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- FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS ABOUT COPYRIGHT (V. 1.1.3)
- Part 1 - Introduction.
-
-
- Copyright 1994 Terry Carroll
- (c) 1994 Terry Carroll
-
- Last update: January 6, 1994.
-
- This article is the first in a series of six articles that contains
- frequently asked questions (FAQ) with answers relating to copyright law,
- particularly that of the United States. It is posted to the Usenet
- misc.legal, misc.legal.computing, misc.int-property, comp.patents,
- misc.answers, comp.answers, and news.answers newsgroups monthly, on or
- near the 17th of each month.
-
- This FAQ is available for anonymous FTP from rtfm.mit.edu [18.70.0.209],
- in directory /pub/usenet/news.answers/law/Copyright-FAQ, files part1 -
- part6. If you do not have direct access by FTP, you can obtain a copy
- via email: send a message to mail-server@rtfm.mit.edu with the following
- lines in it:
-
- send usenet/news.answers/law/Copyright-FAQ/part1
- send usenet/news.answers/law/Copyright-FAQ/part2
- send usenet/news.answers/law/Copyright-FAQ/part3
- send usenet/news.answers/law/Copyright-FAQ/part4
- send usenet/news.answers/law/Copyright-FAQ/part5
- send usenet/news.answers/law/Copyright-FAQ/part6
- quit
-
-
- DISCLAIMER - PLEASE READ.
-
- This article is Copyright 1994 by Terry Carroll. It may be freely
- redistributed in its entirety provided that this copyright notice is not
- removed. It may not be sold for profit or incorporated in commercial
- documents without the written permission of the copyright holder.
- Permission is expressly granted for this document to be made available
- for file transfer from installations offering unrestricted anonymous file
- transfer on the Internet. Permission is further granted for this
- document to be made available for file transfer in the data libraries of
- associated with the following Compuserve Information Services fora: the
- Legal Forum, the Desktop Publishing Forum, the Show Business Forum, and
- the Ideas, Invention & Innovation Forum. This article is provided as is
- without any express or implied warranty. Nothing in this article
- represents the views of Santa Clara University or of the Santa Clara
- Computer and High Technology Law Journal.
-
- While all information in this article is believed to be correct at the
- time of writing, this article is for educational purposes only and does
- not purport to provide legal advice. If you require legal advice, you
- should consult with a legal practitioner licensed to practice in your
- jurisdiction.
-
- Terry Carroll, the FAQ-maintainer, is a computer professional, and is
- currently (January 1994) a student in his final semester at Santa Clara
- University School of Law, is currently Editor-in-Chief of the Santa Clara
- Computer and High Technology Law Journal, and is seeking employment as an
- attorney.
-
- If you have any additions, corrections, or suggestions for improvement to
- this FAQ, please send them to one of the following addresses, in order of
- preference:
-
- 71550.133@compuserve.com
- tcarroll@scuacc.scu.edu
-
- I will accept suggestions for questions to be added to the FAQ, but
- please be aware that I will be more receptive to questions that are
- accompanied by answers. :-)
-
-
- FAQ ORGANIZATION.
-
- The following table indicates the contents of each of the parts of the
- FAQ. For each part, the last version in which that part was
- substantially updated (excluding the reorganization into six parts done
- as part of V1.1.0) is indicated in parentheses.
-
-
- Part 1 (V1.1.1) - Introduction (including full table of
- contents).
- Part 2 (V1.1.2) - Copyright basics.
- Part 3 (V1.0.0) - Common miscellaneous questions.
- Part 4 (V1.0.0) - International aspects.
- Part 5 (V1.0.2) - Further copyright resources.
- Part 6 (V1.0.0) - Appendix: A note about legal citation form,
- or, "What's all this '17 U.S.C. 107' and '977
- F.2d 1510' stuff?"
-
- TABLE OF CONTENTS (for all parts).
-
- Part 1 - Introduction.
-
- Part 2 - Copyright Basics.
-
- 2.1) What is a copyright?
- 2.2) What is "public domain?"
- 2.3) I just wrote a great program/novel/song/whatever. How can I
- get a copyright on it?
- 2.4) How long does a copyright last? Does it need to be renewed?
- 2.5) What advantages are there to registering my work with the
- Copyright Office?
- 2.6) How can I register a copyright with the U.S. Copyright
- Office?
- 2.7) What advantages are there to including a copyright notice on
- my work?
- 2.8) Can I ever use a copyrighted work without permission of the
- copyright holder, or "What is 'fair use?'"
- 2.9) Fair use - the legal basis of the doctrine.
- 2.10) [reserved.]
-
- Part 3 - Common miscellaneous questions.
-
- 3.1) Who owns the copyright to something I wrote at work, me or my
- company?
- 3.2) [reserved.]
- 3.3) Is copyright infringement a crime, or a civil matter?
- 3.4) What is the statute of limitation for copyright infringement?
- 3.5) Can the government be sued for copyright infringement?
- 3.6) Can the government copyright its works?
- 3.7) Can I legally make a cassette copy of a musical CD for my own
- use, so I can play it in my car?
- 3.8) Are Usenet postings and email messages copyrighted?
- 3.9) Are fonts copyrighted?
- 3.10) What does "All Rights Reserved" mean?
- 3.11) What's the difference between a copyright and a patent?
- 3.12) Why is there so little in this FAQ about patents?
- 3.13 - 3.18) [reserved.]
-
- Part 4 - International aspects.
-
- 4.1) What international treaties exist governing copyright, or
- "What is this Berne Convention I keep hearing about?"
- 4.2) Is Freedonia a signatory to either the Berne Convention or to
- the Universal Copyright Convention?
-
- Part 5 - Further copyright resources.
-
- 5.1) Where can I get more information on copyright?
- 5.2) What materials related to copyright are available on the
- Internet?
-
- Part 6 - Appendix: A note about legal citation form, or, "What's
- all this '17 U.S.C. 107' and '977 F.2d 1510' stuff?"
-
-
- INTRODUCTION
-
- This FAQ originally began as a general-purpose FAQ for the Usenet
- misc.legal newsgroup. After working on that broad FAQ for several
- months, it became apparent that such a FAQ was too monumental a task to
- be undertaken by a single FAQ maintainer. The person who succeeded me in
- the effort agreed.
