COPYRIGHTS PROF. JANICKE FALL 2015. 2015 Copyrights2 CONSTITUTIONAL POWER ART. I, SEC. 8 (8):...

Post on 03-Jan-2016

215 views 0 download

Tags:

Transcript of COPYRIGHTS PROF. JANICKE FALL 2015. 2015 Copyrights2 CONSTITUTIONAL POWER ART. I, SEC. 8 (8):...

COPYRIGHTS

PROF. JANICKEFALL 2015

2015 Copyrights 2

CONSTITUTIONAL POWER

• ART. I, SEC. 8 (8):

SCIENCE USEFUL ARTS

AUTHORS INVENTORS

WRITINGS DISCOVERIES

2015 Copyrights 3

REQUISITES FOR PROTECTION:

• ORIGINALITY (i.e. NOT COPIED)

• WORK OF AUTHORSHIP

• FIXATION

2015 Copyrights 4

FIXATION REQUIREMENT

• WORK MUST BE FIXED IN A TANGIBLE MEDIUM OF EXPRESSION (§ 102)

• MORE THAN TRANSITORY TIME (§101)

• HENCE, NOT COPYRIGHTED: – MY CLASSES (WITH NO RECORDING)– PASTOR’S UNWRITTEN SERMON

2015 Copyrights 5

WORKS COVERED• LITERARY (INCL. SOFTWARE)• MUSICAL (INCL. WORDS)• DRAMATIC (INCL. MUSIC)• PANTOMIME / CHOREOGRAPHY• PICTORIAL, GRAPHIC,

SCULPTURAL• MOTION PICTURES AND OTHER A/V• ARCHITECTURAL WORKS

2015 Copyrights 6

WORKS COVERED

• SOUND RECORDINGS (AS SEPARATE WORKS)– RECORD USUALLY HAS MORE THAN

ONE “WORK” ON IT: • THE RECORDING WORK, AND • THE UNDERLYING (E.G., MUSIC) WORK

(WHICH COULD IN TURN BE BASED ON A POEM)

• THE ARRANGEMENT OF THE MUSIC

2015 Copyrights 7

– SOMETIMES NOT CLEAR WHO THE “AUTHOR” OF THE RECORDING WORK (“SOUND RECORDING”) IS:

• SINGER, BAND, STUDIO ENGR.?

• USUALLY HANDLED BY CONTRACT

– COPYRIGHT IS OWNED BY THE AUTHOR, UNTIL ASSIGNED

2015 Copyrights 8

GOVERNMENT WORKS

• NO COPYRIGHT IF IT IS CREATED BY U.S. GOVERNMENT ACTIVITY §105

• BUT U.S. CAN ACQUIRE OTHERS’ COPYRIGHTS IN THEIR WORKS

2015 Copyrights 9

ORIGINALITY REQUIREMENT (§ 102)

• NOT HARD TO MEET• SLOGAN MAY BE TOO SHORT (TRY

TRADEMARK)• DOESN’T MEAN NEW• TWO PEOPLE THINK OF THE SAME

POEM → TWO VALID COPYRIGHTS

2015 Copyrights 10

ORIGINALITY REQUIREMENT MET (§ 102)

• EXAMPLE: TAKING A PHOTOGRAPH OF BUILDING

• EXAMPLE: PAINTER COPYING THE MONA LISA [NO PERMISSION NEEDED IN THIS INSTANCE, BECAUSE ORIGINAL WORK IS VERY OLD, IN THE PUBLIC DOMAIN]

2015 Copyrights 11

WHAT IS NOT ENOUGH

• WHITE PAGES OF PHONE BOOK (FEIST

PUBLICATIONS, INC. v. RURAL TELEPHONE SERVICE CO., 499 U.S. 340

(1991)

2015 Copyrights 12

IDEA-EXPRESSION DICHOTOMY

• THE CENTRAL DOCTRINE OF COPYRIGHT LAW (§ 102(b))

