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Scrivener's Error |
Law and reality in publishing (seldom the same thing) from the author's side of the slush pile, with occasional forays into military affairs, censorship and the First Amendment, legal theory, and anything else that strikes me as interesting. |
link to: 10:37 [GMT-6]
As a public service announcement and on behalf of limiting the spread of communicable disease, please carefully watch the embedded video for some serious medical instruction.
Simultaneously, congratulations to the winners of the Newbury and Caldecott medals and honors.
If the speaker in that video at the top of this entry seems vaguely familiar, it's tough guy Vinnie Jones — a star of recent British action films, and before that the hardest of the "hard men" in football. That's him on the left. Perhaps he should be selling little blue pills or doing a PSA for prostate cancer instead of for heart attacks...
No, the ref didn't see it.
Labels: arts, politics, publishing, science, sport
link to: 12:21 [GMT-6]
Pirates, prepare to walk the plank... Arggggggh!
I have a few thoughts about takedown of M3gaUp10ad and (entirely expected and predictable) juvenile (at best) response from An0nym0u5. As an actual exercise of free speech under the First Amendment based upon actual facts instead of just ideology, and in no particular order:
In particular, I note that none of the public statements have acknowledged M3gaUp10ad's prominence in storing and distributing pirated audiobooks and pirated texts. That's probably because the actual holders of those copyrights can't afford to own (or rent) sufficiently-highly-placed gummint officials... and because H'wood and N'ville have been so much more vocal in their misuse of foundationless numbers to convince people that the problem is serious.
Parrotting someone else's original expression has almost nothing to do with free speech. Those who care about free speech will engage in their own original expression... and thereby avoid copyright piracy in the first place. Whether a particular "reuse" is "transformative enough" is an issue of fact that must be decided "reuse" by "reuse" — but that's not what we're dealing with here. It may be what SOPA/PIPA wants to deal with, though.
Of course, if this preemptive counternotification doesn't work, that is perhaps the best evidence that SOPA and PIPA and their ilk constitute an abuse of power!
Labels: copyright, intellectual property, internet, mass media, publishing
link to: 09:40 [GMT-6]
The Supreme Court decided Golan today, holding that Congress does have the power to reinvigorate foreign copyrights to match what would have happened if the US Copyright Act had been consistent with the Berne Convention. This is entirely consistent with the Court's opinion a couple of years back in Eldred v. Ashcroft, 537 U.S. 186 (2003), which affirmed Congress's authority to extend the copyright term in a specific twenty-year increment. Justice Ginsburg wrote the controlling opinion today in Golan, just as she did in Eldred.
For once, I'm going to skip over the complex procedural history of how this matter reached the court. Although that history is very interesting to civil procedure geeks (like me), this time it does not affect the outcome or the factual record on which that outcome is based.
In any event, in the early 1990s Congress got whacked upside the head by the World Trade Organization for not properly complying with the Berne Convention — specifically Article 18 — when the US joined the Berne Convention in the late 1980s. The WTO reminded Congress that the formalities of registration did not, and could not, be used to deny copyright protection for foreign works. This resulted in legislation, because Congress really didn't want to be subject to WTO sanctions for copyright violations, and eventually in the Uruguary Round Agreements Act § 514 (codified at 17 U.S.C. § 104A).
The seeming result of this change was to bring a lot of works back into copyright that had been "relied upon" as being in the public domain. Needless to say, some people — especially, but not only, in classical music, for complicated statutory and cultural reasons that could easily occupy a 10,000-word article — objected to this restriction on their ability to freely perform/exploit works that they had relied upon as being in the public domain. (Also needless to say, these people generally ignored all of the compromise protection offered them in § 514/§ 104A in making their arguments...) They therefore filed suit, claiming that Congress did not have the authority to do what it did.
At a fundamental level, the challenge must fail. Absent a valid First Amendment or Fifth Amendment issue, Congress has an absolute right to take a property interest that is inchoately held by the public. The Supreme Court has previously disposed of the various First and Fifth Amendment challenges here. But notice what the plaintiffs' position really is: It is not a First Amendment challenge at all. It is a Fifth Amendment challenge that what Congress did was a taking... because it presumes that the public domain is property in which potential exploiters have a sufficient and personal property interest. In short, this is an internal logical inversion — they would claim a private right from public property, and further claim that their private right is superior to the private right that Congress intends to "restore" to the original owners.