-
- I've noticed that copyright questions seem to come up constantly on
- Usenet, not only in misc.legal, but in many newsgroups, from comp.fonts
- to rec.classical.music. It also happens to be my favorite area of law,
- so when I abandoned the misc.legal FAQ, I decided to retain the portions
- dealing with copyright law, and to fashion that into a Copyright Law FAQ.
- This document is the result.
-
- This FAQ betrays its misc.legal origin. On misc.legal, it's very common,
- and indeed preferred, for assertions of law to be accompanied by
- citations to the relevant legal authorities. This serves as a check
- against erroneous or misleading interpretations of the authorities. It
- also allows the reader to verify the authorities, and provides an
- enthusiastic reader with starting points for further research into the
- subject. In trimming the former misc.legal FAQ to discuss only copyright
- law, I've decided to retain these citations. This is not only for the
- reasons stated above, but also because this FAQ, like any other static
- document, is in danger of being made out of date by future developments
- in the law. By providing sources for the answers to the questions, an
- inquisitive reader will be able to investigate the source and determine,
- for example, if a particular appellate case has been overruled or has
- been declined to be followed by other appellate courts. I have included
- an appendix at the end of the FAQ to assist newcomers in understanding
- the legal notation used in citing references.
-
-
- ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
-
- I'd like to acknowledge the following people who reviewed early drafts of
- this FAQ and made valuable suggestions for modifications, or otherwise
- contributed to the FAQ:
-
- Richard A. Anderson <rand@seq1.loc.gov>
- Thomas Deardorff <tdeardor@u.washington.edu>
- Stuart P. Derby <sderby@crick.ssctr.bcm.tmc.edu>
- Mary Jensen <cnicopy@charlie.usd.edu>
- David Lassner <david@oit.hawaii.edu>
- George Mitchell <gmitchel@library.unt.edu>
- Ronald Naylor <rnaylor@umiami.ir.miami.edu>
- Carol Odlum <carol@dreamer.rain.com>
- Laura A. Pitta <lpitta@scuacc.scu.edu>
- Hank Roth <odin@world.std.com>
- Craig A. Summerhill <craig@cni.org>
- Peter Stott <pstott@pearl.tufts.edu>
- David W. Tamkin <dattier@genesis.mcs.com>
- Glenn S. Tenney <tenney@netcom.com>
- Marina ___ [full name unknown] <marlen@sovam.com>
-
-
- CHANGE LOG
-
- V1.0 (Jul. 12, 1993) - Initial release.
- V1.0.1 (Jul. 20, 1993) - Updates to reflect changes in FTP sites.
- V1.1.0 (Aug. 05, 1993) - Reorganized into six parts; minor
- editorial changes.
- V1.1.1 (Sep. 21, 1993) - Added FTP information for rtfm.mit.edu;
- major overhaul to section 2.4 (on
- copyright duration); minor editorial
- changes.
- V1.1.2 (Nov. 23, 1993) - Miscellaneous minor changes.
- V1.1.3 (Jan. 06, 1994) - Update to section 2.4 (on copyright duration) to
- reflect 1993 expirations; update to part 6 to
- include pointer to the Legal Research FAQ;
- updates to reflect changes in FTP sites; and, of
- course, the usual miscellaneous minor changes.
-
- FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS ABOUT COPYRIGHT (V. 1.1.3)
- Part 2 - Copyright Basics.
-
- Copyright 1994 Terry Carroll
- (c) 1994 Terry Carroll
-
- Last update: January 6, 1994.
-
- This article is the second in a series of six articles that contains
- frequently asked questions (FAQ) with answers relating to copyright law,
- particularly that of the United States. It is posted to the Usenet
- misc.legal, misc.legal.computing, misc.int-property, comp.patents,
- misc.answers, comp.answers, and news.answers newsgroups monthly, on or
- near the 17th of each month.
-
- This FAQ is available for anonymous FTP from rtfm.mit.edu [18.70.0.209],
- in directory /pub/usenet/news.answers/law/Copyright-FAQ, files part1 -
- part6. If you do not have direct access by FTP, you can obtain a copy
- via email: send a message to mail-server@rtfm.mit.edu with the following
- lines in it:
-
- send usenet/news.answers/law/Copyright-FAQ/part1
- send usenet/news.answers/law/Copyright-FAQ/part2
- send usenet/news.answers/law/Copyright-FAQ/part3
- send usenet/news.answers/law/Copyright-FAQ/part4
- send usenet/news.answers/law/Copyright-FAQ/part5
- send usenet/news.answers/law/Copyright-FAQ/part6
- quit
-
-
- DISCLAIMER - PLEASE READ.
-
- This article is Copyright 1994 by Terry Carroll. It may be freely
- redistributed in its entirety provided that this copyright notice is not
- removed. It may not be sold for profit or incorporated in commercial
- documents without the written permission of the copyright holder.
- Permission is expressly granted for this document to be made available
- for file transfer from installations offering unrestricted anonymous file
- transfer on the Internet. Permission is further granted for this
- document to be made available for file transfer in the data libraries of
- associated with the following Compuserve Information Services fora: the
- Legal Forum, the Desktop Publishing Forum, the Show Business Forum, and
- the Ideas, Invention & Innovation Forum. This article is provided as is
- without any express or implied warranty. Nothing in this article
- represents the views of Santa Clara University or of the Santa Clara
- Computer and High Technology Law Journal.
-
- While all information in this article is believed to be correct at the
- time of writing, this article is for educational purposes only and does
- not purport to provide legal advice. If you require legal advice, you
- should consult with a legal practitioner licensed to practice in your
- jurisdiction.
-
- Terry Carroll, the FAQ-maintainer, is a computer professional, and is
- currently (January 1994) a student in his final semester at Santa Clara
- University School of Law, is currently Editor-in-Chief of the Santa Clara
- Computer and High Technology Law Journal, and is seeking employment as an
- attorney.
-
- If you have any additions, corrections, or suggestions for improvement to
- this FAQ, please send them to one of the following addresses, in order of
- preference:
-
- 71550.133@compuserve.com
- tcarroll@scuacc.scu.edu
-
- I will accept suggestions for questions to be added to the FAQ, but
- please be aware that I will be more receptive to questions that are
- accompanied by answers. :-)
-
-
- FAQ ORGANIZATION.
-
- The following table indicates the contents of each of the parts of the
- FAQ.