• NO PROTECTION FOR IDEAS

– OTHERS CAN TAKE IT FREELY, USE IT IN THEIR OWN ORIGINAL WORKS

• ONLY PROTECTION IS FOR HOW YOU EXPRESS THE IDEA

2015 Copyrights 13

IDEA-EXPRESSION DICHOTOMY

• EXAMPLE: I WRITE A BOOK DESCRIBING THE CONSTRUCTION OF BRIDGES: MATERIALS NEEDED; WORKERS NEEDED; ETC.– YOU BUILD A BRIDGE USING THE INFO

IN MY BOOK – NOT AN INFRINGEMENT– YOU PHOTOCOPY THE BOOK – IS AN

INFRINGEMENT

IDEA-EXPRESSION DICHOTOMY

• EXAMPLE: I WRITE A BOOK ON THE GOOD AND BAD FEATURES OF ELECTION CAMPAIGNS

• YOU PLAN AND CARRY OUT A CAMPAIGN USING MY SUGGESTIONS– NOT AN INFRINGEMENT

• COPYING CHAPTERS OF MY BOOK – IS AN INFRINGEMENT

2015 Copyrights 14

2015 Copyrights 15

COMPILATIONS

• CAN BE “ORIGINAL” WORKS; COPYRIGHTED UPON FIXATION, IF THE PIECES WERE LAWFULLY TAKEN (§ 103(a))

• PROTECTION EXTENDS ONLY TO THE SELECTION OR ARRANGEMENT (I.E., SEQUENCING) (§ 103(b))

2015 Copyrights 16

DERIVATIVE WORKS

• PERHAPS THE MOST POWERFUL AND VALUABLE OF ALL COPYRIGHT RIGHTS

• EXAMPLES:– SCREENPLAY FROM A BOOK (2 ©s)– TRANSLATION OF A NOVEL (2 ©s)– ORCHESTRATION OF A SONG/ARIA (e.g.,

Liebestod from Tristan und Isolde)

2015 Copyrights 17

WHERE THE UNDERLYING WORK IS STILL UNDER COPYRIGHT

• IF DERIVATIVE WORK IS MADE WITHOUT PERMISSION OF COPYRIGHT OWNER: – IT IS MERELY AN INFRINGEMENT; NO

NEW COPYRIGHT IS CREATED!

• IF DERIVATIVE WORK IS MADE WITH PERMISSION: IS A SECOND COPYRIGHTED WORK

2015 Copyrights 18

EXAMPLE

• A COPYRIGHTED PLAY

• SOMEONE WITH PERMISSION MAKES A MOVIE

• A SECOND COPYRIGHT EXISTS, OWNED BY THE MOVIE-MAKER

2015 Copyrights 19

• SOMEONE COPYING THE MOVIE INFRINGES BOTH COPYRIGHTS

• FACES TWO SUITS

2015 Copyrights 20

WHEN IDEA (UNPROTECTABLE) AND EXPRESSION

(PROTECTABLE) COLLIDE

• SOMETIMES HARD TO TELL WHICH IS WHICH

• CALLED “MERGER”• IN THAT CASE, PROTECTION FAILS

BAKER v. SELDEN, 101 U.S. 99 (1879)

EXAMPLE OF MERGER

• I WRITE AN ARTICLE SAYING JACK SMITH SHOULD RUN FOR GOVERNOR

• YOU MAKE UP CAMPAIGN SIGNS SAYING “JACK SMITH FOR GOVERNOR”

• THE IDEA AND ITS EXPRESSION HAVE MERGED

2015 Copyrights 21

CASES

• BAKER v. SELDEN

• LAUREYSSENS

2015 Copyrights 22

2015 Copyrights 23

RIGHTS

• ARE DIVISIBLE FOR LICENSING OR ASSIGNMENT

• THERE ARE NO REDUNDANCIES

• >>>

2015 Copyrights 24

RIGHTS

• MAKE COPIES (§106(1))

• CREATE DERIVATIVE WORKS (§106(2))

