From Voice ~ Topics: copyright, legal
The Copy Left Is Not Right
A new “rights movement” is taking shape around the issue of creators’ rights. In theory, its goal is to benefit the general public. But if successful, it will affect the careers and legacies of freelancers everywhere. And artists, writers and photographers who are already confused about how to protect their copyrights can now say hello to a new ride at the Funhouse.
The issue involves the length of copyright protections, and its advocates are a small group of attorneys, activists and legal scholars, known loosely as the “Copy Left.” Their legal argument is that prolonged ownership of intellectual property robs the public of “free” information to which the public is “entitled.” And they’ve set themselves the goal of rolling back or abolishing copyright protections. Their stated mission is to serve the public interest by speeding the passage of copyrights from private hands into the public domain. Some portray themselves as visionaries trying to restore the “Jeffersonian” ideal of a “free society” by making all culture accessible to consumers for “fair use.” Others might say they’re simply trying to make the public a generous gift of other peoples’ work.
On the surface, the rhetorical target of these activists is corporate copyright holders. But in their effort to stigmatize “Big Media” as hoarders of information, Copy Leftists fail to distinguish between copyrights held by corporations and those held by individuals. This failure has consequences because corporations don’t create; individuals do. And in their drive to enact laws to restrain “Big Business”, they could well damage freelancers instead.
The current situation has its roots in the 1976 revision of the U.S. Copyright Act, a law that went into effect in 1978. Before that time, freelance artists, writers and photographers in the U.S. generally didn’t own the secondary rights to the work they did for clients and publishers. If an artist did a painting for a large national magazine, for example, the publisher could claim all rights to it, just as major corporations now do for a logo they commission from a graphic designer. The 1976 Copyright Act revised all that and gave secondary rights to the freelance artist. This set up the working environment American creators have known for the last quarter century.
Over the years, publishers and others in the U.S. have lobbied for increased length of protection for the copyrights they held. Currently, an American copyright protects the work of a copyright holder for the lifetime of the creator plus 70 years. Twenty years of that term were added within the last decade by the “Sonny Bono Copyright Term Extension Act.” Some say this legislation, sponsored by the former Pop Star and Congressman, was a favor done for the Disney corporation, which feared losing their early copyrights on Mickey Mouse material. Others point out that the Bono Act merely brought the United States into closer compliance with international copyright law, a necessary step if the U.S. wishes to maintain reciprocal overseas trade agreements.
But the Internet has spawned opponents to these long-standing copyright protections. Upstart commercial interests, backed by the Copy Left, contend that copyright is actually a “black hole” which keeps content in the hands of corporations, inhibits free speech and overreaches the intent of the Constitution’s framers. They point out that American copyright was originally intended to protect only authors of “maps, charts and books,” and they seek to overhaul the entire U.S. copyright system to conform to their collectivist’s reading of Original Intent.
One of the leaders of this movement is legal scholar Lawrence Lessig, author of the newly published Free Culture: How Big Business Uses Technology and the Law to Lock Down Culture and Control Creativity (The Penguin Press, 2004). Lessig has previously proposed reducing copyright to a period of five years, with 15 increasingly expensive renewal options. The purpose would be to make the downstream paperwork of copyright holders so onerous that copyrights would fall through the cracks more often and enter the public domain more quickly. But this solution chases the problem without catching it. Anyone familiar with the workings of Big Business will understand that corporate copyright holders faced with increased paperwork and administrative costs would simply staff up to handle the overload, then pass the added cost along to the public. The people more likely to be swamped and defeated by multiple copyright filings and incessant, staggered renewals would be the overwhelmed, deadline-ridden freelancer. In short, the goal of checking corporate overreach by making copyrights harder to maintain would be very likely to burden the wrong parties.
There is some logic in questioning how far corporations should be allowed to go in conglomerating intellectual property. Corporations acquire copyrights in one of two ways: from the work of employees whose creative product is considered the company’s property; or from freelancers who deed their copyrights to the corporation—often as a forced condition of accepting assignments. Once acquired, corporate copyrights can, in theory, be retained as long as rolling copyright extensions can be lobbied into law. Here, the case against Big Media may be on target. But since the argument has no meaning when applied to freelancers, the true believers of the movement have borrowed the logic of Deconstructionism to simply remove creators from the equation.
