm>
15345 <para>
15346 The idea would be a modification of a proposal that has been
15347 floated by Harvard law professor William Fisher.<footnote>
15348 <para>
15349 <!-- f9. -->
15350 <indexterm id='idxartistspayments3' class='startofrange'><primary>artists</primary><secondary>recording industry payments to</secondary></indexterm>
15351 William Fisher, <citetitle>Digital Music: Problems and Possibilities</citetitle> (last
15352 revised: 10 October 2000), available at
15353 <ulink url="http://free-culture.cc/notes/">link #77</ulink>; William
15354 Fisher, <citetitle>Promises to Keep: Technology, Law, and the Future of
15355 Entertainment</citetitle> (forthcoming) (Stanford: Stanford University Press,
15356 2004), ch. 6, available at
15357 <ulink url="http://free-culture.cc/notes/">link #78</ulink>. Professor
15358 Netanel has proposed a related idea that would exempt noncommercial
15359 sharing from the reach of copyright and would establish compensation
15360 to artists to balance any loss. See Neil Weinstock Netanel, <quote>Impose a
15361 Noncommercial Use Levy to Allow Free P2P File Sharing,</quote> available at
15362 <ulink url="http://free-culture.cc/notes/">link #79</ulink>. For other proposals, see Lawrence Lessig, <quote>Who's Holding Back
15363 Broadband?</quote> <citetitle>Washington Post</citetitle>, 8 January 2002, A17; Philip S. Corwin on
15364 behalf of Sharman Networks, A Letter to Senator Joseph R. Biden, Jr.,
15365 Chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, 26 February 2002,
15366 available at
15367 <ulink url="http://free-culture.cc/notes/">link #80</ulink>; Serguei Osokine, <citetitle>A Quick Case for Intellectual Property
15368 Use Fee (IPUF)</citetitle>, 3 March 2002, available at
15369 <ulink url="http://free-culture.cc/notes/">link #81</ulink>; Jefferson Graham,
15370 <quote>Kazaa, Verizon Propose to Pay Artists Directly,</quote> <citetitle>USA Today</citetitle>, 13 May
15371 2002, available at
15372 <ulink url="http://free-culture.cc/notes/">link #82</ulink>; Steven M. Cherry, <quote>Getting Copyright Right,</quote>
15373 IEEE Spectrum Online, 1 July 2002, available at
15374 <ulink url="http://free-culture.cc/notes/">link #83</ulink>; Declan
15375 McCullagh, <quote>Verizon's Copyright Campaign,</quote> CNET News.com, 27 August
15376 2002, available at
15377 <ulink url="http://free-culture.cc/notes/">link #84</ulink>.
15378 Fisher's proposal is very similar to Richard Stallman's proposal for
15379 DAT. Unlike Fisher's, Stallman's proposal would not pay artists directly
15380 proportionally, though more popular artists would get more than the less
15381 popular. As is typical with Stallman, his proposal predates the current
15382 debate by about a decade. See
15383 <ulink url="http://free-culture.cc/notes/">link #85</ulink>.
15384 <indexterm><primary>Fisher, William</primary></indexterm>
15385 <indexterm><primary>Netanel, Neil Weinstock</primary></indexterm>
15386 <indexterm><primary>Promises to Keep (Fisher)</primary></indexterm>
15387 <indexterm startref='idxartistspayments3' class='endofrange'/>
15388 </para></footnote>
15389 Fisher suggests a very clever way around the current impasse of the
15390 Internet. Under his plan, all content capable of digital transmission
15391 would (1) be marked with a digital watermark (don't worry about how
15392 easy it is to evade these marks; as you'll see, there's no incentive
15393 to evade them). Once the content is marked, then entrepreneurs would
15394 develop (2) systems to monitor how many items of each content were
15395 distributed. On the basis of those numbers, then (3) artists would be
15396 compensated. The compensation would be paid for by (4) an appropriate
15397 tax.