But let's leave sheer logic out of it: We're talking about cultural appropriation here, and logic is never a winning (or sufficient) strategy in arguments over culture. This particularly monstrosity ended up in the Supreme Court with this formal statement of the issues:
Section 514 of the Uruguay Round Agreements Act of 1994 granted copyright protection to millions of works that the Copyright Act had placed in the public domain of the United States, where they had remained for years as the common property of all Americans and free to use without restriction. The questions presented here are:
1. Does the Copyright Clause of the United States Constitution prohibit Congress from taking works out of the public domain?
2. Does Section 514 violate the First Amendment of the United States Constitution?
The Court answered both of these in the negative.
1. First, the Court rejected the "impenetrable barrier to restoration" argument (slip op. at 13), finding no constitutional barrier to restoration. Largely relying upon the previous decision in Eldred (as noted above, also written by Justice Ginsburg), the Court notes that the actual extension offered is a limited time, and therefore literally within Congress's power under the Act. The interesting rhetorical exercise here is that the Court entirely skates on a different question: Might the Treaty Power (Article II, § 2, cl. 2) authorize Congress and the President to fill interstices in the Constitution (slip op. at 1516)? That said, the Court rejects the "personal interest in the public domain" theory put forth by the plaintiffs in objecting to restoring foreign copyrights (slip op. at 1619, citing previous examples of bringing works "back" into protection), and specifically holds that Congress may consider international effectiveness in fashioning domestic law:
Considered against this backdrop, § 514 falls comfortably within Congress’[s] authority under the Copyright Clause. Congress rationally could have concluded that adherence to Berne "promotes the diffusion of knowledge." A well-functioning international copyright system would likely encourage the dissemination of exist-ing and future works. Full compliance with Berne, Congress had reason to believe, would expand the foreign markets available to U.S. authors and invigorate protection against piracy of U.S. works abroad,
(slip op. at 22, internal citations omitted, some typography corrected) Justice Ginsburg concludes for the Court that protection of existing works in an international system is an important motivation entirely consistent with the IP Clause (Article I, § 8, cl. 8) and the imperative to promote progress through creation of new works. Compliance with international norms is, therefore, a rational exercise of Congress's power under the IP Clause.
2. The First Amendment question should have been disposed of by noting that the question had already been settled, and indeed never should have been granted. That said, Justice Ginsburg fairly gently points out two things that make the First Amendment essentially irrelevant to this particular question:
The iceberg lurking here is whether the formalities of registration, and particularly of renewal, are so inconsistent with Berne that the underlying legislation is, itself, insufficient... and therefore subject to much-more-profound reinterpretation in light of the First Amendment. Fortunately for the Court, this petition did not squarely present that question, because it doesn't have a good or easy answer.
Of course, there was a dissent. It is not a badly reasoned dissent, but it is somewhat disingenuous in one respect: It does not adequately acknowledge the distinction between constitutional restriction and policy-level second-guessing. For example, Justice Breyer claims that:
Still, I cannot find this argument sufficient to save the statute. For one thing, this is a dilemma of the Government’s own making. The United States obtained the benefits of Berne for many years despite its failure to enact a statute implementing Article 18. But in 1994, the United States and other nations signed the Agreement on Trade-Related Aspects of Intellectual Property Rights, which enabled signatories to use World Trade Organization dispute resolution mechanisms to complain about other members’ Berne Convention violations. But at that time the Government, although it successfully secured reservations protecting other special features of American copyright law, made no effort to secure a reservation permitting the United States to keep some or all restored works in the American public domain. And it made no effort to do so despite the fact that Article 18 explicitly authorizes countries to negotiate exceptions to the Article’s retroactivity principle.
(slip op. at 2223 lit./6768 log., internal citations omitted) That is, Justice Breyer's dissent is founded on the failure to negotiate the treaty accession and Uruguay Round amendments as he would have preferred, with 20/20 hindsight, and then elevating that disagreement to constitutional dimension. Sometimes that is valid; in this instance, however, Justice Breyer's rejection of treatment of past works as providing adequate incentive for creation of new works (see, e.g., slip op. at 17 lit./62 log.) is a policy, and not constitutional, preference. As a policy preference, it fails the test for overturning acts of Congress; at the extreme, not everything that is stupid is unconstitutional.
So, then, why should authors care? Primarily, authors should care because it reinforces what were/have been "best practices" for a long time — ask permission, and then rely on fair use only after careful consideration if that permission is refused or too expensive — are legally required for a relatively small universe of foreign works. At oral argument, Chief Justice Roberts asked a semiilluminating question that would have been relevant — whether Jimi Hendrix's version of the "Star Spangled Banner" would have fallen afoul of § 514 if the original music had fallen inside of the foreign rights restored — but never pointed out that factually, Hendrix's interpretation would have qualified as fair use in a way that a literal "mere" quotation would not. That, however, requires actual application of brain to problem instead of mere reference to ideological predispositions; even if information wants to be free, entertainers want to be paid. Secondarily, authors should care because validation of § 514 also validates the converse — efforts to control infringement of their works in foreign jurisdictions that haven't always respected copyright. This is where Justice Ginsburg's silent nudge on Soviet treatment of US works, such as Bernstein and Copland, is most important.