Following Postmodern theory, Copy Leftists argue that “the romantic myth of authorship” is an artifact of less sophisticated times. To Deconstructionists, artists are nothing more than manifestations of the societies they live in. And since all artists are influenced by the work of previous artists, they say, each individual work of art owes a debt to the past that must be repaid to the public domain—in their minds, sooner better than later. The Copy Left may be breaking new ground here by trying to base statuary law on literary theory, but we don’t need to argue the merits of Postmodern criticism to see the flaws in the argument. Compare copyrights to home ownership and a stronger case prevails.
The principles of building construction are a collective body of wisdom accumulated over the ages. This information is available to everyone, as are building supplies to anyone who can afford them. Yet, the house you build or buy is yours and your heirs. Your debt to the fair use of public information does not obligate you to inhabit your home under a limited government grant, then surrender it back to the public at the end of that term. Let the Copy Left explain why individual copyrights should be treated any differently.
Most freelance artists and writers have no other source of income but their creative work. The accumulated value of that work is no different than the value that accrues to your home; and the copyright that protects it no more robs the public of an "entitlement" than does the ordinary ownership of private property. Indeed, without the incentives guaranteed to individual creators under copyright law, the tradition of independence in the popular arts would be at risk—and with it, the variety of independent viewpoints that freelancers bring to public life. That would rob the public in a noticeable way.
For decades, freelance artists and photographers have given shape to the content of popular culture. Within the last two decades their ability to earn a living has come under assault: from publishers who demand they surrender copyrights in return for assignments, from corporate interests who wish to sell access to “free culture,” from cutthroat competition with discount "image providers," and now from legal "visionaries" who wish to repeal or emasculate copyright.
The case for abolishing copyright can be likened to a scheme for the redistribution of income. In theory it sounds public-spirited. In reality it deadens motivation. Protecting a creator's individual copyrights will cost the public nothing, but it will insure the continued flow of creative work from which the public will ultimately benefit.
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For some reason this reads like Ayan Rand. And while I don't necessary disagree with the sentiments set forth, I do argue with the terminology, "Copy Left." While cleverly catchy it suggests that the "left" is philosophically opposed to property rights. Arguably, the historical left was for "redistribution of wealth," and a classless society at a time when the haves and the have-nots were poles apart, but today's left is for social justice and equitable rights.
Holland's conclusion:
"The case for abolishing copyright can be likened to a scheme for the redistribution of income. In theory it sounds public-spirited. In reality it deadens motivation. Protecting a creator's individual copyrights will cost the public nothing, but it will insure the continued flow of creative work from which the public will ultimately benefit"
Is like Howard Roark's rationale for destroying the mass housing project in the Fountainhead. His vision had been violated, his ideas tampered with.
Sure, copyright should be a inalienable right, but NOT FOREVER and a day. Ideas cannot be hoarded for the profit and benefit of the few. There are many scholarly purposes for which free sourcing is reasonable. Sure rights must be protected from missuse, but to blame the "left" for calling for abolishion is ridiculous. These seeming radicals are simply calling for a society where everything is not always viewed as profitable. -
Most ironic in the said response by the "Copy Left" is that their removal of Copyright protection and proposed application processes for attaining a Copyright will restrict access to Copyrights to only a select few. These few will be the Corporations with the money and resources to fund protecting their overextended Copyrights.
It behooves the public to sustain Copyright protection to maintain quality in design and to support the freedom to protect your work as an individual. This article was enlightening and completely on target. I don't know about other creatives, but I don't want some large company having the right to purchase the copyright for my work so that I can't access my own work. Under the proposed demolition of our rights by the "Copy left", large companies would conceivably hold onto an even larger share of the creative market. -
For an update, check out these articles (which we're putting out starting today)
FROM THE ILLUSTRATORS' PARTNERSHIP
"ALTERNATIVE" COPYRIGHT GAINS GROUND IN EUROPE
Lets artists "choose" not to be paid or credited for work.