-
- Part 1 - Introduction (including full table of contents).
- Part 2 - Copyright basics.
- Part 3 - Common miscellaneous questions.
- Part 4 - International aspects.
- Part 5 - Further copyright resources.
- Part 6 - Appendix: A note about legal citation form, or, "What's
- all this '17 U.S.C. 107' and '977 F.2d 1510' stuff?"
-
- TABLE OF CONTENTS (for this part).
-
- Part 2 - Copyright Basics.
-
- 2.1) What is a copyright?
- 2.2) What is "public domain?"
- 2.3) I just wrote a great program/novel/song/whatever. How can I
- get a copyright on it?
- 2.4) How long does a copyright last? Does it need to be renewed?
- 2.5) What advantages are there to registering my work with the
- Copyright Office?
- 2.6) How can I register a copyright with the U.S. Copyright
- Office?
- 2.7) What advantages are there to including a copyright notice on
- my work?
- 2.8) Can I ever use a copyrighted work without permission of the
- copyright holder, or "What is 'fair use?'"
- 2.9) Fair use - the legal basis of the doctrine.
- 2.10) [reserved.]
-
-
- 2.1) What is a copyright?
-
- A copyright is a right of intellectual property, whereby authors obtain,
- for a limited time, certain exclusive rights to their works. In the
- United States, copyright is exclusively federal law, and derives from the
- "copyright clause" of the Constitution (Art. 1, sec. 8, cl. 8), which
- provides Congress with the power "to promote science and the useful arts,
- by securing for limited times to authors ... the exclusive right to their
- ... writings."
-
- Copyright protects only an author's original expression. It doesn't
- extend to any ideas, system or factual information that is conveyed in a
- copyrighted work, and it doesn't extend to any pre-existing material that
- the author has incorporated into a work. 17 U.S.C. 102(b), 103.
-
- The standard for originality is very low. "Original" in this context
- means only that the work has its origin in the author. There is no
- requirement that the work be different from everything that has come
- before: it need only embody a minimum level of creativity and owe its
- origin to the author claiming copyright. To use an extreme example, if
- two poets, each working in total isolation and unaware of one another's
- work, were to compose identical poems, both of the poems would meet the
- originality requirement for purposes of the copyright statute. Feist
- Publications, Inc. v. Rural Telephone Service Company, Inc., 111 S.Ct.
- 1282, 1287-88 (1991).
-
- In the United States, these seven rights are recognized:
-
- 1) the reproductive right: the right to reproduce the work in
- copies;
- 2) the adaptative right: the right to produce derivative works
- based on the copyrighted work;
- 3) the distribution right: the right to distribute copies of
- the work;
- 4) the performance right: the right to perform the copyrighted
- work publicly;
- 5) the display right: the right to display the copyrighted work
- publicly;
- 6) the attribution right (sometimes called the paternity
- right): the right of the author to claim authorship of the
- work and to prevent the use of his or her name as the author
- of a work he or she did not create;
- 7) the integrity right: the right of an author to prevent the
- use of his or her name as the author of a distorted version
- of the work, to prevent intentional distortion of the work,
- and to prevent destruction of the work.
-
- 17 U.S.C. 106, 106A.
-
- Not all of these rights apply to all types of works. For example, the
- display right applies to literary, musical, dramatic and choreographic
- works, pantomimes, and motion pictures and other audiovisual works. It
- does not apply to sound recordings and to architectural works. The
- attribution right and the integrity right apply only to works of visual
- art.
-
- Also, not all rights have the same duration: in the U.S., rights 1-5
- normally have a duration of the author's life plus 50 years, while rights
- 6-7 endure only for the life of the author.
-
- These rights are not unbounded, and in the U.S., sections 107 through 120
- of the copyright law catalog a series of restrictions on the rights.
- Some of these restrictions are discussed elsewhere in the FAQ (see, e.g.,
- sections 2.8, 2.9, and 3.7).
-
- And, by the way, many persons erroneously spell it "copywrite,"
- apparently because of the association with written material. The correct
- word is "copyright." It derives from an author or publisher's right to
- the copy (copy here being used in the sense that it is used in the
- newspaper trade: the text of an article).
-
-
- 2.2) What is "public domain?"
-
- In contrast to copyright is "public domain." A work in the public domain
- is one that can be freely used by anyone for any purpose.
-
- It used to be that if a work was published without notice, it lost all
- copyright, and entered the public domain. That's no longer true, and now
- public domain is more the exception than the rule.
-
- There are still a number of ways that a work may be public domain.
-
- - The copyright may have expired (see section 2.4).
-
- - The work might be a work of the U.S. Government; such works
- can't be copyrighted (see section 3.6).
-
- - The work might be one that can't be copyrighted. For example,
- titles, names, short phrases and slogans can't be copyrighted
- (37 C.F.R. 202.1(a)). Note, however, they can be trademarks.
- As far as copyright law is concerned, they're public domain,
- but as far as trademark law is concerned, they might be
- protected.
-
- - The copyright might have been forfeited. For example, the work
- may have been published without notice prior to the change in
- the law that eliminated the notice requirement (March 1, 1988,
- the effective date of the Berne Convention Implementation Act,
- PL 100-568, 102 Stat. 2853).
-
- - The copyright might have been abandoned. This is pretty rare.
- Abandonment requires that the copyright holder intend to
- abandon the copyright, and generally requires an unambiguous
- statement or overt act on the part of the copyright holder that
- indicates his or her intent to dedicate the work to the public
- domain. National Comics Pub. v. Fawcett Pub., 191 F.2d 594,
- 598 (2d Cir., 1951). A statement that anyone who wishes to may
- reproduce, perform, or display the work without restrictions
- might be sufficient. Simply posting it on a computer network
- is not abandonment.
-
- There is a common belief that if someone infringes a copyright, and the
- copyright owner does not sue or otherwise put a stop to the infringement,
- the copyright is lost and the work goes into the public domain. There is
- some pre-1988 law on this (e.g., Stuff v. E.C. Publications, 432 F.2d 143
- (2d Cir., 1965) and Transgo v. Ajac Transmission Parts, 768 F.2d 1001
- (9th Cir. 1985)), but it seems to derive mostly from the fact that the
- copyright holder had acquiesced in the publication of the work without
- notice back when notice was a requirement. It was the publication
- without notice, and not the lack of enforcement, that actually worked to
- put the work in the public domain. This is forfeiture of copyright, not
- abandonment. Because the notice requirement is now gone from copyright
- law, these cases don't have much weight today.
