COPYRIGHT LAW 2006 Professor Fischer CLASS of April 27 2006 REMEDIES AND TECHNOLOGICAL PROTECTION...
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Transcript of COPYRIGHT LAW 2006 Professor Fischer CLASS of April 27 2006 REMEDIES AND TECHNOLOGICAL PROTECTION...
COPYRIGHT LAW 2006
Professor Fischer
CLASS of April 27 2006 REMEDIES AND
TECHNOLOGICAL PROTECTION MEASURES
Wrap-Up Point: Reverse Engineering and Fair Use
• The courts have repeatedly held that reverse engineering can be a fair use. See e.g. Sega v. Accolade, Sony v. Connectix.
Kelly v. Arriba
• Was Defendant's display on a visual search engine of lower resolution "thumbnails" of copyrighted images appearing elsewhere on the Internet, without the copyright owners' permission, a fair use?
• What about the display of the full image?
• Does Google’s visual search engine infringe copyrights?
Kelly v. Arriba
• Defendant's display on a visual search engine of lower resolution "thumbnails" of copyrighted images appearing elsewhere on the Internet, without the copyright owners' permission, is a protected fair use of those images under the Copyright Act.
• The court further holds that defendant's display of the full copyrighted image as part of its search engine results, either via inline linking or framing, infringes the copyright owner's right to publicly display the work.
• Does Google’s visual search engine infringe copyrights?
REMEDIES
• Section 504• A. DAMAGES (either actual damages
and profit OR statutory damages) s. 504• B. INJUNCTIVE RELIEF (s. 502)• C. SEIZURE/IMPOUNDMENT (section
503)• D. COSTS/ATTORNEYS FEES (s. 505)• (PROPERTY TYPE OF REMEDIES)
INJUNCTIONS
• More routine than in many other civil cases• Preliminary injunctive relief is generally
awarded if P establishes p.f. case on validity and infringement (irreparable injury is presumed)
• Permanent injunction generally awarded if copyright validity and infringement are found
ACTUAL DAMAGES/PROFITS
• Actual damages are extent to which market value of copyrighted work has been injured or destroyed by an infringement including fair market value of licensing fee (Davis)
• If too speculative, will not be awarded• Punitive damages are not generally
awarded in copyright actions
INFRINGER’S PROFITS
• What profits is a prevailing plaintiff permitted to recover in a copyright infringement action?
What must P prove? - see Davis case
INFRINGER’S PROFITS
• Prevailing P can recover infringer’s profits if attributable to infringement
• Plaintiff is only required to prove D’s sales that are reasonably related to the infringement
• Burden then shifts to D to prove elements of costs to be deducted from sales in arriving at profit.
• Doubt about computing costs/profits should be resolved in P’s favor.
FRANK MUSIC
• Had defendant met its burden in proving element of costs to be deducted from sales in arriving at profit?
• Why or why not? • Can a copyright proprietor recover “indirect
profits”?• How should profits be apportioned?• To what extent are joint defendants liable for an
award of profits?
STATUTORY DAMAGES
• What are statutory damages?• Can you recover statutory damages as well as
actual damages and profits?• Are there any prerequisites for statutory
damages? See s. 412• When must P elect statutory damages?• What amount of statutory damages may a court
award? What if infringement willful?
DIGITAL THEFT DETERRENCE AND COPYRIGHT DAMAGES
IMPROVEMENT ACT
• 1999 legislation raising statutory damages by 50% (See supplement)
STATUTORY DAMAGES
• See s. 504©• Statutory damages can be between $750 and
$30,000 per work “as the court considers just”• For willful infringement, statutory damages can
be increased to no more than $150,000.• If infringement innocent, statutory damages can
be reduced to $200
COMPILATIONS/DERIVATIVE WORKS
• For purposes of statutory damages, all parts of compilation/derivative work are to be regarded as constituting a single work
ENGEL V. WILD OATS
• What was the issue for the Southern District of New York?
• How did it resolve this issue?