"An alternative copyright that allows authors and artists to give away their work while retaining some commercial rights is being adapted for use across Europe and beyond." This according to Jennifer L. Schenker, writing in the International Herald Tribune: New Copyright Grants Artists Greater License, June 14, 2004.
"Lawyers, musicians and filmmakers gathered in Berlin on Friday [June 11, 2004] for the German introduction of the [alternative] licenses, which were first drafted for use in the United States in 2001 by Creative Commons, a Silicon Valley nonprofit organization. The German debut followed the introduction of Creative Commons licenses in Japan in March, in Finland in May and in Brazil on June 4.
"Some 60 countries are expected to adapt Creative Commons licenses to their jurisdiction, 'and Germany is a critical part of that process,' said Lawrence Lessig, the Stanford University law professor who is the chairman and co-founder of Creative Commons.
"Creative Commons licenses will be introduced in the Netherlands next Friday and in France by the end of the summer, with a goal of creating licenses for all EU countries by year-end, Lessig said in an interview by phone last week."
According to Lessig, these alternative copyrights will give artists greater "freedom" to give away their work. According to the article, "Artists choose how they want to share the work, specifying whether they want credit for reuse, whether they want to be paid for commercial use or whether it is acceptable to change [the work]."
Since nothing in current copyright law prevents artists from giving up their copyrights or declining payment and credit for their work, artists may wonder why they need new laws giving them "greater license" to do so. In fact, the "alternative" copyright is intended to act as a copyright "virus," infecting traditional copyright protections throughout society. This would give commercial access to protected works by anyone wishing to profit from their use.
Lawrence Lessig is a driving force behind "The Copy Left," a loose coalition of legal scholars and internet providers, whose goal is to rollback or abolish traditional copyright protections. They blame "the romantic notion of authorship" for impeding the distribution of culture and inhibiting creativity in the arts.
"Lessig is the author of "Free Culture: How Big Media Uses Technology and the Law to Lock Down Culture and Control Creativity." He has argued before the U.S. Supreme Court against extending the length of time that copyrights cover original works [Eldred v Ashcroft] and is an advocate of open-source software, which is distributed freely on the Internet."
This is the first of four e-mails on this subject. For more about this issue, you can read "The Copy Left is Not Right" and related articles on the IPA website ( www.illustratorspartnership.org ).
FROM THE ILLUSTRATORS' PARTNERSHIP:
To understand how a copyright virus would work, we first need to understand the concept of "orphaned" art.
ORPHANED ART AND A COPYRIGHT VIRUS
Two years ago, copyright abolitionist Lawrence Lessig tried to undermine copyright protection of creative works. In the case of Eldred v. Ashcroft, the Supreme Court ruled against him. But undaunted, he is now trying again.
In Kahle v. Ashcroft, two commercial archives have recently asked the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of California to declare unconstitutional statutes that guarantee the term of copyright protection. At stake are works first published after January 1, 1964 and before January 1, 1978. The Complaint asks the Court for a declaratory judgment ruling that copyright restrictions on "orphaned works" — that is, works whose copyright has not expired but which are no longer "available" to potential users — violate the Free Speech Clause of the First Amendment.
Lessig defines "availability" as the ease with which any "user" can locate or identify the creator of any work of art. In Lessig’s logic, the “need” of a "user" to exploit the work of others trumps the right of the work's author to determine when, where or if the work is exploited or what compensation is due for its use. According to Lessig, a user is entitled to expropriate the works of others because the act of expropriation is itself an act of “creativity.” And Lessig argues that where a would-be user of a work cannot lawfully exploit it because he cannot find its author, then the user's right of free speech has been damaged.
Lawrence Lessig is the founder of Creative Commons and is conducting a campaign to institutionalize "alternative" copyright licenses in as many as 60 different countries. This "alternative" license claims to define "the spectrum of possibilities between full copyright – i.e. all rights reserved - and the public domain – i.e. no rights reserved.”
A proponent of the Creative Commons License explains the strategy of the "alternative copyright":
“Widespread voluntary adoption of this [alternative] license will render measures like the extension of copyright irrelevant... the “Share Alike” license requires derivative users to adopt a similarly open license. The greater the volume of material with this kind of license that is out there, the greater the incentive to make use of it, even at the cost of forgoing commercial copyrights. Since most commercial culture depends ultimately on unpaid appropriation of older material, the effects will be cumulative, even viral [emphasis added].”
