COPYRIGHT.
DAVIDSON, MARY WALLACE
Most music librarians have a working knowledge of the United States
Copyright Law with respect to situations that arise in the library,
especially with respect to the use of musical works captured on paper,
recordings, and film. Few at the moment, however, have had to tangle
with legal issues of licensing electronic reference sources, storing and
streaming digitally formatted sound to computer workstations, or
providing library materials legally for distance-learning classes. Fewer
still know whether they are Online Service Providers (OSPs), as defined
by the Digital Millennium Copyright Act of 1998 (DMCA), [1] and if they
are, what rights and responsibilities that definition imposes. As we
cope with this, and the many other public laws now so rapidly being
sponsored and passed by members of Congress, we risk losing sight of
some significant historical threads to guide us into the future.
The United States Constitution provides that "The Congress
shall have Power.. . To promote the Progress of Science and useful Arts,
by securing for limited Times to Authors and Inventors the exclusive
Right to their respective Writings and Discoveries." [2] The
framers fortunately understood two conditions necessary for fostering
the natural growth of artistic and scientific culture: (1) creative
individuals must have some economic incentive to pursue their craft, and
(2) their successors must be able to use the results as seeds for new
growth while those seeds are still alive.
The first federal copyright law passed by Congress in 1790
protected only published books, maps, and charts for fourteen years,
with option for the same period of renewal. Published music was not
protected until the first general revision of this law in 1831 (when the
first term was extended to twenty-eight years), and dramatic works not
until 1856. The second general revision, in 1870, added published works
of art and the rights of authors to create certain derivative works. It
also centralized deposit and registration in the Library of Congress
(rather than with the states). The Copyright Law first protected music
in public performances in 1897 and certain kinds of unpublished works in
the third major revision of 1909. Motion pictures (previously registered
as photographs) joined protected formats in 1912. Limited federal
copyright protection was finally granted to sound recordings (fixed and
first published on or after 1972) in the most recent thorough revision
of the law in 1976, [3] which also provided for all unpublished works.
Computer programs first entered the law at the end of 1980, [4] followed
by the Semiconductor Chip Protection Act of 1984 [5] and the Computer
Software Rental Amendments Act of 1990. [6] The Audio Home Recording Act
of 1992 [7] clarified the legality of home taping for private use while
imposing royalties on the sale of digital audio recording devices.
The law did not concern itself with "moral rights" until
1992, [8] although these often take precedence over copyrights in other
countries. Various international agreements have extended protection to
works published outside the United States, beginning with the Universal
Copyright Convention in 1952. The United States' adoption of the
earlier Berne Convention in 1989 had a greater effect, particularly as a
result of the World Intellectual Property Organization Copyright Treaty in 1996, to which the United States is also a signatory. The Uruguay
Round Agreements Act of 1994 [9] restored copyright protection in the
United States to certain foreign works that had been protected in the
source country (e.g., the former Soviet Union) but not here.
The DMCA and the Sonny Bono Copyright Term Extension Act of 1998
(known as the "Sonny Bono Law") [10] change the law in matters
of potentially great significance to libraries. [11] Among other
provisions, the DMCA revises section 108 to allow what has been the
practice for many years (three preservation copies rather than one), and
also specifies that preservation copies may be digital if they remain
within the library. Works published before 1923 were unaffected by the
Sonny Bono Law, and remain in public domain. The effect of
term-extension provisions on works published from 1923 to date is
complex, but for works published after 1 March 1989, the act extends
protection to 70 years after the death of the author, or if a work of
corporate authorship, the shorter of 95 years from the date of
publication or 120 years from the date of creation. Some would say these
term limits are a far cry from our Constitution's original intent.
Under the current law, "copyright" means just what it
says: the creator enjoys the exclusive right to make copies (a term
later broadened to include displays, performances, and recordings) of
identifiable, reproducible ("fixed") manifestations of
creative works that are the intellectual property of their creators for
certain limited time periods. The property must be of substantive
creative merit to warrant such protection--that is, not just an idea or
a title. There are currently exemptions to ("Limitations on")
these exclusive rights, even during the period of protection, that make
creative works available to teachers, scholars, and critics under the
four conditions known as fair use or "fair dealing" in other
English-speaking countries (sec. 107). Other exemptions apply to
libraries (sec. 108), owners of exemplars (sec. 109), performers (sec.
