Julianna Yau’s blog

Because I need to feed the geek in me.

 

Proposal: Creators’ Charter of Rights & Freedoms

My mind has been brewing with some of the refocused perspectives I’ve gained in the past few weeks. While those thoughts collect into something substantial, I thought I would take my mind-map of creators and concept of creators’ rights (instead of copyrights) and propose a…

Creators’ Charter of Rights & Freedoms (draft)

  1. Right to attribution to works
  2. Right to association with works
  3. Right to anonymity
  4. Right to integrity of work
  5. Right to publication of work
  6. Right to distribution/dissemination of works
  7. Right to duplication of works
  8. Right to adaptation of works
  9. Right to translations of work
  10. Right to freedom of expression
  11. Right to creative reuse (PDF warning)/appropriation of others’ works
  12. Right to financial renumeration for creation & dissemination of works

And while I’m at it, here’s something to counter-balance creators’ rights:

Readers/Listeners/Viewers‘ Charter of Rights & Freedoms (draft)

  1. Right to access public works (to address TPM issues)
  2. Right to format-neutrality (to address format-shifting and compatibility issues)
  3. Right to privacy
  4. Right to cultural appropriation
  5. Freedom of choice

I realize the proposed RLV’s charter is much shorter than the creators’. This is not because I feel RLVs should have fewer rights & freedoms, but because I haven’t spent nearly as much time thinking about those rights as the rights of creators’.

What else should be on those charters?

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Filed under : art, copyright, movies, music, privacy, technology
By Julianna Yau
On February 2, 2008
At 3:12 pm
Comments : 2
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Jessica Litman - Rethinking Copyright

Yesterday, I attended the 2008 Grafstein Lecture in Communications at the University of Waterloo. This year’s presenter was Jessica Litman, on the topic of rethinking copyright.

The topic of rethinking copyright was exciting on its own. I have a great deal of respect for Litman’s work, so being able to attend the lecture was something I was looking forward to for several weeks.

Litman started the lecture with some background information, which was mostly “common knowledge” for anyone who has studied copyright and all of which was a precursor to the crux of her position. She reiterated the fact that many creators are trying to manage the changes in the way their work is distributed, accessed and copied with the new technologies available to us, and that the internet is putting some copyright owners out of business and creating opportunities for other copyright owners (primarily creators who wouldn’t have publishers under the old model of creation and distribution). She then reminded us that the costs of paper publishing, both historically and presently, require that much of the revenue go toward the publisher, who is an intermediary between the creator and the user.

Litman stressed the need for a reallocation of the priorities in copyright, with a focus on enhanced rights for readers of works. She reminded us that the dominant businesses in the creative industry are lobbying for change because the current copyright law does not work well for them. In particular, current US copyright law makes it very difficult to license digital copies of music.

Among the distribution problems is the one that creators often have little control over and income from their works. This, I believe, is a problem more common in creative works meant for mass distribution (e.g. literature, movies, software and music), rather than something like visual art where the work is meant to be unique and limited in its distribution.

A very interesting (and under-reported) point that Litman mentioned is that 4 years ago, the Supreme Court of Canada passed a judgement which states ““Research” must be given a large and liberal interpretation in order to ensure that users’ rights are not unduly constrained“. This decision, she felt, should be giving lobbyists for user rights adequate support for their cause.

One of her great observations is that the technology for distributing/copying/publishing is overlapping with the technology for reading/watching/listening. This is where the old concepts of how people interact with creative works shifts, because the technologies create temporary and permanent copies of copyrighted works.

The following are the three ongoing problems she listed as prime examples:

The question Litman posed to us is where do readers, listeners and viewers fall into copyright?

One of the problems she has with current discussions on user rights is that we are rolling all users of copyrighted materials into one category: both the corporate users (e.g. Disney) and the individual readers, listeners and viewers. Note that in the Q&A which followed the lecture, someone asked where Litman would place the new breed of users, which I’ll call the creators of user-generated content. Litman replied that she would draw the line between commercial and non-commercial use. Although I tried drawing that line in the past, I’m still not certain whether that’s the correct or most accurate distinction.

Litman stressed the need to use the distinction of “readers, listeners and viewers” rather than “consumers” (because of the inherit implication that money is involved) or “enjoyers” (because the work may not necessarily be enjoyed, per se). From this point, I’m just going to use “RLV” because I’m too lazy to type “readers, listeners and viewers” every time.

To drive home the need for us to rethink copyright via user rights, Litman argued that the RLVs interact with works and thereby complete the creators’ interests. While I find this notion somewhat romantic, I do agree that the creation and existence of works seems very hollow without anyone on the receiving end. Like having a conversation with yourself, creating a work without an audience is often unfulfilling for the creator.

