Founding Fathers and Public domain


 
     

Re: Founding Fathers and Public domain

by Tom Swift on Tue Mar 31, 2009 9:25pm

A fascinating article on public domain and the thoughts behind the copyright protection from the Founding Fathers:

http://writ.news.findlaw.com/commentary/20020305_sprigman.html

THE MOUSE THAT ATE THE PUBLIC DOMAIN:
Disney, The Copyright Term Extension Act, And eldred V. Ashcroft
By CHRIS SPRIGMAN
Tuesday, Mar. 05, 2002

Unless you earn your living as an intellectual property lawyer, you probably don’t know that the Supreme Court has granted certiorari in Eldred v. Ashcroft, a case that will test the limits of Congress’s power to extend the term of copyrights. But while copyright may not seem inherently compelling to non-specialists, the issues at stake in Eldred are vitally important to anyone who watches movies, listens to music, or reads books.

If that includes you, read on.

Back in 1998, representatives of the Walt Disney Company came to Washington looking for help. Disney’s copyright on Mickey Mouse, who made his screen debut in the 1928 cartoon short “Steamboat Willie,” was due to expire in 2003, and Disney’s rights to Pluto, Goofy and Donald Duck were to expire a few years later.

Rather than allow Mickey and friends to enter the public domain, Disney and its friends - a group of Hollywood studios, music labels, and PACs representing content owners - told Congress that they wanted an extension bill passed.

Prompted perhaps by the Disney group’s lavish donations of campaign cash - more than $6.3 million in 1997-98, according to the nonprofit Center for Responsive Politics - Congress passed and President Clinton signed the Sonny Bono Copyright Term Extension Act.

The CTEA extended the term of protection by 20 years for works copyrighted after January 1, 1923. Works copyrighted by individuals since 1978 got “life plus 70” rather than the existing “life plus 50”. Works made by or for corporations (referred to as “works made for hire”) got 95 years. Works copyrighted before 1978 were shielded for 95 years, regardless of how they were produced.

In all, tens of thousands of works that had been poised to enter the public domain were maintained under private ownership until at least 2019.

So far so good - as far as Disney and its friends were concerned, at least. In 1999, a group of plaintiffs led by Eric Eldred, whose Eldritch Press offers free on-line access to public domain works, filed a challenge to the statute. Eldred argues that the CTEA is unconstitutional on two grounds: first, because the statute exceeds Congress’s power under the Copyright Clause; and, second, because the statute runs afoul of the First Amendment by substantially burdening speech without advancing any important governmental interest.

Eldred lost before the district court and the D.C. Circuit. However, there is good reason to believe that he may yet prevail in the Supreme Court.

The CTEA Exceeds Congress’s Copyright Clause Power

Most likely to succeed is Eldred’s argument that the CTEA exceeds Congress’s power under the Constitution’s Copyright Clause (Article I, Section Cool, which provides that

The Copyright Clause does two things. First, it empowers Congress to “promote the Progress of Science and useful Arts.” Second, the text of the Copyright Clause limits the means that Congress may adopt in exercising the enumerated power. Congress is limited to granting rights to authors for “limited Times” - there can be no perpetual ownership of intellectual property.

Clear thinking about the scope of Congress’ Copyright Clause power requires careful separation of ends from means. The end - the enumerated power itself - is the promotion of progress, a fact the Supreme Court recognized in Graham v. John Deere Co., where it held that the “qualified authority” that the Copyright Clause grants “is limited to the promotion of advances in [science and] the ‘useful arts’.” In contrast, the copyright grant is not itself the enumerated power; it is merely the instrument through which progress may be realized.

Seen in this light, the CTEA cannot survive. Because already existing works cannot be created anew, extension of subsisting copyrights does not “promote progress.” Congress is not empowered merely to provide copyright holders with an additional boon - that is not “progress”, but corporate welfare.