And last, but far from least, a snarky comment about Wikipedia. For those who haven't noticed, Wikipedia is dark today, voluntarily, as a "protest" against SOPA. I share the ire against SOPA (and the various alternatives that have thus far been floated). The snark is twofold: That this points out exactly why voluntarily going dark as a news source misinterprets the First Amendment and is ultimately self-defeating; and that now, at least until midnight today, people trying to understand what Golan means (those who don't stop here first, that is <vbeg>) will not be deceived by the almost-inevitably wrong bullshit that appears on Wikipedia for new intellectual-property opinions. (Aside: No, Mike, it's not you; it's the various "editors" who are more interested in their versions of reality than the ones shared by everyone else, and fail to distinguish between "should be" and "is".) Instead, they'll have a chance of getting something that approaches accuracy... on a copyright matter, during a voluntary darkness in "protest" of a copyright matter.
Labels: copyright, culture, intellectual property, internet, jurisprudence
link to: 12:28 [GMT-6]
Please judge these internet link sausages by the content of their recipes and not the origin of their casings...
In Britain, money buys silence. The cost of libel actions in England and Wales is 140 times higher than the European average. If you lose a case, lawyers operating on a no-win, no-fee contract force you to pay damages, your costs, your assailant's costs, a "success fee" for the victorious lawyers– which doubles their real costs – and a payment to cover insurance bills. In 2010, Lord Justice Jackson added these together and estimated that the costs of civil litigation in England could amount to 10 times the damages the court awarded.
Nick Cohen, "You Can't Read This Book" (book extract). The obvious counterargument is that this is no more than the scandalous liar deserves. Even assuming that to be true, though, the peculiar British institution of requiring the defendant speaker to prove the truth of what he said (instead of, as in the US and arguably as required by the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, the plaintiff subject to prove the falsity of what the defendant said) only magnifies the problem... and hides the problem of determining who, exactly, is the liar.
Yes, this does relate directly to each of the three preceding link sausages on this platter. Each of them concerns an improper, self-interested classification that is imposed upon an entire antitrust market by coordinated interests that dominate a significant subsegment of that antitrust market — and thereby manage to extract rents from not just that subsegment, but from the entire antitrust market. If one accepts the theory behind the Rule of Reason, the HHI Index, and non-Schumpeterian modern antitrust doctrine, that shouldn't happen. That it does, in fact, happen (NewsCorp's very existence is proof) indicates that modern antitrust economics, at least as it relates to intellectual property, undervalues the endowment effect of intellectual property and underestimates the situational elasticity of the Coase Theorem, among other issues. In short, it's bad, ideologically driven economic theory that is not satisfactorily congruent with real human behavior, if only because economics and ideology are inherently valid for large systems and considerations in the arts and innovation are inherently valid for small systems... but both have much-greater than predicted by analogy to quantum mechanics echoes in the other.
Last for today, I want to comment on a successor to Dr King's concern about skin color. I am not implying that that battle is over, or even necessarily won; there are several towns in this county where one risks being pulled over for driving while melaninically enhanced. Instead, there's a move toward proxies, like religion, that are (in employment-law terms) of disparate impact rather than intentionally and universally discriminatory.
The case of Jessica Ahlquist is an excellent example, unfortunately. It also points out the defects in the Supreme Court's decision in Santa Fe School District, which did not go nearly far enough in rejecting prayer as a formal part of school athletic events. The obvious question is whether the sauce for the goose is also sauce for the gander. If one actually reads the attacks on Jessica Ahlquist, one sees a lot of accusations that she's not thinking for herself — that this is actually her parents using her as a proxy. Perhaps; but if that's valid, why not apply the same inquiry to the schools in Santa Fe that essentially directed a protestant, evangelical point of view as the only acceptable basis for that school-sponsored prayer/address?
Then there's the proxy issue for race and ethnicity. Take a look at that photograph of Ms Ahlquist that's on Ms McCreight's blog, linked above. It doesn't look very stereotypically Scandanavian, does it? Is there perhaps — just perhaps — some mixed ethnicity in Ms Ahlquist's background? And how, one might ask, does that compare to the much-more-homogeneous-than-average demographics of Cranston, Rhode Island (about 1.6σ off the US mean, and somewhere around 1σ off the Rhode Island mean, so far as I can determine quickly)? Disturbingly, I run across this all too often here in East Central Redneckistan, and ran across it all too often in the military worldwide and in dealing with legal and publishing issues.