Litman recognizes that it’s difficult for many people to think about user rights because that’s not normally how we think about copyright. The difficulty I have with thinking about user rights is not the resistance to it, but not knowing what exactly those rights ought to be and which ones are related primarily to copyright.

Personally, I found Litman’s comments about the relationship between the creator and the RLV to be a crucial concept which needs to be explored much more, both within and outside of the realm of copyright. At the Visual Arts Summit, there was discussion of needing to connect audiences with art, and I’m now wondering how much creators have been disconnected with the people for whom they are creating/the people who interact with their creations. Litman likened the trio of creators, publishers an RLVs to an ecosystem which depends on each other, and it was unspoken that there is an imbalance in the ecoystem.

A humorous and true insight from Litman was that while we all agree that there is an imbalance in the amount of power and control allotted to the creators, distributors and RLVs, the disagreement is who has the upper hand. Each side feels that they are being cheated by the other two, and each demands for their rights to be protected. But when their interests conflict, whose rights prevail?

Throughout the lecture, the dominant thought I had was that we need to start rethinking, not copyright, but the entire sphere of creative output and its support systems. To date, most of us have been treating the problems of copyright as the result of changes in technology. But I’m starting to think that we need to see the inadequacies of current copyright law as a symptom of a much greater phenomenon: the very rel change in the way works are created, distributed and read/listened/viewed. Perhaps we can’t come to any resolutions and keep discussing unrelated issues as copyright issues, not because they are unrelated, but because we are starting from the wrong place.

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Filed under : copyright, innovation law and theory workshops
By Julianna Yau
On January 30, 2008
At 6:54 pm
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Roles and Responsibilities on the Web

In the past two days, much discussion on the responsibilities of ISPs (Internet Service Providers, such as Rogers or Bell) has landed in my inbox or feed reader. This includes:

What really did get me was the poll on the G&M website. I have mostly been thinking about the ISP’s role in combating copyright infringement from the perspective that they are in the most advantageous position to do anything (and, of course, keeping in mind the problems of net neutrality, privacy and copyright holder abuse). But the question of whether it is in fact an ISP’s responsibility to do anything has, surprisingly, never crossed my mind. And if it isn’t their responsibility, where does the responsibility lie? To find out, let’s start by looking at who the players are:

  • ISPs (Internet Service Providers; they provide end users with access to the internet; the internet is where the possibly infringing content is contained)
  • website hosts (companies which allow persons to store content on servers; the servers may belong to the website host or to a third party; by being on those servers, the content is accessible on the internet)
  • websites hosting user-generated content (sites such as YouTube, MySpace, Facebook, any discussion forums, etc, where the majority of the content is submitted by the users rather than the company running the website)
  • users (the individual persons who access the internet and provide possibly infringing content; users can provide and access content either through a website or directly through their computer)
  • software designers/companies (the entities which create the necessary software for computers to interact with each other and with servers; examples of relevant software are website browsers, software to facilitate peer-to-peer networking, and “webware“)
  • hardware manufacturers (makes the computers used to go online and the servers where internet content is usually housed)
  • copyright holder (the first copyright holders of content; often, but not always, this is the creator)

And how they play together:

Scenario 1 - User accesses content

  1. User gets internet access through ISP
  2. User gets software to put onto their hardware so that they can access the content on the internet
  3. User accesses internet and obtains content, which could potentially have been provided to the user without permission of the copyright holder; or
    User deliberately seeks to obtain content without the permission of the copyright holder (usually, this happens by obtaining the content without payment; however, content is increasingly being provided without requirement of payment)

Scenario 2 - User only provides content

  1. User gets internet access through ISP
  2. User gets software to put onto their hardware so that they can provide content on the internet. This content may either be their own, or be provided without the permission of the copyright owner.
  3. Content provided by the user is accessed by other users.

This is where we get into issues with the concept of “making available“. The argument is that the entity responsible for making something available is responsible for the copyright infringement; the counter-argument is that the content being made available could be used for legitimate purposes (primarily, anything falling under fair dealing). The problem with the counter-argument is that it is addressing an issue which is not related to the primary act of infringement in the act of making available.

A few weeks ago, I spoke with a colleague and friend about the concept of making available. After some discussion, we came to the very simple agreement that someone who makes a work available to the public without the permission of the copyright holder is infringing copyright…because they are publishing (making public; making available) something to which they do not have publishing rights. Someone who photocopies an entire book or reproduces artwork or duplicates software, without the copyright holder’s permission, and makes it publicly available is infringing copyright regardless of whether anyone takes the copied work or whether money is exchanged. Again, this is because that person did not have the right to copy the work. The problem of the accessibility of a work for fair dealing is an entirely valid one, but should not be solved by diluting the concept of the right to copy.