– VERY POWERFUL, ESP. WHEN INFRINGEMENT CLAIM FAILS

– APPLIES EVEN IF DERIV. WORK IS ORIGINAL AND WOULD BE COPYRIGHTED

• DISTRIBUTING COPIES PUBLICLY, EVEN IF YOU DIDN’T MAKE THEM (§106(3))

2015 Copyrights 25

RIGHTS

• PERFORM THE WORK PUBLICLY §106(4)

• DISPLAY THE WORK PUBLICLY §106(5)

– BUT: OWNER OF THE ACTUAL ARTICLE (e.g. PAINTING) OR LAWFUL COPY IS ALLOWED TO DISPLAY PUBLICLY OR AUTHORIZE OTHERS (MUSEUM) TO DO SO§109(c)

2015 Copyrights 26

“MORAL RIGHTS”

• WE HAVE THEM, IN THE COPYRIGHT STATUTE, BUT ONLY FOR FINE ART WORKS, WHERE NO MORE THAN 200 NUMBERED COPIES ARE MADE BY THE “AUTHOR”:– PAINTINGS– DRAWINGS– PRINTS– STILL PHOTO PRINTS– SCULPTURE CASTINGS

2015 Copyrights 27

“MORAL RIGHTS”

• ATTRIBUTION §106A (a)(1)

– INCLUDES RIGHT OF NON-ATTRIBUTION IF IT’S NOT YOURS

– DON’T SAY IT’S MINE IF YOU’VE CHANGED IT IN ANY WAY

• INTEGRITY §106A (a)(3)

– DON’T CHANGE MY WORK

2015 Copyrights 28

“MORAL RIGHTS”

• ARE NOT ASSIGNABLE §106A (e)

• TERM: LIFE §106A(d)

2015 Copyrights 29

“MORAL RIGHTS”

• ARE BIG IN OTHER COUNTRIES– FOR ALL KINDS OF WORKS, E.G.,

BOOKS

• IN U.S., PROTECTION BY THE COPYRIGHT LAW IS LIMITED TO WORK OF VISUAL ART

2015 Copyrights 30

“MORAL RIGHTS”

• FOR OTHER TYPES OF WORKS, U.S. AUTHORS USE § 43(a) OF THE LANHAM ACT [15 U.S.C. § 1125(a)], SUING FOR UNFAIR COMPETITION

• BIG PUSH FOR U.S. EXTENSION OF MORAL RIGHTS, BUT SEEMS NOT TO BE MOVING IN CONGRESS

2015 Copyrights 31

“INFRINGING” MEANS:

• EITHER: COPYING A SUBSTANTIAL PORTION OF PROTECTED MATTER FROM THE WORK

• OR: NOT COPYING EXACTLY, BUT PRODUCING A SUBSTANTIALLY IDENTICAL WORK AFTER ACCESS

CASE

• PARAMOUNT

2015 Copyrights 32

2015 Copyrights 33

THEREFORE, SUBJECT TO CERTAIN EXEMPTIONS, THE

INFRINGING ACTS ARE:

• MAKING “COPIES”• MAKING A DERIVATIVE WORK• DISTRIBUTING “COPIES” PUBLICLY• PERFORMING WORK PUBLICLY• DISPLAYING WORK PUBLICLY§106

“THE RIGHTS”

• A VAGUE TERM IN COPYRIGHT

• GOOD LAWYERS SAY: “SHE ACQUIRED THE RIGHT TO _____”

2015 Copyrights 34

2015 Copyrights 35

FAIR USE DEFENSE

• COULD BE FOR ANY TYPE OF WORK §107

• PURPOSE IS JUST A THRESHOLD ISSUE – USE LEVEL MUST STILL BE “FAIR”

2015 Copyrights 36

THE FAIR-USE FACTORS:

• PURPOSE AND CHARACTER OF USE– AN ALTRUISTIC OR SOCIALLY DESIRABLE

PURPOSE HELPS– BUT $$ DOESN’T CREATE PRESUMPTION OF

UNFAIRNESS

• NATURE OF THE COPYRIGHTED WORK– COPYING MORE LIKELY TO BE FAIR IF FROM

A SCIENCE HYPOTHESIS THAN FROM A SCULPTURE

2015 Copyrights 37

THE FAIR-USE FACTORS:

• AMOUNT AND SUBSTANTIALITY OF THE PARTS TAKEN

• IMPACT ON POTENTIAL MARKET FOR THE ORIGINAL WORK– SEEMS TO BE THE MOST IMPORTANT

FACTOR BY FAR, IN ACTUAL PRACTICE [OFFICIALLY, NO FACTOR DOMINATES]

– INCLUDES THE DERIVATIVES MARKET

2015 Copyrights 38

BOOKS ABOUT FAMOUS PERSONS

• FAIR USE IS NOT LIKE “FAIR COMMENT” IN DEFAMATION LAW

• A BOOK BY OR ABOUT A FAMOUS PERSON IS ENTITLED TO FULL COPYRIGHT PROTECTION

CASE

• HARPER & ROW

2015 Copyrights 39

2015 Copyrights 40

THE PROBLEM OF PARODY AS FAIR USE

• PARODY IS ENCOURAGED FOR POLICY REASONS, EVEN IF IT HURTS MARKET FOR TARGET WORK

• EVERY PARODY TAKES SOME OF THE TARGET WORK, IN ORDER TO IDENTIFY IT

• TAKING EXCESSIVE AMOUNT IS APT TO BE NOT FAIR

Fisher v. Dees, 794 F. 2d 432 (9th Cir. 1986)

CASES

• FISHER v. DEES

• SEGA v. ACCOLADE

• TY INC.

• MGM v. GROKSTER

2015 Copyrights 41

2015 Copyrights 42

MANY SPECIAL EXEMPTIONSFROM BASIC INFRINGEMENT

RULES

• IN ADDITION TO FAIR USE, THE STATUTE PROVIDES VARIOUS NARROWLY TAILORED SPECIAL EXEMPTIONS FROM INFRINGEMENT:– LIBRARIES– CLASSROOM INSTRUCTION– RELIGIOUS SERVICES– STATE FAIRS

2015 Copyrights 43

EXEMPTION: RIGHT TO SELL YOUR OWN

COPY

• APPLIES TO A LAWFUL COPY § 109(a)

• CAN ALSO RENT OUT, EXCEPT FOR PHONORECORDS OR COMPUTER PROGRAMS §109(b)

– THESE HAD A BAD HISTORY OF PIRACY, LEADING TO CONG. RESTRICTIONS

• PRIVATE LENDING OF RECORDINGS (e.g., TO FRIENDS) for NO $$, IS OK

– § 109 SAYS LENDING NOT ALLOWED FOR COMMERCIAL ADVANTAGE [“for the purposes of direct or indirect commercial advantage”]

2015 Copyrights 44

2015 Copyrights 45

EXEMPTION 110(5)(A): HOME-SIZE RADIO/TV

BROADCAST PUBLICLY PLAYED AT PUBLIC BUSINESS LOCATION

• PLAYING RADIO AND TV BROADCASTS IN STORES, RESTAURANTS, BARS– CAN’T HAVE ANY CHARGE FOR THE

TRANSMISSION– NO RESTRICTION ON SIZE OF

ESTABLISHMENT, BUT:– MUST HAVE “PRIVATE HOMES” TYPE GEAR – SEEMINGLY COVERS ANY KIND OF WORK

§110(5)(A)

UNCLEAR ABOUT 110(5)(A)

• DOESN’T MENTION ORIGIN OF THE “TRANSMISSION’– COULD IT BE INTERNET STREAMING?– DOES THE ORIGIN NEED TO BE

LICENSED?