Creative Commons does not recognize works of art as the unique expression of individuals. In their logic, all “creators” build upon existing works through derivative or "transformative" uses of the work of others. Creative Commons routinely celebrates music remixers, collage makers, and film and print publishers who seek to profit by republishing with impunity the copyrighted works of others.
Consider the vast number of artistic works that appear without credit lines in print or on the internet and you can easily see how insidious this assault on copyright protection can be:
Step 1.
Declare any work of art whose author cannot be located or identified as an “orphaned” work freely available for use by others.
Step 2.
Allow the user of any "orphaned" work to embed his “new derivative creation” with the Creative Commons viral license. Now standard copyright law could become as vulnerable to the copyright virus as computers to an internet worm.
If users can have free legal access to art simply because certain authors are “difficult” to identify or locate, we will see endless opportunities for abuse. Commercial stockhouses, for example, databases and print and web publishing industries could freely gather "orphaned" images for exploitation. And the Copyright Clearance Center, which currently claims they cannot pay artists for the photocopying of their work (because they say they cannot track usage or identify authorship) would see their continued failure to pay artists legitimized.
This case could affect the life’s work of many artists now in the prime of their careers, and provide case law for the further erosion of copyright protections for all artists.
-Copyright © 2005, Cynthia Turner for the Illustrators' Partnership
Subject: #3: COPYRIGHT OFFICE ANNOUNCES ORPHAN WORKS STUDY
FROM THE ILLUSTRATORS' PARTNERSHIP:
U.S. Copyright Office
NewsNet
January 27, 2005
COPYRIGHT OFFICE ANNOUNCES ORPHAN WORKS STUDY (70 FR 3739)
The Copyright Office seeks to examine the issues raised by "orphan works," that is, copyrighted works whose owners are difficult or even impossible to locate. Uncertainty surrounding ownership of such works might needlessly discourage subsequent creators and users from incorporating them in new creative efforts or making such works available to the public. The Copyright Office requests written
comments from all interested parties on whether there are compelling concerns raised by orphan works that merit a legislative, regulatory, or other solution, and if so, what type of solution could effectively address these concerns without conflicting with the legitimate interests of authors and right holders. Comments are due by 5:00 p.m. EST on March 25, 2005. For detailed information on submission requirements and further information, go to the Copyright Office website ( http://www.copyright.gov/fedreg/2005/70fr3739.html ). -
Congratulations to Brad Holland on his article.
Congratulations for misrepresenting the copyleft movement in grand style. Lessig and company are not interested in “abolishing” copyright law and to identify them is this way is the grossest of debate tricks. Serious copyleft scholars and activists are, to a person, supportive of copyright law and of the rights of creators (and even the corporations who hire them) to enforce them in court if necessary. Yet we believe that copyright has become a distorted bonanza to corporate interests while threatening producers of all types, including designers, with frivolous litigation. We believe there is a better way, and it does not involve “abolishing copyright protections.”
Congratulations specifically for straw-manning Lawrence Lessig without telling readers that, because Lessig believes in the free circulation of ideas, his book is available online, for free. Please see: http://free-culture.cc/freecontent . Download the PDF, free of charge, and enjoy. Note that he never contends that everything should be available for free, but the books and articles that make up current legal debates are one of the most important classes of works that should be available to everybody. This is one of the most important functions of libraries, and the lockdown on copyrighted digital materials has reduced the public’s access to these debates. This is so that large publishing houses—but not law professors—can fatten their bottom lines.
Congratulations for fear mongering (among those who have a clear reason to support copyright law) without seriously considering the greater public good or recognizing that even designers are more likely to be slapped with lawsuits because of the overzealous over-enforcement of copyrights for authors who died before World War II. Toward that end, congratulations for ignoring the tremendous dangers to our First Amendment rights as copyright litigation deters or silences criticism and commentary of institutions from corrupt government contractors (e.g., Diebold) to cult-like religious sects (e.g., Scientology).
