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.
Canadian Madames
Apparently, the world's largest romance publisher already notorious for short shelf-lives, miserly author compensation, and improper treatment of copyright thinks that aspiring romance authors could learn from Velvet Jones. At least 'hos get paid, though.
Harlequin has announced that it is establishing a vanity press arm to go along with its commercial publishing business where, for approximately the same as it would advance to a previously unpublished first-time author, authors can pay for seeing their names in print.
But wait there's more!
Harlequin isn't even doing the work itself. It is, instead, partnering with the highly dubious Indiana-based Author Solutions (the current owner of AuthorHouse, Trafford, iUniverse, and xLibris) to make these hourly rentals available to prospective romance authors. Didn't PT Barnum say "There's an author born every minute," or something like that?
This is on top of the already-existing (equally unethical) eCritique "service" recently set up by Harlequin. Harlequin's excuse is that things are going to change in publishing, so writers just need to accept that Harlequin is going to take advantage of every potential income stream. That's more than a little bit like saying that a bank is entitled to embezzle from your account, merely because the banking system is the only game in town; or that a classic boiler-room operation is acceptable because the people it rips off really want success that much. In short, there's more than a faint odor of dead fish and fraud.
This time around, though, writers' trade associations are not accepting Harlequin's newest attempt to squeeze blood from a turnip. SFWA, MWA, and RWA have all issued public statements of disapproval. So far, Harlequin's response has been to change the name of the program.
My advice, for what it's worth: Run away and shun all Harlequin products (that you can clearly identify). Just because the corporation is in Canada does not give it license to avoid the consequences of its greed. If the corporate masters there think that aspiring authors are nothing more than 'hos, they're nothing more than madames (or, if male, pimps).
GBS: Settlement 2.0 Deadlines
Judge Chin has provided "preliminary approval"(PDF image) of Settlement 2.0. This does not mean he thinks it should/will be approved; it means, instead, that:
7. The Court has reviewed the Amended Settlement Agreement and determined it to be within the range of possible approval;
GBS Doc. 772 (19 Nov 2009) at 2. The critical dates and procedures established are:
Supplemental notice shall commence on 14 December 2009 (Doc. 772 at 5 ¶ 17). This requires two types of contact:
For anyone who has previously filed anything a claim form, an objection or statement, an opt-out a mailed or e-mailed notice (Id. ¶ 20); or
Posting on the "official" settlement website (Id. ¶ 19).
Previous opt-outs do not need to be refiled; neither do previous claims (Id. at 6 ¶ 24).
Previous objections do not need to be refiled concerning portions of the agreement not changed (Id. at 5 ¶ 18).
The new deadline for opting out or objecting to the Amended Settlement is 28 January 2010 (Id. ¶ 17).
The fairness hearing is tentatively scheduled for 18 February 2010 at 10am (Id. at 4 ¶ 13).
Persons wishing to be heard at the fairness hearing must file a Notice of Intent to Appear on or before 04 February 2010 (Id. at 8 ¶ 25).
Implicitly, the deadline for those in either subclass to file claims has been extended to 31 March 2011 (Id. at 11). This is inconsistent with the official settlement administration website at the moment, which still says 05 June 2010.
While I was in the midst of expounding upon the antitrust implications of the GBS settlement proposals and, indeed, whether any settlement could pass antitrust scrutiny absent legislative approval I realized that I was using a great many technical terms and concepts. As mysterious as the technical terms and concepts of publishing and of copyright can get at times, they're an order of magnitude clearer than those common in antitrust law. Before I make anyone's head spin any faster than 331/3 RPM, I suppose I should try to bridge that gap... particularly since storage devices these days tend to spin at 5400 or 7200 RPM...
Antitrust law is founded on the same principle as is the US Constitution: No one actor (or, as we'll see later on, group of actors acting together, intentionally or otherwise) should be allowed to obtain or maintain dominant power without challenge absent a specific grant and need to do so. In politics, we have the "three branch" system; in market economics, we have "antitrust and competition law." The political definition of "power" is parallel to the market economics definition of "power," but they're measured differently.27
I'm now going to try, using cross-platform HTML code, to display a block diagram that will (hopefully) illuminate what is going on when one is dealing with intellectual property in an antitrust context. Keep in mind that this is a general-purpose diagram that I redrew from several sources over a decade ago, and not something for GBS or even print publishing in general.
IP Creator
⇓ ⇑ Product Differentiation and Packaging
⇓ ⇑ Product Distribution
⇓ ⇑ End User
In this horribly simplified block diagram, the downward arrows represent the (anticipated) flow of intellectual property28 and the upward arrows represent the (anticipated) flow of compensation. In short, each pair of arrows represents an aggregation of binary market transactions. The key point is that each of the four blocks represents different perspectives on, and balances in, antitrust considerations.
The first thing to keep in mind, antitrust-wise, is that that lefthand arrow has been granted an exclusion from antitrust scrutiny unless it is "misused." Misuse is a shorthand term for a variety of sins, most of which concern attempts to exert power over rights not protected by the intellectual property using that intellectual property as a lever. This is most obvious in "tying" arrangements: "I will not allow you to buy or lease this protected-by-patent photocopier unless you also buy the paper, toner, and service contract from me, even though the paper, toner, and service contract are not protected by that or any other patent." In the entertainment/publishing end of intellectual property, this often appears as either unfair/excessive license fees for reuse (I'm talking to you, ASCAP/BMI!) or overassertion of rights (even louder), and sometimes as outright refusals to deal.29
The second thing to keep in mind, antitrust-wise, is that each block has both monopolistic and monopsonistic aspects. I can see a big "huh?" already... in short:
Although "monopoly" is often used to encompass the entire field of antitrust law, technically (and mathematically) a monopoly concerns only a one-providing-property-to-many situation. In the block diagram, the end user can never be a monopoly, because it doesn't provide property to many: It may receive property from many, but that is
A "monopsony." However, antitrust theory requires more than merely reception of the property; it also requires that there be no rational alternate means of exploiting the property, which is one of the areas in which antitrust theory and intellectual property theory are inconsistent.