2015 Copyrights 46

2015 Copyrights 47

CAVEAT RE. 110(5)

• NO EXEMPTION FOR PLAYING RECORDINGS AT A PUBLIC PLACE, WITHOUT PERMISSION

• 110(5) (A) AND (B) REQUIRE A “TRANSMISSION”

• THEREFORE, ONLY BROADCASTS

2015 Copyrights 48

EXEMPTION: CERTAIN ACTS RE. COMPUTER

PROGRAMS

• NOT AN INFRINGEMENT TO:

– MAKE A COPY IN ORDER TO USE THE PROGRAM

– MAKE AN ARCHIVAL COPY

§117(a)

2015 Copyrights 49

INCORPORATING THE WORK INTO A USEFUL

ARTICLE

• REMAINS COPYRIGHTED See, e.g., Mazer v. Stein, 347 U.S. 201 (1954) (glass figurines of dancers, used as lamp bases).

2015 Copyrights 50

COPYRIGHT IN SOUND RECORDINGS

(PERFORMERS’ RIGHTS)• MORE LIMITED THAN COPYRIGHT IN THE

UNDERLYING WORK (MUSIC)• NO RIGHT TO PROHIBIT PUBLIC PERFORMANCE

OF THE RECORDING (i.e., BY PLAYING THE RECORD) §114(a)– EXCEPT: DIGITAL AUDIO

• RECALL: ANY PUBLIC PERFORMANCE [PLAYING THE RECORD IN PUBLIC PLACE] WOULD INFRINGE THE COMPOSER’S PERFORMANCE RIGHT

2015 Copyrights 51

COPYRIGHT IN SOUND RECORDINGS

(PERFORMERS’ RIGHTS)• SOUND RECORDING COPYRIGHT IS

LIMITED TO PREVENTING MECHANICAL REPRODUCTION OF THE RECORDING OR PORTIONS THEREOF §114(b)

• PLUS DIGITAL AUDIO TRANSMISSION OF THE RECORDING (IF WE EVER GET THERE) §§ 106(6), 114(b)

• THEREFORE, MAKING A RECORD IMITATING THE RECORDING ARTIST’S STYLE IS NOT AN INFRINGEMENT OF SOUND RECORDING COPYRIGHT

– WOULD STILL BE INFRINGEMENT OF THE COMPOSER’S COPYRIGHT – “REPRODUCING THE WORK IN … PHONORECORDS” § 106(1)

2015 Copyrights 52

2015 Copyrights 53

COMPULSORY LICENSE TO MAKE SOUND RECORDING OF

ANOTHER’S WORK

• RIGHT TO MAKE A SOUND RECORDING IS INITIALLY RESERVED TO THE COMPOSER

• HOWEVER, ONCE SHE ALLOWS SOMEONE TO MAKE AND DISTRIBUTE A RECORDING IN U.S., THE SITUATION CHANGES >>>

2015 Copyrights 54

• ANYONE ELSE CAN THEN PERFORM THE WORK PRIVATELY AND RECORD HER OWN PERFORMANCE §115(a)(1)

• CAN SELL THE RECORDS• MUST NOTIFY THE COPYRIGHT

OWNER• MUST PAY A STATUTORY ROYALTY

– ABOUT 1.5 CENTS PER MINUTE OF PLAYING TIME, PER RECORD

2015 Copyrights 55

CAVEATS:

• NO COMPULSORY LICENSE TO DO A PUBLIC PERFORMANCE AND RECORD IT

• NO COMPULSORY LICENSE TO FIX ANYONE ELSE’S PERFORMANCE OF THE WORK § 1101(a)

2015 Copyrights 56

A NOTE ON ARCHITECTURAL WORKS:

• NOT AN INFRINGEMENT TO TAKE A PICTURE OF IT, OR MAKE A PAINTING, ETC., IF THE WORK IS IN PUBLIC VIEW § 120

• [NOTE: BOTH WOULD NORMALLY BE FORBIDDEN DERIVATIVE WORKS]

2015 Copyrights 57

REMEDIES

• INJUNCTION §502

• DAMAGES §504(a), (b)

• AND D’s PROFITS §504(a), (b)

2015 Copyrights 58

REMEDIES

• IMPOUNDING– DURING LITIGATION §503(a)

• DESTRUCTION– AFTER TRIAL §503(b)

