Archive for October 2006
CopyCense Clippings v. 0.93
Due to several other editorial commitments over the past seven days, we have an abbreviated version of CopyCense Clippings this week. We’ll return with a full version next Monday.
Clippings
- Katie Hafner. We’re Google. So Sue Us. The New York Times. Oct. 23, 2006. An inside look at Google’s legal department and a peek into its litigation philosophy.
- Mike Musgrove. A Messy Age for Music. WashingtonPost.com. Oct. 22, 2006. One of the nation’s most respected newspapers devotes a special Sunday section to copyright and downloading. Virtually none of the articles reveals anything new to regular CopyCense readers. What’s significant is that one of the nation’s most respected newspapers devotes a special Sunday section to copyright and downloading. (Make sure you read Rob Pegoraro’s brief history of recorded music.)
- Christopher Conkey. Libraries Beckon, But Stacks of Books Aren’t Part of Pitch. The Wall Street Journal. Oct. 21, 2006. This article outlines how libraries are transforming themselves into information centers on some college campuses. Unfortunately, this transformation still lags way behind the way information transfer has evolved, and the transformation has, by and large, failed to hit public libraries at all.
- Greg Sandoval. YouTube’s No Friend To Copyright Violators. News.com. Oct. 21, 2006. We’ve said this many times: always, always, always read a Web site’s terms (conditions) of use contract.
- Hardware 2.0. Controlling The Kernel — It’s All About DRM. Oct. 20, 2006. Adrian W. Kingsley-Hughes opines that Microsoft’s Vista DRM measures are about introducing a Windows-based media business model, not security.
- ArsTechnica. Boy Scouts Get MPAA-Approved Copyright Merit Badge. Oct. 20, 2005. Remember when Disney used an episode of The Proud Family to demonstrate to kids the evils of file sharing? This is merely an extension of that tactic. Since Big Content is comfortable that Congress is comfortably in check on the copyright front, they’ve turned their domestic attention to passing legislation and instituting related initiatives that influence a younger crowd at the state and local level. This is almost as bad as school districts cutting revenue deals with cola manufacturers.
- Alex Veiga. Universal Music Group Files Lawsuits Against Online Video Sites. MercuryNews.com. (via The Associated Press). Oct. 17, 2006. This could turn out to be a seminal case that, along with YouTube lawsuits, tests the boundaries of the DMCA.
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Technorati Tags: CopyCense, CopyCense Clippings, copyright, DRM, K. Matthew Dames, licensing
CopyCense Clippings v. 0.92
To quote Worm (Edward Norton) in the 1998 film Rounders, “Wow!! Lot of action. Lot … of … action.” There was so much material for this week’s Clippings that we’ve decided to analyze our Article of the Week separately.
This week’s edition features lots of good material concerning Big Music and its broken business model; thoughts about lawsuits; thoughts about digitization; and not one, but (count ’em) two Quotes of the Week.
Article of the Week
Julia Angwin, et al. Record Labels Turn Piracy Into a Marketing Opportunity. post-gazette.com.(via The Wall Street Journal). Oct. 18, 2006. We will analyze this article later this week as a separate CommuniK. post.
Quotes of the Week
“If we can have a legal YouTube, we can have a legal P2P service.” — Bob Lefsetz, editor and publisher, The Lefsetz Letter.
The Lefsetz Letter. YouTube Deals. Oct. 9, 2006. There is virtually nothing else we can add. But even more important than this quote is Lefsetz’s industry analysis (which is consistent with ours): “piracy” is not Big Music’s biggest problem; its broken business model is. That broken business model has virtually nothing to do with “piracy,” and Big Music executives should take full responsibility for their failure to recognize their business is broken. (They also should concede their laziness in relying on litigation and Congressional coffer stuffing to halt commercial and technological development while they get their act together.) We all know what happens to a business that can’t cut it anymore in a changed environment: it dies. And some of those deaths can be sad, as the closing of CBGB illustrates. But life moves on. If Big Music cannot get its act together in a new environment, let it perish as other industries unable to adapt have perished. This is, after all, the flip side of capitalism: adapt or die.
“The [entertainment] business has changed so massively. … You will never have the market forces again that, how do I put this, that allow people to get rich.” — Dick Wolf, creator and executive producer, Law & Order.
Brian Steinberg. ‘Law & Order’ Boss Dick Wolf Ponders the Future of TV Ads (Doink, Doink). post-gazette.com (via The Wall Street Journal). Oct. 18, 2006. Earlier this year, Dick Wolf claimed that his television franchise generated $1 billion in advertising revenue. Even if the actual numbers are only half that estimate, what’s incontrovertible is that Dick Wolf has made a ton of money in the “old school” environment. But what is really interesting is Wolf’s admission that the game has changed so radically during his Law & Order run that the business model he has used to make his money would not work if he were starting today. Further, if you read between the lines, Wolf seems comfortable with having entered the business at the right time with the right concept, having made his money, and seems pleased to move on without regret (and without whining that his formula no longer generates $1 billion in ad revenue). We wonder how many other Big Content executives can say they know when to hold ’em, know when to fold ’em, know when to walk away, and know when to run.
CommuniK. Clippings
Wendy Grossman. Preserving A Copy of the Future. The Guardian. Oct. 19, 2006. Wow!! A national library fighting the music industry over term extension. Too bad America’s de facto national library (which runs this nation’s copyright office) hasn’t seen fit to fight similar battles over term extension here. Oh, wait, we forgot: America’s copyright officer in chief waited seven years to concede that America’s last term extension went too far. Thanks for weighing in.
SiliconValley.com (via Associated Press). European Artists Defend Copyright Levies on Gadgets, Blank Discs. Oct. 18, 2006. With approximately $690 billion collected last year (and a levy of 180 euros, approximately $226, for a 60 GB iPod), you had to know any attempt to halt this tax would be very controversial. On the surface, it seems ridiculous, but if most of this money really is going directly to creators (instead of to content companies, which occurs in the American system), is it an overall bad system? We think, though, that if artists are receiving this sort of subsidy, then copyright terms should be very brief, certainly much shorter than the “life plus 70” term that America has (and European Union countries seem to want to adopt).