15398 </para>
15399 <para>
15400 Fisher's proposal is careful and comprehensive. It raises a million
15401 questions, most of which he answers well in his upcoming book,
15402 <citetitle>Promises to Keep</citetitle>. The modification that I would make is relatively
15403 simple: Fisher imagines his proposal replacing the existing copyright
15404 system. I imagine it complementing the existing system. The aim of
15405 the proposal would be to facilitate compensation to the extent that
15406 harm could be shown. This compensation would be temporary, aimed at
15407 facilitating a transition between regimes. And it would require
15408 renewal after a period of years. If it continues to make sense to
15409 facilitate free exchange of content, supported through a taxation
15410 system, then it can be continued. If this form of protection is no
15411 longer necessary, then the system could lapse into the old system of
15412 controlling access.
15413 </para>
15414 <indexterm startref='idxpromisestokeepfisher' class='endofrange'/>
15415 <indexterm><primary>artists</primary><secondary>recording industry payments to</secondary></indexterm>
15416 <indexterm><primary>semiotic democracy</primary></indexterm>
15417 <indexterm><primary>democracy</primary><secondary>semiotic</secondary></indexterm>
15418 <para>
15419 Fisher would balk at the idea of allowing the system to lapse. His aim
15420 is not just to ensure that artists are paid, but also to ensure that
15421 the system supports the widest range of <quote>semiotic democracy</quote>
15422 possible. But the aims of semiotic democracy would be satisfied if the
15423 other changes I described were accomplished&mdash;in particular, the
15424 limits on derivative
15425
15426 <!-- PAGE BREAK 307 -->
15427 uses. A system that simply charges for access would not greatly burden
15428 semiotic democracy if there were few limitations on what one was
15429 allowed to do with the content itself.
15430 </para>
15431 <indexterm><primary>Apple Corporation</primary></indexterm>
15432 <indexterm><primary>MusicStore</primary></indexterm>
15433 <indexterm><primary>Real Networks</primary></indexterm>
15434 <indexterm><primary>CDs</primary><secondary>prices of</secondary></indexterm>
15435 <para>
15436 No doubt it would be difficult to calculate the proper measure of
15437 <quote>harm</quote> to an industry. But the difficulty of making that calculation
15438 would be outweighed by the benefit of facilitating innovation. This
15439 background system to compensate would also not need to interfere with
15440 innovative proposals such as Apple's MusicStore. As experts predicted
15441 when Apple launched the MusicStore, it could beat <quote>free</quote> by being
15442 easier than free is. This has proven correct: Apple has sold millions
15443 of songs at even the very high price of 99 cents a song. (At 99 cents,
15444 the cost is the equivalent of a per-song CD price, though the labels
15445 have none of the costs of a CD to pay.) Apple's move was countered by
15446 Real Networks, offering music at just 79 cents a song. And no doubt
15447 there will be a great deal of competition to offer and sell music
15448 on-line.
15449 </para>
15450 <indexterm><primary>cable television</primary></indexterm>
15451 <indexterm><primary>television</primary><secondary>cable vs. broadcast</secondary></indexterm>
15452 <indexterm><primary>Asia, commercial piracy in</primary></indexterm>
15453 <indexterm><primary>piracy</primary><secondary>in Asia</secondary></indexterm>
15454 <indexterm><primary>film industry</primary><secondary>luxury theatres vs. video piracy in</secondary></indexterm>
15455 <para>
15456 This competition has already occurred against the background of <quote>free</quote>
15457 music from p2p systems. As the sellers of cable television have known
15458 for thirty years, and the sellers of bottled water for much more than
15459 that, there is nothing impossible at all about <quote>competing with free.</quote>
15460 Indeed, if anything, the competition spurs the competitors to offer
15461 new and better products. This is precisely what the competitive market
15462 was to be about. Thus in Singapore, though piracy is rampant, movie
15463 theaters are often luxurious&mdash;with <quote>first class</quote> seats, and meals
15464 served while you watch a movie&mdash;as they struggle and succeed in
15465 finding ways to compete with <quote>free.</quote>
15466 </para>
15467 <para>
15468 This regime of competition, with a backstop to assure that artists
15469 don't lose, would facilitate a great deal of innovation in the
15470 delivery of content. That competition would continue to shrink type A
15471 sharing. It would inspire an extraordinary range of new
15472 innovators&mdash;ones who would have a right to the content, and would
15473 no longer fear the uncertain and barbarically severe punishments of
15474 the law.