COSTS AND ATTORNEY’S FEES
• See Fogerty v. Fantasy (1994)
• What was the subject of the split in the circuit?
• How did the Supreme Court rule on this split?
• Is Judge Posner’s statement in Gonzalez (see supplement) sound?
Law: Protection for Technological Protections
• WIPO Copyright Treaty of 1996 (WCT) (Art. 11) see (46 members on 3/24/2004) at: http://www.wipo.int/treaties/en/ip/wct/index.html
• entered into force 3/6/2002
WCT Art. 11
• Contracting Parties shall provide adequate legal protection and effective legal remedies against the circumvention of effective technological measures that are used by authors in connection with the exercise of their rights under this Treaty or the Berne Convention and that restrict acts, in respect of their works, which are not authorized by the authors concerned or permitted by law.
DMCA
• Digital Millennium Copyright Act of 1998 (DMCA) is U.S implementing legislation for the WCT – previous attempts to introduce similar legislation prior to the WCT had failed
• Why did the copyright industries demand additional legal protection for digital works?
Technical Protection Measures
• The technical protection provisions in the Digital Millennium Act of 1998 responded to fears that digital format made copying easy and cheap and existing copyright law provided ineffective protections against piracy of copyrighted works. These provide special legal protections where a copyright owner uses technological self-help measures.
• What is technological self-help/technological protections for copyrighted works?
• What special protections does the DMCA now provided for technological protections?
DMCA s. 1201
• 2 kinds of protection. The DMCA distinguishes between
• Access Control Measures (stronger)
• Copy Control Measures (weaker)
• Note – not technology-specific
Access Controls: DMCA section 1201(a)(1):
• “No person shall circumvent a technological protection measure that effectively controls access to a [copyrighted] work…”
• This prohibits access to a work that is encrypted or protected by similar technologies, not just access to a copy of the work.
• Thus this right broadens copyright owner’s rights.• Does this result in overprotection? Does it destroy
fair use?
DMCA 1201(a)(2): Anti-Trafficking Provisions – Access
• Prohibits manufacturing, importing, offering to public, provide, traffic in technology that is primarily designed to circumvent technological protection measures that effectively control access, has only limited commercially significant purposes except to circumvent technological protection measures, or is marketed by that person with knowledge for use in circumventing technological protections.
• How is this different from the access control provisions?
Anti-trafficking: Copy Controls – s. 1201(b)(1)
• Rather similar to access controls but bars manufacture or trafficking in technologies that are primarily designed or produced for the purpose of circumventing technological measures that effectively protects a right of the copyright owner [as opposed to access to the copyrighted work]
Penalties under DMCA• S. 1203 (civil) – injunctive relief, damages (actual or
statutory ($200 to $2500 for act of circumvention, device, product etc..; triple damages for repeated violation), costs, attorney’s fees). Reduction possible for innocent violation, special innocent infringer provision for schools, archives, nonprofit libraries.
• S. 1204 (criminal) – first offense: fine up to $500,000 and/or imprisonment up to 5 years; subsequent offense: fine up to $1 million and/or imprisonment up to 10 years –exempts schools, archives, nonprofit libraries
Does Fair Use Survive the DMCA?
• S. 1201(c) (1) provides: “Nothing in this section shall affect rights, remedies, limitations, or defenses to copyright infringement, including fair use, under this title.”
• -also doesn’t affect vicarious or contributory liability or free speech rights
DMCA s. 1201 (d)-(j)
• Section 1201 (d)-(j) provides exceptions for, e.g., certain reverse engineering, law enforcement activities, certain library uses, certain encryption research, privacy protection, protection of minors, security testing of computer systems
• Also – rulemaking provision under s. 1201(a)(1)(B)-(D).