-
- I can't find anything that supports the idea that failure to assert a
- copyright against an infringer can alone lead to placing the work in the
- public domain (if you have any authoritative information on this, please
- drop me a note at one of the addresses listed in the introduction). Of
- course, circumstances may be such that the ability to sue a particular
- infringer might be waived (e.g., a statute of limitations may expire (see
- section 3.4), or if the infringer has reasonably relied to his or her
- detriment on the copyright holder's failure to sue, the doctrine of
- laches may bar a suit), but that's only with respect to that particular
- infringer, and does not affect the status of the copyright with respect
- to others.
-
- Sometimes you'll see a program on the network accompanied by a statement
- like "This program is public domain. It may be freely distributed, but
- you may not charge more for it than the cost of the media." Statements
- like these are contradictory. If the program is public domain, you can
- do whatever you want with it, including charging whatever you want
- (although you might not get it). In this example, what the programmer
- really wants to do is to retain the copyright, but provide a non-
- exclusive license to copy and distribute the work, with a condition on
- the license that only the cost of the media may be charged for it. In
- this case, where the programmer has, in two consecutive sentences, both
- declared the work to be public domain and asserted a copyright in the
- work, it's unpredictable whether a court would interpret this as
- abandonment.
-
- If there is any restriction upon the use of the work, even the
- restriction that it cannot be sold, the work is not public domain.
- Rather, it's copyrighted, and the restrictions are essentially
- limitations on a licensee using one or more of the exclusive rights
- described above. For example, the restriction that a work may only be
- given away for free is a limitation using the distribution right.
-
- Once a work is in the public domain, whether by expiration of copyright
- or by expressly being dedicated to the public domain by its copyright
- holder, it can never again regain copyrighted status.
-
-
- 2.3) I just wrote a great program/novel/song/whatever. How can I get a
- copyright on it?
-
- Good news. You already have. In the United States, as in most nations,
- a work is copyrighted as soon as it is created:
-
- Copyright protection subsists . . . in original works of
- authorship fixed in any tangible medium of expression, now
- known or later developed, from which they can be perceived,
- reproduced, or otherwise communicated, either directly or with
- the aid of a machine or device. 17 U.S.C. 102(a).
-
- and,
-
- A work is "fixed" in a tangible medium of expression when its
- embodiment in a copy or phonorecord, by or under the authority
- of the author, is sufficiently permanent or stable to permit it
- to be perceived, reproduced, or otherwise communicated for a
- period of more than transitory duration. 17 U.S.C. 101.
-
- What this means in simple terms is that as soon as you've created your
- original work, it's copyrighted. Because of the "either directly or with
- the aid of a machine or device" provision, it doesn't matter whether
- you've printed it out, or if it's only on your hard drive or floppy disk.
-
- You don't need any special formalities, such as registering the work with
- the Copyright Office, or providing a copyright notice (notice stopped
- being a requirement when the U.S. signed the Berne Convention and enacted
- Berne Convention Implementation Act in 1988; see section 4.1 for more
- information).
-
- That being said, you might want to register the work and provide a
- copyright notice anyway. There are certain advantages to doing so (see
- sections 2.5 and 2.7).
-
-
- 2.4) How long does a copyright last? Does it need to be renewed?
-
- The law of copyright duration has undergone many twists and turns. There
- have been several major changes in copyright duration law that contribute
- to this complication:
-
- - the number of years used in calculating durations has changed,
- from either 28 or 56 to either 50, 75 or 100, depending on the
- type of work.
-
- - the basis for determining the endpoint of a copyright has
- changed; it used to be measured based on when the work was
- published, now it's based on when the work's author dies, or
- sometimes on when the work was created and/or when it was
- published.
-
- - There used to be multiple copyright terms, and if the copyright
- was not renewed at the end of the first term, it lapsed.
- Today, except as a minor hangover from the past, there is a
- single copyright term; renewal is not required.
-
- - Not all the provisions changed at the same time. For one thing,
- although the Copyright Act of 1976 did not go into effect until 1978,
- well before the draft of the new law was complete, it was likely that
- the new statute would extend duration of copyright. Congress
- apparently wanted to minimize the impact on authors who would
- otherwise lose the benefit of the extended duration, and through a
- series of several special purpose laws (Public Laws 87-668, 89-142,
- 90-141, 90-416, 91-147, 91-555, 92-170, 92-566 and 93-573, and section
- 304(b) of the 1976 Copyright Act), delayed the expiration of
- copyrights that would otherwise have occurred in the 1962 - 1978
- interim. The net cumulative effect is as if the duration provisions
- had begun to take effect in 1962, 16 years earlier than the rest of
- the Act. For another thing, even when the concept of multiple
- "copyright terms" was discarded, for a long time, works that were
- still in their first term of copyright still needed to be renewed to
- avoid going into public domain. This requirement remained in place
- until it was finally removed in 1992 (by P.L. 102-307, 106 Stat. 264).
-
- So while the law at anyone time has always been pretty simple, the
- cumulative effect of the changes have made the deceptively simple
- question "how long does a copyright last?" quite complicated to answer.
-
- The following discussion is based on a current year of 1994. I've tried
- to indicate the basis for calculations here, so you can see which need to
- be recalculated year by year, and which are okay as is. Regardless of
- the scheme used to compute duration, under 17 U.S.C. 305, copyrights
- always expire on December 31 of the expiration year and at the time of
- this writing (January 1993), December 31, 1993 is the most recent date on
- which any copyright has expired.
-
- With these concerns in mind, here's a short analysis of copyright
- duration.
-
- Generally, for works created in 1978 or later, a copyright lasts for
- fifty years beyond the life of the work's author, after which it lapses
- into public domain. 17 U.S.C. 302(a). If the work is prepared by two or
- more authors (a "joint work"), its copyright lasts for fifty years after
- the last surviving author dies. 17 U.S.C. 302(b). For anonymous and
- pseudonymous works, and for works made for hire, copyright exists for 100
- years from the date of creation, or 75 years from the date of first
- publication, whichever comes first. 17 U.S.C. 302(c). No renewal is
- necessary or permitted. (The year 1978 in this paragraph is because
- January 1, 1978 is the date on which the Copyright Act of 1976 took
- effect.)