If I were definitively judging Ms Ahlquist by the apparent content of her character — and I'm not; no sixteen-year-old girl deserves that, any more than sixteen-year-old girls acting as a clique as they so often do should be judging the worth of anyone else — I'd be a lot more impressed by her than I am by the Cranston community at large... assuming, of course, that the attacks on her Ms McCreight refers to were not largely made by carpetbaggers. (Yes, that inversion of the Southern Complaint during Reconstruction is intentional.) Not to mention that, at a fundamental level, she's right: It is discriminatory, and inappropriate, for an archly christian (and subliminally protestant) prayer to appear on the wall of a public high school in any context, let alone in isolation. It's wrong constitutionally under Santa Fe School District and Lemon and Larson and more other lines of precendent than I can name conveniently, let alone under any fair reading of the First Amendment itself; it's wrong fundamentally; it's wrong ethically; ... and it's wrong as a matter of religious doctrine, at least if one actually reads the later epistles. Most importantly for a day celebrating Dr King, it's wrong demographically as implicitly excluding all non-christians (and implicitly criticizing catholics).
Dr King's dream was not of contemporary Iran, nor of 1960s Belfast, nor of 1620s Germany. That does not mean, however, that it is anything less than the minimum aspiration required both by the constitution and basic human decency.
Labels: censorship, civil rights, culture, internet, mass media, politics, publishing
link to: 11:24 [GMT-6]
Friday the Thirteenth is a good day for many workers paid on the 15th of the month, because it means payday is two days early.
Ironically, this is exactly parallel to a minor tempest-in-a-teabag controversy brewing over across the Pond. The UK's Tory prime minister wants subsidies to focus on "bigger" films, which I suppose makes sense from a purely efficiency-oriented point of view (which I reject when it impinges on freedom of expression, but that's for another time). Needless to say, filmmakers are not in agreement, with each other or Mr Cameron. Meanwhile, neither of those parties is noting that the efficiency question has nothing whatsoever to do with filmmaking, and everything to do with distribution to the public... an entirely separate issue. If it was a question of efficiency, more than the occasional exception would be profitable under even H'wood's definitions (because practices would adjust to account for that — pun intended), and we'd have no superbombs like this one or supersuccesses like this one.
Labels: culture, intellectual property, mass media, politics, publishing
link to: 12:06 [GMT-6]
Those of you who've been complaining about how little meat there is in the link sausages can skip to the bottom of this entry.
Implications of this shift as they concern electronic, and even printed, works of fiction are left as an exercise for the increasingly frustrated reader.
I'm going to close today with something that is not a sausage; consider this the real meat of the meal. The United States Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit yesterday upheld an injunction granted against Oklahoma's voter-approved "anti-Sharia" referendum, remarking near the end:
Appellants argue that the preliminary injunction interferes with Oklahomans' fundamental right to vote, prevents enactment of the voters' will, and "discourages the voters from participating in the election process."
Federal courts should be wary of interfering with the voting process, but we agree with the district court and the Sixth Circuit that "'it is always in the public interest to prevent the violation of a party’s constitutional rights.'" "While the public has an interest in the will of the voters being carried out … the public has a more profound and long-term interest in upholding an individual's constitutional rights." [S]ee also Cate v. Oldham, 707 F.2d 1176, 1190 (10th Cir. 1983) (noting "[t]he strong public interest in protecting First Amendment values").
Awad v. Ziriax, No. 201006273 (10th Cir. 10 Jan 2012), slip op. at 36 (PDF) (ellipses in original, some internal citations omitted).
Leaving aside that, from a policy perspective — indeed, from many policy perspectives — this is the correct outcome, it also points out the real difference between a representative democracy founded on the rule of law and pure populist direct democracy: In the former, there are limits on what the body politic is allowed to do to subsets of the body politic (however vague and inconsistent); in the latter, there are not. That, however, is just the starter course, because the actual meat (I'm not sure whether it's a roast, a stew, or a steak) comes from the Supreme Court's hearings yesterday on the FCC's ban on so-called 'fleeting indecent speech' (and, specifically, the seven words you can't say on radio/television). I have a challenge for the majority in Citizens United, and for those who support the concept that "money is [political] speech:" Make a principled distinction that justifies treating money not as a mere enabler of speech, but of actual speech that necessarily invokes First Amendment protection... that simultaneously justifies treating so-called "four-letter words" and depictions of "naughty bits" as nonspeech that is outside the scope of First Amendment protection while not overturning Cohen v. California, 403 U.S. 15 (1971), which held that a student protestor could wear a jacket proclaiming "Fuck the Draft" without unlawfully denigrating the dignity of a court.
