Showing posts with label copyright. Show all posts
Showing posts with label copyright. Show all posts

Sunday, April 1, 2007

10 Myths About Copyright

1) "If it doesn't have a copyright notice, it's not copyrighted."

This was true in the past, but today almost all major nations follow the Berne copyright convention. For example, in the USA, almost everything created privately and originally after April 1, 1989 is copyrighted and protected whether it has a notice or not. The default you should assume for other people's works is that they are copyrighted and may not be copied unless you know otherwise. There are some old works that lost protection without notice, but frankly you should not risk it unless you know for sure.

2) "If I don't charge for it, it's not a violation."

False. Whether you charge can affect the damages awarded in court, but that's main difference under the law. It's still a violation if you give it away -- and there can still be serious damages if you hurt the commercial value of the property. There is an exception for personal copying of music, which is not a violation, though courts seem to have said that doesn't include widescale anonymous personal copying as Napster. If the work has no commercial value, the violation is mostly technical and is unlikely to result in legal action. Fair use determinations (see below) do sometimes depend on the involvement of money.

3) "If it's posted publicly on some site it's in the public domain."

False. Nothing modern and creative is in the public domain anymore unless the owner explicitly puts it in the public domain. Explicitly, as in you have a note from the author/owner saying, "I grant this to the public domain." Those exact words or words very much like them.

4) "My posting was just fair use!"

The "fair use" exemption to (U.S.) copyright law was created to allow things such as commentary, parody, news reporting, research and education about copyrighted works without the permission of the author. That's vital so that copyright law doesn't block your freedom to express your own works - only the ability to appropriate other people's. Intent, and damage to the commercial value of the work are important considerations. Are you reproducing an article from the New York Times because you needed to in order to criticise the quality of the New York Times, or because you couldn't find time to write your own story, or didn't want your readers to have to register at the New York Times web site? The first is probably fair use, the others probably aren't.

5) "If you don't defend your copyright you lose it." -- "Somebody has that name copyrighted!"

False. Copyright is effectively never lost these days, unless explicitly given away. You also can't "copyright a name" or anything short like that, such as almost all titles. You may be thinking of trade marks, which apply to names, and can be weakened or lost if not defended.

You generally trademark terms by using them to refer to your brand of a generic type of product or service. Like an "Apple" computer. Apple Computer "owns" that word applied to computers, even though it is also an ordinary word. Apple Records owns it when applied to music. Neither owns the word on its own, only in context, and owning a mark doesn't mean complete control -- see a more detailed treatise on this law for details.

6) "If I make up my own stories, but base them on another work, my new work belongs to me."

False. U.S. Copyright law is quite explicit that the making of what are called "derivative works" -- works based or derived from another copyrighted work -- is the exclusive province of the owner of the original work. This is true even though the making of these new works is a highly creative process. If you write a story using settings or characters from somebody else's work, you need that author's permission.

There is a major exception -- criticism and parody. The fair use provision says that if you want to make fun of something like Star Trek, you don't need their permission to include Mr. Spock. This is not a loophole; you can't just take a non-parody and claim it is one on a technicality. The way "fair use" works is you get sued for copyright infringement, and you admit you did copy, but that your copying was a fair use. A subjective judgment on, among other things, your goals, is then made.

7) "They can't get me, defendants in court have powerful rights!"

Copyright law is mostly civil law. If you violate copyright you would usually get sued, not be charged with a crime. "Innocent until proven guilty" is a principle of criminal law, as is "proof beyond a reasonable doubt." Sorry, but in copyright suits, these don't apply the same way or at all. It's mostly which side and set of evidence the judge or jury accepts or believes more, though the rules vary based on the type of infringement. In civil cases you can even be made to testify against your own interests.

8) "Oh, so copyright violation isn't a crime or anything?"

Actually, in the 90s in the USA commercial copyright violation involving more than 10 copies and value over $2500 was made a felony. So watch out. (At least you get the protections of criminal law.) On the other hand, don't think you're going to get people thrown in jail for posting your E-mail. The courts have much better things to do. This is a fairly new, untested statute. In one case an operator of a pirate BBS that didn't charge was acquited because he didn't charge, but congress amended the law to cover that.

