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Lessig's Thoughts On Eldred v. Ashcroft Arguments

yokem_55 writes "Lawrence Lessig has updated his blog giving his thoughts on how the oral arguments for Eldred vs. Ashcroft went before the Supreme Court on Wednesday. He discusses the goals and methods he used in framing his arguments to convince the court to overturn the Sony Bono Copyright Term Extension Act, how he felt he did in presenting his arguments, and also provides some analysis on how he thinks the court might rule."

46 of 235 comments (clear)

  1. Re:not smart... by Skyshadow · · Score: 5, Insightful
    Except, of course, we're talking about law and not poker.

    In reality, Lessig could publish all of his notes from the case and let the opposition interview him for a week to get all the juicy tidbits and it wouldn't matter a hill of beans -- it's like asking a coach about his superbowl strategy the day after the game is played.

    All said, I think that Lessig played a pretty good game here and gave "us" (as in "we the people") pretty much our best possible shot here. People who think he "lost" the Supreme Court arguement just because the justices gave him a hard time are obviously not framiliar with the Court in general.

    That said, I'm not sure that the Court will side with Lessig simply because, IMO, Congress isn't really in violation of the Constitution. Really, this is a fight that needs to be taken to the Congress, which just won't happen until the American people (again, "we the people") take some interest in the machinations of their government.

    --
    Every year during my review, I just pray the words "slashdot.org" aren't mentioned.
  2. Gotta love this line. . . by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Funny

    This is a reason to respect the Court, not criticize it (though how they exercise their restraint, or where, can be criticized, as I suggest below). But the general idea that it will restrain itself, despite believing a law is stupid, is a feature, not a bug in our constitutional tradition.

  3. Re:Eldred is gonna lose. by Skyshadow · · Score: 5, Insightful
    Section 8, Clause 8: To promote the Progress of Science and useful Arts, by securing for limited Times to Authors and Inventors the exclusive Right to their respective Writings and Discoveries;

    So the framers specifically state their intent in giving Congress this power. A trillion years may be a limited time, but it cannot be reasonably seen as a promotion of the "Progress of Science and useful Arts".

    The idea here is that even the stuff before that first comma is important. Lessig et al. argue that, by extending copyright over too long a time, you're actually doing more harm (aka, arresting spin-offs and adaptations) than good (convincing creators to create by making it financially attractive).

    So it's not black and white. You absolutely cannot cimply ignore any of the words or phrases in the Constitution.

    --
    Every year during my review, I just pray the words "slashdot.org" aren't mentioned.
  4. Quick Summary. Read me. by ageitgey · · Score: 4, Informative

    For those of you who are too lazy to actually follow this, here's the quick summary of where we are at:

    Remember that just because a law is "bad" and horribly unbalanced towards lobbists doesn't make it illegal unless there is some specific legal reason the law is unconstitutional.

    Basically, Eldred is arguing that because we have a Constitution of enumerated powers (Congress can only do what the constitution specifically allows), that the power to extend copyright must be limited. In other words, the Constitution grants Congress specific powers. If Congress continually extends copyright, than it has unlimited power (which the Constitution doesn't give it).

    So far it seems the court is buying this argument. The court seems to be unsure though if it has any power to do anything about it. This is good news to Lessig, because it means the court buys the limited power argument.

    The case was also helped by a government bumble. The government argued that there is no constitutional limit on the ability of Congress to extend copyright, thus the extention was legal. This actually helped Eldred because the court did not like this view at all. The court did not support the idea that the constitution limits the powers of Congress, but that Congress gets to set what the limits are. In effect, the government proved Eldred's point themselves.

    So there is a fighting chance that Eldred might win. Everyone say a big thanks to people like Lessig who are fighting hard for the public's right to the "creative commons".

    To quote Lessig:

    "Peace, quiet, and may terms be limited."

    --
    Uninnovate - Only the finest in engineering.
  5. Re:The problem with Lessing.... by I+Want+GNU! · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I'm sorry, I hate perpetual copyrights as much as you do, but I completely disagree that they are the problem. Imagine a world without copyrights. A movie is created, and instantly people with professional equipment are in there getting cam copies of the movie. They sell it in legitimate stores. More copies are made. A DVD is released, and since it is very easy to make a perfect copy, these are made. There are sold in legitimate stores, as this is perfectly legal. A CD is released, and perfect copies are made and sold for $1 each in stores. Software is made and immediately sold for the cost of the media in stores.

    See the dilemna here? While you may argue that the RIAA and MPAA are evil (as they are), and that a lot of CDs these days are made according to a formula and forced down are throats (as many are), the fact is that there is much quality content created as books, audio CDs, movies, and software, that takes a large initial investment in order to create. If some company spends $8 million creating a piece of software then how are they going to recoup their profits if OfficeMax is selling $1 copies in the store in three days?

    This is my argument for why limited copyrights are needed. But, it would be very nice if they only existed for perhaps 20 or 30 years.

  6. Re:The problem with Lessing.... by Raul654 · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Ok, then explain this to me - if there were no copyrights, how would authors/musicians/artists/etc make money?

    The founders had envisioned a world were copyrights are a tradeoff - for a particular works, certain freedoms allowed under other parts of the constitution (suich as the 1st ammendment) do not apply, in order to encourage them to create. But after a time, they go into the public domain. It might be old, but it sounds like solid reasoning to me.

    Now, I agree that it has since been distorted. What we need (IMO) is repeal of those unconstituional retroactive copyright extensions, a shorter term for future copyrights, and (similiar to Russia) a law on the books making it illegal to create fair-use proof works.