Keep in mind, too, that superior practices and products are not antitrust violations, so long as there are acceptably low entry barriers to another potential market participant who comes along with even more superior practices and products.
Those of you who actually paid attention in sixth-grade math will, very soon now, begin to understand why it makes a difference whether one is considering a monopoly or a monopsony as an antitrust issue. That very soon, however, will have to wait for the next entry... which will be much more tightly tied to the GBS settlement.
If you're wondering whether intellectual property laws somehow violate this principle, you get a gold star on your daily report. The distinction is that the US Constitution, with the IP Clause, gives a specific grant and states a specific need for allowing certain limited monopolies in intellectual property... and therefore falls outside of this objection for the initial owners (creators) of intellectual property. The problem, as we'll see down the road, is that the GBS does not concern the initial owners (creators) of intellectual property, but later market mechanisms for distribution of that intellectual property that largely ignore the interests of the initial owners; as Randy Newman says, "It's Money That Matters."
Or, in many circumstances, derivative works based upon that property, possibly combining other intellectual property to create a single product. Consider, for example, a book, which might include the copyrightable expression of the text; a copyrightable index; copyrightable design elements; copyrightable cover design and illustration; and so on (ignoring, for the moment, whether the editorial contribution is itself copyrightable!).
Although it's not relevant to the GBS situation, keep in mind that true transformation of the underlying expressive intellectual property (that is, copyright and/or trademark) is a completely different situation. That concerns not antitrust issues, but freedom-of-speech issues (see, e.g., Campbell v. Acuff-Rose Music, Inc., 510 U.S. 569 (1994) the 2Live Crew case) that make this even more of a headache.
Version 2.0 of the settlement has arrived. It's as much of a monster as was its predecessor, and really does very little to actually address the concerns that purportedly led to the changes. If I was actually a member of the Authors['] Guild I'm eligible, but have chosen not to join <SARCASM> I'd seriously think of using my vast royalty earnings and endless free time <SARCASM> to start a recall movement against the officers and Executive Director for their selfish, self-centered, self-aggrandizing management of this matter that is, on its face and in depth, inconsistent with the stated purposes of the organization. And their little dogs, too.
Before diving too far into what the changes do, though, let's take a quick look at what has remained unchanged:
Representation for both classes remains inadequate. Specific comments from the Executive Director of the AG and from a representative of the publishers have made very clear that they will not accept any additional proposed representatives or parties at the bargaining table.
Contrary to binding procedural authority (Shutt and Hansberry, among others), this settlement purports to bind the copyright owners of orphan works... when, by definition of "orphan works," those parties cannot be found, so there is no way to ensure notice.
Contrary to that same binding procedural authority, albeit less strongly, the "opt out" mechanism remains inimical to the Copyright Act, which contains no means of disclaiming a copyright. In short, this settlement seeks to accomplish by litigation a "solution" that has been explicitly rejected in the Copyright Act of 1976, and implicitly rejected in the 1909 Act.23
The revisions do little or nothing to actually deal with the antitrust problems.
The revisions do nothing whatsoever to acknowledge the Rosetta Books problem, and in fact attempt to silently reverse Rosetta Books in slightly more-obvious fashion.
The same proposed class counsel are operating under the same inept complaints complaints that reflect both factual and legal misunderstanding of what the (as originally named) Google Library Project actually did.
The settlement still accomplishes a shift of administrative burden from the reuser to the copyright holder.24
There is, however, one significant change in Version 2.0. It's a change that I must admire for its chutzpah and subtle creation of an evil overlord: The imposition of a Trusteeship25 on the Authors' Registry (Revised Settlement §§ 3.2.3, 3.10, 4.2, 4.5, 4.7, and 6.2.3). On the one hand, on its surface this would insulate decisions from self-interest by the Authors'-Guild-appointed Board of Directors; on the other hand and the hand far more likely to become an issue in the event of any dispute the structure of the law of fiduciaries, along with a few subtle wording changes, would essentially insulate any decision made by the Trustee from challenge by anyone. Ever.
Absent trustee status, decisions by the Authors' Registry would be reviewed for gross negligence ("should have known" or "reckless disregard of facts or duties"), which is a stiff standard that is difficult to prevail upon. Under trustee status, though, the same decisions would be reviewed under the "abuse of discretion" standard a far more difficult standard to meet for someone who is objecting to a decision, and a particularly inappropriate standard for dealing with a situation that is making things up as it goes along by means of a captively appointed trustee. It's one thing to say that the person(s) stuck making decisions on disputed "unclaimed works" status shouldn't be personally liable; that can be covered with an appropriate, and quite probably inexpensive, insurance rider. It's another thing entirely to procedurally block an aggrieved complainant from any realistic avenue for relief. Now throw in the vaguely specified arbitration system and whether an opt-out settlement can impose arbitration on silent nonobjectors is at best dubious26 and things get interesting. Not the good kind of interesting, either.
Next time: A dive into antitrust law.
One could argue that "failure to register or renew" was a way to disclaim the copyright under the 1909 Act. In a sense, that's true by effect; the problem is that once registered/renewed, the only way to formally "abandon" the copyright was the purposeful act of publishing without marking... and that was inconsistent with the Berne and Universal Copyright Conventions even then, and further was abrogated when the US acceded to the Berne Convention in 1988.
