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Copyright Creep

11 Jun 2008 10:45 am

Excellent essay from Rasmus Fleischer on the history of copyright, and the tendency for the inability to perfectly enforce one regime to simply lead to demands for an ever-more-expansive vision of what needs to be enforced:

A very condensed version of copyright history could look like this: texts (1800), works (1900), tools (2000). Originally the law was designed to regulate the use of one machine only: the printing press. It concerned the reproduction of texts, printed matter, without interfering with their subsequent uses. Roughly around 1900, however, copyright law was drastically extended to cover works, independent of any specific medium. This opened up the field for collective rights management organizations, which since have been setting fixed prices on performance and broadcasting licenses. Under their direction, very specific copyright customs developed for each new medium: cinema, gramophone, radio, and so forth. This differentiation was undermined by the emergence of the Internet, and since about the year 2000 copyright law has been pushed in a new direction, regulating access to tools in a way much more arbitrary than anyone in the pre-digital age could have imagined. [...]

This domino effect captures the essence of copyright maximalism: Every broken regulation brings a cry for at least one new regulation even more sweepingly worded than the last. Copyright law in the 21st century tends to be less concerned about concrete cases of infringement, and more about criminalizing entire technologies because of their potential uses. This development undermines the freedom of choice that Creative Commons licenses are meant to realize. It will also have seriously chilling effects on innovation, as the legal status of new technologies will always be uncertain under ever more invasive rules.

For a long time the whole question of how we deal with intellectual property has been relegated to something like fourth-tier status, decided in backrooms by a clash of special interests with almost no public debate or understanding. At the same time, it's become cliché to observe that we're now in an "information economy" and America is more and more becoming a country that exports media, ideas, design, software, etc. than one that exports planes and cars. Consequently, it's less and less viable to think that the regulation of ideas and content is irrelevant or unimportant -- these are key economic functions, and whether or not they'll be organized to serve the narrow interests of people who current control certain channels of distribution is a huge issue.

UPDATE: Case in point this terrible bill that the House just passed to its discredit, which is supposed to step up enforcement of copyright by, among other things, establishing civil forfeiture penalties for devices that "facilitate" the violation of IP laws.

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Comments (7)

Copyright law in the 21st century tends to be less concerned about concrete cases of infringement, and more about criminalizing entire technologies because of their potential uses.

Because those wealthy enough to buy American law do so in order to protect the profitability of their obsolete business models.

Otherwise, they'd have to work for a living. Corruption is much easier.
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for devices that "facilitate" the violation of IP laws

Like photocopiers?

Xerox stock just plummeted, surely.

Earth to Matt: While Republicans are bad on these issues, Democrats are hostage to them. So much money flows to the Democratic party from Hollywood - the "special interest" you worry about own your party on this issue.

Lessig for Supreme Court!

Tim Lee has posted a response essay which is also very good:

http://www.cato-unbound.org/2008/06/11/tim-lee/two-paths-for-copyright-law/

Interesting point this: "America is more and more becoming a country that exports media, ideas, design, software..."

Question: Should we stake our future on exporting these "information age" commodities?

I ask because though it seems that we have a leg up in those arenas right now but none of them seem to have much growth potential. Because of their cultural nature it seems that eventually different cultures would rather produce that stuff themselves.

We may find ourselves exporting stuff no one else wants because they get it cheaper at home.

Everyone here, including Matt, please read Yochai Benkler's _The Wealth of Networks_ to learn more about this one (Lawrence Lessig works, too). This is an extremely important issue that is quietly being lost in the courts and in Congress. We all need to bone up on the complexities of digital IP law and find a way to follow Fleischer's advice and avoid the ever more sweeping protectionary laws.


Comments closed June 25, 2008.

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