In short, I challenge the Supreme Court to demonstrate in a principled way that even though money is speech, broadcasting the word "fuck" is not. "Because a bunch of white guys in black dresses said so" is not a principled way!
Labels: censorship, civil rights, copyright, intellectual property, jurisprudence, mass media, politics, publishing
link to: 16:12 [GMT-6]
I'm not at all pleased by anything I'm seeing in the Heffalump primaries. It says something quite unsatisfactory that the party is in the thrall of its Know-Nothings, its Klansmen, its Lower-Upper-Middles — its dwarves, now that Snow Reallyreallywhite has gone to sleep (hopefully for a few hundred years).
In particular:
The object of power is power.
Labels: politics
link to: 16:10 [GMT-6]
There is substantial (justified) controversy right now about the proposed Stop Online Piracy Act and alternate versions that have been proposed. The attacks variously construe SOPA as an "internet kill switch for Hollywood", a "censorship engine for the Internet", and various other ills that largely boil down to assertions that BigMedia will use SOPA to entirely shut down parts of the 'net that contain some purportedly unauthorized copies of BigMedia-controlled works, with substantial collateral damage to other exchanges of works and to other political and commercial activity.
The obvious problem here is a jurisdictional one: The DMCA (17 U.S.C. § 512) simply does not apply outside the United States... and many United States-based pirates use RIM/Blackberry formalisms to evade jurisdiction in the United States. Then, too, a large proportion of the pirate clientele is in the United States, making this all the more frustrating for US-based holders of copyrights. Worse yet — and largely through dubious attempts at administrative convenience and efficiency (the fifth, nonstatutory, but usually controlling fair-use factor) — BigMedia has undermined the credibility of the DMCA system in the first place. Worst of all, too damned many providers are getting too damned much revenue from traffic (whether clicks on advertisements or whatever) to be very interested in actually complying with proper DMCA notices1... even if they were predisposed to comply with the law as it is instead of with the law as they believe it should be.
The real problem with bending over for the SOPA, though, is that it is founded upon fundamental misunderstandings of both creative activity and the power relationships involved. I'm not going to delve into the dubious enforcement mechanisms or anything else; I propose, instead, that any such power, authority, standing, and right must be limited to the actual creator — not to a mere licensee (publisher, record company) or patron (multimedia). I do not claim that the following changes will completely fix SOPA — but I think they will enable an actual, meaningful conversation concerning its merits that very well may result in something that works without too much collateral damage.
PROPOSED AMENDMENT TO H.R. 3261
H.R. 3261 is amended by adding the following new Section 3:
"3. Limitations on Standing. Notwithstanding the provisions of 17 U.S.C. § 201(b) or any transfer of copyright inconsistent with the succession of interest established in 17 U.S.C. § 203 or 17 U.S.C. § 304(c) as would apply to the work in question, only the Creator of a work as defined in this Act has standing to request any action under § 102 or § 201 of this Act, or to take any action under § 103 of this Act. This limitation on standing under this Act does not act to diminish the rights of any copyright holder or licensee under 17 U.S.C. § 106, 17 U.S.C. § 106A, or 17 U.S.C. §§ 501513, but applies only to this Act."
H.R. 3261 is further amended by adding the following new Section § 101(25):
"CREATOR — The term 'Creator' means:
"(a) For audio recordings without visual component, the natural person writer (or majority of multiple natural person writers) plus natural person performer (or majority of multiple natural person performers) of the audio recording at issue;
"(b) For audiovisual or purely visual recordings, the natural person writer (or majority of multiple natural person writers) plus natural person director (or majority of multiple natural person directors) of the audiovisual or visual recording at issue;
"(c) For all other works, the natural person writer (or majority of multiple natural person writers).
"For the purposes of this definition only, 'natural person writer' means an individual who contributed discernable original content otherwise protected under the Copyright Act and consistent with Feist Publications, Inc. v. Rural Telephone Services Co., Inc., 499 U.S. 340 (1991), and explicitly excluding any person or entity who might claim 'authorship' pursuant to 17 U.S.C. § 201(b)."