The Revised Settlement calls this officer an "Unclaimed Works Fiduciary" (Rev. S. § 6.2(b)(iii)). That name, aside from being a mouthful, is actually inaccurate; the designated officer's role extends far beyond mere "fiduciary" responsibility for unclaimed works to actual representation of the owners of the "unclaimed works." Calling a rabbit a smeerp does not change the fact that it's a rabbit; this is a Trustee in all but name. And, for simplicity and accuracy, that's what I'm going to call this officer the rest of the way.
See, e.g., the Federal Arbitration Act, 9 U.S.C. § 2 (requiring written agreement to arbitrate that satisfies the law of contract). Even the grossly overreaching decisions that found hidden arbitration provisions enforceable (yes, I'm thinking of you, Chief Judge Easterbrook) were based upon a contract formed by voluntary action and commercial relationships; imposing arbitration through failure to object to the imposition of a new commercial relationship has not, to my knowledge, been upheld anywhere.
GBS: Rearranging the Deck Chairs on the Titanic
Just a quick status update: The parties-plaintiff did file their "revised" settlement documents this evening. I've got downloaded copies off of the filing system, and I'll point to them from a publicly accessible site when they're available and verified.
I'm not impressed. (In fact, I'm insulted... but that shouldn't be much of a surprise.) It took two months to change 3% of the settlement, and some of the changes made things worse. I'll blather on at greater length over the next few days.
The bottom line is that in concept, in detail, and in procedure the settlement remains unacceptable and reflects poorly upon the fulfillment of counsel's duties to the absent class members. And that's the nicest thing I've got to say about it...
It's a Job, Not an Adventure
In this time of job losses and economic hardship, it's especially frustrating to see people who have jobs not doing them.
One of the biggest problems with so-called "tort reform" is that it's so one-sided: It focuses exclusively on "frivolous" claims without considering frivolous defenses and/or unfair defense tactics. One (and only one) recent counterexample from Connecticut is notable for the bar's absolute refusal to do its job:
Mark Dubois, the state's chief disciplinary counsel, is familiar with the case, but said no grievance has been filed against [the defense counsel]. "Sometimes judges just like to handle these things themselves," Dubois said.
Bluntly, that's exactly wrong. If the purpose of the ethics rules really is, or includes, protection of the public, the fact that a judge found it necessary to go on record in litigation involving actual parties with sanctions that the judge was not obligated to issue, for reasons that the judge was not obligated to cite, mandates at minimum a parallel proceeding by the regulatory authorities in order to protect the public (and the profession itself), even if the proceeding ultimately concludes that what that judge did was a sufficient response. What is worse is that this does not appear to be an isolated instance for that particular lawyer; it certainly isn't for that particular insurance carrier. Instead, just about the only way that defense counsel can get sanctioned by bar regulators is by mismanagement of client funds, or being stupid enough to get caught actually destroying evidence in short, actual dishonesty; and that's not just in Connecticut, either.
Sarah Weinman describes monopsonistic distortion of copyright's goals and how it is affecting at least one fictionwriter. The unstated, but key, point is this: So long as the distribution system remains monopsonistic (at multiple levels), there is no chance of breaking that cycle... and it presents "entry barriers" large enough to pass the DoJ's guidelines for antitrust scrutiny, if only the DoJ's grasp of fundamental mathematics was better. And the less smoke spread about technology making literary agents obsolete when unfair business practices and monopolistic/monopsonistic behavior led to the development of the literary agent in the first place, and Amazon isn't exactly a paragon of fair business practices the better. But what's a little antiintellectual protectionism between friends?
Yes, those links really are connected. You shouldn't have to think too hard to see the connection: Mercantilism. It's little wonder that transactions in intellectual property based upon a mercantilist model have trouble dealing with a world that has embraced(PDF)comparative advantage...
Over at Madisonian, Professor Desai attempts to wrestle with the concept of "out of print" in the context of the GBS. It's certainly a worthwhile piece to read... even if it doesn't wrestle with the deeper problem of determining when a work is out of print under publishing industry custom, let alone what that means for authors who have received reversions; or not received reversions for works that are nonetheless out of print; or whose publishers have gone out of business without formally reverting; or... you get the idea. And that's probably a good thing (I'll just whisper Rosetta Books(PDF) and let you ponder how that decision makes the inappropriateness of the GBS settlement even more obvious, because I have no shame and take vicarious glee in your impending headache).
Oral argument before the Supreme Court on Monday in a patent case has some interesting implications for authors. In re Bilski concerns the patentability of "business methods," and presents an opportunity for the Supreme Court to reverse one or both of some bad decisions from a decade ago (the State Street Bank duology)... and, short of that, to at least limit patents to what patents are understood to cover. At a deeper level, though, Bilski asks a question in pure logic, based upon a premise we are not allowed to question: Given that we cannot rewrite the IP Clause of the Constitution, must all forms of intellectual property fall under the same rubric, the same reasoning, and the same evaluation of what will motivate "Progress"? If the Court does its job and the oral argument indicates that it intends to do so it will answer a resounding "not only no, but hell no!"
One might formalistically say "But this is an illusory question, as some intellectual property is already outside of the IP Clause: Trademark arises under the Commerce Clause." In one sense, that's true, but it's a formalistic distinction without a difference. Both the IP Clause and trademark law are founded upon purely economic motivation as being both necessary and sufficient for "Progress in the Useful Arts and sciences" to occur. And, in a sense, this is where Bilski comes in: Does a business method pointed purely at an economic consequence constitute such progress? I think the answer is plainly "no," which in turn demonstrates why (without even parsing the statute) the proposed "plot patent" is fundamentally invalid. Parsing the statute and application, of course, makes that even more obvious.