15475 </para>
15476 <para>
15477 In summary, then, my proposal is this:
15478 </para>
15479 <para>
15480
15481 <!-- PAGE BREAK 308 -->
15482 The Internet is in transition. We should not be regulating a
15483 technology in transition. We should instead be regulating to minimize
15484 the harm to interests affected by this technological change, while
15485 enabling, and encouraging, the most efficient technology we can
15486 create.
15487 </para>
15488 <para>
15489 We can minimize that harm while maximizing the benefit to innovation
15490 by
15491 </para>
15492 <orderedlist numeration="arabic">
15493 <listitem><para>
15494 <!-- 1. -->
15495 guaranteeing the right to engage in type D sharing;
15496 </para></listitem>
15497 <listitem><para>
15498 <!-- 2. -->
15499 permitting noncommercial type C sharing without liability,
15500 and commercial type C sharing at a low and fixed rate set by
15501 statute;
15502 </para></listitem>
15503 <listitem><para>
15504 <!-- 3. -->
15505 while in this transition, taxing and compensating for type A
15506 sharing, to the extent actual harm is demonstrated.
15507 </para></listitem>
15508 </orderedlist>
15509 <para>
15510 But what if <quote>piracy</quote> doesn't disappear? What if there is a competitive
15511 market providing content at a low cost, but a significant number of
15512 consumers continue to <quote>take</quote> content for nothing? Should the law do
15513 something then?
15514 </para>
15515 <para>
15516 Yes, it should. But, again, what it should do depends upon how the
15517 facts develop. These changes may not eliminate type A sharing. But the
15518 real issue is not whether it eliminates sharing in the abstract. The
15519 real issue is its effect on the market. Is it better (a) to have a
15520 technology that is 95 percent secure and produces a market of size <citetitle>x</citetitle>,
15521 or (b) to have a technology that is 50 percent secure but produces a
15522 market of five times <citetitle>x</citetitle>? Less secure might produce more unauthorized
15523 sharing, but it is likely to also produce a much bigger market in
15524 authorized sharing. The most important thing is to assure artists'
15525 compensation without breaking the Internet. Once that's assured, then
15526 it may well be appropriate to find ways to track down the petty
15527 pirates.
15528 </para>
15529 <para>
15530 But we're a long way away from whittling the problem down to this
15531 subset of type A sharers. And our focus until we're there should not
15532 be on finding ways to break the Internet. Our focus until we're there
15533
15534 <!-- PAGE BREAK 309 -->
15535 should be on how to make sure the artists are paid, while protecting
15536 the space for innovation and creativity that the Internet is.
15537 </para>
15538 </section>
15539
15540 <section id="firelawyers">
15541 <title>5. Fire Lots of Lawyers</title>
15542 <para>
15543 I'm a lawyer. I make lawyers for a living. I believe in the law. I believe
15544 in the law of copyright. Indeed, I have devoted my life to working in
15545 law, not because there are big bucks at the end but because there are
15546 ideals at the end that I would love to live.
15547 </para>
15548 <para>
15549 Yet much of this book has been a criticism of lawyers, or the role
15550 lawyers have played in this debate. The law speaks to ideals, but it
15551 is my view that our profession has become too attuned to the
15552 client. And in a world where the rich clients have one strong view,
15553 the unwillingness of the profession to question or counter that one
15554 strong view queers the law.