Xenia P. Kobylarz. Judge Sanctions Firm for Filing ‘Cookie-Cutter’ Patent Infringement Complaints. Law.com (via The Recorder). Oct. 18, 2006. Second paragraph of this story reads: “A federal judge in the Western District of Washington has sanctioned an attorney and his law firm for sending dozens of ‘fill-in-the-blank’ demand letters and filing cookie-cutter patent infringement complaints on behalf of client Eon-Net, a patent holding company based in the British Virgin Islands.” If you change “patent” to “copyright,” and replace “Eon-Net” with “Big Music,” why wouldn’t the same logic apply to file-sharing lawsuits?
Ars Technica. RIAA Drops File Sharing Case. Oct. 15, 2006. Big Music’s random litigation based on scant evidence is not news. Big Music dropping a case with prejudice after a consumer fights back (again, based on scant evidence) is news. What we’d like to see is a network of law school litigation clinics begin to accept these cases to fight the case at pre-trial and negotiate settlements, if settlements are applicable. The only level Big Music has in many of these cases is the cost of litigation. Those who have been using large amounts music without paying anything should pay through settlement. Others who haven’t done anything should not have to spend one cent on spurious charges in federal court. And in really egregious cases like this one where the evidence is weak, we’d also like to see defendants begin asking for sanctions under FRCP Rule 11.
Thudfactor. Gunfight at the Circle-C Corral. Oct. 15, 2006. If not for Bob Lefsetz’s simple, dead on quote, we would have made this our QoTW: “The rampant violation and disrespect for copyright law demonstrates the extent to which copyright law is broken, and having heavy-hitting violators in the game will hopefully make some strides towards repairing it and making it useful again. Copyright holders have been unable to come to terms with the basic truth of their product: copyrighted works are by definition cultural assets. Performance, music—even computer games—become parts of people’s lives. They generate emotional response, they accrue emotional attachment, and in many cases become integrated into people’s identity. People want to pass along the art and stories that appeal to them; it is a basic social activity that predates written language. You can no more expect people to stop sharing their culture than you could expect people to stop six thousand years of beer drinking because a handful of sanctimonious nutjobs pass Prohibition.”
Antony Bruno. Digital Rights in Question As Business Model. WashingtonPost.com (via Reuters). Oct. 15, 2006. We find it rather amazing that in a few short years, now even the mainstream press is openly questioning DRM as a business solution. (Of course, these questions are all the more relevant now that Microsoft has released its Zune music player with yet another DRM scheme that is incompatible with all others.) This article, though, goes even further in that it calls for Big Music to make available .mp3 files with no DRM restrictions at all. The hardcore liberal sect of the copyright crowd has been trumpeting this view for several years, but as recently as two years ago, this suggestion never would have been published in a major newspaper. (Note: While this article is provided through the Reuters news wire, Bruno actually writes for Billboard, the leading music industry publication, which makes the article’s tone all the more extraordinary.) Compare this with the chief technology officer of the MPAA, who posits that piracy is the consumer’s answer to not having standardized DRM. Some commentators, like those on ZDNet’s Hardware 2.0 blog, look to these comments as a sign of progress. We see it another way: that a chief technology officer of any organization would actually state such drivel on the record is virtually incomprehensible. But it’s a Big Content executive speaking; drivel is to be expected.
John Battelle’s Searchblog. A Brief Interview with EFF’s Fred von Lohmann on YouTube, Copyright, Google, and More. Oct. 10, 2006. We’re still unearthing good, residual GooTube coverage that we missed due to sheer volume. This article includes a good, straightforward explanation of the DMCA ISP safe harbor provisions that are codified in Section 512. What becomes apparent in reading this article is Von Lohmann understands the core technologies and plausible uses that are at the heart of so many current copyright battles. We firmly believe that if you do not understand the technology and its current and prospective uses, there is virtually no way you can run a technology business. Further, there is no way you can write laws that affect the technology. Clearly, Big Content and Congress consistently have failed to learn these fundamental lessons.
BitPlayer. Tower Records, iTunes and Napster. Oct. 11, 2006. The L.A. Times‘ entertainment blog discusses the demise of Tower Records, which went into liquidation last week. (The Times’ Ann Powers also lends her pen to the store’s closing.) Most interesting is this last paragraph: “It’s a shame the labels, artists and music publishers have failed to make everything available for sale, and that they (and Apple) have resisted the idea of cheap, bulk sales of older material. The urge to dive deep into an artist’s work is what separates a casual listener — the kind who’s satisfied by the selection at Wal-Mart and Best Buy — from a real music fan. The latter were the Tower Records shoppers of yore, and they are the lifeblood of the industry today. They need to be indulged.” Can we get an “Amen”?
Clippings
- Trudi Bellardo Hahn. Impacts of Mass Digitization Projects on Libraries and Information Policy. ASIS&T Bulletin. October/November 2006. After reading this article, please remind us again: why isn’t copyright a mandatory course in library science masters’ programs?
- Pete Wells. New Era of the Recipe Burglar. Food & Wine. November 2006. After the fashion industry whined about needing federal legislation to protect their designs, and after Dianne von Furstenburg’s asinine comments about copyright [QoTW, Sept. 11, 2006], it is only natural that we’d have to tolerate copyright issues spilling over into the kitchen.
- Brad Stone. The End of Free Trade? Newsweek. Oct. 20, 2006. Details YouTube’s “acoustic fingerprinting” technology, which will be used to monitor copyrighted works owned by Big Music.
- Jason Epstein. Books@Google. The New York Review of Books. Oct. 19, 2006. This is a good summary of the current books that discuss Google’s Book Search project. You can read an even more insightful analysis of this trend at if:book, Google and the Future of Print.
- Open Source blog. What Do Apple’s Earnings Say About Open Source? Oct. 19, 2006. Outstanding article about Apple’s cool factor and service overshadowing it’s proprietary operating system and DRM-laden iPod.
- Anthony Ross Sorkin and Stephen Leeds. Music Companies Grab a Share of the YouTube Sale. The New York Times. Oct. 18, 2006. Big Music gets to wet its beak a little. The Mob would call this “tribute.”