-
- For works to which the attribution right and integrity right apply (see
- section 2.1), these rights endure only for the lifetime of the author.
- 17 U.S.C. 106A(d).
-
- For works published in the years 1964 through 1977, copyright lasts for
- 75 years from date of publication. 17 U.S.C. 304(a). In the past,
- copyright lasted only for 28 years, unless a renewal was filed with the
- Copyright Office. Such a renewal obtained an additional 47 years of
- protection. Renewal was made optional in June 1992 by P.L. 102-307, 106
- Stat. 264. (The year 1964 comes from the fact that renewal was made
- optional in 1992, and 1992 minus 28 (the length of the first copyright
- period) equals 1964.)
-
- For works published in the years 1904 through 1963, the copyright lasted
- for 28 years from date of publication; if the copyright was not renewed,
- it lapsed, and the work went into the public domain. Another 28 years of
- protection could be obtained by filing a renewal, for a total term of 56
- years (1906 comes from the fact that the U.S. effectively switched to a
- 47-year second term in 1962, and 1962 minus 56 (the old maximum duration
- of two 28-year terms) equals 1906). If the copyright was not renewed
- after its initial 28-year term, the work lapsed into public domain.
- Generally, all copyrights secured in 1918 or earlier lapsed at the latest
- in 1993 and are now in public domain (1993 (last year) minus 75 equals
- 1918). Copyrights secured in the period 1919 through 1949 continue to
- exist only if they were renewed, and expire in the period 1994 through
- 2024.
-
- Finally, just to complicate things: if the work was created but not
- published prior to 1978, its copyright duration is calculated as if it
- had been created on January 1, 1978, and lasts as long as that
- calculation specifies, or through 2002, whichever is later. If the work
- is published in 2002 or earlier, then the copyright lasts as long as that
- calculation specifies, or through 2027, whichever is later 17 U.S.C.
- 303.
-
- Whew! And to think I went into copyright law instead of tax to avoid the
- math.
-
-
- 2.5) What advantages are there to registering my work with the Copyright
- Office?
-
- In order to sue for infringement, with some exceptions, your work must be
- registered with the Copyright Office. However, you may register after
- the infringement occurs, as long as it's before filing your lawsuit.
-
- The advantage to registering prior to infringement is that it allows you
- some additional remedies that aren't available if you registered after
- infringement: namely, statutory damages and attorney's fees. 17 U.S.C.
- 412.
-
- "Statutory damages" are damages specified in the statute, as opposed to
- "actual damages," which are damages that you can demonstrate in court
- that you actually suffered. If you registered your work prior to
- infringement, you can skip showing any actual damage, and just elect to
- receive statutory damages. 17 U.S.C. 504(a).
-
- Statutory damages for copyright infringement are $500 - $20,000, as
- determined by the judge. If the infringer proves that he or she was not
- aware and had no reason to believe that his or her acts constituted
- infringement, the court may lower damages to as low as $200 per
- infringement. On the other hand, if the plaintiff proves that the
- defendant's infringement was "committed willfully," the judge may award
- damages to as high as $100,000 per infringement. 17 U.S.C. 504(c).
-
- In deciding whether to register your work, you must weigh the probability
- of an infringement action (and the advantages of attorney's fees and
- statutory damages in such an action) against the $20 cost of
- registration.
-
- CAVEAT: On February 16, 1993, the Copyright Reform Act of 1993 was
- introduced in both houses of the 103nd Congress (H.R. 897 in the House of
- Representatives and S.373 in the Senate). If the bill passes, much of
- the information in this entry will be rendered incorrect. Specifically,
- the bill would, among other things, remove the requirement for
- registration prior to bringing suit, and would remove the restrictions on
- statutory damages that are described above.
-
-
- 2.6) How can I register a copyright with the U.S. Copyright Office?
-
- To register a copyright, file the appropriate form with the U.S.
- Copyright Office, including the payment for registration costs ($20).
-
- For most types of work being published in the United States, two copies
- of the work being registered must be deposited with the Copyright Office
- for the use of the Library of Congress. Strictly speaking, the deposit
- is not a requirement for copyright. However, failing to make the deposit
- at time of publication can result in fines. Some works are exempt from
- the deposit requirement.
-
- Registration forms may be ordered by calling the Copyright Office Hotline
- (see section 5.1). When the answering machine answers, leave a message
- with your name and address, identifying the material you are ordering.
- Ask for the form either by form number, or by Copyright Office
- Information Package number. A Copyright Office Information Package is a
- collection of information on registering copyright for a particular type
- of work. It includes the appropriate forms, instructions for completing
- them and other useful information.
-
- Here is a list of commonly requested forms and Copyright Office
- Information Packages, arranged by type of copyrighted work:
-
- - Books, manuscripts and speeches and other nondramatic literary
- works: Form TX, Package 109
- - Computer programs: Form TX, Package 113
- - Music (sheet or lyrics): Form PA, Package 105
- - Music (sound recording): Form SR, Package 121
- - Cartoons and comic strips: Form VA, Package 111
- - Photographs: Form VA, Package 107
- - Drawings, prints, and other works of visual arts: Form VA,
- Package 115
- - Motion pictures and video recordings: Form PA, Package 110
- - Dramatic scripts, plays, and screenplays: Form PA, Package 119
- - Games: Form TX, Package 108
-
-
- 2.7) What advantages are there to including a copyright notice on my
- work?
-
- As noted in section 2.3, under U.S. law, a work is copyrighted as soon as
- it is created. No notice is required to retain copyright. While most of
- the world has operated this way for some time, this is a comparatively
- recent change in U.S. copyright law, as of March 1, 1988, the effective
- date of the Berne Convention Implementation Act, PL 100-568, 102 Stat.
- 2853 (See sections 4.1 and 4.2 for a discussion of the Berne Convention).
-
- Although notice is no longer a requirement, there are still some sound
- reasons for using one anyway.
-
- If you include a copyright notice on a published copy of your work to
- which the defendant in an infringement suit had access, he or she may not
- plead "innocent infringement" (i.e., that he or she was not aware and had
- no reason to believe that his or her acts constituted infringement, the
- so-called "innocent infringement" defense) in mitigation of actual or
- statutory damages. 17 U.S.C. 401(d), 402(d).
