Photo Credit: siriusrust

Blog

Re:Create Recap – April 28, 2016

Chairman Goodlatte Pledges Commitment To Overhaul Copyright System. Speaking at a World Intellectual Property Organization (WIPO) event in accordance with World Intellectual Property Day, Chairman of the House Judiciary Committee Rep. Bob Goodlatte, addressed the audience in a pre-taped video on April 26, pledging to overhaul the copyright system. Summarizing the committee’s work in the past three years Chairman Goodlatte reflected…

Read More

In a Lawsuit over Copyright in Klingon, Here Come the Klingon Speakers

By: Charles Duan : Originally Posted On: Public Knowledge

  In my almost three years at Public Knowledge, I have never been so delighted as this morning when I saw an amicus curiae brief in the lawsuit over copyright in the constructed language Klingon – which opens by quoting a Klingon proverb, in Klingon script. Copyright in languages is something that has fascinated and troubled me for a long…

Read More

Re:Create Recap – April 21, 2016

Supreme Court Supports Google Books As Fair Use That Benefits Public Knowledge. On April 18, the Supreme Court denied appeal to the unanimous federal appeals panel decision that Google Books is legal under fair use. Hailing the decision, the Executive Director of the Re:Create Coalition said “Our copyright laws were established to help expand access to information, and today the…

Read More

You, too, should celebrate the end of the Google Books litigation

By: Mike Godwin : Originally Posted On: R Street

If you felt a vibration in the air this morning, it may have been the final sigh of relief so many of us heaved when the U.S. Supreme Court announced it will not review last fall’s expansive, pro-fair-use appellate court decision in the Google Books case. (Here’s The New York Times‘ account.) Now, law professors will tell you that when…

Read More

Supreme Court Cements Major Fair Use Victory for Consumers in Google Books Case

By: Shiva Stella : Originally Posted On: Public Knowledge

  Today, the United States Supreme Court denied cert in the long-running Google Books case, Authors Guild, et al. v. Google, Inc., letting stand the Second Circuit’s landmark decision that digitizing, indexing, and displaying snippets of print books in internet search results constitute a fair use under copyright law. The following can be attributed to Raza Panjwani, Policy Counsel at…

Read More

Zombies, Pirates, and Why the Latest Copyright Fray Over Set-Top Box Undermines Itself

By: Kate Forscey : Originally Posted On: Public Knowledge

  Did you hear the one about the new technology that was going to run amok, squashing creativity, gobbling up every copyrighted work in its path, and redistributing it for free to all of the masses until nothing remained but scorched earth and abandoned studios across Hollywood? Me too. About 9,000 times. The latest iteration is an alarmist piece by…

Read More

Re:Create Recap – April 14, 2016

Nonprofit Seeks To Bring “We Shall Overcome” To Public Domain. The We Shall Overcome Foundation, a nonprofit serving orphans and the poor, filed a motion on April 12 seeking a declaratory judgement that the iconic civil rights movement song “We Shall Overcome” is not under copyright and belongs in the public domain. The New York Times reports in ‘We Shall…

Read More

Ensure Hyperlinking Will Not Infringe Copyright Law: Advocate General Wathelet’s Opinion on GS Media  

By: Matt Schruers : Originally Posted On: Project Disco

Last week the Internet achieved a small, but nevertheless important, victory in Luxembourg. Hyperlinking should be kept from the scope of copyright protection as far as possible — that was the key message in the opinion of Advocate General (AG) Wathelet in the GS Media case which is currently pending in front of the Court of Justice of the EU…

Read More

AG Hood Wins Battle, Losing War in Mississippi Content Suppression Case

By: Matt Schruers : Originally Posted On: Project Disco

An update on a subject of previous DisCo coverage [1] [2]: on Friday, a federal appellate court lifted a hold on a subpoena from the Mississippi Attorney General to Google about unauthorized or unlawful content in Internet search results.  Although nominally a loss for the search company, Harvard Law prof Noah Feldman observes that the court’s ruling “doesn’t bode well…

Read More

LCA Submits Comments on Section 1201 to the Copyright Office

By: Krista Cox : Originally Posted On: ARL Policy Notes

*This post is written by Caile Morris, ARL Law and Policy Fellow* The Copyright Office published a notice of inquiry on December 29, 2015, announcing a public study to “assess the operation of section 1201 of title 17, United States Code, including the triennial rulemaking process to adopt exemptions to the prohibition against circumvention of technological measures that control access to…

Read More

Archives