- Rebecca Knight. Microsoft In Digital Book Deal. FT.com. Oct. 18, 2006. This announcement is noteworthy because some of our editors, along with Jill Hurst-Wahl over at Digitization 101, have seen the Kirtas machines in action. The top-end machines — which we presume Microsoft will use — are rather expensive, but seem to be advanced enough technologically that they can handle the sort of volume Microsoft’s digitization efforts will endgender.
- Rich Frankel. Copyright to Public Domain: A Battle Cry. Blogcritics.org. Oct. 18, 2006. A Philadelphia lawyer rants about our current copyright system.
- Graeme Philipson. The Coming Digital Showdown. smh.com.au. Oct. 17, 2006. The online version of Australia’s Sydney Morning Herald addresses the problems with copyright in the digital environment this way: “As for the concept of copyright, I have written many times in this column about its inevitable demise. It is an atomic concept in a networked world.”
- Michael Geist. Why YouTube Won’t Be Napster Redux. Toronto Star. Oct. 16, 2006. Geist compares YouTube with Napster, and explains YouTube likely won’t suffer the same denouement.
- Stefanie Olsen. Wikipedia Co-Founder Plans Expert Spinoff. News.com. Oct. 16, 2006. Larry Sanger plans to launch Citizendium as a Wikipedia alternative, one that features “experts.” We want to know how one qualifies to be an “expert.”
- Between the Lines. DMCA Should Scare Us All. Oct. 14, 2006; ZDNet Education. DMCA Threatens Academic Freedom. Oct. 14, 2006. If you’re a regular CopyCense reader, there is nothing new here, but both articles point to a swelling popular discontent with the directions in which copyright law has leaned recently. Maybe Geist’s prediction that copyright will follow environmental issues as one of the next big political issues will actually come true. If so, look to articles such as these as the beginning of this movement.
- PublicEye. Why You’re Not Seeing Video Of Cory Lidle Playing Baseball. Oct. 12, 2006. Even Black Rock cannot use sports footage in its coverage of news stories because of contract terms and cost. This is evidence of a copyright system gone haywire.
- Inside Higher Ed. Opening Up Online Learning. Oct. 9, 2006. Earlier this month at at the Educause meeting, three dozen academic publishers, LMS providers, and other vendors agreed on an open standard that will make it possible to move digital content into and out of widely divergent online education systems without expensive and time consuming reengineering. Anyone who regularly deals with learning management systems realizes Common Cartridge is a welcome development in academia.
- Chris Morris. The Music’s Over for Tower Records. WashingtonPost.com (via Reuters). Oct. 9, 2006. It seems a lot of New York City icons are biting the dust. First we heard about Coliseum Books. Next, it was CBGB. Now, Tower Records finally bites the dust. True, Tower has been teetering on the edge for quite a while, but it’s still a little shocking to us. Goodness, what’s next, The Strand?
- Madisonian.net. Taking Back Educational Fair Use. Oct. 8, 2006. Loyola law professor Brett Frischman posits some interesting points about why academia increasingly is unable to use the fair use defense, but we think his analysis is way too academic. One important omission with Frischman’s preliminary thought is that it does not take into account the presence (predominance?) of the license, and its effect in eliminating exceptions that are available under the Copyright Act. We plan to publish on this rather soon, but suffice it to say now that in a digital environment, copyright is dead, and the license is the law of the land.
- Tank McNamara. Oct. 7, 2006. The popular comic addresses copyright within the sporting context.
CopyCense™: Code & Content.™ A venture of Seso Group LLC.
Technorati Tags: CopyCense, CopyCense Clippings, copyright, DRM, K. Matthew Dames, licensing
K. Matthew Dames on IBM’s Patent Initiative
“When the nation’s most prolific patent company says that it is going to change the way in which it does business, folks tend to listen, particularly when so much of this nation’s commerce is tied up in commercialized intellectual property. IBM wants to change the way the patent system works, holding itself out as an exemplar of openness.
“What does IBM’s announcement really mean for an American patent system widely considered to be in mass disarray? It depends on whom you ask. IBM, though, is convinced that its initiative will help improve a patent system thought to be on the brink of collapse.”
K. Matthew Dames. The Patent System on Tilt, IBM Seeks to Change the Game. Information Today NewsBreaks. Oct. 16, 2006.
CopyCense™: Code & Content.™ A venture of Seso Group LLC.
CopyCense Clippings v. 0.91
This week, we continue to tinker with the CopyCense Clippings format, which seems to be in interminable beta. One of the things we’ve been doing with Clippings since we introduced it in the summer is adding more original content and analysis. We settled on the Clippings format this summer because the sheer volume of news on code and content has become staggering. It used to be that only specialists covered this area; now mainstream publications are covering this area — and in many cases, summoning their considerable resources to break stories.
We rather like CopyCense Clippings format for two reasons. First, it allows us time to exercise greater editorial prudence in what we post. Second, and more important, by moving to a weekly publication schedule, we can put more energy into putting the news into a broader business, legal, and technological context. We believe our efforts in this area are worth moving our publication schedule from five times per week to weekly.
As we’ve developed Clippings, however, we’ve noticed something interesting: the length of our standard entries has grown. The original idea behind CopyCense Clippings was to distill the news from the prior week, provide citations, and write small summary entries. Bullet point display is perfect for this original idea.
Over the last few weeks, however, we’ve had much more to say about several of the entries. Unfortunately, bullet point format is decidedly inappropriate for this sort of writing. Therefore, effective this week, we are testing a new “CommuniK. Clippings” section. Beginning this week, we are experimenting with this new C&C section as a way of presenting editorial comment about news stories that are longer than what should be in the Clippings section, but not long enough to be included in our CommuniK. series, which is reserved for feature stories.
So, to summarize, CopyCense is experimenting with three lines of content:
- CopyCense Clippings: A brief listing of stories from the prior week;
- CommuniK. Clippings: A listing of stories from the prior week that includes commentary from K. Matthew Dames and other CopyCense contributors; and
- CommuniK.: Feature length articles from K. Matthew Dames that include in-depth commentary and analysis of issues that lie at the intersection of business, law, and technology.