Congratulations for omitting any description of the utterly corrupt legislative process that has led us to the current copyright regime. This process includes some of the heftiest donations in all of Washington lobbying, coupled with the implicit threat that politicians had better play ball with the media companies that control their access to the public’s ear. This process also includes venue shopping, including the way that Assistant Secretary of Commerce and Commissioner of Patents and Trademarks Bruce Lehman used the World Intellectual Property Organization. Unable to pass a domestic prototype of the Digital Millenium Copyright Act, he helped draft the WIPO treaty that let the congress pass the DMCA under the cover of international law, even though the DMCA goes farther than required by the WIPO treaty. (See, for instance, Jessica Litman’s 2000 book DIGITAL COPYRIGHT.)
Congratulations for accepting the false metaphor of land property without even mentioning the profound differences between a home and a book. Congratulations for having the audaciousness to write “Let the Copy Left explain why individual copyrights should be treated any differently.” Lessig and countless other scholars have explained it, and to miss or ignore those arguments is either lazy or intellectually dishonest. (See, e.g., the writings of Siva Vaidhyanathan, Neil Netanel, Jessica Litman, Kenneth Crews, Peter Jaszi, and dozens more.) If I use your home without your permission, your possession is less valuable and your very person is in danger. But intellectual property is never used up; in economic terms, consumption of intellectual property is non-rivalrous. If I buy and then use “your” (an author’s) book, millions of other people buying or borrowing or reselling or photocopying a chapter from that same book does not reduce the value of either my book or the ideas contained in that book. Unlike physical property like homes and cars, one person’s use of intellectual property does not diminish another person’s ability to use it as well. (Imagine if everyone at the airport had to share one copy of THE DAVINCI CODE.) In fact, as science fiction writer Cory Doctorow has learned by putting his books online, the more people who read your book for free, the more valuable it becomes to you because all of those people represent potential future customers.
Finally, congratulations for attempting to undermine a movement that is on your side in many ways. Rest assured that the copyleft movement very much sympathizes with Holland’s point here:
For decades, freelance artists and photographers
have given shape to the content of popular culture.
Within the last two decades their ability to earn a
living has come under assault: from publishers who
demand they surrender copyrights in return for
assignments, from corporate interests who wish to
sell access to “free culture,” from cutthroat
competition with discount "image providers" ...
We copyleft folks also want to help reduce the aggressive corporate acquisition of copyrights and increase the degree to which reproduction royalties actually go to creators.
We copyleft activists want a copyright system that fosters creativity by rewarding creators such as yourself—not one that panders to multinational media corporations’ ability to cash in on “rights” that have nothing to do with rewarding creators who died decades ago.
We copyleft scholars want to make it easier for you to use ideas and inspiration from popular culture without getting sued for infringement and without diminishing your right to prevent people from copying and cashing in on your work.
Mr. Holland, I invite you and your readers to read and absorb some of what the copyleft movement has to say. I think you’ll find them more reasonable, more persuasive, and more on your side than you previously thought.
Sincerely,
Bill Herman
PhD Candidate
Annenberg School for Communication
University of Pennsylvania -
Jennifer Idol suggests that, "It behooves the public to sustain Copyright protection to maintain quality in design and to support the freedom to protect your work as an individual."
I mean this respectfully and not antagonistically: copyright law does neither of those two things, nor was it ever meant to. One can't legislate 'quality in design' (no matter how tempting!), and copyright gives creators only a limited monopoly on their work.
Best,
Michael -
It appears from this article and some of the comments that people are very much using 2004 campaign tactics to describe this issue. The Holland article includes some pretty big generalizations that make me question his motives, and the article by Cynthia Turner characterizes CopyLeft in a sweeping generalization that's pretty much false, since I'm familiar with some of the Eldred vs Ashcroft Supreme Court case. But what I see supporting 'copy left' seems to be just as filled with generalizations and possible inaccuracies, so in this case it's hard to tell who is telling the truth... or at least, giving you the WHOLE story.
There are some important points to consider on both sides of the argument, but I wish these writers would refrain from coloring the opposition and instead CLEARLY outline their position.