It is precisely this deep question, though, that is ultimately at issue in Bilski: What does "Progress" mean? Does delineating an opportunity for economic profit (in the mixed-up world of business litigation, remember that "avoiding a loss" constitutes a form of "profit") result in "Progress"... and if so, is that "Progress" in the "Useful Arts and sciences"? And if not, could Congress nonetheless determine, under its Commerce Clause powers, that tying such a specific opportunity/method into its implementation of the IP Clause is a good thing? Fortunately, Bilski does not need to answer this last question, because it's not before the Court: Reading the Patent Act (in particular § 100(b), as Professor Risch explains) demonstrates that Congress has not (at least not yet) so asserted. Someone will have to do this job eventually, and sooner would be better than later; however, Bilski itself is too soon, so (unlike the other items on this sausage platter) failing to state an answer will not reflect the Court not doing its job.
And happy Veterans' Day to my fellow veterans. I'm now off to harass local businesses about their inept flag display on Veterans' Day.
As Gomer Pyle might have said, "Surprise! Surprise! Surprise!" The "parties" in the GBS litigation won't have their "revised" settlement ready for filing today (09 November 2009), and have asked permission to actually file it on Friday, 13 November 2009. Dammit, that destroys my little parody of the ode to the Guy. (It'll still result in "Pennies for the Author," though.)
Interestingly or not, if you're not quite as much of a civil procedure geek as I am the letter from the AG's counsel says that they met with the Department of Justice last Friday concerning the settlement. That they couldn't get it ready over the weekend implies that the DoJ wasn't yet satisfied...
On a more relieving note, the "parties" assert that they'll move to extend the claim period (for those who haven't opted out and want to claim particular works) from 05 January 2010 to 05 June 2010. There is no motion reflected in the docket yet, so you shouldn't absolutely count on this extension; however, I anticipate that any such motion would be granted, after Judge Chin looks at the revised settlement, and he may find that an even greater extension is appropriate.
As anyone who knows me has heard me complain about at length, I despise Apple. It's not that the technology is inherently bad, but that arrogance of "Steve knows best" that comes through the closed architecture, the inability to adapt products easily to one's own needs (e.g., the continued use of Safari as the default browser... when it is expressly incompatible with the major legal, banking, and government documents systems), and the pricing structure. But, that said, some of the products and accessories really are interesting, which leads to the ability to adapt one's iPhone to help your Klingon language proficiency (that sort of acts as a counterexample to my second gripe, but not in a good way!).
Before I built a wall I'd ask to know
What I was walling in or walling out,
And to whom I was like to give offence.
In a not-too-startling display of abject ignorance, James Surowiecki blathers at The New Yorker that Wal*Mart's price-cutting on certain books is not predatory pricing because "the company's entire history has been one of perpetual cost-cutting, even after it's become the country's dominant retailer" incorrectly assuming, as do most commentators, that Wal*Mart represents a single market. If one looks over time at various aspects of Wal*Mart's pricing policies by store segment, one will discover that the entire history has not been one of "perpetual cost-cutting": Compare, for example, relative tire prices in 1986, 1996, and 2006 to its actual competitors, and then ponder the identity of those competitors. One can easily argue that Wal*Mart drove potential "one-stop shopping" competitors out of tires and, indeed, largely out of automotive in a predatory manner. The same analysis applies across the rest of the store, although perhaps not so obviously. It's just a different information firewall...
Tearing down walls to the past may not benefit everyone, particularly "new and emerging" music acts. <SARCASM> This assumes, of course, that the "new and emerging" acts deserve to "emerge" in the first place if they can't compete with low-resolution/audio quality pieces from the past. And the putative author of that article sort of makes that point for me with his own musical past. <SARCASM>
Later today, I'll be dealing with the Google Book Search wall, in more than one respect: Both the ineffable arrogance and idiocy of the designated parties and the silliness of the settlement structure they've chosen. (Update: I guess it'll be Friday the Thirteenth see the item posted later today.) On the other hand, this afternoon the Supreme Court will be trying desperately to determine whether to erect another wall: What qualifies as proper subject matter for a patent? This is a vastly more important question than even the fundamental-definition-of-justice issues concerning juvenile life sentences being argued this morning, for a very simple reason: It requires, at a principled level, answering the question "Is there any kind of thought that is inherently not claimable as intellectual property? And, if so, is there a gate in the wall?"
Bilski and its brethren directly concern the so-called "business method" patent whether, that is, a business method (in this instance, a procedure for hedging risk against changing commodity prices that purportedly benefits businesses)1 qualifies for patent protection. Ultimately, the problem is this: If the concept in question is indeed "Useful," does it require a grant of "exclusive Rights for limited Times" to motivate those who might personally benefit from the concept to "advance the Useful arts"? Or, more directly: If a "business method" can be practiced for profit, does exclusivity operate to the advantage of "business" as a whole, or only to the "inventors" who can exclude others from practicing that method? Those of us with particularly strange grasps of the concept of "intellectual property" will immediately think of a concept from copyright: The information/expression distinction. To my admittedly strange way of thinking, consistency across the realm of intellectual property counsels rejection of the Bilski patent because it is "mere information," and not a unique, objectively verifiable expression that retains value for the expression per se rather than some summary of it (in the way that Frost's poem linked above retains value beyond the out-of-context quotation of one line that most people know it for). Thus, the Court should reject the Bilski patent, both in particular and on principle; the hard part will be coming up with a coherent rationale for doing so that can withstand both intellectual and economic pressure. And that should sound very much like the Google Book Search problem...