    --


    To make laws that man cannot, and will not obey, serves to bring all law into contempt.
    --E.C. Stanton
  7. Re:What a case by I+Want+GNU! · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Maybe cause a very very small fraction of these copyrights *are* used and profit Disney? The vast majority of work from this long ago is barely making any profit, but there is a very tiny percentage making a positive amount of money for companies such as Disney. Meanwhile, the public domain is a public good and doesn't give Disney any benefit.

    Most corporations would completely disregard the environment since it costs them money to keep it clean (but anti environmental practices give them bad PR, so they only mostly disregard it). Disney and co disregard the public domain because instead of a nice fuzzy feeling they'd rather have their cold hard cash, even if it's just a bit. Remember that scene in Fight Club where Cornelius is on the airplane telling some woman about how auto companies measure the cost of settlements to keep quiet a problem with their cars that kills people versus the price that fixing them all would cost? That doesn't seem so far off (remember Firestone?).

    My point is that companies don't care squat about the public good. If anything gives them an additional cent, they won't care about the side effects. Since Disney stands to gain an extra couple of cents based on these laws they don't mind about us losing some works forever that won't be preserved.

  8. Re:The problem with Lessing.... by I+Want+GNU! · · Score: 5, Insightful

    No, that's not my point. With copyright terms allowed, things like Photoshop, 3D Studio Max, Blade Runner, The Matrix, and Dr. Strangelove get produced. GPL software is good in addition but this will get produced either way. You can argue that there is GPL software that does the same things as many other goods, but without copyright virtually all movies created in the last century would not have been created, or at least not as well. They wouldn't have the money to support the budgets they have, to buy their expensive SteadyCams to shoot them with and the film (which is very expensive), and their video editing studios. The educational videos wouldn't be made without public money since companies wouldn't make a profit on them.

    My argument is that without copyrights, goods that cost money won't get produced to begin with. How can you free a DVD that doesn't exist? Without copyrights you'd force material to be free and thus keep lots from being created. With copyrights, creators have a financial incentive to create, and so their work will be created. How would you like if all the movies we had to watch were GPLed videos? All TV stations would be financed by public donations, and with public goods there is no way of excluding freeloaders.

  9. How would life be different? by A+non+moose+cow · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Until I started following this issue I had never considered the 'length of copyright' laws, but did always wonder who had the 'rights' to classical music and Shakespeare, etc.

    I have lived my entire life in a period where termination of a copyright is a non-existent thing. This situation is 'normal' to us because we have never experienced life without it. We never think to check up on if a copyright has expired so that we can make a derivative work... we just assume that we can't use it because it hasn't expired. The very idea of making a derivative work has simply become unthinkable... in a very literal sense.

    We all know that tomorrow's ideas build on yesterday's. Since the wording of the constitution is apparently open to interpretation in this case, I hope the court considers the potential benefits to the populous of freeing these works. I hope the court does not find the idea 'unthinkable' just because it is the familiar status quo.

    1. Re:How would life be different? by Stonehand · · Score: 3, Informative

      Shakespeare's work should be unencumbered, but specific performances and derivative works may not be. I wouldn't recommend trying to videotape, say, The Reduced Shakespeare Company performing one of their altered versions and using the clip in a music video unless you get their permission first. Likewise for classical music; you should be able to get the sheets and perform it yourself, but a specific performance by, say, the Boston Philharmonic may be off-limits.

      --
      Only the dead have seen the end of war.
    2. Re:How would life be different? by Speare · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Actually, sheet music itself is a vigorously enforced area of Copyright. There are many ways to write the same essential tune, just like the Perl motto of There Is More Than One Way To Do It. Sheet music authors (and player piano roll creators before them) rabidly protect against their unauthorized reproduction.

      Think of the sheet music as an image which represents the music. The older sheets may in fact be turned out to public domain by now, but anything printed since the 50s is just as locked up as Winnie the Pooh drawings and Elvis Presley recordings.

      --
      [ .sig file not found ]
    3. Re:How would life be different? by msaavedra · · Score: 4, Informative
      The older sheets may in fact be turned out to public domain by now...

      Just as a slightly off-topic tangent, there is a fairly good source of public domain classical sheet music available here. I especially like the quote from Beethoven at the top. It sounds like he was an Open Source advocate nearly 200 years before our current movement began.

      --
      "Any fool can make a rule, and any fool will mind it."
      --Henry David Thoreau
  10. Re:Eldred is gonna lose. by Skyshadow · · Score: 4, Interesting
    Who gets to decide what it takes to "promote", and what exactly "limited" means?

    Well the Court *can*.

    What they'd do is establish a logical "test" which could be applied to decide what constitutes promotion (probably be called the Eldred Test). A good example of this is the Lemon Test, written by Justice Warren Burger in Lemon v. Kurtzman (1971), which can be applied to any future law concerning (in this case) school prayer.

    --
    Every year during my review, I just pray the words "slashdot.org" aren't mentioned.
  11. Thanks to Larry Lessig by EricEldred · · Score: 5, Interesting

    As the lead plaintiff in the case, I want to extend my greatest appreciation to Larry Lessig for taking on this case and arguing it so skillfully before the Supreme Court.

    No doubt all of us will agonize over what we could have done better. But in the last four years we have raised the level of debate significantly on the role of copyright in the digital age. Today it would likely be impossible for legislation such as the CTEA to be passed.