We also have to draw a distinction between the responsibility of infringement and the responsibility of policing. In most discussions where the ISPs, website hosts, software designers and/or websites hosting user-generate content have been nominated to police copyright infringement, the argument has mainly focused on the idea that they are an accessory to copyright infringement because they facilitate the transmission of content. I believe that this kind of thinking is one which is part of the administration/practice of law, and not unique to copyright law itself. The problem, in this case, is that this foursome is the easiest target for being asked to police copyright infringement on the internet because they are often seen as having mythical powers (and sometimes less mythical powers). While I think it is technically possible for that them to do the policing, I am now wondering whether that is the right decision, even without considering complications such as net neutrality, privacy issues and the mind-boggling question of how this can be implemented.

If we can agree that the goal is to prevent unauthorized distribution of works, and that the source of the unauthorized distribution is at the level of user, what needs to be done to stop that from happening, without resorting to technical protection measures? To answer that, I think we need to find out why people who do not have the right to distribute copies either are unaware that they don’t have that right or why they feel they do have that right.

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Filed under : copyright, internet
By Julianna Yau
On January 25, 2008
At 6:45 pm
Comments : 4
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An Experiment In Deconstructing Copyright – Part 9 - User Rights

Concepts of user rights are difficult to discuss without it ending in a shouting match because they cross over so many different copyright and non-copyright related issues. The biggest threat of user rights is that they often directly challenge creators’ rights:

  • creative reuse – challenges concepts of creativity, authorship, moral rights, copyrights
  • parody – challenges concepts of authorship and moral rights
  • private, personal copying – challenges concepts of copyright and business models
  • right to resell – I would actually like to explore this later in contrast to the concept of first sale rights and the implications of these concepts when works are available in digital formats

I debated myself on whether “making available” should be part of the list of user rights. Personally, I see that as something which should be licensed/contracted by a creator and not legislated…but I am also trying to deal with these concepts outside of legislation as much as possible so that I can deal with the issues rather than the politics. After some initial thought, I decided that I would like to start by putting the concept of “making available” as a creator’s right and later explore the overall option of creators offering different rights to users. We’ll see how well that works when I delve into that level of this exercise.

And what about consumer rights, like those surrounding the issues surrounding vendor choice, etc, impacted by the whole mess of TPM/DRM? For now, I am going to leave that as a floater issue which has been manifested by the concepts of copyright and how it is being administered, and not one of copyright itself. I am, however, interested in exploring issues of accessibility of works (pre- and post-digital-world) in relation to user rights.

I’m not able to think of anything else to add to the list of user rights (in terms of copyright) at this point, and am feeling that I’ve allowed my thinking to be restricted by what’s currently in the Copyright Act. If anyone can think of other user rights on the copyright front, please let me know.

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Filed under : copyright, deconstructing copyright
By Julianna Yau
On January 11, 2008
At 8:51 pm
Comments : 0
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An Experiment In Deconstructing Copyright – Part 8 - End Users

Historically, copyright law has existed to protect the remuneration to creators and producers/disseminators for copies of original works. How much each is protected through copyright law varies, depending on which version of the historical account you read.

Within all of those versions, the protection of user rights is close to zero.1

And it wasn’t until personal recording technology in the form of things like audio cassettes, video cassettes, Betamax/VCRs, CD-Rs, mp3 and all sorts of other modern acronyms that users started to build a gradual concern for copyright.

So where does that leave us now?

With two basic types of users whose concerns need to be addressed by copyright legislation:

  • professional users (i.e. creators)
  • end-users (i.e. consumers)

Although many of their activities overlap, the primary difference boils down to our good friend Money.

The problem then becomes a horrible blurring of the line between what rights should be granted & protected and when & how those rights should be enforced. For us to move beyond the shouting matches and competitions of wit and rhetoric, I believe we need to start with looking at the two separately before bringing them together.

In Part 9: looking at the conceptual aspects of user rights.


[1] Note that the historical treatment of performances of classical music is much different from current treatment of performances of almost anything. Income for composers used to be based on sales of sheet music, whereas now composers and playwrights generate income from both the sale of their compositions/plays and the performances. One could argue that users used to have more rights and/or that creators now have more rights, depending on where you’re standing.

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Filed under : copyright, deconstructing copyright, technology
By Julianna Yau
On January 8, 2008
At 9:35 pm
Comments : 0
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