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Dogs, Mangers, Growth and Greed:

Striking a Balance in Digital Copyright

The Eighth Annual Conference on Computers, Freedom and Privacy

Hyatt Regency, Austin, Texas

February 19, 1998

Nicholas Johnson*


*Nicholas Johnson, a former Commissioner of the Federal Communications Commission, and keynote speaker at the Third Annual CFP Conference, now teaches communications law at the University of Iowa College of Law in Iowa City.  1035393@mcimail.com; http://soli.inav.net/~njohnson

I.  Introduction

Thank you.

Let's give a big round of applause to Michael Esposito, Mark Lemley, and all the other wonderful folks who have made this eighth annual gathering such a pleasure.

It was an honor to be asked to address this exciting organization at your third annual conference five years ago and, of course, an even greater honor to be invited back.
 

II.  Texas

In the early 1950s, forty years ago, Austin was my home while I was earning undergraduate and law degrees from the University of Texas.  Over the years since I have come back whenever possible, to visit friends and watch Austin grow into the city it is today.  In fact, I will be back in a couple of months for a law school alumni gathering.

I lived in three locations around Red River and 20th, not that far from the law school. In addition to working at the University Co-op, managing an apartment house, and as a student assistant, I helped work my way through school selling ladies' hose and refrigerator defrosters door-to-door in the neighborhood.  My customer list turned out to have political uses as well, and I soon found myself a Democratic Party precinct chair.

Lyndon Johnson and I did not know each other then.  His political career took him well beyond the precinct level as you may know.  Mine did not.  In fact, the first time I ever met President Johnson was in the oval office at the White House when he was trying to persuade me to take a job as U.S. Maritime Administrator -- and what was to be my first experience with computers nearly 35 years ago.

When I came back to Austin to visit my old neighborhood I was at first distressed to see that the homes I had lived in were gone.  I was reminded of the line from Joni Mitchell's song, "they paved paradise and put up a parking lot."  [Joni Mitchell, "Big Yellow Taxi." See http://www.gnt.net/~pompano/songs/taxi.htm]  But then I realized the parking lot was for the Lyndon Johnson Library that included among its millions of documents at least some related to my service for the President.  It seemed a kind of fitting full circle to have the Library in my old precinct.

Besides, I guess I'd have to agree that the old neighborhood wasn't exactly paradise anyway.  Nothing like this hermetically sealed Hyatt; that's for sure.

So it's great to be invited back to Austin.



III.  Computers and Privacy

When CFP began, eight years ago, the primary concern of most computer users was freedom:  free speech, freedom from censorship, the threat of restrictions on what we could move through the Internet.

Those concerns are still with us; not only in China, Saudi Arabia, Singapore and Viet Nam, but in Europe and, yes, in our own country as well.  Ann Beeson reminded us of the law suits that have been filed to challenge public libraries' use of filtering software in Loudoun County, Virginia, and Kern County, California, and Senator John McCain's legislation that would restrict funds for K-12 schools' Internet access to those that use such filters.

It was appropriate eight years ago that we should have put freedom ahead of privacy in our name, "computers, freedom and privacy."  When Internet users were asked about the most important challenge confronting the Internet, "freedom" was what they responded.

Today, as you may have noted from the most recent Georgia Institute of Technology poll, users believe that the number one challenge is privacy.  Over 70% of the 10,000 users polled are asking for new laws protecting privacy.  Censorship is still a concern, but privacy is number one.

I don't mean to make light of users' privacy concerns.  There are real problems out there, and we've been talking about them at this conference.

But it has always seemed to me that computers create more privacy than they destroy.  In fact, there is an almost direct relationship between the amount of time one spends with computers and the amount of privacy one has.

Moreover, if, on the rare occasions one is required to have a brief face-to-face interaction with a humanoid, one limits the topic of conversation to computers you can create even more privacy.  Friends and co-workers will no longer call or drop by to visit.  Interruptions by significant others and children will gradually diminish until they disappear altogether.

It is obvious that this phenomenon requires far more investigation than that provided so far by the privacy protection crowd.

In fact, the LifeStream Behavior Center, and others, have identified individuals whom they believe to have a computer dependency, a compulsion to withdraw from reality into a virtual cyberworld.  They call it "Internet addiction."  I call it privacy.

