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The Fight for Copyright Reform and What It Means for You. Tim Brooks ARSC Conference May 2009. What If --- ?. 100s of private CD reissues of pre-1940 recordings legally available. What If --- ?. 100s of private CD reissues of pre-1940 recordings legally available
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The Fight for Copyright Reform and What It Means for You Tim Brooks ARSC Conference May 2009
What If --- ? • 100s of private CD reissues of pre-1940 recordings legally available
What If --- ? • 100s of private CD reissues of pre-1940 recordings legally available • 1000s of websites with free streaming and downloads of historical recordings
What If --- ? • 100s of private CD reissues of pre-1940 recordings legally available • 1000s of websites with free streaming and downloads of historical recordings • Archives free to preserve and circulate copies • Clear rules about what is under copyright, how to legally use orphan works • Copyrighted but long out-of-print recordings could be used for a reasonable fee
What If…. • Actually, most of this IS true… everywhere except in America • Every country except the U.S.A. now has historical recordings in the public domain • Benefits the public • Causes no discernable harm to rights holders • So why not in the U.S.A.?
The State “Loophole” • Until 1976 recordings not under federal law, little U.S. experience • Justice Dept. thought pre-1972 recording might fall into p.d. upon passage of law; sent memo to House-Senate conference committee • “Technical amendment” added by conference committee leaving pre-1972s under state law for 75 years. No public debate. • A “thundering blunder” by the DOJ?
The Next 30 Years • Major overhaul of copyright in 1990s. • No one paid attention to Section 301(c) – the state exception. • A few warnings, but they went unheeded. • NO ADVOCATE IN WASHINGTON FOR HISTORICAL RECORDINGS. • ARSC did nothing.
Problem: State Law for Pre-1972 Recordings • Brought into stark relief by Capitol v. Naxos (NY, 2005) • Sweeping, one-sided decision • “Common law.” • Perpetual and absolute • No public domain • Few provisions for preservation or fair use • Much preservation work technically illegal. • Few lawsuits – but don’t have to be. • Climate of fear • Many restrictions on access • “Dark archives”
Result: Availability from Rights Holders(% Protected Available by Time Period)
What Do We Do? – Timeline • 2005: Position statement by ARSC: “Several provisions of U.S. copyright law impede the effective preservation of historic recordings and unduly restrict public access to those recordings.” • 2006-07: Copyright & Fair Use Committee develops specific recommendations. • 2007: Researched tax regulations re: non-profits. • 2007: Interview with Rep. Boucher.
ARSC Five Copyright Recommendations • Place pre-’72 recordings under single, understandable national law (repeal sec 301c). • Harmonize federal term with other countries (i.e., 50 to 75 years). • Legalize use of “orphan” recordings. • Permit use of “abandoned” recordings with appropriate compensation to copyright holder. • Permit “best practices” digital preservation.
Timeline - 2008 • ARSC hired representative in D.C. • Malcolm Grace, Wexler & Walker • Met with staff for 24 key members of Congress. • Met with Register of Copyright Marybeth Peters. • Met with RIAA. • Obtained support from six organizations: ALA, AMIA, IAJRC, MLA, SAM, SAA (total 70,000+ members). • Prepared OW amendment directing Copyright Office to study repeal of 301(c). Lined up Democrat and Republican co-sponsors.
Timeline - 2009 • Generous support from ARSC members. • Formed HRCAP coalition with MLA, SAM. • Also helps with funding. • Website: www.recordingcopyright.org • But Orphan Works Bill (and amendment) stalled, had to explore other options.
A Major Breakthrough! • March 11, 2009: Pres. Obama signs the Omnibus Appropriations Act. • Includes directive that Copyright Office study bringing pre-1972 recordings under federal law. • Effect on preservation • Effect on public access • Economic impact on rights holders • Used ARSC language. • Deeply grateful to Appropriations Committee.
What to Expect Next • Copyright Office must take public comment, report in two years. • For first time this will shed light on a dark corner of copyright law. • Opens the door for more to come. • No guarantees though. • There will be pushback. • We must make our case!
What to Expect Next • Inertia. • Other agendas. • Fear. • There has been fierce, sometimes irrational opposition to Orphan Works.
The Battle over Orphan Works • Despite layers of protection for creative artists, and three years of negotiation… • Website: A MILLION PEOPLE AGAINST THE ORPHAN WORKS BILL!!! • “A threat to the intellectual property rights, privacy and free speech of all Americans” • “Unalienable right” to have copyright “for eternity” • “License to steal!” • Coalition of music groups loudly oppose.
But… • The RIAA is willing to talk.
What We’ve Learned • No one knew! • Much “soft” congressional support. • Perceived as non-partisan, for the public good, not harmful to stakeholders. We’re the “white hats.” • House is where IP legislation originates. • Chairmen are extremely powerful. • We must “Talk to stakeholders.” • There may be a “fear campaign” against it. • Will take time, persistence. • Will take $$$. • Change is possible.
Thank Youwww.recordingcopyright.org • Laws are being rewritten. • The door has been kicked ajar. • Copyright Office study huge breakthrough. • We can make a difference.