15555 </para>
15556 <indexterm><primary>Nimmer, Melville</primary></indexterm>
15557 <indexterm><primary>Sonny Bono Copyright Term Extension Act (CTEA) (1998)</primary><secondary>Supreme Court challenge of</secondary></indexterm>
15558 <para>
15559 The evidence of this bending is compelling. I'm attacked as a
15560 <quote>radical</quote> by many within the profession, yet the positions that I am
15561 advocating are precisely the positions of some of the most moderate
15562 and significant figures in the history of this branch of the
15563 law. Many, for example, thought crazy the challenge that we brought to
15564 the Copyright Term Extension Act. Yet just thirty years ago, the
15565 dominant scholar and practitioner in the field of copyright, Melville
15566 Nimmer, thought it obvious.<footnote><para>
15567 <!-- f10. -->
15568 Lawrence Lessig, <quote>Copyright's First Amendment</quote> (Melville B. Nimmer
15569 Memorial Lecture), <citetitle>UCLA Law Review</citetitle> 48 (2001): 1057, 1069&ndash;70.
15570 </para></footnote>
15571
15572 </para>
15573 <para>
15574 However, my criticism of the role that lawyers have played in this
15575 debate is not just about a professional bias. It is more importantly
15576 about our failure to actually reckon the costs of the law.
15577 </para>
15578 <para>
15579 Economists are supposed to be good at reckoning costs and benefits.
15580 But more often than not, economists, with no clue about how the legal
15581 system actually functions, simply assume that the transaction costs of
15582 the legal system are slight.<footnote><para>
15583 <!-- f11. -->
15584 A good example is the work of Professor Stan Liebowitz. Liebowitz is
15585 to be commended for his careful review of data about infringement,
15586 leading him to question his own publicly stated
15587 position&mdash;twice. He initially predicted that downloading would
15588 substantially harm the industry. He then revised his view in light of
15589 the data, and he has since revised his view again. Compare Stan
15590 J. Liebowitz, <citetitle>Rethinking the Network Economy: The True Forces That
15591 Drive the Digital Marketplace</citetitle> (New York: Amacom, 2002), (reviewing his
15592 original view but expressing skepticism) with Stan J. Liebowitz,
15593 <quote>Will MP3s Annihilate the Record Industry?</quote> working paper, June 2003,
15594 available at
15595 <ulink url="http://free-culture.cc/notes/">link #86</ulink>.
15596 Liebowitz's careful analysis is extremely valuable in estimating the
15597 effect of file-sharing technology. In my view, however, he
15598 underestimates the costs of the legal system. See, for example,
15599 <citetitle>Rethinking</citetitle>, 174&ndash;76.
15600 <indexterm><primary>Liebowitz, Stan</primary></indexterm>
15601 </para></footnote>
15602 They see a system that has been around for hundreds of years, and they
15603 assume it works the way their elementary school civics class taught
15604 them it works.
15605 </para>
15606 <para>
15607 <!-- PAGE BREAK 310 -->
15608 But the legal system doesn't work. Or more accurately, it doesn't work
15609 for anyone except those with the most resources. Not because the
15610 system is corrupt. I don't think our legal system (at the federal
15611 level, at least) is at all corrupt. I mean simply because the costs of
15612 our legal system are so astonishingly high that justice can
15613 practically never be done.
15614 </para>
15615 <para>
15616 These costs distort free culture in many ways. A lawyer's time is
15617 billed at the largest firms at more than $400 per hour. How much time
15618 should such a lawyer spend reading cases carefully, or researching
15619 obscure strands of authority? The answer is the increasing reality:
15620 very little. The law depended upon the careful articulation and
15621 development of doctrine, but the careful articulation and development
15622 of legal doctrine depends upon careful work. Yet that careful work
15623 costs too much, except in the most high-profile and costly cases.
