Law in the Internet Society

View   r1
EzinneIwuanyanwuSecondEssay 1 - 17 Dec 2024 - Main.EzinneIwuanyanwu
Line: 1 to 1
Added:
>
>
META TOPICPARENT name="SecondEssay"

Copyright Protection but Without Punishing the Poor

-- By EzinneIwuanyanwu - 17 Dec 2024

The Current Copyright System

“To promote the Progress of Science and useful Arts…” [1] This is the purpose of the United States copyright system. Spanning for life plus 70 years after, creators are granted an exclusive monopoly to their works to further this purpose. Through a monopoly grant, the copyright system essentially makes a bargain; legally enforceable exclusion in exchange for allowing the public to consume one’s creative work. This idea may seem counterintuitive, as discretionary exclusion is seemingly at odds with public access. To truly understand how this bargain works, we need to parse out what exactly is being excluded.

17 U.S. Code § 106 states that the owner of a copyright has the exclusive rights to reproduce, prepare derivates, distribute, publicly perform, and publicly display their work. [2] Understood broadly, these rights amount to the exclusivity of certain kinds of uses, and these uses were likely targeted because of their monetary potential. Reproduction and distribution are fundamental to commerce. By being able to reproduce a work and then distribute it to others, a person can participate in the marketplace, selling the work many times over. Derivatives, although not quite the same as the original, use just enough of the original’s likeness and character to profit from the original’s profitability. The statute’s inclusion of the word “public” in relation to performance and display could be attributed to Congress’ understanding that publicly displaying or performing, a musical score for example, could reasonably lead to, if not already predicated on the condition of, the performers being paid. Although financial control is an important part of copyright exclusion, attribution is another key element. Creators may understandably feel entitled to having their name associated with their work. After all, creators dedicate time and energy into producing their creative works. The exclusive rights of § 106 are meant to safeguard this association between creators and their works by baring others from uses that are specially reserved for the owner of the copyright. Conversely, creators may not want their work to be associated with certain ideas or concepts. Thus, § 106 forces a person to get a license or the owner’s permission, if they want to engage in these kinds of uses.

Problems in the Current Copyright System

The current system is off balance, with the bargain between exclusion and public access disproportionately favoring those who benefit from the former. If we accept that the exclusion rights of § 106 are meant to reserve a creative work’s financial profitability for the copyright owner, then we must acknowledge that it achieves this goal by putting a paywall behind any meaningful use. Low budget creators who find inspiration in the creative works of others and low-income individuals who just want to indulge in the beauty of another person’s creative genius are hurt by this paywall. By tightly gatekeeping a work’s profitability, the current system punishes those who do not have enough money to enjoy what is at the heart of a creative work—creativity.

Reimagining 17 U.S. Code § 106

We need a new system that can protect the rights of creators without coming at the expense of people who cannot afford to spend money on a license for meaningful access to their creative works. A more equitable and balanced version of the copyright system would do away with § 106, and in its place provide that owners of a copyright have receive the following: (1) Right to Attribution, (2) Right to Integrity, and (3) Right to Commercial Compensation.

The Right to Attribution and the Right to Integrity

In the current system, attribution rights are one category of rights within the broader set of Moral Rights. Attribution rights secure a creator’s right to be identified as the author of the work. It also protects against misattribution. The Right of Integrity, the other category, provides a creator with the right to protect their reputation or protect against any mutilation of their work. These two categories of Moral Rights match up perfectly with what I envision for The Right to Attribution and the Right to Integrity, respectfully. However, Moral Rights apply exclusively to works of visual arts. [3] All other forms of creative works must fabricate the right to attribution and the right to integrity through the exclusion rights of § 106. These creators are left to hope that others will recognize that they are the rightful author of a work given that they have § 106 rights. By gutting the current provisions of this section and expanding Moral Rights to include all types of copyrightable subject matter, we can properly account for the attribution and integrity rights. [4]

Right to Commercial Compensation

As I stated before, financial control is an important part of copyright exclusions, as all the § 106 uses have great potential for profitability. Gutting these rights would allow people to profit from another person’s creative efforts. Attribution is simply not enough to incentivize creators to share their works with the public. Many want to protect their financial compensation as well.

Unlike the Right to Attribution and the Right to Integrity, we can find little inspiration from the United States’ copyright statute to help us define the Right to Commercial Compensation. Instead, we can look to Creative Commons, which offer a range of free licenses that grant the public permission to use a person’s creative work. [5] Creative Commons offers a path for the low budget creator and down-on-his-luck Dan to access creative content for free. A revised § 106 would include these licenses as default options for creators to pick from, but still allowing parties to create their own licenses. My proposed Right to Commercial Compensation would act as a silent provision and entail the following: When at any point commercial use of a copyrighted work leads to great or moderate profitability, the creator receives at least 1% of the profits from that year forward and every year thereafter or until the use stops generating great or moderate profits. Great or moderate profitability will vary based on copyrights subject matter and with economic variances across regions and time. Only commercial entities that have not already worked out a properly compensating license deal with creators will be subject to the Right to Commercial Compensation. This new provision should ensure that creators are fairly compensated for their works by large commercial entities that the original § 106 should have focused on targeting, while the default licenses protect the creative interests of those with little money to spare.

Footnotes

[1] Article I(8)(8)

[2] 17 U.S. Code § 106 - Exclusive rights in copyrighted works

[3] 17 U.S.C. Section 106(a)

[4] Per 17 U.S. Code § 102, the types of works that can receive copyright protection include the following categories: literary works; musical works; dramatic works; pantomimes and choreographic works; pictorial, graphics, and sculptural works (PGS); motion pictures and other audiovisual works, sound recordings; and architectural works.

[5] Creative Commons is an international nonprofit organization that empowers people to grow and sustain the thriving commons of shared knowledge and culture we need to address the world's most pressing challenges and create a brighter future for all. https://creativecommons.org/


Revision 1r1 - 17 Dec 2024 - 02:16:52 - EzinneIwuanyanwu
This site is powered by the TWiki collaboration platform.
All material on this collaboration platform is the property of the contributing authors.
All material marked as authored by Eben Moglen is available under the license terms CC-BY-SA version 4.
Syndicate this site RSSATOM