CONGRESSMAN
RICK BOUCHER URGES REAFFIRMATION OF FAIR USE RIGHTS
The
American public has traditionally enjoyed the ability to make convenience
and incidental copies of copyrighted works without the necessity of
obtaining the prior consent of the owner of the copyright. These traditional
"fair use" rights are at the foundation of the receipt and
use of information by the American public.
From
the college student who photocopies a page from a library book for use
in writing a report to the typical television viewer who records a broadcast
for viewing at a later time to the prudent home computer owner who makes
back-up copies of the information he has lawfully stored on his hard
drive, we all depend on the ability to make limited copies of copyrighted
material without having to pay a fee or obtain prior approval from the
owner of the copyright prior to making the copy.
In
fact fair use rights to obtain and use a wide array of information are
essential to the exercise of First Amendment rights. The very vibrancy
of our democracy is dependent on the information availability and use
facilitated by the Fair Use Doctrine.
The
time, in my view, has come for the Congress to reaffirm the Fair Use
Doctrine and to bolster specific fair use rights which are now at risk.
In
1998, responding to the concerns of copyright owners, Congress passed
the Digital Millennium Copyright Act. Its announced purpose was to protect
from piracy copyrighted material in an environment which poses special
concerns for copyright owners. The copyright owners made the valid point
that unlike analog technology in which each successive copy degrades
in quality, with digital technology a copy of a copy of a copy contains
the same clarity and integrity as the original of the work. They also
made the valid point that in the networked environment, perfect copies
by the thousands can be sent simultaneously across the globe with a
single click of a computer mouse. Copyright owners urged that the Congress
provide greater protections to them to guard against piracy of copyrighted
works in the digital networked era.
The
Digital Millennium Copyright Act is the Congressional response to these
realities. There are some who believe that it went too far and that
in the extension of new protections to copyright owners that it placed
in peril the traditional fair use rights of the users of information.
For
example, it creates in Section 1201 (a) a new crime of circumventing
a technological protection measure which guards access to a copyrighted
work. Under Section 1201, the purpose of the circumvention is immaterial.
It is a crime to circumvent a password or other gateway even for the
purpose of exercising fair use rights. There is no requirement under
Section 1201 that the circumvention be for the purpose of infringing
a copyright. Any action of circumvention without the consent of the
copyright owner is made criminal by this provision.
Some
now foresee a time when through the operation of Section 1201 what is
available for free on library shelves today may only be available in
the future on a "pay per use" basis. A time will arrive when
virtually all new material will be sent to libraries on CD-Roms. That
material may easily be guarded by a password, which under the provisions
of Section 1201(a) would qualify as a "technological protection
measure." In exchange for a fee for each viewing, the password
may be used. It would be a simple matter for the creator of the content
to impose a requirement that a small fee be paid each time the copyrighted
work is accessed by library patrons. Under this scenario, the most recently
arrived library material would be available only on a pay per use basis.
The student who wants even the most basic access to material to write
his term paper would have to pay for each item he reads.
Several
members of Congress made the effort in 1998 to limit the new crime under
Section 1201 to circumvention for the purpose of infringing the copyright,
but the momentum to enact the measure essentially unamended was too
strong, and our effort fell short. With a growing realization on the
part of the education community and supporters of libraries of the threat
to fair use rights which Section 1201 poses, perhaps the time will soon
come for a Congressional re-examination of this provision and for the
assemblage of a national effort of sufficient size and intensity to
enable a much needed modification of the provisions of Section 1201
(a) to occur.
Perhaps
the only conduct which should be declared criminal is circumvention
for the purpose of infringing the copyright. Perhaps a more limited
amendment could be crafted to insure the continued exercise of fair
use rights in libraries and in scholastic settings notwithstanding the
provisions of Section 1201.
And
there are other challenges.
I
am concerned about the apparent attempt of some in the content community
who are seeking to protect their copyright interests in material contained
in digitally broadcast television programs by insisting that the television
signal quality be degraded or by insisting on the use of set- top box
technology which could potentially prohibit all copying. The reasonable
expectations of television viewers to be able to make home recordings
of programs for time shifting and other historically accepted purposes
are now placed at risk.
There
is a way to protect copyrights in digitally broadcast programs and to
permit television viewers to make copies of television programs for
home use. The model is contained in Section 1201 (k) of the Digital
Millennium Copyright Act which was designed for analog television broadcasts.
The
Section requires video cassette recorders to respond to Macrovision,
a copy prevention technology, and to block copying of rental movies
encoded with Macrovision. In exchange for this statutory mandate, viewers
are granted the right to make unlimited copies of off-the-air television
broadcasts and one copy for time shifting purposes of pay per view movies
which may only be purchased at specific times.