110), broadcasters (sec. 111), and transmitters of ephemeral recordings
(sec. 112). The text for the Fair Use exemption (sec. 107, as amended in
1990 and 1992) is th e most succinct and oft quoted:
(ss.) 107. LIMITATIONS ON EXCLUSIVE RIGHTS: FAIR USE
Notwithstanding the provisions of sections 106 and 106A, the fair
use of a copyrighted work, including such use by reproduction in copies
or phonorecords or by any other means specified by that section, for
purposes such as criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching (including
multiple copies for classroom use), scholarship, or research, is not an
infringement of copyright. In determining whether the use made of a work
in any particular case is a fair use the 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;
(2) the nature of the copyrighted work;
(3) the amount and substantiality of the portion used in relation
to the copyrighted work as a whole; and
(4) the effect of the use upon the potential market for or value of
the copyrighted work.
The fact that a work is unpublished shall not itself bar a finding
of fair use if such finding is made upon consideration of all the above
factors. [12]
The beauty of this section is its very vagueness and lack of
specificity. There simply are no answers to fit every case. Rather, the
wording suggests only "safe harbors." Interpretation of this
section is only possible within a context where both owners and users of
intellectual property understand how interdependent they are on each
other for the continued health of our culture.
This symbiotic relationship has become quite fragile in the age of
digital publication and distribution. If nothing else, the recent
Conference on Fair Use (CONFU) confirmed this statement repeatedly
throughout the series of meetings beginning in September 1994 and
concluding in May 1997. [13] Delegates of some forty (later ninety)
organizations--representing authors, publishers, educators, and
libraries--were invited to discuss fair-use issues, and "if
appropriate and feasible," to develop voluntary guidelines for the
fair use of digital works and online services. Hearing little progress,
or mention of music, representatives of nineteen music organizations met
in April 1996, but the discussion proved equally cautious: "The
general consensus was that no change was needed at that time, but that
music publishers, music educators, and music librarians would need to be
aware of the guidelines being developed by CONFU, which might include
uses of music in digital form." [14] In fact, although the CONFU
Report doe s contain proposed guidelines for digital images, distance
learning, and educational multimedia, none received enough endorsement
to be considered consensus, and each was actively opposed by one or more
representative groups.
Nevertheless, CONFU had an impact on participants and their
organizations, not the least of which was education about the issues
involved. Participants were also exposed to concurrent political
processes on many levels: local (CONFU as it related to the agenda of
the U.S. Patent & Trademark Office), national (Congress), and
international (the World Intellectual Property Organization [WIPO]).
These venues all had complex "back door" relationships to each
other, and still do. CONFU did make a conscious attempt to seek
consensus among educators, librarians, and commercial interests. Whereas
the educators and librarians clung to the notion that the principles of
fair use should remain the same in the digital environment, the
commercial interests focused on the fact that digital is different. In a
library or a bookshop, one may read a page or two of a book or look at a
table of contents or index to see if that book is going to have the
information one wants before either putting it back, proceeding to
acquire it, or making a lawful copy of some portion of it. When that
same reader retrieves and displays a digital source for the same
purpose, she or he has the capability of transmitting that page--or the
entire source--to an infinite number of potential readers, instantly.
The commercial representatives at CONFU had not yet calculated how much
that difference (and/or convenience) is worth in the marketplace, or how
best to ensure a reasonable profit over large costs (nor have they
still). So they, too, wanted no change in the Copyright Law at that
time. Instead they turned their attention to the international arena.
In spite of its title, the World Intellectual Property Organization
concerns itself with international trade (not education or libraries)
and is bent on "harmonizing" international laws with respect
to the commerce of intellectual property. There were in fact two
agreements reached in December 1996: the WIPO Copyright Treaty and the
WIPO Performances and Phonograms Treaty. Both, as they say in their
preambles, desire to "develop and maintain the protection of the
rights [of authors of literary and artistic works, performers, and
producers of phonograms] to develop and maintain the protection of
[their] rights in a manner as effective and uniform as possible."