And, hey, what about the far greater numbers of people who have a reality dependency, a compulsion to withdraw from cyberspace?  How about helping them get over their reality addiction?

You want privacy?  Get a computer, that's what I say.


IV.  Issues Aplenty

Of course, freedom and privacy -- or now, as it is, privacy and freedom -- are not the only issues on our monitors these days.
  But of all these issues the one I would like to say something about this evening is digital copyright.

V.  Striking a Balance in Digital Copyright

My colleague, friend and former student, David Loundy, led off CFP98 with his tutorial on copyright and trademark law early Wednesday morning.

He has discussed, here and elsewhere, the Digital Era Copyright Enhancement Act (H.R. 3048), the opposition of 60 law professors to Representative Coble's H.R. 2281, the On-Line Copyright Liability Limitation Act (H.R. 2181), Senator Ashcroft's Digital Copyright Clarification and Technology Education Act of 1997 (S. 1146), and the No Electronic Theft Act (H.R. 2265 -- now 17 U.S.C. Sec. 506(a)(2)).

Such subjects are best addressed, if at all, only at early morning sessions following the consumption of large quantities of coffee.  It is not the stuff of after-dinner talks.

But so long as we leave the legal technicalities to David, and others similarly intellectually blessed, perhaps you will permit some simplistic public policy suggestions on this occasion.

In brief, what I would like to propose is a substantial relaxation of the present copyright prohibitions regarding the uploading of textual material to the Internet.

It is not as radical an idea as may first appear.  It is similar, in some ways, to what the Copyright Act now provides under the concept of "fair use" (17 U.S.C. Sec. 107).[1]  It has even more precedent in the provisions authorizing libraries to copy works in some circumstances (17 U.S.C. Sec. 108).[2]

My proposal is really relatively simple, narrow and precise.  It is also more in the nature of an invitation to dialogue than a carefully crafted final draft of legislation.  It needs more research, and additions and revisions to the drafting.

Let's be a little more precise.

VI.  Conclusion

How we approach, and resolve, digital copyright issues can have enormous consequences for everyone on this planet.

We now have the ability to put the equivalent of libraries on the Internet, freely available to the world's people for their economic, intellectual and cultural growth.  With advances in computer translation, even more individuals can have access to English-language texts.

In posting textual materials we must, of course, recognize the legitimate property interests of those who have made huge investments in the creation of commercial intellectual property.

At the same time, we can fairly insist that their greed be balanced against our growth and that of all the world's peoples.

There is no more reason to tolerate a virtual dog in an electronic manager today than there was in Aesop's time.


Endnotes

1.  Relevant language in Section 107 provides:

"[T]he fair use of a copyrighted work, including such use . . . for purposes such as criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching . . ., scholarship, or research, is not an infringement of copyright. . . . [T]he factors to be considered shall include --

(1) the purpose and character of the use, including whether such use is of a commercial nature or is for nonprofit educational purposes.

. . .

(4) the effect of the use upon the potential market for or value of the copyrighted work . . .."

2.  Relevant language in Section 108 provides:

(a) [I]t is not an infringement of copyright for a library . . . to reproduce . . . a work . . . if --

(1) the reproduction or distribution is made without any purpose of direct or indirect commercial advantage;
(2) the collections of the library or archives are (i) open to the public . . .; and
(3) the reproduction or distribution of the work includes a notice of copyright.

(b) The rights . . . apply to a copy . . . for purposes of preservation . . ..

(c) The right . . . applies to a copy . . . solely for the purposes of replacement of a copy . . . that is . . . lost . . ..

3.  During the question and answer session following the presentation of this paper a proposal was made from the floor which seems very sensible.  (If the person suggesting it will let me know who they were I will, of course, acknowledge the contribution in any future draft of this piece.)  It is that there be something in the nature of a public notice, like a registry of deeds, presumably a Web page plus search engine plus links, where anyone who intended to upload a copyrighted work would first post a notice to that effect.  Thus, rather than uploading the work first, and then having to remove it, there would be a period of, say, 90 days, or six months, during which the copyright owner could object -- and, following which, anyone would be free to upload the work.
 

 [19980220 1730]


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