Is "Making Available" Copyright Infringement?
NewYorkCountryLawyer updates us now that the legal issue — is it copyright infringement merely to "make available" a copyrighted work? — has been argued by the attorneys in Elektra v. Barker (on January 26). Whichever way the ruling goes it will have a large impact across the Internet. Appeal seems likely either way. No ruling has issued yet but "a friend" has made the 58-page transcript "available" (PDF here).
Between this, and people being held liable for the actions of their neighbors using their open wi-fi networks, it makes me scared to think what will come next...
Appended to the end of comments you post. 120 chars.
Did anyone think of a library making copyrighted materials available? (Sure it is likely to be more detailed then that but in the same manner is this where we are going?)
If you intentionally make your assets unprotected, and when stolen, you don't report to the police and just get on with the life, would it be illegal?
I wonder what would happen if some broke into a house, instead of taking away CDs, he just copied them and left, would the house owner be liable for copyright infringement?
Virtual Betting on Facebook for non-geeks.
NewYorkCountryLawyer updates us now that the legal issue -- is it copyright infringement merely to "make available" a copyrighted work?
This of course, leading to 2011's legal dilemma: Is it copyright infringement to "view" a copyrighted work?
The theory of relativity doesn't work right in Arkansas.
Software exists for OCR from camera sources such as cell phones. Would the presence of, say, a bookstore which allows patrons to browse the shelves and - presumably - photograph the pages be liable under this expansion? What are the special circumstances for libraries, and could they be considered liable under this distribution interpretation?
Is it just my observation, or are there way too many stupid people in the world?
From Merriam-Webster:
1 a : a place in which literary, musical, artistic, or reference materials (as books, manuscripts, recordings, or films) are kept for use but not for sale b : a collection of such materials
Sounds exactly like a share folder to me. I wonder why nobody has used this as a defense before?
Weaselmancer
rediculous.
The problem for the RIAA is that their investigator can't download the song himself and then use that as an example of infringement because it is a legal impossibility to violate your own copyright. So the courts are being asked to find against somebody on the basis that somebody else probably downloaded the song. This is a poor standard of proof.
I realize the RIAA is focused on people "making available" copyright works via P2P networks, but the legal implications are pretty profound.
Sometimes you don't ask a question to find an answer...
Sometimes you ask a question to make people think about the issue.
You can't talk about Wikipedia's flaws on Wikipedia
That is in fact happening. See Creative Commons, FreeCulture, Free Software Foundation, etc.
Ray Beckerman +5 Insightful
There is something magical in libraries. It is called the "right of first sale" or "first purchase." This is the one and only thing that allows the libraries, used bookstores and used record stores. This basic tenet of American copyright law says that when you buy a physical copy of a copyrighted work you can do what you want with that copy without needing authorization from the copyright holder, including re-sell it.
Without "first purchase," all libraries, used bookstores, used record stores, video rental stores, etc. would have to separately negotiate the right to lend, resell or rent each and every copyrighted work and pay royalties--and that's assuming they could even find the rights holders. There would be no libraries. The copyright industry doesn't like the secondary market that "first purchase" allows because it means that multiple people can enjoy a copy of a book or video. "First purchase" also interferes with their ability to create scarcity in the market which lets them raise prices. Currently the copyright industry is working on making your "first purchase" rights null by using DRM to make exercising your rights technologically impossible. For instance, legally you may have a right to re-sell a song you have purchased on iTunes (Apple has even admitted it to CNet) but they will not make it possible to transfer a song technologically.
You keep repeating this mantra:
Please listen carefully to what I am about to tell you.
I have an important announcement to make.
There is no such thing as "making available" in the Copyright Act.
So why on earth would there be cases that discuss what is or isn't "making available"?
Didn't you read the briefs? Didn't you read the argument, especially the part where the Judge points out to the RIAA lawyer that there's no such thing as "making available" in the Copyright Act?
Don't you know that the only litigant anyone has ever seen that thinks that merely "making available" is a copyright infringement is the RIAA?
Ray Beckerman +5 Insightful
I'm not the only stupid one then : http://www.joegratz.net/archives/2005/09/02/p2p-de fendant-riaas-own-downloads-cant-prove-infringemen t/ - lawyers who know more about this than me use the same arguments.