9) "It doesn't hurt anybody -- in fact it's free advertising."

It's up to the owner to decide if they want the free ads or not. If they want them, they will be sure to contact you. Don't rationalize whether it hurts the owner or not, ask them. Usually that's not too hard to do. Time past, ClariNet published the very funny Dave Barry column to a large and appreciative Usenet audience for a fee, but some person didn't ask, and forwarded it to a mailing list, got caught, and the newspaper chain that employs Dave Barry pulled the column from the net, pissing off everybody who enjoyed it. Even if you can't think of how the author or owner gets hurt, think about the fact that piracy on the net hurts everybody who wants a chance to use this wonderful new technology to do more than read other people's flamewars.

10) "They e-mailed me a copy, so I can post it."

To have a copy is not to have the copyright. All the E-mail you write is copyrighted. However, E-mail is not, unless previously agreed, secret. So you can certainly report on what E-mail you are sent, and reveal what it says. You can even quote parts of it to demonstrate. Frankly, somebody who sues over an ordinary message would almost surely get no damages, because the message has no commercial value, but if you want to stay strictly in the law, you should ask first. On the other hand, don't go nuts if somebody posts E-mail you sent them. If it was an ordinary non-secret personal letter of minimal commercial value with no copyright notice (like 99.9% of all E-mail), you probably won't get any damages if you sue them. Note as well that, the law aside, keeping private correspondence private is a courtesy one should usually honour.

11) "So I can't ever reproduce anything?"

Myth #11 (I didn't want to change the now-famous title of this article) is actually one sometimes generated in response to this list of 10 myths. No, copyright isn't an iron-clad lock on what can be published. Indeed, by many arguments, by providing reward to authors, it encourages them to not just allow, but fund the publication and distribution of works so that they reach far more people than they would if they were free or unprotected -- and unpromoted. However, it must be remembered that copyright has two main purposes, namely the protection of the author's right to obtain commercial benefit from valuable work, and more recently the protection of the author's general right to control how a work is used.

While copyright law makes it technically illegal to reproduce almost any new creative work (other than under fair use) without permission, if the work is unregistered and has no real commercial value, it gets very little protection. The author in this case can sue for an injunction against the publication, actual damages from a violation, and possibly court costs. Actual damages means actual money potentially lost by the author due to publication, plus any money gained by the defendant. But if a work has no commercial value, such as a typical E-mail message or conversational USENET posting, the actual damages will be zero. Only the most vindictive (and rich) author would sue when no damages are possible, and the courts don't look kindly on vindictive plaintiffs, unless the defendants are even more vindictive.

The author's right to control what is done with a work, however, has some validity, even if it has no commercial value. If you feel you need to violate a copyright "because you can get away with it because the work has no value" you should ask yourself why you're doing it. In general, respecting the rights of creators to control their creations is a principle many advocate adhering to.

Friday, March 30, 2007

Anti-Plagiarism Service Sued for Copyright Violation

By David Johnston

In a strange twist of fate, the anti-plagiarism service TurnItIn has been sued by four high school students for violating copyright laws. The claim stems from TurnItIn’s policy of adding the text of student papers to its database when they are checked for plagiarism. However, the students noticed that requests that their papers not be added to TurnItIn’s database were ignored, violating their intellectual property rights.

They argue that TurnItIn should not be able to use student papers which it does not own in order to make money on its anti-plagiarism service. The suit specifies 6 papers that were copyrighted by the students before being handed in. The students are asking for $150,000 compensation per paper, though they claim to not want or expect the money.


Read more on RealTechNews

Sunday, March 25, 2007

Software sleuth hunts copyright abusers

By Michael Liedtke

Vance Ikezoye didn't set out to become one of the digital revolution's top copyright cops when he first began tinkering with the technology that launched Audible Magic Corp.

At first, all he was looking for was a better way to identify songs and advertisements broadcast on the radio.