Now, the final challenge we have is how to preserve our categorization scheme in light of this revamped format. Input from indexers, catalogers, classification specialists and other interested parties is highly welcome. Please let us know what you think about the new format and presentation.
And for the news? This week, we have a handful of entries about copyright implications of the GooTube merger; comments from Big Content executives, one of which seems to get it, another who seems lost; Vista and DRM complications, and of course, our Article of the Week (AoTW) and Quote of the Week (QoTW).
Article of the Week
Michael Geist. Parallel Federal Political World of Environment and Copyright. The Hill Times. Oct. 9, 2006. Geist posits copyright as the next big mainstream political issue in Canada. If only this were the case in the U.S.
Quote of the Week
“We understand now that piracy is a business model. It exists to serve a need in the market for consumers who want TV content on demand. Pirates compete the same way we do — through quality, price and availability. We don’t like the model but we realize it’s competitive enough to make it a major competitor going forward.” — Anne Sweeney, Co-Chair Disney Media Networks and President, Disney-ABC Television Group.
PaidContent.org. Mipcom: Piracy Is A Business Model, Says Disney Co-Chair Anne Sweeney. Oct. 10, 2006. When the “most powerful woman in entertainment” (Hollywood Reporter) makes such a keen observation, it is worth noting. We’ve known all along that the way to fight “piracy” — whatever that is — is to offer better product with more features. In other words, provide the consumer options that make him want to pay than to get it free. Now, the question is whether or not the Disney directors got this from Jobs, or whether it was something the board members discussed before he became a director.
CommuniK. Clippings
Ian Youngs. Technology “Can Beat Film Piracy.” BBC News. Oct. 13, 2006. There are some business executives that finally seem to understand the challenges their content businesses face (see QoTW, above). The U.K.’s film minister, however, is not among them. Technology is not the key to making money in the new digital content environment.
(Notice we did not say “technology is not the key to beating ‘piracy.'” See K. Matthew Dames’s September 2006 Information Today article “Framing the Copyright Debate” to understand why terms like “piracy” are industry doublespeak that rarely go unchallenged in CopyCense.)
The key to making money in the new digital content environment is by “handling your business,” as the kids say. And these days, a digital content company handles its business by recognizing traditional revenue streams are no longer reliable due to changed commercial conditions; identifying and exploiting new opportunities that are driven by social and technological change; and providing new value to customers that makes rampant reproduction irrelevant. After this analysis is done, then content companies may find out that their role is significantly reduced, and that many large companies and executives no longer have jobs. If this is the case, so be it. Nature calls this phenomenon evolution; businessmen call it the free market.
The Electric New Paper. Copyright Battles Likely Over YouTube. Oct. 12, 2006. What is interesting about this story is that it is published out of Singapore, yet still contains rather standard Western analysis of Google’s YouTube acquisition. There is, however, an interesting quote from an American lawyer concerning YouTube’s application of the ISP safe harbor provisions under the DMCA: “The problem is that the more [YouTube goes] into editorial control, the less they can rely on the DMCA to protect them.” We’d be interested in seeing a full analysis on this issue. (In a separate article out of Canada, Duke University law professor James Boyle says YouTube’s reliance on the safe harbor provision is an open legal question that the U.S. federal court system has yet to address.)
As a related aside, with each passing year it seems clear to us that the federal court system (and perhaps also the U.S. Copyright Office) is ill-equipped to address and resolve major copyright issues with alacrity. Said another way, the American copyright system continues to grind along at a 20th century pace while dealing with 21st century issues. It is interesting, then, that we’ve heard an outcry about overhauling the patent system (from the federal agencies that handle patent matters to judicial review of patent cases), but we’ve heard virtually nothing about overhauling this country’s copyright system in the same way. We feel such reform should be debated and considered, at a minimum.
Brenda Goodman. King Papers, Back in Atlanta, Will Be Placed on Display. The New York Times. Oct. 10, 2006. Wouldn’t this collection have been a boon for the students at Clark Atlanta University’s library school? The school could have made a name for itself in archives & preservation (possibly even digitization) working with this collection alone. Sadly, the School of Library & Information Science graduated its last class in June 2005, closing the last (and only) ALA-accredited LIS school in the state of Georgia.
Christopher S. Rugaber. Supreme Court Denies Zoloft Patent Case. chron.com (via Associated Press). Oct. 10, 2006. A generic drug maker does not get to argue whether patent holding, brand-name drug makers sometimes block generic drug makers from issuing new products by refusing to sue them for alleged patent infringement during the FDA approval process. The significance? “This refusal to sue can leave the status of patents unresolved and create uncertainty for a generic drug company, since the brand-name company could later sue for patent infringement once the generic firm begins manufacturing and selling the drug. This threat, in turn, can prevent generic companies from proceeding in the first place.” On its face, this is the sort of issue the allegedly business savvy Roberts court should have heard.
Clippings
- Kevin Tampone. Bull & Bear Pub Settles Karaoke Copyright Lawsuit. The Central New York Business Journal. No date. A downtown Syracuse pub agrees to securing an ASCAP license after it is sued for playing popular music during its karaoke night.
- Paul F. Roberts. Vista’s DRM Features Could Bedevil AV. InfoWorld. Oct. 13, 2006. A security researcher poses concerns that Microsoft’s planned DRM in the new Vista operating system could interfere with common desktop anti-virus program functionality. Remember, the Sony-BMG DRM rootkit scandal was brought to light by a well-intentioned security researcher.
- Alex Veiga. Anti-Piracy System Could Hurt YouTube. Forbes.com. (via Associated Press). Oct. 12, 2006. “Analysts said that stepped-up monitoring by entertainment companies raises the likelihood that YouTube fans won’t find what they’re used to getting — and will go searching for the next online video rebel.” Query this: how many analysts know copyright (or business, for that matter) well enough to reliably and credibly make this assessment? Perhaps weatherman is the only other occupation for which one can be paid so much to be so wrong so often.