    What we need to do now is transfer some of the momentum from the Eldred case toward fighting some of the bad legislation beginning with the DMCA and including the Coble bills. After the Eldred decision, we can plan our next moves for new legislation that promotes the public interest.

    Please support the public domain now by freely publishing your own ideas from your own website. Make new derivative works by digitizing works that are now in the public domain. Support the EFF, EPIC, Public Knowledge, Creative Commons, and Project Gutenberg and other online libraries.

    And thanks for your support in all this!

  12. Re:The problem with Lessing.... by Raul654 · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Ok, then explain this to me - if there were no copyrights, how would authors/musicians/artists/etc make money?

    Perhaps through concerts or public display. But this point is part of the problem, the end goal is not to make money for XYZ, but rather to maximize benefit to society. It is an unfair question like in the past how do the poor cotton farm owners make money without slavery? Well, stop trying to exercise rights you don't have and we can discuss it.

    I hate to burst your bubble, but having people do their job for the benefit of society is a hallmark of socialism, and has been conclusively proven not to work, except under very special conditions. If there was no money to be made from writing books, very few would write them.

    The founders had envisioned a world were copyrights are a tradeoff - for a particular work, certain freedoms allowed under other parts of the constitution (such as the 1st ammendment) do not apply, in order to encourage them to create. But after a time, they go into the public domain. It might be old, but it sounds like solid reasoning to me.

    It might have looked reasonable at a time where an encyclopedia of knowledge couldn't be transfered and coppied to every point on the planet in less than 30 seconds, but not today

    As one of today's articles pointed out, works hold their value for a shorter period of time nowadays. So I guess the simple solution is to shorten the length for which their copyright apply. That not withstanding, the founders' theory still holds.


    Now, I agree that it has since been distorted. What we need (IMO) is repeal of those unconstituional retroactive copyright extensions, a shorter term for future copyrights, and (similiar to Russia) a law on the books making it illegal to create fair-use proof works

    Oh and another thing about slavery, is that it started out as short term indentured servitude for blacks and whites that could not be inherited. After the term you got freedom and your own property. Sounded like a good deal, accept there was one problem, it planted the seed for a system that was outright evil and caused a lot of damage in the long run for America.


    You make a valid point. Indentured servitude (a valid, morally-neutral arragement), while helping to bring early settlers to America, decayed into something more evil. However, abolishing copyrights is like killing the patient to cure the disease. If you do it, you kill off 98% of the industries that depend on copyrights. [Please, please, prove me and show how the *AA can continue to make anywhere near it's current money without copyrights] In this case, the way to prevent decay is to take the money out of congress, so that commercial interests like the *AA can't exert undue influence.

    --


    To make laws that man cannot, and will not obey, serves to bring all law into contempt.
    --E.C. Stanton
  13. No, thank *you* by InterruptDescriptorT · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Actually, it is you whom we ought to thank, firstly for all the work you are doing with the library and also for pressing the case and having the tenacity to take it all the way to the Supremes.

    Regardless of the outcome, you have raised this issue in the media and finally people are starting to become aware of the awesome power of the copyright holders and the great potential of the public domain that may be lost if it weren't for you.

    I do have a vested interest: I put a lot of poetry (Dickinson, Poe, St. Vincent Millay [if you win :-)]) to music in a modern setting, bringing the great works to a whole new audience. If you win, and I sincerely hope you do, then it benefits not just you, not me, but everybody.

    Thanks.

    --
    Karma: Excellent Birds (mostly as a result of listening to Laurie Anderson)
  14. Re:Eldred is gonna lose. by mamba-mamba · · Score: 4, Informative

    As you say, this is an off-topic thread, of course.

    I think the idea behind "well-regulated" might mean that the people (whoever they are) MUST be in control of the militia. That is to say, the 2nd ammendment in no way justifies private armies, but is designed to encourage every able-bodied man (or person, nowadays) to take seriously his (or her) obligation to defend the country against hostile takeover.

    Here is a URL to a (pro-gun) discussion of this idea:
    http://www.2asisters.org/unabridged.htm

    Since I admit that this is off-topic, and posted with "No Score +1 bonus," and since this is a reply to a reply to a reply, and thus will not be read by many people, please don't mod me down!
    MM

    --
    By including this sig, the copyright holders of this work or collection unreservedly place it in the public domain.
  15. Public domain doesn't benefit Disney? by Spamalamadingdong · · Score: 4, Interesting
    Disney's made huge piles of cash off of the public domain. Look at what they raked in on Victor Hugo's work (the Hunchback of Notre Dame) after it went out of copyright. Ditto with Snow White and a pile of other, older works.

    Of course, when it comes time for Disney to give something back to the commons from which they've drawn so much, it's "different".

  16. Re:What a case by glandauer · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The problem with Disney's views is that they're shortsighted- even for Disney. As people have routinely pointed out, Disney has been very aggressive about using public domain as a source for its works- i.e. Snow White, Sleeping Beauty, etc. That means that they could probably profit more than anyone else if the public domain was expanded. Yes, they'd lose the rights to Steamboat Willy, but how much money are they actually making from that? OTOH, Winnie the Pooh would be out of copyright pretty soon, so they wouldn't have to pay royalties to A.A. Milne's heirs for the use of Pooh. How many great movies could be made based on the works of Faulkner, Hemmingway, and the like that are currently being kept under copyright by the term extensions? How great would it be to be able to use Gershwin's music as a background score without having to pay his heirs for it? Why can't Disney see the advantages to them of being able to take advantage of the new works that would be going into the public domain?