Of course, in a "process" sense this merely represents a patent on Maxwell's Demon... because the whole point of an orderly market in commodities is that it supposedly reaches equilibrium quickly, and hedging by definition is an attempt to avoid the consequences of market equilibrium. In short, one can argue that the Bilski patent is an attempt to defeat the laws of nature akin to a perpetual-motion device. Thus, this may turn out to be a less than optimal fact pattern for a sensible decision. There's nothing new in that; so was Brown v. Topeka Board of Education, and so was Gideon v. Wainwright. The Court doesn't operate in a laboratory-clean world of carefully designed experimental results... which is, itself, a rather ironic comment on the Bilski patent.
Feuerwerken
Next Monday, perhaps we'll be chanting
Remember, remember, the ninth of November
The Authors Guild/Google Books plot . . .
as we try to slog through a 350-plus-page "amended settlement agreement." But, for today, I'll just turn toward the AG's offices in New York and implore them to go Fawkes themselves.
I was going to summarize this in the context of the previous item, but Professor Rebecca Tushnet already did. And it's an important decision, even if it does concern one of the six sources of all that is evil in college football (the other five being Auburn, Notre Dame, Ohio State, Oklahoma, and USC).
Professor (now Google's Chief Copyright Counsel) Patry remarks on writing the book some audience members claim they wanted, not the book the author actually wrote. There's quite a bit of food for thought in there for fiction writers, and particularly for literaturic artistes (and yes, that misbegotten phrase is just as sarcastic, just as condescending, and just as demeaning as it sounds). Of course, they'll pass it up because since it relates to a reality not their own it's not in their diet...
Walter Laqueur argues that Russia's fate is struggle with imaginary demons, like Islam. It is perhaps easier to accuse a different culture of this problem; just think about the American "imaginary demon" of the vociferous, nonassimilated Other (whether immigrants, women, gays, whatever).
Sorry, Herr Scalzi, but the problem isn't "winning" by the exceptional; by this logic, the near-canonization of Roberto Clemente ended all problems of acceptance for both the melaninically enhanced and Hispanic immigrants. The point that in purely commercial terms there seems to be less "prejudice" toward speculative fiction is, indeed valid; the problem is that ignoring the disdain of what Scalzi refers to as "acceptance... from other literature geeks, whom they feel have excluded them from their sekkrit lit geek clubs" leads not to "winning" and "losing", but to isolated populations... which, in the long run, is not "winning" by any rational measure.
And then there's the problem that the other literature geeks are largely responsible to teaching all literature geeks. Perhaps taking it out of literature and putting it into engineering will be illuminating. Speaking from personal experience, it's as if chemical engineers and chemists studied chemical equilibrium and thermodynamics using completely different, largely incompatible paradigms not just the idiosyncratic emphases of the instructors, but even the notation and coverage of foundational courses.* Now mix in the increasing recognition by biologists that this chemical equilibrium stuff might have some important implications for cell biology, and ask if we'd have had different results in the study of the cell if the leading biologists had consulted chemical engineers in the mid-1980s than chemists...
And, I suppose, it's time for a more substantive and procedural! note "inspired" by a semiheckler at the Google Book Search panel at WFC on Thursday. After a panelist (not me) stated that Google's intent in establishing the GBS/GLP scan-index-retrieve system was improper, an audience member proclaiming himself to be a former Google employee objected that the panelist could not possibly ascribe intent to the corporation. And there is the problem. As I pointed out in reply, the panelist was not accusing each employee at Google of ill intent; he was, instead, relying upon corporate statements entered in the record (and other public corporate statements) concerning the corporation's intent. Basically, the problem is this: Corporate intent is a one-way street. That is, statements of ill intent from a corporate officer can be imputed to the corporation; however, statements of ill intent by the corporation cannot without more specific ratification be imputed to individual employees, or often individual officers and directors.
What I'm really saying here is this: Accusing "Google" of ill intent is not an accusation that each and every employee of Google (all the way down to the janitor) shares that intent. So my fellow geeks and nerds need to get over it; most of the ire of the creative community is aimed at the businesscreatures in control of the corporation, not at the infotechies. Most; there's some spillover, and some of that spillover is even deserved. But that's for another time.
* As anyone with a degree in either chemistry or chemical engineering knows, this is unfortunately not a hypothetical.
The theme today appears to be overgeneralization...
At GalleyCat, there's yet another whinge about problems with the short story market. The major difficulty with this particular whinge is that it has an exceedingly narrow view of what constitutes a "short story": If it's material that might conceivably have a dragon, or a spaceship, or a detective, on the cover, it doesn't count. It also focuses on periodicals as the "natural" form for distributing short fiction, while neglecting the economic and technological (not literary) origin of periodicals... that has, in the 170 years or so since they became viable at the mass level, changed so radically that it's no wonder that profitable periodicals are no longer an effective means of distributing individual pieces of short fiction to large audiences.
Lee Goldberg also makes a similar error of omission in his discussion entitled "The Cons and Cons of Self-Publishing" only in this case, the error is far less of a problem, and his analysis is far more on target. There are certain niche categories for which self-publishing is a viable option; implicitly (and correctly), Goldberg is asserting that fiction at any length is not included. Because Goldberg is primarily a fiction-writer (both for TV and for print), his article unfortunately assumes that his own experience extends across the entire field, to include other niches like technical and instructional manuals, poetry, and cookbooks.