- Laura Parker. Jury Awards $11.3M Over Defamatory Internet Posts. USA Today. Oct. 11, 2006. One thing we’re all for is increasing professional standards in blogging. If bloggers want the legal protections afforded to journalists, they have to begin to act at least a little more responsibly when it comes to publishing information.
- Dugie Standeford. EU Online Content Stakeholders Debate DRM’s Value For Copyright Protection. Intellectual Property Watch. Oct. 11, 2006. It is nice to see the European Union having this discussion. This is something the U.S. Copyright Office should address domestically.
- Kirk Makin. High Court Upholds Key Copyright Decision. globeandmail.com. Oct. 10, 2006. Canada’s highest court echoes the Tasini decision.
- Paul Meller. E.U. Patent Chief Hits Back at Criticism. ITworld.com (via IDG News Service). Oct. 10, 2006. Apparently, the U.S. Patent & Trademark Office is not the only patent office coming under fire. According to the story, a patent applicant must still apply for protection in all the European Union countries because the patent regime has not been consolidated to allow applications to cover all E.U. member countries.
- Ed Bott’s Microsoft Report. Vista Mythbusters #7: How Much DRM Is Too Much? Oct. 10, 2006. A behind-the-scenes, technical look at the Vista DRM measures Microsoft announced last week.
- James Morrissey. USTR Outlines Plans To Attack Piracy. Textile World. Oct. 10, 2006. Still more evidence of how the U.S. Trade Representative has become this country’s chief intellectual property legislator. Why haven’t we heard from Congress about this gross constitutional breach?
- SiliconValley.com. YouTube Cuts Deals With CBS, Universal Music Group, Sony BMG. Oct. 9, 2006. When $1.6 massive is on the table, one wouldn’t want a little thing like copyright infringement to get in the way of finalizing a transaction.
- Eric Auchard. Web Video Search Site Blinkx Signs Microsoft Pact. WashingtonPost.com. Oct. 9, 2006. This deal is not as sexy as the YouTube/Google pairing, but this story’s lead paragraph — “YouTube is a load of laughs. Finding something specific you want to watch is another matter” — is right on point.
- Robert Gellman. Government Should Use DRM Sparingly. GCN. Oct. 9, 2006. A privacy consultant discusses the possibility of DRM use by Uncle Sam within the context of DRM use by New Zealand’s government. Apparently, government sponsorship of DRM is gaining steam, since Canada is investigating whether to mandate DRM in order for music companies to sell online music.
- Randy Cohen. The Download On Copyright Wrongs at the Local Library. chron.com. Oct. 7, 2006. Siva Vaidhyanathan puts on his Carrie Russell cape and answers a library copyright question for the online version of the Houston Chronicle.
- Michael Robertson. Getting Zuned. Oct. 5, 2006. The founder of MP3.com discusses the other side of DRM: being at the mercy of content companies despite the price you paid to “own” content.
- Doc Searls Weblog. Newspapers 2.0. Oct. 5, 2006. Doc Searls breaks down the newspaper industry, as he broke down the radio industry a couple days before.
- The Patry Copyright Blog. The 109th Congress. Oct. 5, 2006. William Patry addresses the lack of enacted copyright legislation in the soon-to-be concluded Congress.
- Jonathan Zittrain. A Domain by Any Other Name. Comment Is Free … Oct. 4, 2006. An Oxford professor of internet governance and regulation goes inside ICANN, one of the least well-known and most influential organizations of the information economy.
- Yardena Arar. Sony: An E-Book Worth Reading. PC World. Oct. 1, 2006. Almost four large for the Sony Reader. At that price it had better make Sunday brunch. Also, see David Pogue’s more recent review in The New York Times.
CopyCense™: Code & Content.™ A venture of Seso Group LLC.
Technorati Tags: CopyCense, CopyCense Clippings, copyright, DRM, K. Matthew Dames, licensing
CopyCense Clippings v. 0.9
This week’s edition of CopyCense Clippings features movement in the Google Book Search lawsuit, scuttlebutt over YouTube’s possible acquisition, Microsoft’s thoughts of placing malware on your computer, and the British Library’s intellectual property manifesto.
Article of the Week
Elise Ackerman. Google Seeks Rivals’ Data for Lawsuit Over Libraries. MercuryNews.com. Oct. 5, 2006. Has it been one year, already? We had to chuckle, because this is, at once, a brilliant legal and public relations strategy. From a public relations standpoint, it forces the Open Content Alliance (OCA) folks to divulge information about its project. If OCA doesn’t provide details, it looks like it is hiding something (effectively not “open” after all). The legal strategy, though, is even better. Google is trying to position book digitization as a natural extension of search, while saying to a court “See, everybody’s doing it.” By doing this, the case becomes about the viability of search — not just this single digitization program — and it there is virtually no way that a federal judge is going to issue a ruling that could significantly hamper Google and Microsoft and Yahoo!, as important as those companies are (financially and symbolically) to the American economy. (And if a federal district court judge does issues an adverse ruling, he is virtually certain to have parts of that decision overturned on appeal. No judge likes to have his decisions overturned on appeal.) As K. Matthew Dames wrote in the March 2006 edition of Online noted last year, these and other extra-legal factors point toward a positive outcome for Google, which is all the more reason why the library representative organizations should have been on board supporting Google a long time ago.
Quote of the Week
“The British Library last week voiced its concern after it found that of 30 licensing agreements recently offered to the library for use of digital material, 28 were more restrictive than the rights existing under current copyright law. ‘Our concern is that, if unchecked, this trend will drastically reduce public access, thus significantly undermining the strength and vitality of our creative and educational sectors,’ Chief Executive Lynne Brindley said in a statement.”
– Reuters. Rallies Protest Limits on Digital Copying. News.com. Oct. 3, 2006.