2015 Copyrights 59

STATUTORY DAMAGES

• STATUTORY DAMAGES ARE AVAILABLE AS ALTERNATIVE TO ACTUAL DAMAGES

• $750 – $30,000 PER WORK §504, 505

• HIGHER IF WILLFUL (TO $150,000)• AVAILABLE ONLY IF PROMPT

REGISTRATION OCCURRED §412

2015 Copyrights 60

ATTORNEY FEES

• IN COURT’S DISCRETION, AS PART OF “COSTS”

§ 505

• PROMPT REGISTRATION NEEDED

2015 Copyrights 61

REGISTRATION• IS NOW PERMISSIVE• PROMPT REG. NEEDED FOR

ATTORNEY FEES AND STATUTORY DAMAGES §412

• ALWAYS NEEDED BEFORE SUIT CAN BE COMMENCED §411

• NO OTHER MAJOR LEGAL SIGNIFICANCE

• GREAT PRACTICAL SIGNIFICANCE

CASE

• ARTHUR RUTENBERG

2015 Copyrights 62

2015 Copyrights 63

OWNERSHIP

• INITIALLY IS IN THE “AUTHORS”

• FOR WORK MADE FOR HIRE, HIRER IS THE AUTHOR

• >>>

2015 Copyrights 64

WHAT IS A “WORK MADE FOR HIRE”?

• A WORK:– BY AN EMPLOYEE; OR – BY WRITTEN COMMISSION, BUT ONLY

IF IN THE NINE CLASSES OF WORKS §101

– IN OTHER SITUATIONS, NEED A SEPARATE ASSIGNMENT • THE UNDERLYING CONTRACT TYPICALLY

PROVIDES FOR LATER EXECUTION OF SUCH A DOCUMENT

2015 Copyrights 65

DURATION OF COPYRIGHT

• NORMALLY, LIFE OF AUTHOR + 70 YEARS §302(a)

• IF MULTIPLE AUTHORS, LAST TO DIE + 70 YEARS §302(b)

• WORKS MADE FOR HIRE: 95 YEARS FROM 1ST PUBLICATION OR 120 YEARS FROM CREATION [EARLIER GOVERNS] §302(c)

2015 Copyrights 66

NOW YOU SEE IT, NOW YOU DON’T:

REVOCATION/TERMINATION OF COPYRIGHT

ASSIGNMENTS/LICENSES

• STATUTE CALLS IT “TERMINATION” §203

• IT’S REALLY A STATUTORY RIGHT TO RENEGE ON AN AGREEMENT

2015 Copyrights 67

• POWER OF TERMINATION EXISTS AS TO LICENSES AS WELL

• DESPITE LICENSE TERMS• NO REASONS NEEDED IN EITHER

CASE• NO SUCH POWER OVER WORKS

MADE FOR HIRE

2015 Copyrights 68

TERMINATION RIGHT

• IS NOT PASSABLE BY WILL

• GOES TO PRESCRIBED RELATIVES

§203(a)(2)

2015 Copyrights 69

TERMINATION OF GRANTS FOR NEWER WORKS

• FOR WORKS CREATED AFTER 1977

2015 Copyrights 70

HOW IT WORKS• OCCURS IN A WINDOW: 35-40 YRS.

AFTER THE GRANT* TO BE TERMINATED

• MUST GIVE NOTICE OF TERMINATION 2-10 YRS. BEFORE IT IS TO HAPPEN

• ∴ FOR EARLIEST POSSIBLE TERMINATION, MUST SERVE NOTICE BETW. 25 AND 33-YRS. AFTER GRANT

* = ASSIGNMENT OR LICENSE

2015 Copyrights 71

MORE ABOUT TERMINATION

• TERMINATION RIGHT IS NOT ASSIGNABLE AND CANNOT BE CONTRACTED AWAY

• A GRANT NOTICED FOR TERMINATION CANNOT BE “RENEWED” UNTIL AFTER THE TERMINATION HAPPENS §203(b)(4)