But Ikezoye's ambitions have shifted with the media landscape, positioning Audible Magic to control what can and can't be watched on the Internet. Online video sites are adopting its filtering tools to prevent the kind of copyright trouble that provoked a legal battle between Viacom Inc. and Google Inc.'s YouTube.com.

"It's been an interesting ride," said Ikezoye, Audible Magic's 49-year-old chief executive.

"We are kind of in the middle of everything, where we are part mediator and part battering ram."


Read more on Canada.com

Sunday, March 18, 2007

Viacom v Google: The $1bn battle for content

By Tim Luckhurst

When is copyright theft not illegal? In the struggle to answer this defining question of the internet age, one entertainment giant has declared war. Viacom, owner of the Paramount and Dreamworks film studios and television channels including MTV, Nickelodeon and the Comedy Channel, has launched a $1bn (£515m) copyright-infringement suit against Google.

The case, which accuses Google's YouTube video-sharing site of building "a lucrative business out of exploiting the devotion of fans to others' creative works", has the potential to redefine how content is used on the internet. "If it goes to court, this will be the biggest case since Napster [the music-sharing website shut down by litigation in 2002]," says Edgar Forbes, senior lecturer in media law and intellectual property at Bournemouth University.


Read more on The Independent

Saturday, March 17, 2007

Another brick in the copyright wall

By Steve Johnson

The news this week that Viacom is suing YouTube and its owner, Google, over alleged massive copyright infringement brings to mind some other lawsuits I'd like to see:

- FedEx sues Amazon for using boxes that are way bigger than the stuff inside. Tupperware, a leading proponent of accurate volume estimation, joins the suit.

- Users sue MySpace for being an inchoate mess where too many bands become so hot that you momentarily overlook how bad the music is. Also, your "friends" aren't really there for you when you need them.

- Microsoft sues iTunes because it "really, truly" had the idea for a hip online music store first and has the minutes from hundreds of hours of New Product Contemplation Committee meetings to prove it.

This is not to say the Viacom-GooTube lawsuit is a laughing matter. At stake could be, if the action is litigated to the hilt, nothing less than the future of copyright on the Web.


Read more on Chicago Tribune

Thursday, March 15, 2007

Copyright Law Is a Battlefield

Viacom sues Google for letting copyright-protected material slip onto YouTube. Brewster Kahle sues the federal government over a public-domain policy he considers restrictive. The recording industry sues college students -- and, some critics say, just about everyone else in sight -- for downloading music illegally. Lawsuits are the lingua franca of intellectual-property debate, and that's not likely to change any time soon, says Larry Downes.

Mr. Downes, a technology consultant and adjunct professor at the University of California at Berkeley, draws parallels between the current information wars and the Industrial Revolution -- which spurred the rise of communism and the progressive movement, both of them "rejections of a legal system that no longer functioned, and which could not adapt to changing realities."


Read more on Chronicle

Monday, March 12, 2007

Government may relax copyright law for educational purposes

On Feb. 27, Reps. Rick Boucher, D-Va., Zoe Lofgren, D-Calif., and John Doolittle, R-Calif., introduced a new bill making it easier for scholars to access copyrighted material without impeding on copyright laws. The Freedom and Innovation Revitalizing U.S. Entrepreneurship Act of 2007, also referred to as The Fair Use Act, will limit the amount of control that content owners are granted by copyright laws over their work.

The act, which is supported by the American Library Association and the American Association of Law Libraries, "is intended to promote innovation, encourage the introduction of new technology, enhance library preservation efforts and protect the fair use rights of consumers," Boucher said upon introducing the new act to Congress.


Read more on Stater Online

Friday, March 9, 2007

When the Internet Radio Copyright Dust Settles...

I received over a dozen calls yesterday from webcasters and writers wanting my take on what the Copyright Royalty Board ruling means. Today's assessment is that this horse is at fast gallop, and it looks like only a few riders have their feet in the stirrups. If you've ridden a horse you know having those feet in the stirrup is required when you try to pull back on the reins.