-
- Unlike the decision of whether to register your work, this is a no-
- brainer, since it's simple and free: just include a notice on every
- published copy of the work.
-
- A proper copyright notice consists of three things: 1) the letter "C" in
- a circle (called, logically enough, the "copyright symbol"), or the word
- "Copyright," or the abbreviation "Copr."; 2) the year of first
- publication; 3) the name of the copyright owner. 17 U.S.C. 401(b).
-
- Using "(C)" in place of a copyright symbol is not a good idea. To the
- best of my knowledge, no court has expressly ruled one way or another
- whether "(C)" is a sufficient substitute for a copyright symbol. One
- case, Videotronics v. Bend Electronics, 586 F.Supp. 478, 481 (D. Nev.
- 1984), implies that it is not sufficient; another, Forry v. Neundorfer,
- 837 F.2d 259, 266 (6th Cir., 1988), implies that it might be. While
- courts are generally lenient in allowing for what makes up a valid
- notice, it's best to be squarely within the statute. If you can't make a
- copyright symbol, either spell the word out, or use the "Copr."
- abbreviation.
-
- As a side note with regard to international protection, the Universal
- Copyright Convention requires that, at a minimum, all signatory nations
- that require notice must accept the C-in-a-circle variant; it does not
- provide a provision for a spelled out variant. On the other hand, most
- nations that have signed a copyright treaty are signatories to the Berne
- Convention, which forbids requiring a notice as a condition to copyright.
- See section 4.1 for details.
-
- For a sound recording, the notice requirement is similar, except that it
- uses the letter "P" (for "Phonorecord") in a circle, plus the year and
- owner name. 17 U.S.C. 402(b). The statute does not provide a spelled
- out alternative to the P-in-a-circle.
-
-
- 2.8) Can I ever use a copyrighted work without permission of the
- copyright holder, or "What is 'fair use?'"
-
- In any analysis of copyright, it's important to remember the law's
- constitutional purpose: to promote science and the useful arts. "Fair
- use" is a doctrine that permits courts to avoid rigid application of the
- copyright statute when to do otherwise would stifle the very creativity
- that copyright law is designed to foster. The doctrine of fair use
- recognizes that the exclusive rights inherent in a copyright are not
- absolute, and that non-holders of the copyright are entitled to make use
- of a copyrighted work that technically would otherwise infringe upon one
- or more of the exclusive rights. Although fair use originated "for
- purposes such as criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching, ...
- scholarship, or research," it also applies in other areas, as some of the
- examples below illustrate. However, courts seem more willing to accept
- an assertion of fair use when the use falls into one of the above
- categories.
-
- Perhaps more than any other area of copyright, fair use is a highly fact-
- specific determination. Copyright Office document FL102 puts it this
- way: "The distinction between 'fair use' and infringement may be unclear
- and not easily defined. There is no specific number of words, lines, or
- notes that may safely be taken without permission. Acknowledging the
- source of the copyrighted material does not substitute for obtaining
- permission."
-
- The document then quotes from the 1961 Report of the Register of
- Copyrights on the General Revision of the U.S. Copyright Law., providing
- the following examples of activities that courts have held to be fair
- use:
-
- - Quotation of excerpts in a review or criticism for purposes of
- illustration or comment;
- - Quotation of short passages in a scholarly or technical work
- for illustration or clarification of the author's observations;
- - Use in a parody of some of the content of the work parodied;
- - Summary of an address or article with brief quotations, in a
- news report;
- - Reproduction by a library of a portion of a work to replace
- part of a damaged copy;
- - Reproduction by a teacher or student of a small part of a work
- to illustrate a lesson;
- - Reproduction of a work in legislative or judicial proceedings
- or reports;
- - Incidental and fortuitous reproduction in a newsreel or
- broadcast, of a work located in the scene of an event being
- reported.
-
- Document FL102 is included in Copyright Office information kit 102 ("Fair
- Use"), which can be ordered from the Copyright Office (see section 5.1).
-
- Carol Odlum <carol@dreamer.rain.com>, a free-lance editor, has provided a
- set of guidelines used by one publisher as rules of thumb. These
- certainly have no legal force, but it's instructive to note at least one
- publisher's interpretation of what "fair use" means in the real world.
- The publisher uses the following criteria for determining when permission
- of the copyright holder must be sought in order for the work to be used:
-
- - Prose quotations of more than 300 words from a scholarly book.
- (If a source is quoted several times for a total of 300 words
- or more, permission must be obtained.);
- - Prose quotations of more than 150 words from a popular,
- general-market book;
- - Prose quotations of more than 50 words from a scholarly
- journal;
- - Quotations of more than 2 lines of poetry or lyrics;
- - Quotations of more than 1 sentence from a popular magazine or
- newspaper;
- - Quotations of any length from letters or other personal
- communications, interviews, questionnaires, speeches,
- unpublished dissertations, and radio or television broadcasts.
- - Illustrations -- including drawings, graphs, diagrams, charts,
- maps, artwork, and photographs -- created by someone else;
- - Music examples of more than 4 measures;
- - Tables compiled by someone else.
-
-
- 2.9) Fair use - the legal basis of the doctrine.
-
- Section 2.8, above, describes fair use in a nutshell. This follow-on
- entry provides a more detailed description of the doctrine for those
- interested in the nuts and bolts.
-
- There are four factors used to decide whether a particular use of a
- copyrighted work is a fair use:
-
- (1) the purpose and character of the use, including whether
- such use is of a commercial nature or is for nonprofit
- educational purposes;
- (2) the nature of the copyrighted work;
- (3) the amount and substantiality of the portion used in
- relation to the copyrighted work as a whole; and
- (4) the effect of the use upon the potential market for or
- value of the copyrighted work.
-
- 17 U.S.C. 107.
-
- The remainder of this answer discusses how each of these factors has been
- interpreted.
-
- (1) The purpose and character of the use: In considering the purpose and
- character of the use, courts have looked to two characteristics of the
- use: whether the use is commercial and, somewhat less frequently, whether
- the use is a "productive" one.
-
- If the copyrighted work is being used commercially, e.g., all or part of
- a copyrighted drawing being used in a commercially published book on
- drawing techniques, that's a strike against it being fair use. On the
- other hand, if the same drawing were used in a non-profit school to teach
- children to draw, then this factor would be in favor of finding a fair
- use. Most situations are somewhere in between. That is, a use might not
- be commercial, but it's not necessarily non-profit educational, either.