Clippings
- Elise Ackerman and Ryan Blitstein. Google In Talks to Buy YouTube. MercuryNews.com. Oct. 7, 2006. One person interviewed for the story, a “veteran of the Napster wars,” is quoted as saying “I don’t know why Google would be buying YouTube. They can’t just go in and buy a copyright infringement machine. They are a publicly traded company. They have obligations to their stockholders and they have obligations under the law.” Maybe Google thinks it is strong enough, rich enough, and important enough to the American economy at this point (remember all those data centers) that it can sway legislators enough to keep Big Content off its back on the copyright issue. Maybe it has enough gall to think it can do for online video music what Apple did with downloadable music (legitimize it, legalize it, and commercialize it). The Napster analogy is inappropriate because the environment has changed so radically. Then, content companies were arrogant enough to think they could move online at their own pace, under their own conditions. Now, many still outwardly present that notion, but the smartest companies know that they have no choice but to find a way to make the online model work.
- Reuters. U.S. Pushes Russia In WTO Talks to Close MP3 Site. News.com. Oct. 5, 2006. Trade talks and state law are the new ways in which federal copyright law is being introduced and codified. William Patry wrote about this phenomenon three weeks ago.
- Google Watch. ‘My Sharona’ Creators Sue Yahoo, Apple, Amazon and Run DMC for Copyright Infringement. Oct. 4, 2006. The Knack sues legendary hip hop group Run-DMC over the latter’s alleged use of The Knack’s “My Sharona” in the single “It’s Tricky.” “Sharona” was released in 1978; “Tricky” in 1986. The statute of limitations for a civil copyright infringement case is within three years of the claim’s accrual. (Heavy civil procedure concept; we’ll go no further.) We don’t think this one has a chance of getting past summary judgment, but we’ve seen stranger. And while we’re on sampling infringement cases, has anyone heard any update about the Ready To Die case? If so, please let us know.
- Associated Press. Microsoft to Step Up Anti-Piracy Stance With Windows Vista. SiliconValley.com. Oct. 4, 2006. Big Redmond vows “that people running an unlicensed copy of Vista that it believes is pirated will initially be denied access to some of the most anticipated features of the operating system. … If a legitimate copy is not bought within 30 days, the system will curtail functionality much further by restricting users to just the Web browser for an hour at a time.” (Emphasis added.) This really is worthy of a CommuniK. piece, but let’s just briefly parse this here. So Microsoft is essentially saying that it will intentionally shut down your computer if its spider deems that the version of Windows Vista you have on your machine is illegal (or simply not registered). How is that different from what happened in the Sony BMG spyware scandal, besides Microsoft announcing at least 6 months before Vista is ready to ship? The only difference we see is that the announcement was made 6 months before Vista is ready to ship, which suggests that Big Redmond is floating this as a public relations ploy to gauge where the wind might blow on this issue. If there is a big hue and cry — and their should be — then Microsoft will retreat slightly, then position itself as sensitive to customers’ needs while balancing its need to protect its intellectual property. Only then the spyware will come in another form. Does it sound like we’re cynical?
- Thomas J. Lueck. Coliseum Books to Close Permanently by Year’s End. The New York Times. Oct. 3, 2006. One of New York City’s last, great independent book stores succumbs to a changed marketplace. The store, first open on 57th Street near Columbus Circle and now located on 42nd Street across the street from Bryant Park and the main branch of the New York Public Library, first opened in 1974.
- Alan Sipress. Ever So Humble. WashingtonPost.com. Oct. 3, 2006. Reasonable people can debate whether the removal of the “I’m Feeling Lucky” button would lead to “mass protests worldwide,” the article does offer some insights into the spartan design that is the Google home page.
- Laura Holson. Is Th-Th-That All, Folks? The New York Times. Oct. 3, 2006. The lack of imagination in the creative industries is astonishing. Once something works, like animation, then everyone wants to plumb that line in the name of revenue and profit. Recently, we have seen articles that suggest that publicly-held newspaper companies take themselves private as a way to focus on their core mission without having to worry about investors’ quarterly financial demands. Can the same question viably be put to media and entertainment companies?
- David Cohn. At BarCamp, Form Trumps Substance. Wired News. Oct. 3, 2006. Although the story’s title is somewhat dismissive, we think this idea (or rather, the format) actually could be very effective if implemented into a law school curriculum. Intellectual property law is created by, and opined on, some individuals (legislators and judges) who, as a class, are incredibly technologically illiterate. The next generation of lawyers, legislators, and judges must be able to fully understand a wide host of technology issues, understand where they apply commercially and societally, and be able to write laws and opinions that reflect a balance between protection and possibility. (See also, O’Reilly’s Foo Camp.)
- Robin Peek. The British Library Releases Intellectual Property Manifesto. Information Today Newsbreaks. Oct. 2, 2006. Lynne Brindley’s comments last week on copyright were our QoTW, but regretfully we forgot to post a link to the news item, nor did we actually provide information about the British Library’s press release or the actual Manifesto (.pdf). Will James Billington (to whom Register of Copyrights Marybeth Peters reports) please stand up?
- Fred Vogelstein. Rebuilding Microsoft. Wired. October 2006. What happens to the most powerful technology company in the world when it’s iconic co-founder steps down, just at a time when the platform upon which it made its fortune begins to be irrelevant?
- Elise Ackerman. Judge Dismisses Suit Against Google Over Trademarked Terms in Ads. MercuryNews.com. Sept. 29, 2006. Of course, decisions like this (.pdf) are welcome for Google, whose entire financial house is built upon AdWords revenue. This decision helps to settle the law in this area. What we find interesting about this case is its venue. The Northern District of New York typically is not known for handling these types of cases. Most of the time, the venue of choice is the Southern District of New York or any of the California districts.
- 7online.com. N.J. Sales Tax Covering More Items. Sept. 28, 2006. So it seems New Jersey is one of an increasing number of states that is taxing digital downloads. New York State does not tax downloads (yet) but does charge an Internet use tax to all residents and businesses.
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Cornell Agrees to Publishing Industry Reserve Guidelines
Cornell University. Cornell University and Publishers Announce New Copyright Guidelines Governing Use of Digital Course Materials. Sept. 19, 2006. We assiduously avoid reporting on press releases because they don’t constitute news, but this release from Cornell is important because we believe it signals the publishing industry’s attempt to circumvent both the Section 108 and Section 110 exceptions.