Both similarly recognize "the need to maintain a balance between
the rights [of these authors, performers, and producers] and the larger
public interest, particularly education, research and access to
information." That said, neither treaty posits any limitations to
the protected rights in the public interest, except to say that the
signatory countries may want to legislate such provisions--but only if
these provisions "do not conflict with a normal exploitation of the
work and do not unreasonably prejudice the legitimate interests of the
[authors, performers, or producers]." [15]
Not surprisingly, there are subtle shifts in the definitions
constructed for these treaties, particularly the Performances and
Phonograms Treaty, starting with an expanded concept of
"phonogram" to include any fixed sound, not just those
incorporated in films or audiovisual works. "Fixation" now
means "the embodiment of sounds, or of the representations thereof,
from which they can be perceived, reproduced or communicated through a
device." [16] "Communication to the public," as distinct
from publication or broadcasting, means "the transmission to the
public by any medium ... of sounds of a performance or the sounds or the
representations of sounds fixed in a phonogram, [and] making [them]
audible to the public." [17] The language is awkward because it
needs to account for present and future technologies (wire, wireless,
and so on).
The effect of these international agreements is rapidly becoming
pervasive in the European Union and the United States. In the U.S., the
DMCA is also known as the WIPO Trade Agreement Implementation Act, in
reference to the WIPO Copyright Treaty of 1996, which it seeks to
implement. No doubt other legislation will be introduced in future
Congresses, and it behooves us all to pay attention. The strength of the
commercial interests will unquestionably continue and wax more
enthusiastic and powerful as more and more of our culture and its
sources of information are digitally packaged and licensed rather than
sold. In general, commercial publishers take a dim view of the fair-use
argument, seeing it as a dodge from fair reimbursement. Some colleges
and universities have been active in exerting their fair-use rights--by
establishing written policies, retaining counsel, and so forth--but most
of their concerns have been limited to coursepacks and retaining rights
of works created by faculty and staff as employees. The educational
music community tends either to ignore the fundamental changes in the
entertainment industry or to want "a piece of the action." In
that case, it wants to be paid for the products it creates, too--if not
for profit at least to recoup the heavy start-up costs. These activities
will raise thorny legal questions for university counsels.
Licensing is a familiar concept and practice within the music
community, as it concerns chiefly performance rights, or rights to use
"the work" (or a version of it) as distinguished from a
particular manifestation or copy. The concept is now spreading to the
digital environment, where publishers want to protect screen displays of
electronic resources in educational institutions with the same
limitations as "performances or displays" under section 110.
From ASCAP, BMI, and SESAC, electronic publishers have also learned the
efficacy of a site license. From a creator's or producer's
view, it allows centralized and efficient control of contracts and
money. Strangely enough, as educational institutions have increasingly
adopted business ethics and practices, some administrators have also
expressed this same preference for centralization, uniformity, and
efficiency on the part of the user as well. The wording of contracts for
these licenses is ever hopeful that libraries have the technology to
count (report, limit , constrict, etc.) and usually contain such
language. Neither the licenses nor the available technology, however,
distinguishes the characteristics of a given use of a particular
source--that is, whether that use meets the "four factor" test
of section 107. In fact, publishers are still experimenting and have no
rational basis upon which to charge. Music librarians need to watch
carefully not only the quality of what they choose to license, but the
language of what they choose to sign. Most publishers willingly agree to
reasonable changes in contracts, and librarians should not inadvertently
put their institutions at legal risk. [18] Nor should they inadvertently
put their clients at cultural risk by failing to exercise the rights of
fair use and preservation, protected by the Copyright Law of the United
States.
Our task for the future is to keep informed about current
legislation and to lend our voices to concerted action as appropriate.
The Digital Future Coalition (DFC), comprised eventually of some
forty-two financially contributing members (including the Music Library
Association), was founded in 1995. Because it was "a unique
collaboration of many of the nation's leading non-profit
educational, scholarly, library and consumer groups, together with major
commercial trade associations representing leaders in the consumer
electronics, telecommunications, computer and network access
industries," it was committed to a balanced approach to
legislation, at least through the 105th Congress. [19] The successful
passage of the DMCA in fact reflected the credibility of positions taken
by the DFC.
Such coalitions may be too good to be true, or at least too
expensive to persist, but they are the only possible way to ensure the
long-term preservation of our musical culture. Obviously the creators,
producers, users, and preservers of music, in all its manifestations,
rely on each other's health. Rather than taking myopic positions,
it behooves us to talk, understand, educate, and negotiate with one
another for the common good. Above all, we must guard against
"nickel and diming" the Copyright Law for one special interest
after another (including international "harmonization") but
not fail to recognize the need for a thorough revision when the time is
ripe.
