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How to Fix Copyright (2011)

by William Patry

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The arrival of the Internet was revolutionary, and one of the most tumultuous developments that flowed from it--the upending of the relatively settled world of copyright law--has forced us to completely rethink how rights to a work are allocated and how delivery formats affect an originator's claims to the work. Most of the disputes swirling around novel Internet media delivery systems, from Napster to Youtube to the Google Book Project, derive from our views on what constitutes a proper understanding of copyright. Who has the right to a work, and to what extent should we protect a rights hold… (more)
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Of course I’m not really the audience for this entry into the ever-growing category of books on copyright for the general-interest reader; this one has some nice bits, though, including a riff on copying as a central element of creativity—Patry focuses mostly on copying as training before the development of one’s individual style, but he notices that individual styles still retain a bunch of copying, necessarily. I liked his take on why we should restore formalities (notice and registration/renewal to keep a copyright over a longer term): “The theocracy of formality-free copyright belongs to the Romantic ideal of artists starving in their Parisian garret. Copyright doesn’t want to be free any more than information does.” He defends fair use and “unauthorized creativity,” pointing out that copyright owners don’t like criticism or competition and are perfectly willing to use law to suppress both, but that doesn’t mean we should let them do it. ( )
1 vote rivkat | Jan 24, 2012 |
Like Lawrence Lessig and other critics of the current copyright regime, Mr. Patry attacks media companies for exaggerating their problems with piracy, then goes on to engage in hyperbole better suited to blog posts than books. This is a shame, since How to Fix Copyright is full of smart, sensible ideas. Mr. Patry argues that different kinds of work should get different kinds of protection. He suggests that creators be required to register their copyrights after a certain amount of time in order to maintain them—a good idea, given that under current law even works as minor as family photos receive automatic legal protection. At the same time, he recommends a "use-it-or-lose-it" provision under which rights to out-of-print works would revert to their creators. These ideas, as well others he explores, would greatly improve a system that even many proponents agree has expanded well beyond its intended purpose.

Unfortunately, Mr. Patry dances around the thorniest problem with copyright laws: the fact that some Internet companies see them as suggestions rather than statutes and build businesses based largely on infringement. Rhetoric aside, much of the debate over copyright online has less to do with what's legal than with who has liability for what isn't. Companies from Google to Grooveshark rail against any law that would require them to take responsibility for the way their businesses are run. Meanwhile, copyright-holders—as record labels learned the hard way—face a high cost in money and bad publicity if they try to sue individual consumers. And while technology companies have been outspoken in condemning SOPA for going too far, they aren't suggesting workable alternatives—at least partly because it is not in their interest to do so. . . .

To some extent, the success of Mr. Patry's arguments rest on whether one believes creative people can be motivated by copyright—or any kind of financial gain. Like most copyright critics, he is skeptical. (Perhaps Mr. Patry hasn't been listening, but many rappers certainly seem to like getting paid.) Of course, like most such critics, Mr. Patry has a day job—at a company that would stand to profit if his ideas took hold. That doesn't make them bad ideas. But one reason we need a copyright system—a reformed, more effective one—is so writing books like this isn't limited to those with that kind of financial stake in the outcome.
 
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The arrival of the Internet was revolutionary, and one of the most tumultuous developments that flowed from it--the upending of the relatively settled world of copyright law--has forced us to completely rethink how rights to a work are allocated and how delivery formats affect an originator's claims to the work. Most of the disputes swirling around novel Internet media delivery systems, from Napster to Youtube to the Google Book Project, derive from our views on what constitutes a proper understanding of copyright. Who has the right to a work, and to what extent should we protect a rights hold

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