Want to slow this doomsday scene down? Take a few hours to read through the 115-page CRB ruling. As reading it is more a cure for insomnia, maybe the Rip Van Winkle effect will take hold and when you wake up this copyright issue will be history - or, at the very least, still on appeal.


Read more on AudioGraphics.com

Thursday, March 8, 2007

Music companies slap Yahoo China with copyright suit

Eleven music companies, including Warner Music Group Corp and Sony BMG, filed a lawsuit against Yahoo China for alleged copyright infringement by providing links to unlicensed music, an industry group said.

The suit, filed in January, was accepted by Beijing's Number 2 Intermediate Court on Tuesday, Leong May-seey, Asia-Pacific regional director for the International Federation of the Phonographic Industry, said by telephone from Hong Kong yesterday. The IFPI represents companies such as Warner, Sony BMG, EMI Group PLC and Universal Music Group.

The case against Yahoo China comes about four months after Baidu.com Inc, operator of China's largest search engine, won a suit brought by music companies claiming the company allowed illegal song downloads on its Web site. About 85 percent of recordings in China are illegal, with sales of pirated music worth US$410 million in 2005, according to the federation.



Read more on Taipei Times

Tuesday, March 6, 2007

Microsoft's Copyright Assault on Google

by Catherine Holahan

Hoping to convince publishers to back its own online book search service, the software titan comes out swinging against the search giant.

Microsoft threw a one-two public relations punch against Google, starting Mar. 5. The sparring got under way when Microsoft attorney Thomas Rubin publicly criticized Google's position on copyright—first in a newspaper editorial and then again the following day at a publishing industry conference.


Read more on BusinessWeek

Russia among top 10 worst countries for copyright piracy

The annual report by the International Intellectual Property Alliance (IIPA) on global piracy has ranked Russia in the top 10 of the world's worst offending countries for property rights.

The report ranks Russia together with India, Pakistan, and Nigeria as the worst countries for piracy, with Bangladesh at the top of the list.

"Russia's economy is ingrained with high-levels of piracy", the report said, adding that the country had failed to protect property rights.


Read more on RIA Novosti

Monday, March 5, 2007

FAIR USE Act aims to clarify copyright limits

By Thomas Claburn

Calling the fair use rights of consumers of digital media "severely threatened," two congressmen on Tuesday introduced the Freedom And Innovation Revitalizing U.S. Entrepreneurship Act of 2007 (FAIR USE Act) to restore balance to copyright law.

U.S. Representatives Rick Boucher (D-VA) and John Doolittle (R-CA) proposed the legislation to amend the Digital Millennium Copyright Act. The 1988 landmark bill is widely seen by consumer advocacy and cyber liberties groups as favoring corporate owners of copyrighted content at the expense of consumers and fair use rights.


Read more on Electronics Supply & Manufacturing

Friday, February 23, 2007

Piracy and Public Perception

The editors of the Wheeling News-Register are rather disgusted by college students who download music illegally, a fact they make very clear in an unsigned editorial:

To their credit, some universities are cutting off campus Internet access to culprits. Good. They should do all they can to help enforce the law — which happens to involve copyrights, much the same as those college professors have on the textbooks they write.


Read more on The Chronicle

Wednesday, February 21, 2007

Google sees video anti-piracy tools as priority

Google Inc., racing to head off a media industry backlash over its video Web site YouTube, will soon offer anti-piracy technologies to help all copyright holders thwart unauthorised video sharing, its chief executive said on Wednesday.

YouTube, which Google acquired late last year, plans to introduce technology to help media companies identify pirated videos uploaded by users.

But, to date, the tools are only being offered as part of broader licensing talks, media industry insiders complain.

Read more on Reuters.co.uk

Monday, February 19, 2007

MySpace to block unauthorized videos



MySpace will use software to monitor videos posted to the site in a bid to block unauthorised use of copyrighted content. The social networking giant will use technology to analyse videos' audio tracks to identify infringing posts.

The move is intended to placate the big copyright-holding music and entertainment industries, which are taking legal action against social networking and video sharing sites over the copyright infringing activity of their users.


Read more on The Register

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