Where
there is no reasonable expectation of being able to make a copy, such
as in the case of a movie rented from a video store, the VCR will block
all copying in its response to Macrovision encoding.
This
arrangement for the world of analog broadcasts offers a model for resolution
of the present debate over how to protect copyrights associated with
digital broadcasts. In exchange for a reasonable set of guaranteed home
recording rights, along the lines of Section 1201 (k), I am hopeful
that an arrangement can be achieved through a negotiated agreement to
employ in the video stream watermarks or other encodings which would
prevent copying that is inconsistent with the recording rules and to
require that recording equipment recognize and respond to the encoding.
Such an agreement should extend to all digital TV programming whether
it is delivered by cable, satellite or over the air.
The
time has come for the motion picture studios to present a proposal along
these lines to the manufacturers of recording equipment. There is an
urgent need for an agreement which will simultaneously protect copyrights
and the home recording rights of television viewers.
In
the meantime, I hope that the creative community will not attempt unilateral
approaches to protecting content which would either defeat home recording
rights or degrade the quality of digital broadcasts.
Congress
should also reaffirm fair use principles in other specific areas:
1.
Traditional distance learning applications use broadcast and closed
circuit television, and a special copyright exemption accommodates these
educational broadcasts. Today, a new era of distance learning has arrived
in which personal computers and the Internet are replacing the television
set and closed circuit systems as the delivery medium. The copyright
exemption should be broadened to include the new technology and to expand
to the home the setting in which distance learning can occur.
2.
The First Sale Doctrine should be made applicable to on-line sales accompanied
by downloads of the purchased material. Under current law, a book or
CD purchased in a "bricks and mortar" store can be given to
a friend or sold to another person without obtaining the consent of
the copyright owner. The key to the permissibility of the transaction
is that at any given point in time only one copy of the material is
extant. The same principle should apply to material downloaded from
the Internet. The technology exists to enable the transfer of a downloaded
item to a third party with the simultaneous deletion of the material
from the hard drive of the individual who is transferring it. The analogy
to the transaction I previously described in the physical world is exact,
and the First Sale Doctrine should be extended to apply to the on- line
experience with equal force.
3.
Given the architecture of the Internet and personal Computers, the simple
act of viewing a downloaded image, listening to webcasting, or sending
an e-mail message creates an incidental or temporary reproduction, and
many consumer electronics products temporarily store bits, representing
audio clips or audio visual works in a buffer as part of their normal
operation. These temporary copies, which are essential to the operation
of digital products and networks, should be made unequivocally lawful
under the copyright law.
4.
Current law permits a computer user to make back-up copies of software
so that the program can be restored in the event of a hard disk crash.
But current law does not permit an archival copy to be made of copyrighted
data associated with the program. For example, under current law, the
software which enables the recording on a hard drive of music lawfully
downloaded from the Internet can be archived for back-up purposes. However,
the music which was lawfully downloaded cannot be archived. In the event
of a hard disk crash, the purchaser of the music would be required to
go back to the seller and purchase another copy. The current exemption
permitting the archive of software should be expanded to permit the
archive of any copyrighted data which is lawfully acquired and is associated
with the software.
5.
The in store exemption for music sampling should be expanded to cover
samples of music which are accessed over the Internet for purposes of
determining whether or not to make a purchase of the music. Under the
current in store exemption, bricks and mortar stores are able to share
with their customers samples of recorded music, and millions of Americans
routinely put on headphones in record stores and listen to the music
before they purchase it. The same opportunity should be provided for
sales accomplished over the Internet. Brief samples of recorded music
should be made available without the need to obtain the permission of
the owners of the music copyrights.
6.
Purchasers of audio CDs should be able to contract with on -line services
for the storage of music on the CDs they have purchased which they can
access over the Internet at a time and place of their choosing. The
misic would be stored in an on-line locker specific to each subscriber.
Today, people physically carry their CDs from their home to their car
to their office to a friends home for the purpose of listening
to the music they have purchased. The Internet offers the opportunity
for enhanced convenience by enabling people to leave their CDs at home
and have access to their music by downstream from an on- line locker
at any location where they can obtain Internet access. The owners of
music copyrights are fully compensated, in this example, when the individual
purchases the CD at the outset. He should then have complete freedom
without interference from the copyright owner to access the music on
that CD over the Internet at a time and place of his choosing.
This
are some of the steps which taken together would constitute an appropriate
reaffirmation of fair use rights for consumers, and I look forward to
the time in the very near future when the attention of Congress will
turn to the need through these and potentially other steps to create
a better balance between the rights of copyright owners and the rights
of the users of copyrighted information.