This is the point on which the D.C. Circuit’s opinion in Eldred should collapse. The lower court relied on prior circuit authority holding that the “promote . . . Progress” language does not restrict Congress’s power. But that authority is palpably at odds with the Supreme Court’s statement in Graham that the promotion of progress is the Copyright Clause power.

The D.C. Circuit leaned also on a snippet in the CTEA’s legislative history asserting that extending subsisting copyrights would encourage preservation of older works. But if Congress really wanted to encourage preservation, it could simply have offered the quid of an extended copyright in exchange for the quo of the copyright holder taking steps to preserve the copyrighted work - for example, by digitizing it and depositing it in an electronic archive (such as the non-profit Internet Archive. There is no such quid pro quo in the CTEA; rather, the statute is a giveaway to content owners, a quid pro nihilo.

What About Future Copyrights?

The argument set forth above deals only with the CTEA’s grant of retroactive extensions. Eldred advances another, somewhat more doubtful, Copyright Clause argument that applies to future extensions. The argument is that Congress’s repeated extensions (the CTEA is but the latest of 11 acts that have stretched the copyright term from 14 years to beyond 100 years) have rendered meaningless the stricture that exclusive rights may be granted only for “limited times.”

Eldred also advances a First Amendment challenge: both subsisting and future copyright extension, Eldred argues, substantially burden speech by foreclosing use of expression that would otherwise be available in the public domain, while advancing no important government interest. Lining the pockets of generous campaign contributors is not, Eldred maintains, a legitimate - let alone important - government interest.

But although the CTEA may be struck down, Disney and its fellow media giants will inevitably be back in Congress pushing a substitute bill. Accordingly, it is worthwhile to consider briefly why copyright extension is bad policy, as well as bad law.

When copyright expires, works are said to “fall into” the public domain, where they are usable without charge or need of authorization.

The linguistic convention by which works “fall” when they enter the public domain is revealing: immanent in the phrase is the notion that a work is debased when no longer copyrighted. Perhaps it is this view that allows statutes that shrink the public domain to gain widespread support.

But disparagement of the public domain is out of step with our constitutional history, with the economics of information markets, and with the real way in which art, literature, and music are produced in our culture.

The Framers, Viewing Intellectual Property As Monopoly, Sought To Constrain It

The Framers of our Constitution viewed inventions and expression not as “property”, but as public goods to which exclusive rights may be granted purely as a means of incenting production. Thomas Jefferson expressed the then-dominant view with characteristic felicity in an 1813 letter:

If nature has made any one thing less susceptible than all others of exclusive property, it is the action of the thinking power called an idea, which an individual may exclusively possess as long as he keeps it to himself; but the moment it is divulged, it forces itself into the possession of every one, and the receiver cannot dispossess himself of it. Its peculiar character, too, is that no one possesses the less, because every other possesses the whole of it. He who receives an idea from me, receives instruction himself without lessening mine; as he who lights his taper at mine, receives light without darkening me . . . .

Inventions then cannot, in nature, be a subject of property. Society may give an exclusive right to the profits arising from them, as an encouragement to men to pursue ideas which may produce utility, but this may or may not be done, according to the will and convenience of the society, without claim or complaint from anybody.

Correspondence between Jefferson and Madison regarding the drafting of the Copyright Clause evidences the same concern: both men classify copyrights and patents as “monopolies” sufferable only for limited periods, and only for the purpose of incenting invention.

We Don’t Know How Much Incentive Is Enough, And How Much Is Too Much

First, the creation of exclusive rights involves a difficult trade-off between creation and dissemination. To the extent that a piece of expression enjoys a market value, its price is likely to be higher if it is subject to copyright, as the copyright owner will be entitled to limit or eliminate competition in the provision of that expression to others. At the margin between life plus 50 and life plus 70 - which is the margin in which the CTEA operates - the proponent of a longer term should be prepared to show that the social value of the additional incentive outweighs the harm caused by another two decades of supra-competitive pricing and consequent reduced dissemination of valuable copyrighted work.