15624 </para>
15625 <para>
15626 The costliness and clumsiness and randomness of this system mock
15627 our tradition. And lawyers, as well as academics, should consider it
15628 their duty to change the way the law works&mdash;or better, to change the
15629 law so that it works. It is wrong that the system works well only for the
15630 top 1 percent of the clients. It could be made radically more efficient,
15631 and inexpensive, and hence radically more just.
15632 </para>
15633 <para>
15634 But until that reform is complete, we as a society should keep the law
15635 away from areas that we know it will only harm. And that is precisely
15636 what the law will too often do if too much of our culture is left to
15637 its review.
15638 </para>
15639 <indexterm><primary>Brezhnev, Leonid</primary></indexterm>
15640 <para>
15641 Think about the amazing things your kid could do or make with digital
15642 technology&mdash;the film, the music, the Web page, the blog. Or think
15643 about the amazing things your community could facilitate with digital
15644 technology&mdash;a wiki, a barn raising, activism to change something.
15645 Think about all those creative things, and then imagine cold molasses
15646 poured onto the machines. This is what any regime that requires
15647 permission produces. Again, this is the reality of Brezhnev's Russia.
15648 </para>
15649 <para>
15650 The law should regulate in certain areas of culture&mdash;but it should
15651 regulate culture only where that regulation does good. Yet lawyers
15652
15653 <!-- PAGE BREAK 311-->
15654 rarely test their power, or the power they promote, against this
15655 simple pragmatic question: <quote>Will it do good?</quote> When challenged about
15656 the expanding reach of the law, the lawyer answers, <quote>Why not?</quote>
15657 </para>
15658 <para>
15659 We should ask, <quote>Why?</quote> Show me why your regulation of culture is
15660 needed. Show me how it does good. And until you can show me both,
15661 keep your lawyers away.
15662 </para>
15663 <!-- PAGE BREAK 312 -->
15664 </section>
15665 </section>
15666 </chapter>
15667 <chapter label="" id="c-notes">
15668 <title>Notes</title>
15669 <para>
15670 Throughout this text, there are references to links on the World Wide
15671 Web. As anyone who has tried to use the Web knows, these links can be
15672 highly unstable. I have tried to remedy the instability by redirecting
15673 readers to the original source through the Web site associated with
15674 this book. For each link below, you can go to
15675 <ulink url="http://free-culture.cc/notes"/>
15676 and locate the original source by clicking on the number after the #
15677 sign. If the original link remains alive, you will be redirected to
15678 that link. If the original link has disappeared, you will be
15679 redirected to an appropriate reference for the material.
15680 </para>
15681
15682 <!-- insert endnotes here -->
15683
15684 <index type="endnotes"/>
15685
15686 <!--PAGE BREAK 336-->
15687
15688 </chapter>
15689 <chapter label="" id="c-acknowledgments">
15690 <title>Acknowledgments</title>
15691 <para>
15692 This book is the product of a long and as yet unsuccessful struggle that
15693 began when I read of Eric Eldred's war to keep books free. Eldred's
15694 work helped launch a movement, the free culture movement, and it is
15695 to him that this book is dedicated.
15696 </para>
15697 <indexterm><primary>Rose, Mark</primary></indexterm>
15698 <para>
15699 I received guidance in various places from friends and academics,
15700 including Glenn Brown, Peter DiCola, Jennifer Mnookin, Richard Posner,
15701 Mark Rose, and Kathleen Sullivan. And I received correction and
15702 guidance from many amazing students at Stanford Law School and
15703 Stanford University. They included Andrew B. Coan, John Eden, James
15704 P. Fellers, Christopher Guzelian, Erica Goldberg, Robert Hallman,
15705 Andrew Harris, Matthew Kahn, Brian Link, Ohad Mayblum, Alina Ng, and
15706 Erica Platt. I am particularly grateful to Catherine Crump and Harry
15707 Surden, who helped direct their research, and to Laura Lynch, who
15708 brilliantly managed the army that they assembled, and provided her own
15709 critical eye on much of this.