Mary Wallace Davidson is head of the William and Gayle Cook Music
Library at Indiana University. She has been a member of the Music
Library Association's Legislation Committee since 1990, and from
1995 to 1997 represented MLA at the Conference on Fair Use, sponsored by
the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office.
(1.) U.S. Statutes at Large 112 (1998): 2859-918.
(2.) U.S. Constitution, art. 1, sec. 8.
(3.) "Title 17, USC, Copyrights." US. Statutes at Large
90 (1976): 2641-602.
(4.) "Patent and Trademark Laws, Amendment." US. Statutes
at Large 94 (1980): 3028.
(5.) U.S. Statutes at Large 98 (1984): 1727-28.
(6.) Ibid., 104 (1990): 5134-37.
(7.) Ibid., 106 (1992): 4237-48.
(8.) Section 106A, "Rights of Certain Authors to Attribution
and Integrity," Visual Artists Rights Act of 1990, U.S. Statutes at
Large 104 (1990): 5128-30.
(9.) U.S. Statutes at Large 108 (1994): 4973-81.
(10.) Ibid., 112 (1998): 2827-34.
(11.) For a clear discussion of the impact of these two laws on
libraries, see Arnold P. Lutzker, "Primer on the Digital
Millennium: What the Digital Millennium Copyright Act and the Copyright
Term Extension Act Mean for the Library Community," at the Web site
of the Association of Research Libraries,
http://www.arl.org/info/frn/copy/primer.html (last modified 8 March
1999). The effect of the DMCA on section 108 of the Copyright Law
regarding library preservation is posted in both "redlined"
and "clean" versions of the section at the University of
Texas, Office of General Counsel, "Crash Course in Copyright,"
http://www.utsystem.edu/ogc/intellectualproperty/108.htm, created by
Georgia Harper (updated 24 June 1999). A good chart that captures all
effects of the Sony Bono Law on term extension was published by Peter B.
Hirtle on the last page of a four-page insert, "Recent Changes to
the Copyright Law: Copyright Term Extension," Archival Outlook,
January/February 1999, between pages 22 and 23.
(12.) U.S. code, Title 17, section 107 (1994, 8:912-13). Justice
Sandra Day O'Connor, delivering the opinion of the Supreme Court in
Harper & Roe v. Nation Enterprises, 471 U.S. 539 (1985), noted that
the fourth factor "is undoubtedly the single most important element
of fair use." From the same opinion, it is also clear that all four
factors must he considered. The final sentence, extending the exemption
to unpublished works, was added to section 107 in 1992 (U.S. Statutes at
Large 106 [1992]: 3145).
(13.) U.S. Department of Commerce Patent and Trademark Office, The
Conference on Fair Use: Report to the Commissioner on the Conclusion of
the First Phase of the Conference on Fair Use, September 1997
(hereafter, CONFU Report). Single copies are available free of charge
either from the office, do Richard Maulsby, Director, Washington, DC
20231, or via the office's Web site at http://www.uspto.gov.
(14.) CONFU Report, 8.
(15.) "WIPO Copyright Treaty," article 10,
"Limitations and Exceptions" and the "WIPO Performances
and Phonograms Treaty," article 16, "Limitations and
Exceptions." Summaries and full texts of both treaties are
available through links at http://ecommerce.wipo.int/activities.
(16.) "WIPO Performances and Phonograms Treaty," article
2.
(17.) Ibid.
(18.) The Yale University Library maintains a useful site that
includes sample license agreements: "LIBLICENSE: Licensing Digital
Information, a Resource for Librarians,"
http://www.library.yale.edu/[tilde]llicense, updated frequently. Yale
also hosts a strong statement created by the International Coalition of
Library Consortia on "Current Perspective and Preferred Practices
on the Selection and Purchase of Electronic Information,"
http://www.library.yale.edu/consortia/statement.html. A group of six
large library associations has mounted "Principles for Licensing
Electronic Resources" (final draft, July 1997),
http://www.arl.org/scomm/licensing/principles.html.
(19.) From the DFC's Web site (http://www.dfc.org), last
updated in late May 1999. The DFC has apparently ceased to exist since
then because of a lack of funding