"Fair Use Is Working!": 2014 in Review | Electronic Frontier Foundation

abernard102@gmail.com 2014-12-30

Summary:

"Back in January, Congress held a hearing on the state of fair use, as part of a year-long review of all things copyright that, in 2015, may lead to real legislative proposals. Among the witnesses was Professor Peter Jaszi, who had good news for the Committee: '[F]air use is working!' Meaning that, on balance, the fair use doctrine is doing its job: helping to ensure that copyright promotes, rather than impedes, creativity and innovation. Several legal decisions this year suggest he is right. In June, for example, the Second Circuit Court of Appeals held that fair use sheltered book digitization, in Authors’ Guild v. Hathitrust. HathiTrust was set up by several universities to operate a digital library containing electronic scans of the universities’ books (Google provided the scans as part of its Google Books project). Most notably, the court found that the purpose of a full-text searchable database is so different from that of the underlying works that the use was 'a quintessentially transformative use,' a conclusion that was key to its fair use finding. In September, a federal court relied on that decision to reject Fox’s effort to use copyright to shut down a video 'clipping' service, TVEyes. TVeyes creates a searchable database of TV and radio station broadcasts. The database enables research, commentary, and criticism that would otherwise be impossible for many of its users. Fox insisted that customers might abuse TVeyes to view Fox News without authorization, in ten minute increments. The court largely dismissed Fox’s theories and held that TVEyes’ copying and making available of all of Fox News’ broadcast content was integral to its purpose of creating a complete and useful database. On the other hand, many were perplexed by the outcome of another leading fair use case, Cambridge v. Patton.  That case involved the creation of electronic reserves at Georgia State University (GSU), specifically the practice of sharing digitized book and article excerpts on a secure course website ..."

Link:

https://www.eff.org/deeplinks/2014/12/some-fair-use-highlights-2014

From feeds:

Open Access Tracking Project (OATP) » abernard102@gmail.com

Tags:

oa.new oa.comment oa.copyright oa.fair_use oa.digitization oa.media oa.tveyes oa.hathi oa.google oa.authors_guild oa.georgia_state.u oa.law oa.litigation oa.licensing oa.libre

Date tagged:

12/30/2014, 07:59

Date published:

12/30/2014, 02:59