  17. Re:It is amassing to me by Skjellifetti · · Score: 5, Insightful

    You are right. We, the ignorant public, just don't get it. Someone worked very hard to write the music, book, whatever. You did nothing. And yet you believe that you are entitled to the benefits of that work without paying anything for those benefits. Nope, we just don't get it.

    I laughed at my father years ago in my leftist youth when he told me an old quote variously attributed to Churchill, Clemanceau, Shaw, Russell, and Disraeli:

    Any man who is not a socialist at age 20 has no heart.
    Any man who is still a socialist at age 40 has no head.


    One day, you, too will not get it either.

  18. The problem with red herrings and straw men.... by Spamalamadingdong · · Score: 3, Insightful
    ... is that they are meaningless.
    I hate to burst your bubble, but having people do their job for the benefit of society is a hallmark of socialism, and has been conclusively proven not to work, except under very special conditions. If there was no money to be made from writing books, very few would write them.
    I don't mind bursting your bubble. If the laws of society are to exclusively benefit one group of people over another, why should the latter group bother to obey them? The point of copyright law is that it strikes a bargain for the benefit of all, not that it creates a sinecure for authors, artists and the CEOs of megamedia conglomerates.
  19. After they win... by Murdock037 · · Score: 3, Interesting

    ...Somebody ought to put together a little DVD collection of the earliest Mickey Mouse shorts that would now be public domain. And donate proceeds to the EFF.

    A little thanks to Lessig, and a little fsck you to Disney.

    1. Re:After they win... by Patrick · · Score: 4, Insightful
      You want to make a profit selling someone elses work, and use that profit to fight to destroy legislation protecting copyrighted work, so you can continue destroying individual rights.

      Walt Disney, creator of those early Mickey Mouse works, has no individual rights left. He's dead. You're promoting the "rights" of a huge corporation to use government power to grant themselves a continued monopoly on the use of 75-year-old cartoons. Some "rights."

      Authors have no inherent "individual right" to the use of their ideas. Copyright is not a right like the right to free speech and physical property. Copyright is a bargain: to promote the progress of science and the useful arts, government grants short, limited monopolies for the commercial uses of certain types of art. To claim that perpetual, posthumous control over your ideas is a natural right is absurd.

  20. Re:Eldred is gonna lose. by joenobody · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Section 8, Clause 8: To promote the Progress of Science and useful Arts, by securing for limited Times to Authors and Inventors the exclusive Right to their respective Writings and Discoveries;

    What this says to me is that copyrights should be non-transferable. No signing away copyright to some big corporation unless you're doing "work for fire". This, and a sane policy that recognizes that authors don't have any incentive to create Writings and Discoveries after they're dead, would pretty much wrap it all up.

    --

  21. Re:not smart... by einhverfr · · Score: 3, Interesting

    IMO, Congress isn't really in violation of the Constitution.

    Except that the DoJ has admitted that in their case they see congress having total discression of the "limited time" that a copyright has. So, this looks a lot like saying limit of x as x goes to infinity would be supported here by their argument ;)

    Whether or not the court strike down the law, it will be interesting to see how they interpret this limit in general.

    And a quick comment-- Whether or not we win this battle, we need to be thankful for Lessig because he has devoted 4 years to this fight and without him, the fight might not have begun or be carried as far as it has been. If we lose here, we are in for a long fight, outside the courts, though activism, legislators, etc.

    --

    LedgerSMB: Open source Accounting/ERP
  22. Good points - and elaboration by kscguru · · Score: 5, Informative
    VERY good pints, though I think I might comment/elaborate on a few of them.

    Remember that just because a law is "bad" and horribly unbalanced towards lobbists doesn't make it illegal unless there is some specific legal reason the law is unconstitutional.

    Exactly right - and the Supreme Court would be correct in maintaining a law passed entirely by lobbyists over the objections of 90% of the American people. Why? Because the Constitution doesn't prevent it. And in the U.S., there is no law higher than the Constitution. Immoral, yes, but illegal, no.

    I even think this is necessary - because think of the opposite. How many laws were passed with the support of 90% of the people over the objections of lobbyists? Answer: a whole bunch of important ones. Taft-Hartley (sp?) on labor laws, Sherman Antitrust, Amendment 19 (?) (women voting). If we want the people to overrule lobbyists sometimes, we need to let lobbyists overrule us sometimes - because the people can always re-elect a more favorable Congress.

    So far it seems the court is buying [the limited powers] argument. The court seems to be unsure though if it has any power to do anything about it. This is good news to Lessig, because it means the court buys the limited power argument.

    It's actually a very good thing the court is unsure if it has power. In fact, the court almost ALWAYS asks if it has power to intervene... you'll notice that since the court rejects upwards of 90% of the cases appealed to them. A big part of those appeals are cases where the court doesn't feel it should issue a ruling.

    Another example, the Florida election stuff. That debacle was an example of the Court deciding it DID have power (and deciding very quickly, and without much justification). IMO, a more correct ruling would have been to just say that "how a state runs its elections is its own business" and just refuse the matter entirely. This was basically the minority opinion. I'm not arguing the merits or outcome of the decision (I would have remanded it with instructions for a re-hearing, but I'm not a Supreme), but most of the mess occurred because the Court jumped too quickly into an area it shouldn't have entered.

    Perhaps the Court even feels burned because of the Florida voting episode, and is trying to be extraordinarily cautious with its power (and even more so because more eyes are looking for faults!)