First Triennial Inquiry
• Are there particular “classes of works” as to which users are, or are likely to be, adversely affected in their ability to make noninfringing uses if they are prohibited from circumventing such technological measures
• On October 27, 2000, Library of Congress/Copyright Office issued a final rule identifying 2 classes of works exempt from access provisions
Exemptions following first Copyright Office triennial
inquiry• 1. Compilations of lists of web sites blocked by
filtering software applications• 2. Literary works, including computer programs
and databases, protected by access control mechanisms that fail to permit access because of malfunction, damage or obsoleteness
• In future there may be a need for more exemptions
Exempted category 1
• 1) Compilations consisting of lists of Internet locations blocked by commercially marketed filtering software applications that are intended to prevent access to domains, websites or portions of websites, but not including lists of Internet locations blocked by software applications that operate exclusively to protect against damage to a computer or computer network or lists of Internet locations blocked by software applications that operate exclusively to prevent receipt of email.
Exempted category 2
• (2) Computer programs protected by dongles that prevent access due to malfunction or damage and which are obsolete.
Exempted category 3
• (3) Computer programs and video games distributed in formats that have become obsolete and which require the original media or hardware as a condition of access. A format shall be considered obsolete if the machine or system necessary to render perceptible a work stored in that format is no longer manufactured or is no longer reasonably available in the commercial marketplace.
Exempted category 4
• (4) Literary works distributed in ebook format when all existing ebook editions of the work (including digital text editions made available by authorized entities) contain access controls that prevent the enabling of the ebook's read-aloud function and that prevent the enabling of screen readers to render the text into a specialized format.
Universal City Studios v. Reimerdes CB p. 581
• Plaintiffs: 8 major motion picture studios
• Defendants included (l) Eric Corley a.k.a. Emmanuel Goldstein, publisher of 2600: The Hacker Quarterly
• Ps alleged violations of DMCA – how did defendants respond?
Jon Johansen: Creator of DeCSS• Norwegian teenager: 15 years
old when he created DeCSS• Prosecuted under s. 145(2)
145(2) of the Norwegian Criminal Code, which punishes "any person who by breaking a protective device or in a similar manner, unlawfully obtains access to data or programs which are stored or transferred by electronic or other technical means."
• Acquitted in Jan. 2003, under appeal
• See an essay by Nowegian professor Jon Bing at: http://www.eff.org/IP/DRM/DeCSS_prosecutions/Johansen_DeCSS_case/20000125_bing_johansen_case_summary.html
For a Norwegian legal perspective
Protesters at the federal trial (2000)
http://www.nylug.org/articles/index.shtml?nycdvdcourt“Electronic Civil Disobedience?”
REIMERDES
• Cause of action: DMCA 12(a)(2) – anti-trafficking provisions
• Defense: Actions don’t violate DMCA and DMCA violates the First Amendment/Copyright Clause by obstructing fair use and DMCA violates limits on duration in Copyright Clause
JUDGE KAPLAN
• Finds (after full jury trial) • 1. Posting DeCSS was a violation of 1201(a)(2) that
was not protected by statutory exceptions for fair use, good faith encryption research, or security testing or by fair use, as was linking where knew offending material on linked-to-cite and knew unlawful circumvention technology and link created to disseminating that technology..
• 2. Anti-trafficking provisions constitutional under first Amendment
• 3. Awards injunctive and declaratory relief- to deter
REIMERDES APPEAL
• Second Circuit ruled in November to affirm Judge Kaplan’s order
• Kathleen Sullivan, the Dean of Stanford Law School and a noted constitutional scholar, argued the appeal for the defendants.
• Review by the U.S. Supreme Court is not sought
More DMCA litigation• Considerable number of cases have been brought under the
DMCA• Some, such as EFF Fred Von Lohmann, have alleged that
the unintended consequences of the DMCA litigation is that it is being used not to control piracy but to stifle competition, to impede free expression and scientific research, and to jeopardize fair use. See: http://www.eff.org/IP/DMCA/20030102_dmca_unintended_consequences.html
• Some prominent commentators like Pamela Samuelson have argued for revision of DMCA
• Copyright industries counter that the DMCA is necessary to combat the growing problem of piracy