That is no mean task, not least because, as Professor (now Justice) Breyer observed in The Uneasy Case for Copyright: A Study of Copyright in Books, Photocopies, and Computer Programs, it is not clear that the promise of exclusive rights is a necessary prod to artistic creation:

Authors in ancient times, as well as monks and scholars in the middle ages, wrote and were paid for their writings without copyright protection. Taken as a whole . . . the evidence now available suggests that, although we should hesitate to abolish copyright protection, we should equally hesitate to extend or strengthen it.

What was true in ancient Greece and Rome and in medieval Florence is equally true today in Brooklyn’s DUMBO - painters paint, and writers write, for reasons other than the size of the royalty check. But even if you assume that exclusive rights do make some difference, there was no attempt back in 1998 (nor has there been since) to justify the CTEA’s 20-year extension. Of course, $6.3 million in campaign contributions can make up for quite severe deficiencies in the data.

Artists Depend On A Rich Public Domain

If we know little about the utility of longer copyright terms, there is abundant evidence regarding the vital importance to the progress of our culture of a robust stock of public domain works.

Most artists, if pressed, will admit that the true mother of invention in the arts is not necessity, but theft. And this is true even for our greatest artists. Shakespeare’s Romeo and Juliet (1591) was taken from Arthur Brooke’s poem Romeus and Juliet (1562), and most of Shakespeare’s historical plays would have infringed Holingshead’s Chronicles of England (1573). For the third movement of the overture to Theodora, Handel drew on a harpsichord piece by Gottlieb Muffat (1690-1770). Passages of both works are compared at this very interesting web site.

Cultural giants borrow, and so do corporate giants. Ironically, many of Disney’s animated films are based on Nineteenth Century public domain works, including Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs, Cinderella, Pinocchio, The Hunchback of Notre Dame, Alice in Wonderland, and The Jungle Book (released exactly one year after Kipling’s copyrights expired).

Borrowing is ubiquitous, inevitable, and, most importantly, good. Contrary to the romantic notion that true genius inheres in creating something completely new, genius is often better described as opening up new meanings on well-trodden themes. Leonard Bernstein’s reworking in West Side Story of Romeo and Juliet is a good example.

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Re: Founding Fathers and Public domain

by James Grimes on Tue Mar 31, 2009 9:39pm

That is a darn good article.  Thanks for bringing this up.  Smile

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Re: Founding Fathers and Public domain

by Calix Lewis Reneau on Wed Apr 01, 2009 9:31am

There’s a lot of subtext and presumption in the article that decries capitalism and promotes socialism (to use phraseology as loaded as that of the article itself) that I don’t subscribe to.

The question isn’t ‘what should the protection be on Disney’s property?’

The question for each of us here - as artists - is ‘what do I believe the protection should be on the product of my own work?’

It’s interesting to me that, by and large, the people arguing for a reduction of copyright protection (or against its expansion) and for the expansion of uncompensated use of intellectual property almost always have never created any intellectual property of their own and are simply arguing to allow those who do not create to profit at the expense of those who do.

Cheers,
Calix

(...that’s my ox gettin’ gored there, folks…)

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Re: Founding Fathers and Public domain

by Daniel Mount on Wed Apr 01, 2009 9:31pm

Calix Lewis Reneau wrote:

It’s interesting to me that, by and large, the people arguing for a reduction of copyright protection (or against its expansion) and for the expansion of uncompensated use of intellectual property almost always have never created any intellectual property of their own and are simply arguing to allow those who do not create to profit at the expense of those who do.

Hmm. I’m not sure this is the case.

Just take my own case: I’ve written a roughly 500-page hardcover book on the Faith of America’s Presidents that took 5 years to research, I’ve released a DVD and CDs on related topics, and (totally unrelated) I’ve written over 500 musical compositions (one of which has been cut by a professional group in my chosen genre, and with others in the pipeline). So I think I can fairly lay claim to being an intellectual property creator.

But let’s just suppose I live a fairly full life (80 years) and the works are protected 70 years beyond that. I think the concept that my book and songs could still be under copyright in 2136 is completely ludicrous.