-
- Note, though, that the statute does not command this "commercial/non-
- profit educational" balance, and not all courts use it, at least not by
- itself. Commercial use might be forgiven if the use is characterized as
- a "productive" or "transformative" use, i.e., a use of the material that
- interprets or otherwise adds value to the material taken from the
- copyrighted work. See Consumers Union v. General Signal Corp., 724 F.2d
- 1044, 1047 (2nd Cir. 1983) (noting that the use of one of Consumer Report
- magazine's reviews of a vacuum cleaner in an advertisement was a fair
- use, in part because the purpose and character of the advertisement was
- in part to educate consumers). The Supreme Court has noted that the
- distinction between "productive" and "unproductive" uses is not wholly
- determinative, but is helpful in balancing the interests. Sony Corp. v.
- Universal City Studios, 464 U.S. 417, 451 n.40 (1983).
-
- (2) The nature of the copyrighted work: If the work being used is one
- that is factual or functional in nature, then that's a point in favor of
- use of that work being a fair use. That's because copyright isn't
- available for facts themselves, and the courts recognize that it's kind
- of dumb to force someone with a newspaper clipping to completely rewrite
- it to avoid infringement (besides, a paraphrase is still an infringement,
- because it qualifies as creating a derivative work, even if it's not a
- direct copy). If the work is a fictional or artistic one, though, taking
- the work is taking much more than any underlying facts. A fictional or
- artistic work is more expressive than a factual one, so the copyright
- (which is designed to protect expression) is stronger. Even in factual
- works, however, where the portion used includes subjective descriptions
- whose power lies in the author's individualized expression, this factor
- might go against a finding of fair use, if the use exceeds that necessary
- to disseminate the facts. See Harper and Row v. Nation Enterprises, 471
- U.S. 539 (1985) (finding no fair use for infringement of former U.S.
- President Ford's memoirs despite its factual content).
-
- Another point that's often examined in looking at the nature of the
- copyrighted work is whether the work has been published. Courts will
- generally consider a use of an unpublished work as more likely to
- infringe than a similar use of a published work. Harper and Row v.
- Nation Enterprises, 471 U.S. 539, 564 (1985). This is for two reasons.
- First, the first publication is often the most valuable to the copyright
- holder. Second, it affects the copyright holder's ability to choose not
- to publish the work at all. See Salinger v. Random House, 811 F.2d 90,
- 97 (2nd Cir. 1987).
-
- As with the first factor, while the "fact/fiction" balance and
- "published/unpublished" balance are two of the most common, they are not
- commanded by the statute, which only requires considering the "nature of
- the copyrighted work." For example, in Sega v. Accolade, 977 F.2d 1510,
- 1525 (9th Cir., 1993), the Court of Appeals noted that the nature of most
- computer programs distributed in object code is that the functional (and
- therefore unprotected) elements cannot be discerned without disassembly.
- This supported the court's opinion that, in certain limited instances,
- disassembling of a competitor's product to find interface information
- that cannot be obtained in any other way is a fair use of the work,
- despite the fact that code disassembly necessarily involves making a copy
- of the copyrighted program.
-
- (3) The amount and substantiality of the portion used in relation to the
- copyrighted work as a whole: This appears simpler than it really is. On
- the face of it, it means that if you incorporate 95% of a copyrighted
- work into another work, it's a lot less likely to be a fair use than if
- you take only a small portion, say, 5%. And that's true. However,
- assessing this factor is a bit more complex than that simple statement.
- Even if only a small portion of the work is used, if that portion is
- "qualitatively substantial," e.g., if the portion used is essentially the
- heart of the work, that use will be deemed to have been "substantial,"
- and could go against a finding of fair use. See Harper and Row v. Nation
- Enterprises, 471 U.S. 539 (1985) (finding no fair use for infringement of
- former U.S. President Ford's memoirs, where the portion used (which
- described Ford's decision to pardon former President Nixon) included "the
- most interesting and moving parts of the entire manuscript"), and Roy
- Export Co. v. Columbia Broadcasting System, 503 F.Supp. 1137 (S.D.N.Y.
- 1980) (taking of 55 seconds out of 89-minute film deemed "qualitatively
- substantial").
-
- To confuse matters further, some courts have (probably erroneously)
- interpreted this factor by looking at what percentage of the work _using_
- the material is composed of material from the copyrighted work, rather
- than what percentage of the copyrighted work was used. See, e.g.,
- Association of American Medical Colleges v. Mikaelian, 571 F.Supp. 144
- (E.D. Pa, 1983), aff'd 734 F.2d 3 (3rd Cir., 1984), aff'd 734 F.2d 6 (3rd
- Cir., 1984). While this interpretation is probably erroneous, it's worth
- bearing in mind that, at least in one judge's courtroom in the Eastern
- District of Pennsylvania, that's how the statute will be interpreted.
-
- (4) The effect of the use upon the potential market for or value of the
- copyrighted work: The U.S. Supreme Court has stated that this factor is
- "undoubtedly the single most important element of fair use." Harper and
- Row v. Nation Enterprises, 471 U.S. 539 (1985). The late Professor
- Melville Nimmer, in his treatise on copyright law, paraphrased it, "Fair
- use, when properly applied, is limited to copying by others which does
- not materially impair the marketability of the work which is copied."
- Nimmer on Copyright, section 1.10[D]. If the use impacts the market for
- the work, the use is less likely to be held to be a fair use.
-
- Note also that the weighing is of the impact on the potential market, not
- on the actual market. For example, although Playboy magazine does not
- distribute its pictures in machine-readable form, it may choose to do so
- in the future. One might argue that digitizing a picture and posting it
- on the net does not impact the current market for the magazine originals.
- However, it impacts the potential (but currently non-existent) market for
- machine-readable copies. Because there is an impact on the potential
- market, an analysis of this factor in such a situation would not support
- a finding of fair use.
-
- If all this sounds like hopeless confusion, you're not too far off.
- Often, whether a use is a fair use is a very subjective conclusion. In
- the Harper and Row case cited above, for example, the Supreme Court was
- split 6-3. In the famous "Betamax case," Sony v. Universal City Studios,
- 464 U.S. 417 (1984) (in which the Supreme Court found that off-air non-
- archival videotaping of broadcast television was a fair use), the split
- was 5-4. In both of these cases, the District Court ruled one way (no
- fair use in Harper and Row, fair use in Sony) and was reversed by the
- Court of Appeals, which was then itself reversed by the Supreme Court.
