Larry Lessig Threatened With Copyright Infringement Over Clear Fair Use; Decides To Fight Back
Techdirt. Stories filed under "fair use" 2013-08-24
Summary:
If you read Techdirt, you're almost certainly familiar with Larry Lessig, the law professor at Harvard who (among many other things) has been an avid advocate for copyright reform and campaign finance reform, an author of many books about copyright and creativity, a well-known public speaker whose presentations are stunningly compelling, entertaining and informative, and the founder of some important organizations including Creative Commons. Of course, as an expert on copyright and creativity, and someone who's actually been involved in some of the key copyright legal fights over the past decade (tragically, on the losing side), you might think that a record label would think twice before issuing a clearly bogus threat to sue him over copyright infringement. Well, apparently Liberation Music was either unaware of Lessig's reputation and knowledge, or just didn't care.
Apparently, back in 2010, Lessig gave one of his many wonderful public talks, this one called "Open," at a Creative Commons event in South Korea. While that happened a few years ago, Lessig just put video of that talk online a few months ago. In that video, which is now down (for reasons explained below), there are a few brief clips of the Phoenix song Lisztomania, which was quite popular a few years ago. When the clip was posted, it appears that YouTube's ContentID noted two possible claims: one from Viacom and one from Liberation Music, though, oddly, Lessig was only informed about the Viacom one. Lessig disputed the Viacom block, but as YouTube was about to restore the video, Liberation Music took it one step further, and filed a full DMCA claim, demanding the video be taken down and kept offline (while many people confuse them, the ContentID match is not the same thing as a DMCA claim -- without getting into the details, the DMCA claim is a bit more serious).
In response, Lessig did exactly what the law allows, and filed a DMCA counter-notice, claiming that the work did not infringe. In response, Liberation emailed Lessig directly telling him that it would be filing a copyright infringement lawsuit against him in 72 hours if he did not "retract" his counter-notice. To avoid having an immediate lawsuit on his hands, Lessig retracted the notice, but since then has teamed up with the EFF to file for declaratory judgment that the video does not infringe and (more importantly) to seek DMCA 512(f) damages against Liberation for filing a totally bogus DMCA takedown notice.
There are a few things worth digging into here. For example, this is not the first time that Lessig has had videos removed from YouTube on highly questionable copyright claims. In fact, we've written about it happening twice before. However, I'm pretty sure that, in both cases, after Lessig countered the claims, the videos were restored. In both cases, it really looked like part of an automatic takedown, where the companies later realized there was nothing worth pursuing. What's different (and stunning) here is that Liberation decided to press forward with the obviously bogus claim, file the DMCA notice and threaten to sue if Lessig didn't drop his counternotice.
Next, in terms of the content of the video itself, while the YouTube video is gone because of the DMCA takedown, I'm pretty sure there's another copy here. The Lisztomania clips come in around the 37:50 mark. I wasn't able to fast forward to it, but Lessig has used it in other presentations as well. For example, you can see it in a TEDx presentation that Lessig did a few months earlier, with the key section of that video happening at 4:40 in that video. And what he's showing, actually, is not something that Lessig himself put together, but rather clips from a video that Julian Sanchez had put together -- a video we've written about a few times.
That's because it's a truly fantastic video that Sanchez put together in February of 2010, highlighting how copying was a key part of culture, using a really compelling example: First, there was a mashup video uploaded to YouTube by a user called "avoidant consumer," which mashed up the song Lisztomania by the band Phoenix, with a bunch of (mostly dance) scenes from a variety of John Hughes movies, leading with the classic Breakfast Club. The video is pretty good in a variety of ways. The music is catchy, the film scenes are classic (especially for people who grew up in the 80s), and (most importantly), the video and the music just fit together. I remember that video getting passed around like crazy. The whole thing