The intended — and, to at least a first order approximation, actual — effect of this language is to remove mere licensees and BigMedia distributors from decisionmaking authority over SOPA incidents. Admittedly, there are some "problem children" among Creators, such as the descendants of James Joyce and Margaret Mitchell, but they are the exception, rather than the rule... and would still have to comply with everything else in SOPA to have any influence. This also prevents mere licensees and distributors from overreaching into rights that were not at issue at the time they acquired whatever rights they were initially granted, and avoids a serious constitutional and international-law problem with forcing foreign actors to recognize the constitutionally dubious work-for-hire doctrine that redefines the "author" of a work to be what the rest of the world — and, in particular, the English-speaking world in the 1780s — would have called the "patron." This is a fundamental problem with the US conception of copyright, particularly measured against both the English common law and the Statute of Anne (1710). It is also the means by which BigMedia stuck its nose into the copyright tent in the first place, inconsistent with the purposes of the Intellectual Property Clause (to "promote progress in the useful arts and sciences", in modern capitalization).
The proposed amendment is just plain more fair to everyone involved, as it allows the actual author to laugh off trivial infringements... and puts pressure on licensees and distributors to actually and effectively exploit their rights in a way that defeats piracy by providing a high-quality product at a reasonable price.
I suppose that it's possible that virtually every ISP that has been confronted with a credible, fact-based § 512(i) attack has immediately settled thereafter... which would explain why there are virtually no opinions after Ellison that focus on that aspect of the DMCA. Well, actually, it's not: I have personal knowledge that some of the big cases out there should have (on the basis of documentation in my possession and my personal experience interacting with specific ISPs) included a § 512(i) attack on the ISP's eligibility for the safe harbor, but did not. That explicitly includes the now-completed Grokster action; the various assaults on LimeWire; and the current brouhahas regarding YouTube and HotFile. It is not, however, limited to those examples.
<SARCASM>Of course, that would require relying upon actual facts and performing a prefiling investigation adequate under Fed. R. Civ. P. 11(b)(3), which is inconsistent with the policy stance of BigMedia and too much of BigLaw. Further, it would diminish the motion practice, meaning that BigLaw personnel would have to become familiar with the facts in their cases instead of quotemining from Westlaw/Lexis. Yeah, that's gonna happen Real Soon Now.</SARCASM>
Labels: censorship, copyright, intellectual property, internet, mass media, politics, publishing
link to: 12:56 [GMT-6]
The following link sausages are alternately flavored with rant and academia (or sometimes both), but they're all variations on salsiccia sardonicus. It's up to you to figure out which is which... or just be vaguely amused and not bother.
I therefore tentatively put forth the following null hypothesis for testing — and I have neither the time nor the data set to test it:
H0: Inexperience with the process of data gathering, data assimilation, and/or conversion of data to valid legal statements of fact — for either judicial or legislative statements of fact — does not influence the weight accorded to statements of fact in reaching judicial decisions.
This is a non-normative statement and hypothesis — that is, I'm not saying whether it should or should not. For one thing, note that I said "valid" and not "sound".... Regardless, I think it both an interesting academic inquiry and a critical ideological/jurisprudential one.
Labels: copyright, culture, intellectual property, jurisprudence, politics, science
link to: 10:42 [GMT-6]
It is 2012 now, after all. It's not just the Mayans; it's also Nostradamus. And an unjustly underappreciated Anthony Burgess novel. And if the incessant blathering of the Heffalumps isn't enough to make one wish for the end of the world, I don't know what will be...
Labels: arts, mass media, publishing, science
link to: 07:42 [GMT-6]
By this time tomorrow, anyway. The preparations for that little reconnaissance mission have eaten up a lot of time this past month!
This is actually closely related to the publisher-overreaching in the last link of the preceding item. Publishers — particularly for category fiction — are becoming increasingly hostile to authors' control of the author's own name, primarily through noncompetition clauses that are becoming broader and less negotiable. Returning to the issue of "customer," recognizing that there's a competing concept of "vendor" illuminates most of the disagreement between Mr Scalzi and that other (semipseudonymous) blogger. The logical antecedent of "customer" is "of what" — and there's a considerable difference between the fulfillment aspects of being a publisher and the editorial aspects of being a publisher. If you can't agree on who/what the vendor is, you can't agree on what responsibilities that vendor has to a customer, let alone who the customer is (and is not). Then there's the monopoly/monopsony problem on top of that!
Labels: copyright, intellectual property, life, mass media, politics, publishing
link to: 13:18 [GMT-6]
Condolences to family, friends, and colleagues for the untimely death of Professor Ribstein, a (if not the) leading theorist on business entity structures that are not corporations. We were at most academic acquaintances who had met a couple of times in passing. Our politics did not match well, but our shared interest in the interface between individuals and their business interests led to some interesting exchanges over the years... and helped sharpen my thoughts on how authors and other creators of intellectual property should arrange their own business affairs.
