Why Yes, Copyright Can Be Used To Censor, And 'Fair Use Creep' Is Also Called 'Free Speech'

Techdirt. Stories filed under "fair use" 2013-07-26

Summary:

So, as we'd been discussing, Congress recently had a hearing about copyright reform that was supposed to be about the "content creators'" view of copyright -- but which actually mostly presented the views of the legacy industry which makes money off the backs of creators, rather than hearing from any creators themselves. The hearing was about as silly as you might expect, with Parker Higgins from EFF presenting a good run down of the problems, including the claims that it's copyright that enables free speech, that copyright is good because it's "about control" and that "fair use creep" is dangerous. Of course, if you want a funny, and nearly totally wrong counterpoint, you can read the overview from Tom Giovanetti, who runs a "think tank" that is a favorite of copyright maximalists. Let's compare and contrast, and add some reality. Giovanetti insists that copyright should be about "control."
Several Twitter critics insisted that, while copyright no doubt has economic benefits, it also functions as “an instrument of control.” But of course copyright involves control, and rightly so. Control is implied in all property rights. Without some degree of control, you cannot enter into contracts, you cannot license, and copyright becomes impotent—little more than a credit or an attribution. But a credit alone does not incentivize creation, innovation, and distribution of new works. Ownership always involves a degree of control.
Except, as Higgins noted, the purpose of copyright has never been about "control." It has always been to "promote the progress of science" for the benefit of the public.
Most striking was the repeated assertion that copyright should be understood primarily as a mechanism of control. Testimony from Sandra Aistars, the director of the Copyright Alliance, was explicit on this point. That’s funny, because we thought it was supposed to be a mechanism to promote new creativity. Ironically enough, Aistars also claims that copyright “is about choice” and “freedom.” Choice and freedom for some people, that is: under her construction of copyright, a grant of copyright is designed to concentrate all of the choice with the copyright owners, at the expense of the public.
Of course, Giovanetti's claim that "property rights needs control" is misleading for a whole variety of reasons. First off while the actual copyright itself might be a form of property in that it can be bought and sold, the underlying content is not. That's an important distinction that often gets lost in the mix. Furthermore, while it's true that for true property part of the point of property rights is to "control," when you're talking about speech and expression -- things that are in abundance -- it makes no sense to use it as a tool for control, for a variety of reasons. The reason you want control of tangible property is to avoid having someone else claim it. But copyright is not about that at all. It is, according to the Constitution, solely a tool to promote the progress of knowledge and information. Furthermore, we already have aspects of copyright law today that recognize it's not about control -- including things like compulsory licenses. Then Giovanetti makes a patently ridiculous statement that copyright holders never want to censor anything:
Several others made the ridiculous assertion that copyright is used to “censor.” But as Sandra Aistars of the Copyright Alliance noted in her statement, copyright is “core to protecting our First Amendment rights of freedom of expression.” Copyright holders are champions of the First Amendment, have every incentive to see their work disseminated as widely as possible, and have no reason to censor anything. It’s a preposterous charge, manufactured by ideologues to create a false premise that copyright is somehow in tension with consumer interests.
Oh really? So, KTVU wasn't trying to block the video of its newscaster (accidentally, stupidly) using racist slurs about the Asiana Air pilots? NBC wasn't trying to censor Senator Warren when it pulled a clip of her schooling CNBC news anchors? St. Louis University wasn't trying to

Link:

http://www.techdirt.com/articles/20130726/12394323961/why-yes-copyright-can-be-used-to-censor-fair-use-creep-is-also-called-free-speech.shtml

From feeds:

Fair Use Tracker » Techdirt. Stories filed under "fair use"

Tags:

Authors:

Mike Masnick

Date tagged:

07/26/2013, 21:50

Date published:

07/26/2013, 16:40