And here’s the crux of the issue, at least for me. My goal in creating intellectual property is not to get rich, but to have something that has lasting value. Perhaps a bestseller will still be drawing in enough money to make copyright administration feasible 125 years from the date of publication, but for pretty much anything else, it will not be financially feasible to keep that structure in place. So works under copyright but decades past the point of financial viability will gather dust until everyone has forgotten about them, and then when they do enter the public domain, it will be too late.

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Re: Founding Fathers and Public domain

by Erik Yeager on Wed Apr 01, 2009 9:56pm

That’s not the case with the classics.  Popular authors, such as C.S. Lewis, should have the ability to pass their life’s work (and the revenues generated by such work), to their beneficiaries.  If you want to distribute your work for free earlier than the law allows, it should be your choice and only your choice.  Intellectual property is still property.

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Re: Founding Fathers and Public domain

by James Burgess on Wed Apr 01, 2009 11:44pm

I wonder what we would ‘believe in’, had copyright laws existed in the first
century, and Matthew, Mark, Luke and John, along with St Paul, St Peter
and St James, been granted exclusive protection for their writings, the span
of their lives + x years?  “No hand written copies or dissemination without
prior approval”.

Shortly after the Civil War, corporations which at that time were limited to
a life of 6 years, were granted ‘in perpetuity’.  So Man bestowed on his own
creation that which he could not claim for his own existence: ‘eternal life’.

There is a pattern here, obviously.  Man seeks to control—harvest, bottle
and sell—that which is given freely to his imagination by the Creator of all.

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Re: Founding Fathers and Public domain

by Daniel Mount on Thu Apr 02, 2009 5:34am

James Burgess wrote:

There is a pattern here, obviously.  Man seeks to control—harvest, bottle and sell—that which is given freely to his imagination by the Creator of all.

I like the way you put it!

Copyright law is supposed to strike a reasonable balance between financial gain for the benefit of creators and a strong public domain for the benefit of scholarship. The pendulum has swung way too far the one way,

And if one creates for the sole purpose of financial gain, then I can see how they would want a copyright (essentially) in perpetuity. But for those who seek to contribute to knowledge or enjoyment of society, we look for a greater good than our own in seeking a balance.

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Re: Founding Fathers and Public domain

by Erik Yeager on Thu Apr 02, 2009 6:16am

It also depends on what you’re creating.  A lot of intellectual property requires a significant investment from the creator.  If you limit their profitability, innovation will slow down or cease entirely.  Few people want to pour out their resources to benefit the “common good”.  Artists are obviously more likely to do this than business owners.

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Re: Founding Fathers and Public domain

by Calix Lewis Reneau on Thu Apr 02, 2009 6:54am

Look at what happens in socialist countries with universal health care to medical research.

It becomes moribund - because researchers know they will never recoup their investment, much less profit.

Cheers,
Calix

(...excuse me, I’ve got meds to take now…)

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Re: Founding Fathers and Public domain

by James Burgess on Thu Apr 02, 2009 7:56am

Calix, you read too much propaganda from the Pharma industry.
Having know several Pharma sales reps, the industry is ripping off the American consumer,
all in the guise of recouping investment capital.

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Re: Founding Fathers and Public domain

by Erik Yeager on Thu Apr 02, 2009 9:21am

It’s no secret that our system allows for severe pharmaceutical industry abuses, but Calix is right, too.  The reason that the healthcare industry is able to hyperinflate prices is that government gets involved through Medicare, HMOs (etc.), and legistration (Pharm lobbying!).  Before government got involved, a free market led to price competition that has been all but killed in the present system.

As far as Calix’s point…I’m not terribly well versed on Pharm innovations, but it seems like most (if not all) innovative drugs come from free market economies.  I don’t think this is propaganda, just the nature of socialism.  Welfare state (socialism) = laziness (and a whole lot of other bad things, but I’ll stay on topic).

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