This leaves a considerable hole in the theoretical and practical landscape of "uncorporations" — and leaving aside the personal issues, that's a bad thing in this day of proliferating llcs as the purported "solution" for everything.
Labels: jurisprudence, miscellany, publishing
link to: 14:02 [GMT-6]
I've been spending the last week-plus surrounded by various types of dead bodies. (And the house sure stinks because of it... although one should also recall that the term for the back files of a periodical is a "morgue".) Zombies, however, don't make for great blogging. At least not for me.
Do I have your attention now?
This involves some simple math and complex contract interpretation, so please digest this whole sausage first. When authors review contracts to see what they should be getting for royalties, they tend to focus on the obvious stuff: x% of list price. That is, indeed, the default royalty calculation for printed books (at least at present; more and more publishers are pushing toward a y% of net model, but even those contracts follow the rest of this paragraph...). The kicker, though, is the "high discount" clause, which cuts the royalty in half for copies "sold"1 at a "high discount." As y'all may well be aware — and is the factual context even if you're not — books are sent to bookstores, including Amazon, at a discount from the list price. The ordinary terms are called the "long" or "trade" discount. Historically — that is, from the late 1960s to about 2003 or so — this was a fairly iron-clad 40%. Sometimes, though, there were "special deals" offered at higher discounts, which the publisher then demanded be treated differently. If you're cynical, you can probably spot what's coming...
The high-discount clauses typically kick in at a 50% discount from list, at least for contracts negotiated before mid-2004 or so (and even for the vast majority of contracts negotiated after that time). The problem here is that Amazon as its standard term demands a discount of greater than that from many publishers, particularly independent small presses (which, BTW, one is most likely to encounter at an independent bookstore); as of early 2010, the standard terms demanded of Publishers Z1, Z2, Z3, and Z4, for example, was 52%. That would trigger the high-discount clause in older contracts (and I've confirmed that Z2 and Z3 have invoked that clause) for calculating author compensation for every sale through Amazon. What makes this worse is what will happen when Z4 is acquired by a conglomerate and becomes, at most, a brand subset — like Buick — because the existing distribution agreements will continue until renegotiated...
Now, this does not hold true for all publishers, or all books, or all of anything, sold through or via Amazon; one of the ways that the Big Brazilian River has thus far avoided being dammed by the antitrust authorities is that it maintains the pretense of negotiating contracts with vendors. Similarly, not all authors have been so foolish as to accede to a 50% trigger for the high discount clause (although, to be honest, I've yet to meet an agent or author who had considered this issue until I pointed it out). Nonetheless, there's a substantial chance that when someone buys a book from Amazon that was printed by a publisher that is not one of the Big Six (and even if it was), the author is getting a lot less money from that transaction than if that same book were purchased via the (now, lamentably, closed) Pages for All Ages here in Chambanana, or the Elliott Bay Book Company in Seattle, or the Tattered Cover in Denver, or any other independent bookstore.
Labels: intellectual property, internet, politics, publishing, science
link to: 12:21 [GMT-6]
The flu is so much more fun at one remove with remoras also going through end-of-semester panic...
The most obvious, relatively nearby counterexamples to EyeOfNewt's lie only a few hundred kilometers due north of Palestine: Kurds and Armenians. Of course, the implicit comparison of Israel to the atrocities committed by the decaying Ottoman empire as it sank into a two-class society consisting of a decadent, "religiously correct" ruling class determined solely by ancestry and a randomly oppressed peasantry isn't exactly what EyeOfNewt intended, now, is it? One could also point to the "former Yugoslavia" (or, if one is feeling particularly whimsical, the "former Austro-Hungarian/eastern Hapsburg domain") for exactly the same problems with self-designation of ethnic groups seeking political independence. Gavrilo Princip, anyone?
More to the point — especially if one likes one's political rhetoric like Turkish coffee (which is to say strong, black, and bitter) — EyeOfNewt's denigration of Palestinians as an "invented people" exactly matches Georgia during the civil rights era (and I mean EyeOfNewt's home state, not the former Soviet Republic — although come to think of it...). It also exactly matches the idea of "Americans" as a distinct "people." More to the point, it also matches the idea of consolidating all of the various tribal factions on the eastern seaboard of North America into "Native American" or "Indian", and then adding to the designation by later conquest so that it includes tribes that would have slaughtered each other on sight. Somehow, I don't think that EyeOfNewt has ever considered the kinds of animosities between pre-Balfour Declaration "native residents" of Galilee and the Negev... or, for that matter, considered the friction between Ashkenazim and Sephards, or the undercurrents in the story of "the Good Samaritan." No, it's all just another version of manifest destiny, because the implicit presumption is that arch-Zionist dominance of the region and displacement of its population is right... and has no exceptions or limitations.