The press release notes that the new guidelines “govern the use of electronic course materials on the library’s electronic course reserves system, on faculty and departmental web pages, and through the various ‘course management’ web sites used at Cornell” and “affirm that the use of such content is governed by the same legal principles that apply to printed materials.”
Like the broadcasters’ attempt to ram Webcasting protections through the treaty process, we believe this an attempt to bypass federal copyright law thorough a private agreement between private actors. The Association of American Publishers has been clanging swords over e-reserves for at least a year, and now it gets a major Ivy League institution to sign off on this sort of agreement. And if the “guidelines” are consistent with copyright law, why are they necessary at all? This seems extraordinarily fishy.
(Editor’s Note: Copycense editors originally commented on this article in the Oct. 2, 2006, edition of Copycense Clippings.)
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CopyCense Clippings v. 0.8
This week provides a double dose of Clippings, as other obligations kept us from posting last week’s edition. This week’s edition features an editorial on the H-P leak investigation scandal.
Article of the Week
In lieu of an AoTW, we’ve decided to comment on the H-P leak investigation scandal.
One thing you may notice about this edition of Clippings is the relatively light coverage of the H-P leak investigation. To briefly summarize, H-P (formerly Hewlett Packard, a name virtually synonymous with computing and Silicon Valley) has been fighting back the proverbial S storm of bad publicity after reporting has revealed that company executives authorized a rogue operation designed to identify the source of press leaks that occurred shortly before the company’s board fired former chief executive officer Carly Fiorina. The business press has been “shocked, shocked” that one of the most venerable names in American business, which also is one of the world’s largest technology companies, would authorize spying and possible “pretexting” in order to find identify the leaker.
(“Pretexting” essentially is pretending you’re someone else as a means of acquiring or getting access to data. It’s a technique used by hackers all the time.)
Of course, we have a theory about why this has become a significant story at all. The business press has made this a story because it involves the business press, and reporters can rant about how they’ve been wronged. As reporters have unearthed more details about the operation, they have discovered that in the process of getting this information, H-P essentially was investigating the press as much as it was investigating the leak. Reporters get very uppity when they are being investigated, instead of doing the investigating.
Here’s something obvious about leaks that few confess: for a leak to be effective, someone with private, often confidential information has to be willing to spill the beans, and a member of the press has to willingly and knowingly agree to divulge that information to the public. In other words, reporters are as integral to the leak as the person with knowledge of private, often confidential information.
Again, this seems obvious, but why is it we rarely hear about reporter and media outlet complicity in unearthing private information? Isn’t the act of making private information public as problematic (perhaps immoral) as divulging that information in the first place? Something that continues to amaze is is the halo of credibility and (dare we say) moral righteousness that follow San Francisco Chronicle reporters Lance Williams and Mark Fainaru-Wada. Williams and Fainaru-Wada are the reporters that published leaked grand jury testimony in the Chronicle and in the book Game of Shadows. According to federal law, it is illegal for most people associated with the federal grand jury process to divulge the contents of grand jury testimony.
In other words, Congress has decided that grand jury testimony in a federal trial or investigation is supposed to remain secret. Now, we’re loathe to blindly follow our Congress, but this rule seems to be in place for a good reason. And it is a rule that has worked relatively well. If this is the case, then how is it that two reporters who published (and likely solicited disclosure of) secret federal grand jury testimony are hailed as great reporters — patriots, even — for unearthing a story that is the best interests of the American public? No, Williams and Fainaru-Wada were accessories to a federal crime and should go to jail.
The reporters in the H-P investigation seem to want to imbue themselves with the same halo of righteous credibility that has illuminated the acts and reputations of Williams, Fainara-Wada, former New York Times reporter Judith Miller, and a host of other reporters who break law or ethics in the name of trailblazing journalism. Again, there are two sides to a leak: the leaker, and the person who decides to leak. And inordinately, the person who decides to leak does so primarily — if not exclusively — because of self-interest, not because there is a story that is critically important to the country and its citizens.
The business press corps has made this H-P incident into a “big story” as much because H-P executives dared to investigate the press as it is because of what H-P did. We just wish the corps would stop whining. If you’re in the leak reportage game, what’s good for the goose should be good for the gander.
Quote of the Week
Tom Espiner. British Library Calls for Digital Copyright Action. News.com. Sept. 25, 2006. “Unless there is a serious updating of copyright law to recognize the changing technological environment, the law becomes an ass,” so says Lynne Brindley, CEO of the British Library. We couldn’t agree more, but the way the American copyright law currently is updated skews so much toward privatization that one could reasonably wonder whether no updates are better than the industry-sponsored updates.
Clippings
- Jon Healey. What’s Holding Up Movie Downloads. LATimes.com. Oct. 1, 2006. This is repeat of Rob Pegoraro’s column, which was our AoTW two weeks ago. Again, the L.A. Times shows it is unafraid to skewer Hollywood over its lazy business practices.
- Damon Darlin. H.P., Red-Faced but Still Selling. The New York Times. Oct. 1, 2006. See our commentary above.
- Siva Vaidhyanathan. Copyright Jungle. Columbia Journalism Review. September/October 2006. Vaidhyanathan writes about media coverage of the copyright wars, a theme K. Matthew Dames also covers in “Framing the Copyright Debate,” which is published in the September 2006 issue of Information Today.
- Victoria Shannon. U.S. Loosens Its Control Over Web Address Manager. The New York Times. Sept. 30, 2006. On the surface, it seems proper that the American government begin to cede control over the domain name system. Even though much of the development of the Internet has U.S. origins, the Internet is — and always should be — an international network that is beyond the actual or de facto control of a single nation. Perhaps the only thing worse than the Internet being controlled by American government, though, is for the Internet to be controlled by private corporations. According to a companion WashingtonPost.com story, corporate control over the domain name system is likely to succeed the end of the most recent renewal of the cooperative agreement between the Commerce Department and the Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers (ICANN).
- Saul Hansell. YouTube’s Video Poker. The New York Times. Sept. 30, 2006. You know you matter in media when you get the invite to Allen & Company’s annual Sun Valley retreat. YouTube’s Chad Hurley just got his first invite.