In the "coffee-snort overgeneralization" category, an editor asserts that "Kensington Publishing Corp. is the last remaining independent U.S. publisher of hardcover, trade and mass market paperback books." Again, this is an almost-understandable overgeneralization, as it appears on the Novelists, Inc. blog... the problem is that I can name at least fifteen independent US publishers of hardcover, trade and mass market paperback books outside of trade fiction, including a former employer of mine that isn't exactly struggling for revenue.
Sometimes even the Daily Telegraph has something perceptive to say about publishing... or, at least, to report by drawing on a "news event" to unintentionally imply something more relevant. In this instance, it's an excuse for a beefcake/cheesecake photo to "illustrate" a story on "celebrity-written" novels. Of course, being the Telegraph, it utterly fails to go beneath the surface, remarking only that "publishers need to make a profit" and then expounding on how publishers are "highly educated with a passion for literature, and they became publishers in the hope of finding the next Vladimir Nabokov, not the next Martine McCutcheon." Leaving aside that the person with the title Publisher ordinarily does not make these decisions instead, they are constrained from above by numeric measures of success, and from below by what their subordinates believe will meet those measures most publishing executives these days (in both the US and the UK) are not "highly educated with a passion for literature."
Those major objections aside, Mr Farndale's piece does implicate toward a critical issue in publishing and literature that is founded at least as much on the logical errors of the "great books/great art" movement as on anything else: What is the brand or mark that should be applied to a new work as an identifier? Example: Should it be Raymond Carver, Gordon Lish, Esquire, or McGraw-Hill? In turn, this has profoundly disturbing implications for preservation of cultural artifacts and permission to reproduce them not just for the Google Book Search litigation (you knew I was going to work that in somehow, didn't you?), but for issues like museum displays and the Kafkaesque trial over ownership of Kafka's papers.
In a somewhat technical but admirably clear, once one gets past the needless polysyllablary in the underlying opinion explication of how telephone ringtones fit into copyright, the IPKat's "American correspondent" discusses a UK opinion on the mess. This is exactly what one should expect for not defining a term in a statute; consider that the US Copyright Act never defines "publication" for anything except (ironically enough) recorded audio... even though the longest section in the statute is the section of definitions at the beginning (17 U.S.C. § 101).
The passive voice is not evil, except if you're an Anglocentric SOB who has no knowledge of other languages that require it. Passive voice has specific purposes and uses, and does tend to be overused... but that's not the same thing as "evil." For that matter, speech-tagging ("He said") is oft-overused, too.
This blawg will be getting even more unpredictable than usual, as I head for the World Fantasy Convention later this week. Note to potential burglars: The house will remain occupied, and the remora is feeling bloodthirsty.
Speaking of bloodthirsty, though, I'll be one of the panelists for a session on the Google Book Search litigation. I had to promise the programming director that I would refrain from bloodshed at that panel; getting blood out of the carpet in a hotel ballroom is both annoying and quite expensive... I didn't say anything, though, about refraining from inflicting blunt-language trauma.
High-Nitrite Lunch
Just a few quick bites of link sausage today:
While out and about yesterday dealing with medical paperwork, I stopped by the local outlet of [famous menswear store's name deleted to save embarassment on their part] and began browsing. I noted a new display for different monogramming options for dress shirts, and busted out laughing at part of it:
RNWII
monogram may include up to 4 letters
demonstrating a distinct lack of numerical literacy... that it took half a minute to explain to the store manager.
GBS minor update/kerfluffle As expected, someone has filed a pro forma objection to the parties' proposed schedule for dealing with the forthcoming "revised" proposed settlement agreement (see Doc. 760 (22 Oct. 2009)). Now let's see if they follow up by doing it correctly: Filing a motion to extend time after the "revised" proposed settlement agreement gets filed.
I find it a bit tactically naïve that the "notice" filed by the EFF et al. does not raise the parties' proposed schedule as an additional subissue implicating adequacy of representation. In my experience dealing with class actions, judges tend to derogate adequacy attacks that are less than pervasive and continuous (however much those attacks are in consumer litigation improper, they're not here). Perhaps I'll have something to say... since I'm a putative class member, and even opting out won't protect my interests against the economic effects of this settlement <vbeg>.
Professor Rebecca Tushnet is summarizing a number of paper and panel presentations at a conference on the intersection between copyright and "digital reality" (which is, to my mind, an oxymoron akin to "honest politician"... or "military intelligence"). Too bad the conference is at Vanderbilt, which sits in the circuit (the Sixth) farthest removed from reality on copyright! Part I and Part II are already up, and provide an interesting counterpoint to the procedural issues Professor Tushnet summarizes from a paper presented at a different conference on whether the Federal Circuit has been successful (by Professor Rochelle Dreyfuss).
Kudos to Professor Tushnet for making these pretty clear and accessible to non-expert audiences; even though they include a lot of the jargon, they do so in a self-defining manner, which also serves to educate for the next controversy. (If you give a friend a pirated song, he can enjoy it now; but if you teach your friend to use LimeWire, he can enjoy all pirated songs forever. Or something like that.)
Hold the Mustard
Just a little afternoon link sausage snack:
Bigger isn't always better, as Professor Johnson notes. Now apply this lesson to "big media" not just NewsCorp, but Pearson, and Bertelsmann, and Hachette, and Viacom, and... while remembering that it's not just the economy that's at issue when Big Media gets too big: It's the First Amendment (historians may recall the Hearst situation of a century ago).