EyeOfNewt's position would have been more defensible if he had extended it to its extreme: All "ethnicity" is an invented psychosocial construct that changes substantially over time and geography. That's a position I could, and do, agree with... but it contradicts "American exceptionalism," and in particular "white christian American exceptionalism," so you're just not going to see it considered seriously in American political debate. From or by anyone.
Conversely, it also implicates antitrust problems in the existing industry subsegment, and the fact that no matter where one comes down on the question, the answer isn't going to be quick. Or cheap. Or casualty-free.
One proposal raised was to provide people with copyright in their faceprints or facial features. This idea has two demerits: it is unconstitutional, and it is insane. Otherwise, it seems fine.
More than anything else, this points out just how difficult it is to adapt the common-law model to rapid change in context.
Labels: copyright, culture, intellectual property, politics, publishing, science
link to: 22:49 [GMT-6]
So, if they're "student-athletes," perhaps a little bit of the "student" aspect needs to go into college football "standings." I therefore present the Bowl Standings for Collegiate Athletic Commercial Advantage, or BS-CACA. I'll weight the BS-CACA equally between "football performance" and "academic performance," which in turn is equally weighted between the NCAA's most-recent academic progress report for the football team and the university's median freshman standardized-test score. And thus, we get:
| School | BCS Score | BCS Rank | NCAA APR | ACT | Academic | Final Score | Final Rank | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| LSU | 1.0000 | 1 | 966 | .7541 | 25.5 | .4167 | .5854 | .7927 | 1 |
| Alabama | .9419 | 2 | 963 | .7049 | 26.5 | .4722 | .5886 | .7653 | 3 |
| Oklahoma State | .9333 | 3 | 942 | .3607 | 25.0 | .3889 | .3748 | .6451 | 6 |
| Stanford | .8476 | 4 | 977 | .9344 | 31.0 | 1.0000 | .7222 | .7849 | 2 |
| Oregon | .7901 | 5 | 941 | .3443 | 24.0 | .3333 | .3388 | .5645 | 9 |
| Arkansas | .7687 | 6 | 937 | .2787 | 25.0 | .3889 | .3338 | .5513 | 11 |
| Boise State | .7408 | 7 | 981 | 1.0000 | 22.5 | .2500 | .6250 | .6829 | 4 |
| Kansas State | .6827 | 8 | 940 | .3279 | 24.0 | .3333 | .3306 | .5067 | 13 |
| South Carolina | .6553 | 9 | 954 | .5574 | 26.5 | .4722 | .5148 | .5851 | 7 |
| Wisconsin | .6374 | 10 | 967 | .7705 | 28.0 | .5556 | .6631 | .6503 | 5 |
| Virginia Tech | .5190 | 11 | 955 | .5738 | 27.0 | .5000 | .5369 | .5280 | 12 |
| Baylor | .4977 | 12 | 951 | .5082 | 26.5 | .4722 | .4902 | .4940 | 15 |
| Michigan | .4794 | 13 | 928 | .1311 | 29.0 | .6111 | .3711 | .4252 | 16 |
| Oklahoma | .4603 | 14 | 960 | .6557 | 26.0 | .4444 | .5501 | .5052 | 14 |
| Clemson | .4218 | 15 | 977 | .9344 | 27.5 | .5278 | .7311 | .5765 | 8 |
| Georgia | .4119 | 16 | 976 | .9180 | 27.0 | .5000 | .7090 | .5604 | 10 |
It would look even more... interesting if we could substitute in the ACT score median for the respective teams instead of the entire freshman class.
link to: 10:41 [GMT-6]
Just remember: A tree's natural enemy is not some woodland creature, but a lawyer. Unless, that is, you're talking about a lawyer who is also a woodland creature, like a weasel who passes the bar exam.
So, then, why would Google move to dismiss the complaint when it can't win? Well, for one thing, because judges in the Second Circuit (albeit not Judge Chin) have a long history of treating class-action motions to dismiss as motions for judgment on the pleadings... even though Rule 12(c) explicitly says judgment on the pleadings is appropriate only after the pleadings have been closed. For another, this is part of the process of educating the judge on the issues, in a general sense; that's not really necessary in this matter, though, given the extensive ruling that Judge Chin has already made. Most importantly, though, it delays things — considerably. (Not to mention runs up law firm billings.)
Labels: copyright, intellectual property, internet, jurisprudence, mass media, publishing
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