    The case was also helped by a government bumble. The government argued that there is no constitutional limit on the ability of Congress to extend copyright, thus the extention was legal. This actually helped Eldred because the court did not like this view at all. The court did not support the idea that the constitution limits the powers of Congress, but that Congress gets to set what the limits are. In effect, the government proved Eldred's point themselves.

    As much as the Court hates giving itself power, it likes giving someone else power even less. A better argument might have been that there is a limit but Congress should determine it; but instead, the government chose to try to defend the whole thing. It almost feels like they're giving the case away. Thus: I'm watching carefully to see if someone responds to "an erosion of copyright law" by introducing a new, draconian law with overwhelming support. Cyncial, yes, but I'm very cynical when politicians are involved.

    Very good summary, my complements to you good sir.

    --

    A witty [sig] proves nothing. --Voltaire

  23. Re:The problem with Lessing.... by Chasuk · · Score: 5, Insightful

    ...the entire renissance happend without copyrights.

    This is true as far as it goes; however, it ignores the other mechanism in existence which guaranteed the livelihood of those renaissance artists whom we remember today: patronage.

    Respected artists and philosophers of the renaissance didn't have to work, because some rich noble or institution supported them, or because they were already independently wealthy. I know that this doesn't apply to all artists of that era, but to a significant minority.

    This also ignores another issue. Let's suppose that the RIAA, etc. didn't exist. That I produced a work of art accompanied by a license of my own composition in which I requested that you didn't distribute my creation, and deleted it from your HD after 24 hours unless you paid me $5.

    Wouldn't I have the right to do that? Does an artist who chooses a digital medium automatically forfeit rights that a sculpture in bronze or clay doesn't?

    I we expect the GPL to be honored, then what about the rights of artists who choose to be protected by copyright law? I mean, the RIAA aside, doesn't Metalicca have the right to choose which license they distribute their wares (not warez) under?

  24. Re:What a case by Stonehand · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Maybe it's a tactical decision.

    Somebody well-funded like the Walt Disney company can pay those royalties, or, if the royalties demanded are outrageous, spend some time and money looking for alternatives. An upstart on a much lower budget might be hampered far more if the copyrights remain.

    --
    Only the dead have seen the end of war.
  25. Re:The problem with Lessing.... by WEFUNK · · Score: 5, Insightful

    ...it would be very nice if they only existed for perhaps 20 or 30 years.

    I think Lessig did a great job, but I'm a little worried that the case will fail for being too conservative by limiting the challenge to the CTEA alone. The constitution can easily be read to be even more restrictive if you understand "...securing for limited Times to Authors and Inventors the exclusive Right..." to mean that the time is to be limited from the relative perspective of the creator, not an absolute term.

    This is in keeping with the original limits which were well within an average lifespan (granted, a work produced less than 14 years before an authors death might seem unlimited but in most practical cases copyright would expire during their lifetime). Today, copyright is extended exclusively (and transferably) to an author for an unlimited time from their perspective (as long as they live), to their children for a nearly unlimited time (most if not their entire life) and, barring further extensions, only their grandchildren are likely to hold copyright for long but limited time. From another perspective, anything produced during my lifetime will never enter the public domain before I die. As far as I'm concerned, to me this is an unlimited term.

    Now I highly doubt that the supreme court would role back all of the earlier laws, even if they prove to be unconstitutional, but Lessig's argument can be thought of as providing a welcome compromise that limits the need to meddle with the less recent past. My worry is that they will accept the Lessig argument as the most extreme case and seek a lesser comprimise such as limiting future extensions without repealing CTEA.

    --
    My next sig will be ready soon, but friends can beat the rush!
  26. Expired... but for how long? by coyote-san · · Score: 3

    One of the scariest things about this last extension is that some copyrights HAD expired, then were reinstated.

    That is what is the most obscene thing about the extension, IMHO. Republication of several volumes which have long been out-of-print because it made no economic sense for the IP holder (the cost of tracking down the heirs could easily exceed the physical costs of a low volume publication run!) have been forced to be suspended with no renumeration to the parties who had already spent good money to prepare for publication of the material once it entered the public domain, for absolutely no benefit to anyone except that it protected a few corporate logos.

    Quick, when was the last time Mickey Mouse appeared in a Disney animation? I think there was a short released with one of the animated films a few years ago, but before that you would have to go back to the 50s. When was the last time Steamboat Willie appeared in any theater outside of the Disney theme parks? Mickey is still protected as a trademark, but you can't credibly claim that the early works still need copyright protection.

    --
    For every complex problem there is an answer that is clear, simple, and wrong. -- H L Mencken
    1. Re:Expired... but for how long? by DarkVein · · Score: 4, Informative

      This is part of the Bern Convention. This is an international treaty on Copyright policy. The policy favors inherited royalties (lifetime plus 50 years) on all works, and sets a standard for which works are still covered by copyright. Realistically, it clears up if heirs should still recieve royalties.

      The US would have to break from the Bern Convention for meaningful copyright reform, though we only signed on in the last two decades. This itself is pretty encumberant, but it's the least of our troubles. The US is also a member state of the WIPO and WTO, each of which have the power to repeal (without popular vote) laws which impeed international trade. Google for the Clean Air Act.

      --

      I'm as mimsy as the next borogove but your mome raths are completely outgrabe.

  27. Congress represents the people by SiliconEntity · · Score: 4, Insightful

    What people are forgetting here is that Congress represents the people of the United States. Representatives and Senators serve at the pleasure of their constituents. If they consistently pass laws which the people of the United States hate, they will lose their jobs.