In contrast, in some respects one can have too much competition. One of the frustrating aspects of both legal doctrine and actually practicing law in this country resembles Europe's too-often-forgotten stepchild: the Balkans. One judge in New York recently remarked on a particularly obvious aspect of the problem the "geographic lodestar" that ignores the reality of communities. The problem reaches far more substantive issues, too, such as the law that applies to seemingly simple business disputes in many metropolitan areas and even to parties' choice of counsel. The less said about the idiocy of state-level regulation of the bar, the better.
Last, and all too amusingly timed, the Chancellor at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign finally resigned... very close to Halloween. I have too much respect for the late Chancellor Cribbet's family, or I'd go to the graveyard and try to resurrect him for the job. Even if it was unsuccessful even if all I ended up doing was putting his gravestone into the chair in the Chancellor's office it would be a considerable improvement. Had Chancellor Cribbet been around, there wouldn't have been even a hint of "Category I."
And, meanwhile, there need to be search committees going for the top three jobs at UIUC: President of the U of I system, campus Chancellor, and campus Provost. Faculty members beware!
Your Tuesday Sausage Platter
A particularly diverse set of link sausages. No guarantees on species... or planet of origin.
Dance has nothing to fear but dance itself. And critics. And the public. And the financial downturn. And the music available for dance. And...
If you really, really need any proof that the S&M dorks are in charge in publishing, ponder S&S's decision to sign up a YAish trilogy based on an iPhone app. And while you're at it, ponder whether there's a rep for that.
Dan Glickman has decided to abdicate his throneresign as head of the MPAA. Glickman is actually an improvement over his predecessor Emperor Palpitine Jack Valenti, if only because he hasn't been so stridently (and cadaverously) unwilling to accept that there was anything anything at all wrong about the film industry. Not enough of an improvement to excuse the MPAA's continued violations of antitrust law and attitude, but I think I'm supposed to be thankful for small favors. With my luck, they'll appoint Ben Silverman or a Redstone or Dick Cook all notoriously hostile to "the talent" and notoriously prone to NIH (not invented here) Syndrome. <SARCASM> Of course, antitrust considerations are irrelevant. <SARCASM>
It was twenty years ago today Maggie Thatcher told the band to play... and the thought of the Baroness in paisley as a lead singer (or, worse yet, still in office) is just as frightening, if not more so, as the implications of the historical revisionism in that review essay, the books under review, or Europe's view of itself. Of course, it could start by considering the deep-seated hostility in Europe to the US's First Amendment... which we adopted largely because of Europe's own history. At least Europe has better beer: Even light-bodied Europilsners are better than the diluted horsepiss that passes for "beer" over here, particularly from the American brand in question in that lawsuit.
Speaking of stuff that only us boomers really remember, the LAT proposes a bunch of things from m-m-m-m-my generation that should be allowed to die. My list would be different (for one thing, anything and everything related to Led Zeppelin would replace the horror of Beatles reissues)... but they can pry my first-month-of-issue vinyl copies of Who's Next and Dark Side of the Moon from my cold, dead pectoral fins (if the remoras don't get them first).
Professor Lipton muses on what do authors really want from copyright? Of course, she could have invoked much older situations, too: Marion Zimmer Bradley, Chelsea Quinn Yarbro... the list goes on. However, this aspect of copyright is not being considered at all in the Google Book Search settlement yet more proof that the purported class representatives are inadequate.
Last, and far from least, the Supreme Court has issued its first actual decision of the October 2009 term(PDF), summarily reversing a rather elementary civil-and-appellate-procedure gaffe out of the Seventh Circuit. At the moment, therefore, the Ninth Circuit is not the most disfavored circuit! We'll see how long that lasts...
Also this morning, the Court agreed to hear a critical case on whether judges may order GITMO detainees released into the US. Although technical this is a more important case than it appears, because it will go a long way toward revealing just how devoted to federalism the newer justices really are.
GBS Tangent: Sergey Brin's Ignorant Defense
Irony. It's like goldy and bronzy, but it's made out of iron. It is also well beyond the capabilities of any of the participants in the Google Book Search litigation to recognize... especially when it's coming out of their own mouths.
To begin with, consider his invocation of the Library of Alexandria. We'll leave aside the ineptness of the comparison to begin with; recall that the Library of Alexandria consisted almost entirely of hand-copied scrolls, that were acquired by force without any compensation. If one brought a printed work into the city, one was required to deposit it at the library for copying. Although there was a security deposit, that deposit was solely as security for the physical article; when the printed work was returned by the library, the owner of the printed work had to return the security deposit to the library. And, of course, there was no compensation to the author of the work copied, nor to the owner of the physical item based upon its rarity if not returned (the later Ptolemies were notorious for not returning particularly rare items). The deposit requirement was enforced by searches of ships at the docks and of caravans at the gates... which bears a disturbing resemblance to what has happened in the GBS scanning program, albeit with a little less tar and sand at issue.
Of course, there's another problem with comparison to the Library of Alexandria: At that time, there was a decent chance that the copy that strayed into the limits of Alexandria was one of, at most, a handful of extant copies of that work. For particularly rare books, I suppose that is a possibility now with Google Book Search; however, it is actually quite rare for a university library to have copies of works printed in editions of less than 1,200 or so, except for materials produced by its own graduate students... which are scanned in a different program by University Microfilm anyway. Further, the then-denominated Google Library Project essentially ignored the rare books collection at Michigan. So, on that ground, too, Mr Brin's invocation of a disaster in the past and, one should add, a nonaccidental disaster crumbles to dust.
