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Finishing Up Fair Use; More on Copyright
Spring 2015CS 340
Fair Use test (Universal v. Sony, 1984)
Four Factors:1. Purpose of the new use
in question2. Nature of the original
copyrighted work3. Amount and
substantiality of the portion copied
4. Effect of the new use on the market for original work.
Thinking QuestionWhy are transformative, proportional, incidental, and credited uses often fair uses?
Which factor wins/loses fair use cases?
A. Amount copiedB. Nature of the
original workC. Purpose of the new
useD. Effect on the market
of the original
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The court could find fair use even if the copier of the work makes money.
A. YesB. No
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Kelly v. Arriba Soft Corporation (9th Cir., 2003)http://openjurist.org/336/f3d/811
• Facts: Professional photographer sues search engine operator for indexing his images. In the process, thumbnails were created and stored on the Arriba Soft’s server.
• Issue: Do these unauthorized copies of his images violate Kelly’s copyright?
• Ct analysis: 4 factor fair use analysis
• Holding:
Do you agree with the court’s decison in Kelly?
A. YesB. No
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Galoob v. Nintendo (9th Cir, 1992)
• Game genie case. Users can modify existing games (extra lives, invincible char., unlimited ammo, etc.).
• Issue: Is this a derivative work?• Ct Analysis: 4 factor fair use; is it derivative
• Holding:
Do you agree with the court’s decision in the Galoob case?
A. YesB. No
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More on Copyright
IP part 3CS 340 Fall 2014
Suppose you buy a hardback of the novel Girl on the Train. Once you are finished reading it, can you legally lend, give or sell it to
your friend?
A. Yes you can legally lend it.B. Yes you can legally give itC. Yes you can legally sell itD. All of the above are trueE. Only A and B are true (you
may not sell it.)
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Doctrine of First Sale
• The doctrine means that the copyright holder is not entitled to a second royalty.– Works to extinguish the copyright holder’s interest in that
particular copy (once that copy is sold to a consumer.)• Ex. Used paperback book resale
– Copyright holders are still protected from unauthorized copies of their works
• This doctrine was created in a time (1908) when you purchased a tangible copy of intellectual property– A paperback, a poster, a vinyl record
Digital Rights Management (DRM)
• Digital rights management (DRM): a collection of technologies that work together to ensure that copyrighted content can be only viewed by the person who purchased it
• Often still used on ebooks and software, trending away from this with legal music download files
Audio Home Recording Act (1992)
• Provides royalties be given to copyright holders, from the fees collected on the sale of devices that can copy sound files and media to store it
• Provides an exception to copyright holders rights: consumers can make a copy of their lawfully purchased music for personal use
RIAA v. Diamond Multimedia
• The Diamond RIO mp3 player case• RIAA sued for an injunction (sale and mfg) against Diamond
RIO as device did not prevent copyright infringement– RIAA claims unlawful device as consumers could make &
download illegal mp3 files and use them on the player.• Ct denied injunction; affirmed “space shifting” as a fair use
• See http://museumofintellectualproperty.eejlaw.com/exhibits/rio.html for more information
US v. LaMacchia (1994, Massachusetts District Ct.)
• David LaMacchia and his electronic bulletin board Cynosure, pp. 113-4
• LaMacchia charged with criminal copyright infringement– The court found that the required element of “monetary or
property gain” was not present. The case against LaMacchia was dismissed.
• In response, Congress passed the No Electronic Theft Act of 1997. NET removes the requirement of monetary profit or commercial benefit. See http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/NET_Act
If the LaMacchia case was heard today (post NET) would the outcome would be different?
A. Probably soB. Probably not
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The Digital Millennium Copyright Act (1998)
Two main components:• Anti-circumvention clause: “No person shall
circumvent a technological measure that effectively controls access to a work protected under this title.”
• Safe harbor clause: provides immunity for service providers for infringing activities of their uses as long as they comply with some conditions– Notice and takedown
Peer to Peer Sharing Infringement
• Contributory infringement: occurs when an infringement committed by another person would not have happened without your help
• Vicarious infringement: involves an infringement that occurs in an area under your supervision, and when you should have been policing and preventing such acts
Ethics in a Computing Culture 18
The Napster case
• Who is Shawn Fanning?– Please watch this video resource:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CSpzW8bkkPc
• How Napster worked– Modified peer-to-peer– Revenue generation?– Success of Napster: Registered users after 1 yr of operation?
Napster’s position
• DMCA safe harbor for search engines• Many songs traded were not copyrighted & others
fell under fair use– Sampling– Space-shifting
• Service was akin to the device in Sony, capable of substantial non-infringing use
• 4th factor, market: sales increased during Napster• 1st amendment right to tell people where the
content they want is.
RIAA’s arguments
• Napster is not a search engine• That Napster materially contributed to the
infringement• Napster had direct interest req.• First Amend challenge not relevant• Plaintiff’s shown irreparable harm
We know how this comes out, but whose side do you like?
A. NapsterB. RIAA
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RIAA met burden
• For contributory or vicarious infringement must show direct infringement by 3rd party.– Shown 87% of files in violation– That the labels control 70% of files available
through Napster.• RIAA showed Napster tried to remain ignorant
of users’ identities. RIAA gave actual knowledge of 12000 infringing files.
MGM Studios, Inc., et. al. v. Grokster, Ltd., et. al.US S Ct 2005
• Grokster used "no servers to intercept content of requests" or to "mediate the file transfers"
• Grokster therefore does not "know when a particular file is copied"
• MGM showed that "90% of files available for download on the . . . system were copyrighted works."
• Grokster stipulated that most downloads using the system involved unauthorized, copyrighted works and that use was the "primary" use.
• Grokster marketed its software as a "napster alternative" – From ads:
• "#1 alternative to Napster" • "[w]hen the lights went off at Napster ... where did all the users go?"
• Lots of facts in record showed that "principal object was use of their software to download copyrighted works."
• Grokster obtained ad revenue from ads that its users were exposed to
• MGM claims Grokster should be liable as a contributory infringer and should have vicarious liability for infringement.
Grokster cont’d• Lower ct ruling: for Grokster.
• S. Ct issue & holding: "The question is under what circumstance the distributor of a product capable of both lawful and unlawful use is liable for acts of copyright infringement by third parties using the product. We hold that one who distributes a device with the objective of promoting its use to infringe copyright, as shown by clear expression or other affirmative steps taken to foster infringement, is liable for the resulting acts of infringement by third parties."
Reconciling the Sony & Grokster cases
• Supreme Court said that Sony case did not prohibit secondary liability for infringement for the distribution of a commercial product – fair use exception in Sony granted for the time-shifting
• No evidence in Sony that Sony promoted unlawful use • "because the VCR was capable of commercially significant non-
infringing use, We held the manufacturer could not be faulted solely on the basis of distribution."
• Sony "barred secondary liability based on presuming or imputing intent to cause infringement solely from the design or distribution of a product capable of substantial lawful use" – cannot impute intent from mere distribution – need "statements or actions directed to promoting infringement"
Grokster was not fair use. Why?A. Was not a private useB. Used the whole songsC. Most of the work shared
were creative worksD. Hurt market for originalsE. All of the above
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