Kids face summary trials for copyright violations – INSIDE JoongAng Daily

Kids face summary trials for copyright violations – INSIDE JoongAng Daily.

Relax, United States. This is from Korea.

Or, better, don’t relax. The law in the US takes the owner of the internet account to task for infringements made under that main account; the music industry, for example, regularly sues the parents of children in the US who download music for “free” from the internet. Thus, in the US, the parents are answerable for the child’s sins.

The Koreans place the onus of the offense where it belongs: on the kids — the actual infringers. 

I talk regularly to kids in schools about copyright and how their “free” downloads will cost their parents thousands of dollars in attorney fees and judgment payments to the music licensors; the kids look at me like I have five heads. Maybe if the US began to treat copyright infringement like the crime it is — and held the actual infringer responsible — the temptation to make those free downloads would be significantly less.

I love kids, which is why I think we just might have a generation of people coming up who have no clue about how to be accountable, and that makes me sad. But that’s a parenting issue, not the subject of this blog. If, though, answering for infringing IP can help, I’m all for making the infringer answer personally, no matter what the tender age.

World Copyright Treaty: Accession by the Republic of Tajikistan

World Copyright Treaty (WCT) Accession by the Republic of Tajikistan.

The World Copyright Treaty was accessed by the Republic of Tajikistan on January 5, 2009 and will go into effect as to Tajikistan on April 5, 2009; the treaty was originally adopted on December 20, 1996.

So what took the Republic of Tajikistan so long to come on board?

And where IS Tajikistan, anyway?

The answer to the second question helps with the answer to the first, so let’s go in that order. Tajikistan is north of Pakistan and Afghanistan, west of China, east of Uzbekistan and south of Kyrgyzstan. In other words, it’s in the far east, in the middle of the Himalayas and not far north of India. This part of the world is not noted for strong enforcement of IP. China — home to more than a billion people — is coming into synch with the western portion of the world, but IP enforcement there is still a long and difficult process. That Tajikistan, its newly independent neighbor (independent since 1991), has accessed this treaty is an immensely positive step in the quest for worldwide recognition of intellectual property rights, and Tajikistan is to be congratulated.

The semester begins…

…and along with it invariably arise questions about copyright fair use.

Teachers claim “fair use” for making massive numbers of photocopies of articles, books, cartoons, and other copyrighted materials to pass out to their classes. They stand firm in their belief that all educational use is “fair use.”

What IS “fair use” under the copyright laws of the US? That question is almost metaphysical in its scope. The statute defines fair use as:

Sec. 107. Limitations on exclusive rights: Fair use

Notwithstanding the provisions of sections 106 and 106A, the fair use of a copyrighted work, including such use by reproduction in copies or phonorecords or by any other means specified by that section, for purposes such as criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching (including multiple copies for classroom use), scholarship, or research, is not an infringement of copyright. In determining whether the use made of a work in any particular case is a fair use the factors to be considered shall include–

        (1) the purpose and character of the use, including whether such use is of a commercial nature or is for nonprofit educational purposes;

        (2) the nature of the copyrighted work;

        (3) the amount and substantiality of the portion used in relation to the copyrighted work as a whole; and

        (4) the effect of the use upon the potential market for or value of the copyrighted work.

The fact that a work is unpublished shall not itself bar a finding of fair use if such finding is made upon consideration of all the above factors.

17 USC 107

Well, what does that mean?

The statute lays out a test that the court must follow to determine if a particular use that would ordinarily be an infringing use is fair use under the Copyright Act. There’s a sliding scale: if the copying work is commercial, it’s more likely to be found to infringe than if it is for a non-commercial or educational purpose; if the purportedly infringing work increases the market share of the original work, the copy is more likely to be found not to infringe than if it took the market share away from the original. If the accused infringer took only a small part of the work and copied it, he is less likely to be found to infringe the original than if he took a large chunk. If the original work is a work of fiction, any copying of it is more likely to be found to infringe than if it were a factual work. And so on.

At the end of the day, though, the judge has to weigh the factors and render a decision based on that ever-wonderfully vague term “the interests of justice.” So, basically, a copyright infringement case defended with fair use can turn out whichever way the judge wants it to turn out.

How to Register a Copyright

U.S. Copyright Office – Online Services (eCO: Electronic Copyright Office).

It’s actually a very simple process, except that the Copyright Office has mashed its forms into one form and has not done anyone any favors in that revision.

You fill out the form at the linked page, you write a check for $45.00 to the REGISTER OF COPYRIGHT, and you send the form, the check and either one or two copies of the work to be registered (depending on whether the work is published or not) in to the US Copyright Office in Washington D.C. You then wait several months until a Certificate of Copyright is returned to you. Note that even though the registration certificate may take months to come back to you, the copyright is presumed to be registered when your mailing is received by the Copyright Office. You might therefore want to include some sort of proof of receipt with your mailing.

Copyright actually attaches the instant a work of authorship is affixed in a tangible medium, but the protection is less than ideal until that work is sent to the Copyright Office and registered. The federal courts, which have exclusive jurisdiction over copyright matters, won’t even look at a case where an unregistered copyright is infringed. No statutory damages are available to unregistered works, which means that the copyright owner must prove actual damages from the infringement to get any relief at all.

Since copyright is so easy to register, there really is no reason not to register it. Spend the $45 and get full protection for your valuable works of authorship.

Jacobsen v. Katzer, from the US Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit

Jacobsen v. Katzer – AltLaw.

This is a case from the US Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit (which holds exclusive jurisdiction over patent appellate matters) that considers the intersection of copyright and licensing law. Is it possible for a copyright holder to dedicate certain work to free public use and yet enforce an A open source @ copyright license to control the future distribution and modification of that work?

Here, the plaintiff holds a copyright that he dedicated to the public domain through open-source licensing. The license for open-source technology, though, has a catch (the source of all open-source code must be acknowledged in downstream works), and the downstream users have to comply with the catch or be caught infringing the open-source license.

IP Audit a Necessity for Due Diligence

What IS an IP audit, anyway?

An IP audit is a systematic categorization of all of your business’s intellectual property, including but not limited to:

  • Inventions (patented and unpatented)
  • Copyrights (registered and unregistered)
  • Trademarks (registered and unregistered)
  • Trade Dress (registered and unregistered)
  • Trade Secrets (obviously unregistered)

This categorization, with a simultaneous search for areas where your IP may have “holes,” is done by an intellectual property attorney in cooperation with your firm’s management team; despite the word “audit,” this is NOT an accounting function (although certainly an accountant belongs on your firm’s management team and probably on the IP audit team).

Use an IP audit as due diligence when you plan to merge, divest, buy, sell, create, license, franchise your property. Also use an IP audit when there has been a shift in the law that governs IP.

For more information about IP audits, read Nancy’s article, published in the December 2003 issue of Les Nouvelles (the flagship publication of the Licensing Executives’ Society), The Intellectual Property Audit (.pdf format) or visit our IP Audit webpage.