The most disturbing implication of Mr Brin's misguided diatribe, though, is at a more-metaphoric level, and becomes apparent largely through its comparison to Ms Baratz-Logsted's response. The floor underneath Mr Brin's position is that he should not be required to interact with any human being ever if he wants a particular bit of textual stimulation. Those with much knowledge of the history of speculative fiction should spot some echoes of both H.G. Wells and, in particular, E.M. Forster's "The Machine Stops" (1909). Ironically enough, Forster himself had a substantial connection to Alexandria during his lifetime (18791970); and, even more ironically, under the copyright law of his home country (and most of the world), "The Machine Stops"(US only) remains in copyright!
Forster's story posits a society in which all human contact is via a black-box "machine" that substitutes for communication and personal experiences, and in particular for physical and personal interactions. When the machine stops, both individuals and society collapse. This bears more than a hypothetical relationship to reinventing a Library of Alexandria with cultural artifacts: The proposed settlement would essentially establish a deposit requirement without a security deposit, without a branch library, and all inside of Google's monolithic machine... so that Mr Brin need not interact with so annoying a person as a "reference librarian," and can instead get his (unproofread) reading materials of dubious origin without leaving his room. Ever again.
The best defense that life has against extinction is diversity in numbers. Despite Brin's invocation of that problem, the Google Book Search settlement would actually return us to the Library of Alexandria problem, mediated by the Machine. I'm no Luddite; that model is not "Progress in the Useful Arts," or indeed progress of any kind at all. I learned all of the information presented above from print materials; the links are for user convenience only.
Under the Influence?
Another disjointed, only marginally sausage-like set of links. It's a good think that my literary license can't be revoked for drivelling under the influence of children...
GBS Status Update Two appeals by disgruntled, rejected intervenors have been filed (docket numbers 752 and 756). In the ordinary course of things, this would immediately divest the District Court of jurisdiction, and throw the whole matter into the Second Circuit, making the 09 November target date for announcement of the "New, Improved Settlement (With 50% Greater Obfuscation!)" moot. This is not, of course, the ordinary course of things. I'm not even certain that, under CAFA, an interlocutory appeal by a rejected intervenor on the class's side of the v. remains proper (a possibly unintended consequence). In any event, it's not the kind of appeal that stops the trial court's activities in the first place... yet. The appellants could apply to the Second Circuit requesting a stay in the District Court pending appeal, but I've seen no sign of such papers being filed as of yet. I'd be far from surprised to see such papers filed on/shortly after 09 November, though.
(HT: Professor Froomkin) Sergey Brin recently made some statements in defense of the Google Book Search settlement... that appear to have originated in another galaxy. A NYT reader quickly demonstrated just how far removed from reality he is... but neglected to note that that initial, "official" name of the project at Google was the Google Library Project.
And Professor Desai bangs even harder on the unintentional self-parody theme for Google in his discussion of in a discussion focusing on academic books. In turn, this brings to mind the ultimate problem with the copyright system that we have: It is strictly binary; the alternative letting lawyers make decisions on how "original" or "artistic" a particular protectable, original expression is, and then granting/denying rights based on those decisions is vastly worse. Remember, lawyers (obviously in common-law jurisdictions, less obviously but still essentially so in civil-law jurisdictions) are trained under the meme that one wins a dispute, or establishes the meaning of law, by demonstrating that someone else has said almost exactly the same thing before: That is, by denying the value of originality. And that's before we consider the inartful writing endemic in the law...
Professor Goldman explains why the "blogger sponsorship/gift disclosure" guidelines announced by the FTC will benefit only the lawyers: they violate a relevant statute.
Oh, those awful Canadians: As Professor Rebecca Tushnet manages to explain without once questioning the sanity of those making the claim, Canada tuk Hollywood's bukkit.
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Warped Weft
Now live at the new site. I have arranged some of
the more infamous threads that have appeared here
by unravelling them from the blawg tapestry (and hopefully eliminating some
of the sillier typos). Sometimes, the threads have been slightly reordered for clarity.
The Public Library of Law can help you
find the law... but not use it in court, as many of its resources are not in proper form and do not provide
all of the citation information needed in court papers
Legal, free e-books are available through
Online Books (University of Pennsylvania)
and Shakespeare (MIT)
Legal, free music is available through
ClassicCat.net
(what kind of music do you think you'll find here?)
These may be of interest; I do not necessarily agree
with opinions expressed in them, although the reasoning and writing are almost always first-rate (and
represent a standard seldom, if ever, achieved in "mainstream" journalism). I'm picky, and have
eclectic tastes, so don't expect a comprehensive listing.
A blawg is sort of like a blog on legal issues, but
usually has a lot more links to outside resources (other than other blogs) than does a typical blog.
Scrivener's Error is a blawg, not just a blog. You can find other blawgs at <?law blogs#>.
How Appealing
is aimed at appellate lawyers and legal
news in general. If you care about the state of the law, start here Howard's commentary is far
better balanced, better informed, and better considered than any of the media outlets. To
concentrate on the Supreme Court, don't forget
SCOTUSBlog.
Some academics' blawgs with a variety of political (and doctrinal) viewpoints:
BoingBoing, by speculative fiction writer
(and 'net
activist) Cory Doctorow, is quite hostile to copyright enforcement efforts, particularly
regarding file-sharing
The main European IP blawg of interest remains the UK-based IPKat, on a variety of intellectual property issues, with some overlap (with a
less Eurocentric view) at IPFinance
Cyberlaw (Stanford) has its agenda
grounded firmly in the so-called "digital commons," which might make a bit more sense if any of the
advocates of that viewpoint understood diddly-squat about population ecology
The American Constitution Society blawg
is a purportedly "liberal" counterweight to the so-called
"Federalist Society" (which, despite
its claims, should be called "Tory Society") that has yet to establish much coherence... but maybe
that's all to the good.