15710 </para>
15711 <para>
15712 Yuko Noguchi helped me to understand the laws of Japan as well as
15713 its culture. I am thankful to her, and to the many in Japan who helped
15714 me prepare this book: Joi Ito, Takayuki Matsutani, Naoto Misaki,
15715 Michihiro Sasaki, Hiromichi Tanaka, Hiroo Yamagata, and Yoshihiro
15716 <!--PAGE BREAK 337-->
15717 Yonezawa. I am thankful as well as to Professor Nobuhiro Nakayama,
15718 and the Tokyo University Business Law Center, for giving me the
15719 chance to spend time in Japan, and to Tadashi Shiraishi and Kiyokazu
15720 Yamagami for their generous help while I was there.
15721 </para>
15722 <para>
15723 These are the traditional sorts of help that academics regularly draw
15724 upon. But in addition to them, the Internet has made it possible to
15725 receive advice and correction from many whom I have never even
15726 met. Among those who have responded with extremely helpful advice to
15727 requests on my blog about the book are Dr. Mohammad Al-Ubaydli, David
15728 Gerstein, and Peter DiMauro, as well as a long list of those who had
15729 specific ideas about ways to develop my argument. They included
15730 Richard Bondi, Steven Cherry, David Coe, Nik Cubrilovic, Bob Devine,
15731 Charles Eicher, Thomas Guida, Elihu M. Gerson, Jeremy Hunsinger,
15732 Vaughn Iverson, John Karabaic, Jeff Keltner, James Lindenschmidt,
15733 K. L. Mann, Mark Manning, Nora McCauley, Jeffrey McHugh, Evan
15734 McMullen, Fred Norton, John Pormann, Pedro A. D. Rezende, Shabbir
15735 Safdar, Saul Schleimer, Clay Shirky, Adam Shostack, Kragen Sitaker,
15736 Chris Smith, Bruce Steinberg, Andrzej Jan Taramina, Sean Walsh, Matt
15737 Wasserman, Miljenko Williams, <quote>Wink,</quote> Roger Wood, <quote>Ximmbo da Jazz,</quote>
15738 and Richard Yanco. (I apologize if I have missed anyone; with
15739 computers come glitches, and a crash of my e-mail system meant I lost
15740 a bunch of great replies.)
15741 </para>
15742 <para>
15743 Richard Stallman and Michael Carroll each read the whole book in
15744 draft, and each provided extremely helpful correction and advice.
15745 Michael helped me to see more clearly the significance of the
15746 regulation of derivitive works. And Richard corrected an
15747 embarrassingly large number of errors. While my work is in part
15748 inspired by Stallman's, he does not agree with me in important places
15749 throughout this book.
15750 </para>
15751 <para>
15752 Finally, and forever, I am thankful to Bettina, who has always
15753 insisted that there would be unending happiness away from these
15754 battles, and who has always been right. This slow learner is, as ever,
15755 grateful for her perpetual patience and love.
15756 </para>
15757 <!--PAGE BREAK 338-->
15758
15759 </chapter>
15760
15761 <xi:include href="freeculture-about-edition-en.xml" xmlns:xi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XInclude">
15762 <xi:fallback/>
15763 </xi:include>
15764
15765 <index></index>
15766 <colophon>
15767 <title></title>
15768 <?latex {\centering
15769 ?>
15770 <para>
15771 Free culture: How big media uses technology and the law to lock down
15772 culture and control creativity / Lawrence Lessig.
15773 </para>
15774 <para>
15775 Copyright &copy; 2004 Lawrence Lessig. Some rights reserved.
15776 </para>
15777
15778 <para>
15779 <ulink url="http://free-culture.cc/"/>
15780 </para>
15781
15782 <para>
15783 Published in 2015. First published 2004 by The Penguin Press.
15784 </para>
15785
15786 <para>
15787 This English and Norwegian Bokmål edition was published by Petter
15788 Reinholdtsen with help from many volunteers.
15789 </para>
15790
15791 <para>
15792 Typeset with
15793 <ulink url="http://dblatex.sourceforge.net">dblatex</ulink> using the
15794 font Crimson Text.