    This is why the Supreme Court is hesitant to overturn such laws, because there is another check on unjust laws, namely the ballot box. It is only when Congress is overstepping its bounds in a matter where the people support them that the Court is really needed to step in. When the majority takes on too much power and infringes on the rights of the minority, the Supreme Court can act to limit these excesses.

    But this does not seem to be what is happening in the case of copyright extensions. It's not like there's a powerless minority whose rights are being infringed by policies supported by the majority of the American people. Rather, these copyright extensions are technical matters that most people simply don't care about. They aren't important enough to make or break a Congressman's career.

    What needs to happen is that this has to be solved in the political arena. People who think that copyright policy should be changed need to convince others of that fact, to get them interested in the dispute, to attract supporters and political power. Then they can convince Congress to change its policies.

    This issue is a simply and fundamentally a matter of politics. The dispute needs to be resolved in the political arena. It may seem easier to convince 9 members of the Supreme Court than the American people. But ultimately it will be more just and more fair to effect change by convincing people, the American people, that these changes are worthwhile.

    We have a representative government, but that doesn't mean that everything they do is what you personally would want. What it does mean is that you can try to convince people that your ideas are good, and if you get enough support, the government will go along. That is the proper course for political change in a representative democracy.

    1. Re:Congress represents the people by kcbrown · · Score: 3, Insightful
      What people are forgetting here is that Congress represents the people of the United States. Representatives and Senators serve at the pleasure of their constituents. If they consistently pass laws which the people of the United States hate, they will lose their jobs.

      Man, how naive can you get?

      Look at the voter turnout figures and start talking to people. You'll find that there is very little confidence in our elected officials on the part of the electorate. Most people don't bother to vote anymore because they feel that there's nobody good to vote for anymore.

      And the politicians know this. They like this. They know that they only chance anyone has of getting in office is by getting sufficient exposure that the people who do vote know about them, and that the only way to do that is through the mass media. But the mass media is owned by large corporations whose only concern is raking in the cash. For the media, money is the only language worth speaking and the only one they'll listen to.

      And what entities in this country now have most of the money? The large corporations, if you haven't guessed it. Those large corporations that don't directly own the media outlets will of course have deals going with those that do, to make sure that only the candidates that are reasonably favorable to their desires will get any real media exposure, much less favorable exposure.

      This works because you can't elect someone you don't know anything about. You and other people might randomly vote for such a candidate, but such a candidate can't win because the votes of people who vote randomly will be distributed more or less evenly amongst the unknown candidates (of which there are quite a few).

      And so the bottom line is that the politicians don't listen to the people anymore, except when what the people are saying happens to coincide with what their corporate masters are saying. When there's a conflict, the corporations win.

      This explains the DMCA. It explains the CTEA. It explains the airline bailout. It explains why corporations were able to get away with bamboozling their investors for so long. It explains the FCC's behavior. And it nicely explains the foreign policy decisions of the United States.

      You can ignore all this and continue to believe that the U.S. is the shining beacon of peace and democracy in the world. But you do so at your peril, especially in light of the recent incursions on the rights and freedoms of the people (such as the current policy of the government to indefinitely detain, on a whim, anyone it decides to label an "enemy combatant").

      --
      Use 'slashdot stuff' in the subject line in any email you send me if you want to get past the spam filter.
  28. meaning of limited by solferino · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Thus, for example, when I said that limited should be read like "limitThus, for example, when I said that limited should be read like "limited edition print," Justice Souter interrupted to say that this was a different kind of case (not a contract, etc.), and I said, yes, but we are simply showing you that there is a plain meaning of the term "limited" that actually produces a limit. He's a very careful justice; he got the point, as did the court by the end


    I think the example of the use of the word limited as in 'limited print edition' is a good one.

    To spell it out :

    someone produces 100 prints in a 'limited edition'

    sometime later they say this is still a limited edition but we are going to produce another 100 prints - now it is a limited edition of only 200 prints

    again, further down the road they produce another 100 prints but maintain it is still a 'limited edition'

    seen in this way their use of 'limited' is obviously bogus - and the analogy carries directly to how the congress is interpreting the use of the term 'limited' in the copyright clause
  29. Re:What a case by PotatoHead · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I don't think this is a 'maybe' at all. Disney wants to own the art of bringing classic works to new audiences. This is the core of their business.

    Everything they do comes from that. Great works are great works. Given a little honesty on Disney Corporations part, I would be willing to bet that the economics of creating great works to build their business on is just a bit tougher than building on those works already created.

    Sure, there are the occasional original works, but by and large, the really good stories, and I mean ones that people can identify with, are those that lie just far enough in the past that they can be used a source material while being just familiar enough that people are interested by name alone.

    Everyone knows about the stories that Disney likes to retell. This is where the power is for them. Early in school you were told about Pocahontas right? So was I and everyone else that has gone to school which basically means everyone. Now think back to those early years... Do you recall any of your imaginative images of that story? I can, though not well. Now combine that imagery with your young impressionable mind and the importance and intrigue generated by your teacher.

    Now forward 30 years or so and see the name again attached to a new attractive movie. You are already sold!

    Disney would profit from additional works, but so would others. Right now there are almost *zero* names associated with this particular form of entertainment. Should others begin the art, the Disney name would be diluted. Given how much investment and profit is tied to that, they will do anything to prevent that from happening...