- Steve Friess. Pod People Ponder Litigation. Wired News. Sept. 29, 2006. Underneath all of Apple’s outward manifestations of cooperation and sharing lies a tremendously competitive (and one might add slightly paranoid) company. Apple sagely identified the move toward consumer-generated content, but unfortunately several of its business moves over the past year — remember the leak lawsuits — suggests it will engage in typically corporate behavior in order to preserve its competitive advantage. What an irony: the company that champions DIY media is also the company that seeks to control the direction in and pace at which the DIY media movement evolves.
- Kate Norton. Google in Tussle for Digital Rights. CIO Today. Sept. 28, 2006. It should be no surprise that news outlets are fighting Google tooth and nail over alleged unauthorized reproduction of its content. (Google also is fighting Agence France Presse over a similar issue.) While Google issued its own spin on content, what is interesting about this ruling is that it reminds us that not everyone is enamored of Google (especially, it seems, Europeans), and that copyright is not a strictly American concept.
- Ars Technica. Royalty Agreement Reached for U.K. Digital Music Downloads. Sept. 28, 2006. “Those who remember the shift from cassette tapes to CDs will recall that during that transition, packaging cost savings were not passed on to the artists (or indeed, to the consumer) either. The music industry has shown itself to be slow to change, but will the transition from CDs to digital downloads prove to be any different from previous shifts? So far, it is looking like more of the same.”
- The Patry Copyright Blog. Grokster Remand Opinion. Sept. 27, 2006. William Patry, expectedly, weighs in with insightful analysis about the appellate court’s fact-dependent decision. (.pdf) What’s special about Patry’s commentary, however, is his confirmation that inducement now is an official liability standard, and his opening comments that refer to the economics of copyright litigation.
- Marie Jackson. Virtual School “Beats Real Thing.” BBC News. Sept. 27, 2006. With advances in technology and a generation of increasingly technology literate students and instructors, virtual education will become standardized instead of an anomaly. What will be interesting is how the law follows, particularly amendments to legislation such as the TEACH Act. 43(b)log. Kozinski on Fair Use and Injunctions. Sept. 27, 2006. Rebecca Tushnet’s reportage of “Fair Use Revisited,” as speech by Ninth Circuit judge Alex Kozinski. American University’s Washington College of Law has a Webcast available for viewing.
- Bit Player. The Current Shifts Against StreamCast. Sept. 27, 2006. The federal case against StreamCast, the parent of file-sharing program Morpheus, applies (.pdf) the inducement standard the Supreme Court articulated in last year’s MGM v. Grokster decision. This is not news. What is noteworthy, however, is that this post comes from a Los Angeles Times-sponsored blog that chronicles “Hollywood’s love-hate relationship with technology.
- Ars Technica. Congress Looks at P2P in Academia. Sept. 27, 2006. With all due respect to Ars, which is a wonderful publication, this article really should be entitled “The RIAA Looks at P2P in Academia, And Congress Complies, Since Either It Doesn’t Know How to Challenge Big Music’s ‘Studies’ or Intentionally Avoids Doing So.” Perhaps more than anything, consumers, librarians, and educators need some person or entity with the skills to analyze Big Content’s methodology, and, preferably, put that methodology into context. (Fortunately, Ars itself took issue with Big Music’s latest piracy numbers.)
- Michael Hickins. IBM Pushes New Patent Policies. InternetNews.com. Sept. 27, 2006. At its core, this seems like an interesting way for the world’s most prolific patent filer improve the process. We see, however, at least one possible ulterior motive. This could be a way for IBM to control the pace of innovation.
- Eric Lach. Copyright Check: Students Required To Comply. The Wesleyan Argus. Sept. 26, 2006. This story proves that Big Music officially has gotten higher education to do its bidding on the copyright front. One would think that universities would figure out a way to stare down the content industry to come to an equitable truce.
- Jim Abrams. Congress Moves to Protect Trademarks. SeattlePI.com. September 25, 2006. Congress passes the Trademark Dilution Revision Act of 2006 (H.R. 683), which effectively overturns the Supreme Court’s 2003 ruling against Victoria’s Secret, which filed trade infringement and dilution claims against an Elizabethtown, Ky., adult novelty shop originally named Victor’s Secret.
- Cornell University. Cornell University and Publishers Announce New Copyright Guidelines Governing Use of Digital Course Materials. Sept. 19, 2006. We assiduously avoid reporting on press releases because they don’t constitute news, but this release from Cornell is important because we believe it signals Big Publishing’s attempt to circumvent both the Section 108 and Section 110 exceptions. The press release notes that the new guidelines “govern the use of electronic course materials on the library’s electronic course reserves system, on faculty and departmental web pages, and through the various ‘course management’ web sites used at Cornell” and “affirm that the use of such content is governed by the same legal principles that apply to printed materials.” Like the broadcasters’ attempt to ram Webcasting protections through the treaty process, we believe this an attempt to bypass federal copyright law thorough a private agreement between private actors. The American Association of Publishers has been clanging swords over e-reserves for at least a year, and now it gets a major Ivy League institution to sign off on this sort of agreement. And if the “guidelines” are consistent with copyright law, why are they necessary at all? This seems extraordinarily fishy.
- SiliconValley.com. Gonzales Calls for Law to Require ISPs to Preserve Customer Data. Sept. 19, 2006. We’ve discussed this before, but what’s notable about this story is the following quote from Attorney General Gonzalez: “We respect civil liberties, but we have to harmonize this so we can get more information,” he said in the story. It seems that even the country’s top legal officer has adopted copyright doublespeak.
- Ryan Blitstein. YouTube Inks Deal With Warner. MercuryNews.com. Sept. 19, 2006. This is the first of many deals you can expect YouTube to ink with media companies as it tries to avoid getting sued into oblivion. The question is how will YouTube preserve itself despite the deals?
- Ars Technica. From Vinyl to Silicon. Sept. 12, 2006. Ars publishes a great review of contemporary DJ software. Had we not gotten on our soapbox over the H-P issue, this likely would have been our AoTW.
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