15795 </para>
15796
15797 <para>
15798 Excerpt from an editorial titled <quote>The Coming of Copyright
15799 Perpetuity,</quote> <citetitle>The New York Times</citetitle>, January
15800 16, 2003. Copyright &copy; 2003 by The New York Times Co. Reprinted
15801 with permission.
15802 </para>
15803 <para>
15804 Cartoon in figure
15805 <xref xrefstyle="template:%n" linkend="fig-1711-vcr-handgun-cartoonfig"/> by
15806 Paul Conrad, copyright Tribune Media Services, Inc. All rights
15807 reserved. Reprinted with permission.
15808 </para>
15809 <para>
15810 Diagram in figure
15811 <xref xrefstyle="template:%n" linkend="fig-1761-pattern-modern-media-ownership"/>
15812 courtesy of the office of FCC Commissioner, Michael J. Copps.
15813 </para>
15814
15815 <para>
15816 Cover created by Petter Reinholdtsen using inkscape.
15817 </para>
15818
15819 <para>
15820 The quotes on the cover came from
15821 <ulink url="http://free-culture.cc/jacket/"/>.
15822 </para>
15823
15824 <para>
15825 Portrait on the cover was created 2013 by ActuaLitté and licensed
15826 under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 2.0 license. It was
15827 downloaded from
15828 <ulink url="https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File%3ALawrence_Lessig_(11014343366)_(cropped).jpg"/>.
15829 </para>
15830
15831 <para>
15832 Classifications:
15833 </para>
15834
15835 <para>
15836 (Dewey)
15837 306.4,
15838 306.40973,
15839 306.46,
15840 341.7582,
15841 343.7309/9
15842 </para>
15843
15844 <para>
15845 (UDK) 347.78
15846 </para>
15847
15848 <para>
15849 (US Library of Congress) KF2979.L47 2004
15850 </para>
15851
15852 <para>
15853 (ACM CRCS) K.4.1
15854 </para>
15855
15856 <para>
15857 Printing was sponsed by NUUG Foundation,
15858 <ulink url="http://www.nuugfoundation.no/"/>.
15859 </para>
15860
15861 <para>
15862 Includes index.
15863 </para>
15864
15865 <?latex } %\centering
15866 ?>
15867
15868 <para>
15869 The Docbook source is available from
15870 <ulink url="https://github.com/petterreinholdtsen/free-culture-lessig"/>.
15871 Please report any issues with the book there.
15872 </para>
15873
15874 <para>
15875 <informalfigure id="cc-logo">
15876 <graphic fileref="images/cc.svg" align="center" width="11%"></graphic>
15877 </informalfigure>
15878 </para>
15879
15880 <para>
15881 This book is licensed under a Creative Commons license. This license
15882 permits non-commercial use of this work, so long as attribution is
15883 given. For more information about the license visit
15884 <ulink url="http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/1.0/"/>.
15885 </para>
15886
15887 <para>
15888 <informaltable id="isbn">
15889 <tgroup cols="2" align="left">
15890 <thead>
15891 <row>
15892 <entry>Format / MIME-type</entry>
15893 <entry>ISBN</entry>
15894 </row>
15895 </thead>
15896 <tbody>
15897 <row>
15898 <entry>US Trade edition from lulu.com</entry>
15899 <entry>978-82-690182-0-2</entry>
15900 </row>
15901 <row>
15902 <entry>application/pdf</entry>
15903 <entry>978-82-690182-1-9</entry>
15904 </row>
15905 <row>
15906 <entry>application/epub+zip</entry>
15907 <entry>978-82-690182-2-6</entry>
15908 </row>
15909 </tbody>
15910 </tgroup>
15911 </informaltable>
15912 </para>
15913
15914 </colophon>
15915 </book>