    Clearly not a 'maybe' but a must! (From the Disney point of view.)

  30. Re:Eldred is gonna lose. by Skyshadow · · Score: 5, Informative
    This, and a sane policy that recognizes that authors don't have any incentive to create Writings and Discoveries after they're dead, would pretty much wrap it all up.

    Interesting, but totally off-base.

    Consider the memoirs of U.S. Grant. Their are considered to be a model for military memoirs, and he wrote them while he was dying of throat cancer. He did so with the specific intent of restoring his family fortune (lost in bad business deals) and providing for his family.

    That alone demonstrates that heirs should be allowed copyright protection for a limited time.

    --
    Every year during my review, I just pray the words "slashdot.org" aren't mentioned.
  31. Re:The problem with Lessing.... by Tony-A · · Score: 3, Interesting

    The time horizon which determines what does and what does not get made is more like a year or two, certainly less than a decade. You don't really think any producer is going to decide what to do based on a 75-year payout, do you?

  32. Economist article on Lessig by ckd · · Score: 3, Informative

    Free Mickey Mouse is the Economist's story on Lessig, subtitled "Lawrence Lessig wants less copyright protection, including for Disney's famous rodent". Good article.

    It begins as follows:

    LAW professors rarely boast an army of "fans", but Lawrence Lessig is no run-of-the-mill academic. Now at Stanford University, formerly at Harvard, Mr Lessig has become a rock star of the information age, mixing scholarly inquiry with barnstorming activism on many issues.
  33. Ayn Rand Institute Says Lessig is a "Marxist" by ink · · Score: 5, Interesting
    For those wondering about lessig's mention of the Ayn Rand thing:
    From: Ayn Rand Institute Media davidh@aynrand.org
    Date: Mon Oct 7, 2002 8:10:04 PM US/Eastern
    To: Op-ed.list@heroic.aynrand.org
    Subject: WOULD-BE INTELLECTUAL VANDALS GET THEIR DAY IN THE SUPREME COURT

    Op-Ed from the Ayn Rand Institute

    WOULD-BE INTELLECTUAL VANDALS GET THEIR DAY IN THE SUPREME COURT

    Those who are spearheading the current legal challenge to the copyright law favor intellectual cannibalism masquerading as creativity and free speech.

    By Amy Peikoff, J.D.

    In 1998 Congress, pursuant to its Constitutional power to determine the duration of federal copyright protection, passed a law extending the term of that protection by 20 years. This law brought United States copyright protection in line with that already afforded in Europe. In addition, as the average life expectancy in the United States now exceeds 70 years, the law brings copyright protection in line with the legal vehicle for the posthumous control of tangible property--the law of testamentary trusts, which bases the term of such control on a human lifespan.

    Despite the reasonableness of this law, Stanford professor Lawrence Lessig is spearheading a legal challenge to it, culminating in his argument before the Supreme Court this Wednesday. Lessig, who seems to have become, in the words of New York Times writer Amy Harmon, "a rock star for the digital liberties set," is expected to argue that the law is "overly restrictive of the free-speech rights of would-be users of copyrighted material that previously would have been in the public domain."

    In recent decades we have already seen the "right to free speech" extended to mean the "right" to be provided with a free platform for one's speech. Anyone who dares to be successful enough to own a property where the public enjoys gathering--e.g., a shopping mall--is for that reason compelled to allow people to speak on that property. "Free" speech thus means: free of any need to earn one's own physical instrumentalities or audience, or even to pay for the right to borrow someone else's achievements.

    Lessig would have the Supreme Court extend this perversion of free speech to mean: free of any need to pay for the borrowing of someone else's greatest achievement: original thought. Or worse: free of any need sufficiently to digest that original thought so as to be able to put it into one's own words. Appropriating and parroting the creation of others is now, according to Lessig, "free speech."

    Lessig and his allies try to downplay what they are doing by making it an issue of finances. They say things like, "the copyright law used to restrict only big business, which is fine--but now it restricts anyone who has access to the Internet." "Only 2 percent of works protected by copyright," they go on, "create a regular stream of income for their creators." Translation: only a small minority of "non-little" people will be hurt by repealing this law, so why not do it? This attack on money, success and big business--no doubt another symptom of the "Enron" era--is shameful and Marxist. How is the Court, as Lessig demands, to "balance the interests" of original thinkers against those for whom "creativity" consists of cannibalizing--and even vandalizing--the products of others' thought?

    The government is expected to argue--properly--that the Supreme Court cannot arbitrarily impose a definition of "limited times." In other words, the power to set an appropriate time period for copyright protection lies with Congress. Congress has clearly been reasonable in its exercise of that power.

    The other main argument offered by supporters of the 1998 law is that, in the long run, the law will promote creative work, and thus the national welfare, by offering higher profits to those who invest in it. This argument--based on the "public good" standard--is intellectually bankrupt and doomed to failure. Opponents simply counter that more creativity will be fostered by allowing people to obtain and build upon existing works. Many "conservatives," such as Milton Friedman, use the same "public good" standard to argue that the incremental economic payoff provided by the 1998 law is not significant enough to encourage creativity.

    Anyone who raises the standard of the "public good" in this context had better be ready to have his rights in any field adjudicated according to the latest iteration of Jeremy Bentham's utilitarian calculus. In practice, this means according to the premises, preferences, and whims of the judge sitting before him.