I'm going do some digging before I form an opinion on this, but initially I'm in agreement with designboy. Copyright SHOULD be an inalienable right, but NOT FOREVER.- BG -
How will a freelancer benefit from a copyright that lasts their lifetime plus 70 years? The only entity that will be around that long is a government and a company.
The comparison of copyrights with physical property is false. Copyrights are for ideas. Ideas can be distributed to an unlimited number of people, whereas only a limited number of people could live in your house without destroying it.
The copyrights should ensure a return on the originators investment that stimulates the creation of new work. Its a law that is part of a government policy to encourage the creation of new innovative things. Limiting copyrights just means the efforts of artists and organizations eventually are eventually fed back into culture. This is why you can imitate Bauhaus designs on your website without a fee or court appearance. You can paint a Mona Lisa with a moustache. You could translate and sell your own version of the Bible.
The efforts of the EFF and such organisations have become more poignant recently in the face of courts and companies further expanding the power, length, and applicability of copyrights. Numbers are being copyrighted. DNA sequences.
It is becoming more, not less, likely that 500 years from now, people may likely still be arrested or fined for producing modifications or commercial parodies of Mickey Mouse. -
This article, while perhaps an attempt to represent the side of freelancers, contractors, creators, etc. has simply left me with a bad taste in my mouth.
With all due respect, I am a freelancer, and frankly I welcome the opportunity to share my work and receive monetary compensation. And I have. -
This is a terribly interesting and important subject worth being fully presented and openly discussed at the Design Conference in Boston. But instead, ZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZ. Another opportunity lost.
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Interesting Article, AIGA has a great site.
And as a freelancer, I also welcome the opportunity to share my work therefore receiving monetary compensation.
And I agree with Royko: "Copyrights are for ideas. Ideas can be distributed to an unlimited number of people, whereas only a limited number of people could live in your house without destroying it." :) -
I would like to know your views on the Logo Works scandel.
You can read all about it on Chris Gee's blog.
http://www.thepreparedmind.com -
Just wondering why there can't be a happy meduim between the two ideas. I believe very much in Copy Left but I also believe very much in private ownership. I'm working on a research paper about these subjects and if anyone would like to bless me with any more insightment that would be wonderful. Thanks.
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Thought others here might be interested in a current copyright wrangle. In this case, my sympathies are with the artist, Daniel Moore, and his livelihood.
Daniel Moore attends, photographs (for years with complete support of Univ. of AL) University of Alabama football games, and then creates lively paintings based on the photos. I'm not a fan of his work, but many Alabama football fans are. Now the University wants their "cut", as if Daniel's paintings are a jersey using the UA logo, or a doll or any other piece of mass produced sports memorabilia. In fact, they've revoked his press pass to games....
I really worry when someone says, as Daffy Duck did in an old Looney Toons cartoon, "I'm the old man of the mountains, and I don't want them painted"...and then rubs the mountains off Porky's Painting." I'd be curious to see what my AIGA buddies think about all this..... -
PEOPLE:
YOU CANNOT COPYRIGHT AN IDEA. A PIECE OF INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY IN FIXED, TANGIBLE FORM, CAN THOUGH. -
This article does not demonstrate a full comprehension of copyleft, and it fails to point out the biggest thing for why it's being questioned, computer networks. The first time they mention computer is the footnote, and they never mention Richard Stallman, ever. They do mention Lawrence Lessig, but this is not Copyleft, this is Creative Commons.
Copyleft is a term that Richard Stallman created that describes a license that reserves the use for only other Copylefted works. For example, if you want to use a Copylefted work in your work, your work must also be Copylefted. A Copyleft licence is the GNU General Public License.
Examples of projects using Copyleft:
Wikipedia.org
The many flavors of the Gnu/Linux operating system, which includes: Debian, Redhat, Suse, Ubuntu, Kubuntu, Xunbuntu... the list goes on and on, and this is the beauty of it. -
I don't understand why giving people MORE freedom is such an issue? It's not like the Copyleft has TAKEN AWAY copyright. What they have done is offer up a few new ways that you can license your own work. They are not MANDATORY. But if you are an artist who wants them you can use them. And if you don't want them.... then don't use them. Duh. What the hell is the big deal?
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How can you copyright an idea????No way

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