Home Page
09.24.2007 (previous | next)
Nick Car on Fair Use Study

Nick Carr's comments on CCIA's study of fair use include the following:

What the authors have done is to define the "fair-use economy" so broadly that it encompasses any business with even the most tangential relationship to the free use of copyrighted materials. Here's an example of the tortured logic by which they force-fit vast, multifaceted industries into the "fair use" category: Because "recent advances in processing speed and software functionality are being used to take advantage of the richer multi-media experience now available from the web," then the entire "computer and peripheral equipment manufacturing industry" qualifies as a "fair-use industry." As does the entire "audio & video equipment manufacturing" business. And the entire software publishing industry. And the entire telecommunications industry.

Oh dear. I think one could fairly count the Tivo, and a portion of some of the activity described above... anything involving parody, certainly.

Of course, there is a larger conceptual problem. Fair use is always fair use *of* something copyrighted... so do we add fair uses on to the value of copyright uses? There is a case to be made that the copyrighted materials--and the consequent fair use of them--would not exist in such abundance but for copyright. The logical response to that is, yes, but we wish to measure in particular the value of this particular *exception.* Fair enough, so long as one bears in mind the risk of the exception's swallowing the rule. Also, that a substantial part of the economic activity in question might well occur in similar form even without the exception, due to the growth of markets in snippets and bits and other licensed material for downstream use.

Empirical studes are funny things, aren't they?

SS


posted by Solveig Singleton @ 12:55 PM | Access: Commons, Fair Use, Orphan Works, Public Domain, Economics, Game Theory & Public Choice, Markets: Business, Investment & Innovation

Link to this Entry | Printer-Friendly | Email a Comment | Post a Comment(1)


Comments

"Fair use is always fair use *of* something copyrighted"

Actually, you need to read the study more carefully - the study uses "fair use" as shorthand for all the various exceptions and limitations to copyright, including the idea-expression dichotomy and the non-copyrightability of facts. These things are not "something copyrighted" and were not coaxed into existence by the presence of a government-granted exclusive right to act as an incentive. They are, instead, industries that would be hurt by expansions of copyright law. Without exceptions and limitations that allow people to build on the works of others (what the study calls "fair use" in the broad sense) there would be no copyrighted works. Name a Hollywood movie that isn't in some way based on an earlier story.

As for the industries they chose to include, NBC recently told the FCC to order all ISPs to filter for infringing content because digital copying of movies hurts farmers who grow corn. Really. The authors of the CCIA study didn't have to stretch logic nearly that far. In any case, the study uses the same WIPO methodology that the movie studios themselves use. If you criticize the method you are casting doubt on the content industries' "piracy" figures as well.

Posted by: John Gordon at September 24, 2007 3:23 PM








 
IPcentral WebLog

Blog Main

IPcentral Blogosphere Archives

Search the Blog

Recent Posts
  - IP and Marginal Cost
- Academics and Copyright
- More on Jammie Thomas from DOJ
- More Studies of Downloading
- Facebook, MySpace, and Network Externalities
- Copyright and the University: An Academic Symposium
- Tyler Cowan on Chinese Movie Piracy
- More WHO Antics--Roger Bate Reports
- Patents, Meds, and the Developing World: Clips & Links
- Jermaine Dupri's Gripe with iTunes
Archives by Month
  - December 2007
- November 2007
- October 2007
- September 2007
  - (see all)
Archives by Subject
  - Academia
- Access: Commons, Fair Use, Orphan Works, Public Domain
- Accounting
- Analog Holes
- Antitrust
- Art
- Aspen
- Big Tent
- Biotech
- Books
- Comments from Readers
- Counterfeit
- Digital Americas
- Digital Europe
- Digital Europe 2006
- DMCA
- DRM & Watermarks, etc.
- Economics, Game Theory & Public Choice
- Enforcement & Remedies
- Free Culture Movement
- Games
- General
- Infrastructure
- International
- Internet: P2P, Search Engines...
- Legislation and Legislators
- Liberty and IP
- Markets: Business, Investment & Innovation
- Media: Video, Music...
- Patents
- Pharma
- Physical Property
- Prices, Terms, and Licensing
- Privacy and Security
- Radio
- Software
- Spectrum & Wireless
- Standards
- Supreme Court
- Tax-Funded IP
- Telecom
- Theft of Service
- Universities
Links
 

Site Feed

  - Atom
- RSS 1.0
- RSS 2.0
We welcome comments by email - look for a link to the author's email address in the byline of each post. Please let us know if we may publish your remarks.


 
Home Page