    An artist or intellectual is often not only or even primarily concerned to reap the monetary benefits of his works; in addition, he wants to be sure that the integrity of the work is protected against mutilation as long as possible. This is especially true if the work conveys an important artistic or philosophic message. If those in the "digital liberties set" plan to have a field day with others' works of creative genius--bastardizing them into whatever fragments they find appealing, adding any distorting content they choose, then blasting the results all over the internet--what is the point of trying to convey to the world one's own vital viewpoint? What is the reward offered for trying painstakingly to create one's vision of truth or of the ideal universe, and to invite readers to share in it, if our nation's highest court gives Lessig's gang a formal sanction to practice intellectual vandalism on the finished product?

    Amy Peikoff, J.D., is a senior writer for the Ayn Rand Institute in Irvine, CA. The Ayn Rand Institute promotes the philosophy of Ayn Rand, author of Atlas Shrugged and The Fountainhead.

    --
    The wheel is turning, but the hamster is dead.
    1. Re:Ayn Rand Institute Says Lessig is a "Marxist" by hyphz · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Heh.

      The irony is, in a world with indefinate copyright, Rand could have been sued for making unauthorised use of Atlas.

  34. What a neat entry by oooga · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I guess I don't really know, but I'm assuming that the supreme court justices aren't treated like jurors and are allowed to keep up in the world. If that's true, and any of them happen upon Mr. Lessig's blog, I can't imagine them finishing it unswayed: not only are his arguments logical and convincing (as I'm sure they were in court, which is why this point is redundant from the POV of a justice), his writing is CONSTANTLY complimenting the court for it's treatment of the issues, from any angle possible. When the court refuses to go along with his ideas, they're exercising "rare and valuable restraint" about deciding when they can exercise their powers. When they agree with him on a point they're demonstrating understanding of his case.

    If I didn't agree with Lessig about most everything he's arguing, I'd call him a hopeless sophist, using flattery and reciporical(sp?) reasoning to draw the court into his camp. As it stands, I'm glad we have such a great speaker and convincing logician taking _our_ side for once.

    --
    -- Nerds on toast in the new millenium
  35. Re:The problem with Lessing.... by rhizome · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I'm sorry, I hate perpetual copyrights as much as you do, but I completely disagree that they are the problem. Imagine a world without copyrights.

    You're indulging in extremes where there is plenty of middle ground (as Congress has mapped out in its periodic lengthening of the copyright term). The topic of Eldred vs. Ashcroft is not concerned with abolishing copyright, it's taking the Sonny Bono/Disney Act (CTEA) to task for defining Congress' power over copyright extensions as being effectively unlimited where the Constitution specifically states that Congress' powers are to be, in fact, limited.

    You go on an on about evil and bootlegs and then recant your thesis with a statement on your preference for copyright terms. There is no dilemma as you state it here, except in Constitutional terms. Try to stay on topic, this isn't Usenet.

    --
    When I was a kid, we only had one Darth.
  36. Re:The problem with Lessing.... by swillden · · Score: 3, Insightful

    My worry is that they will accept the Lessig argument as the most extreme case and seek a lesser comprimise such as limiting future extensions without repealing CTEA.

    More likely, they'll just say that Congress can pass all the extensions they like, but they can't make them retrospective.

    I think this was Lessig's exact point in his explanation of the term "limited" as in "limited edition print". The "limited" in "limited edition print" means that a specific limit on the number of prints was made when the prints were created, and that no more will ever be made. Similarly, Lessig is saying that copyright should be given to an author (and heirs, etc.) for a specific period of time, defined when the work is published, and that no extensions for that work should ever be allowed.

    In this way, the Court doesn't set a maximum on the length of copyright terms (that being Congress' prerogative), but does insure that there are defined limits to copyright duration.

    What will this mean in practice? IMO, it means that the CTEA's copyright durations will stand forever, barring some legislative action to reduce them. Why? Because no corporation has long enough vision to bother pushing for terms longer than we already have. It would be effort that would only help some guy 100 years from now, and would have zero effect on the company or the stock price today or next year.

    No, the only reason the big entertainment industry dollars were pushing for the CTEA extensions was because they wanted that retrospective extension. If the Court strikes down Congress' ability to do that, then there will be no interest in lengthening the terms further.

    --
    Note to ACs: I usually delete AC replies without reading them. If you want to talk to me, log in.
  37. Re:Wondering... by odin53 · · Score: 3, Informative

    Simplest explanation: the constitutional prohibition against ex post facto laws apply really only to criminal, penal laws. Copyright isn't a criminal law; it's of a civil nature. Also, even though it has prohibitions, etc., copyright really is more of an enumeration of rights, not a penal code.

  38. Re:Wondering... by Tassach · · Score: 3, Insightful
    Copyright isn't a criminal law
    The hell it isn't. If you can go to jail for it, it's a criminal law. Last time I checked, the FBI investigates and arrests people for criminal copyright infringement. Read that little notice at the front of a videotape sometime. If it's a civil law, what's a federal law enforcement agency doing enforcing it?
    --
    Why is it that the proponents of "one nation under God" are so eager to get rid of "liberty and justice for all"?
  39. Re:Eldred is gonna lose. by Tassach · · Score: 3, Insightful
    That alone demonstrates that heirs should be allowed copyright protection for a limited time.
    This is not necessary. Rather than publishing your memoirs late in life under your own name, you can just as easily give them to your children and have him publish them as "the collected memoirs of $parent; as edited by $child". This way, your children would get the full benefit of the copyright in their lifetimes.
    --
    Why is it that the proponents of "one nation under God" are so eager to get rid of "liberty and justice for all"?