- This goes to show that even well-educated jurists are capable of
- disagreeing on the application of this doctrine.
-
- 2.10) [reserved.]
-
- FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS ABOUT COPYRIGHT (V. 1.1.3)
- Part 3 - Common miscellaneous questions.
-
- Copyright 1994 Terry Carroll
- (c) 1994 Terry Carroll
-
- Last update: January 6, 1994.
-
- This article is the third in a series of six articles that contains
- frequently asked questions (FAQ) with answers relating to copyright law,
- particularly that of the United States. It is posted to the Usenet
- misc.legal, misc.legal.computing, misc.int-property, comp.patents,
- misc.answers, comp.answers, and news.answers newsgroups monthly, on or
- near the 17th of each month.
-
- This FAQ is available for anonymous FTP from rtfm.mit.edu [18.70.0.209],
- in directory /pub/usenet/news.answers/law/Copyright-FAQ, files part1 -
- part6. If you do not have direct access by FTP, you can obtain a copy
- via email: send a message to mail-server@rtfm.mit.edu with the following
- lines in it:
-
- send usenet/news.answers/law/Copyright-FAQ/part1
- send usenet/news.answers/law/Copyright-FAQ/part2
- send usenet/news.answers/law/Copyright-FAQ/part3
- send usenet/news.answers/law/Copyright-FAQ/part4
- send usenet/news.answers/law/Copyright-FAQ/part5
- send usenet/news.answers/law/Copyright-FAQ/part6
- quit
-
-
- DISCLAIMER - PLEASE READ.
-
- This article is Copyright 1994 by Terry Carroll. It may be freely
- redistributed in its entirety provided that this copyright notice is not
- removed. It may not be sold for profit or incorporated in commercial
- documents without the written permission of the copyright holder.
- Permission is expressly granted for this document to be made available
- for file transfer from installations offering unrestricted anonymous file
- transfer on the Internet. Permission is further granted for this
- document to be made available for file transfer in the data libraries of
- associated with the following Compuserve Information Services fora: the
- Legal Forum, the Desktop Publishing Forum, the Show Business Forum, and
- the Ideas, Invention & Innovation Forum. This article is provided as is
- without any express or implied warranty. Nothing in this article
- represents the views of Santa Clara University or of the Santa Clara
- Computer and High Technology Law Journal.
-
- While all information in this article is believed to be correct at the
- time of writing, this article is for educational purposes only and does
- not purport to provide legal advice. If you require legal advice, you
- should consult with a legal practitioner licensed to practice in your
- jurisdiction.
-
- Terry Carroll, the FAQ-maintainer, is a computer professional, and is
- currently (January 1994) a student in his final semester at Santa Clara
- University School of Law, is currently Editor-in-Chief of the Santa Clara
- Computer and High Technology Law Journal, and is seeking employment as an
- attorney.
-
- If you have any additions, corrections, or suggestions for improvement to
- this FAQ, please send them to one of the following addresses, in order of
- preference:
-
- 71550.133@compuserve.com
- tcarroll@scuacc.scu.edu
-
- I will accept suggestions for questions to be added to the FAQ, but
- please be aware that I will be more receptive to questions that are
- accompanied by answers. :-)
-
-
- FAQ ORGANIZATION.
-
- The following table indicates the contents of each of the parts of the
- FAQ.
-
- Part 1 - Introduction (including full table of contents).
- Part 2 - Copyright basics.
- Part 3 - Common miscellaneous questions.
- Part 4 - International aspects.
- Part 5 - Further copyright resources.
- Part 6 - Appendix: A note about legal citation form, or, "What's
- all this '17 U.S.C. 107' and '977 F.2d 1510' stuff?"
-
- TABLE OF CONTENTS (for this part).
-
- Part 3 - Common miscellaneous questions.
-
- 3.1) Who owns the copyright to something I wrote at work, me or my
- company?
- 3.2) [reserved.]
- 3.3) Is copyright infringement a crime, or a civil matter?
- 3.4) What is the statute of limitation for copyright infringement?
- 3.5) Can the government be sued for copyright infringement?
- 3.6) Can the government copyright its works?
- 3.7) Can I legally make a cassette copy of a musical CD for my own
- use, so I can play it in my car?
- 3.8) Are Usenet postings and email messages copyrighted?
- 3.9) Are fonts copyrighted?
- 3.10) What does "All Rights Reserved" mean?
- 3.11) What's the difference between a copyright and a patent?
- 3.12) Why is there so little in this FAQ about patents?
- 3.13 - 3.18) [reserved.]
-
-
- 3.1) Who owns the copyright to something I wrote at work, me or my
- company?
-
- That depends on a lot of things. Normally, you are the author of the
- work and own the copyright. There are two broad mechanisms by which your
- company may own the copyright, though: assignment and the work-made-for-
- hire doctrine.
-
- ASSIGNMENT: Even if you are the author, and therefore the copyright is
- initially yours, it may now belong to your company if you assigned the
- copyright to them. A full assignment of copyright must be in writing,
- and signed; it can't be implied. 17 U.S.C. 204. Therefore, if you're
- the author in a copyright sense, and did not assign the copyright to your
- company in writing, you still own it. Please note, however, that some
- companies make it a practice to acquire a blanket assignment of copyright
- in any works created on the job at time of hiring.
-
- Note, though, that even in the absence of a written contract, your
- actions might have been sufficient to grant the company an implied
- license to the work. For example, in the case of Effects Associates v.
- Cohen, 908 F.2d 555 (9th Cir., 1990), a film producer (Cohen) claimed
- that he owned copyright in special effects film footage depicting "great
- gobs of alien yogurt oozing out of a defunct factory." The footage was
- produced by Effects Associates, a special effects company, and there was
- no written assignment of copyright. The court ruled that Effects
- retained ownership of the copyright, but that Cohen had an implied
- license to use it in his horror film, "The Stuff," because Effects had
- "created the work at [Cohen's] request and handed it over, intending that
- [Cohen] copy and distribute it." Because the license was non-exclusive,
- it wasn't a complete transfer of copyright, and did not need to be in
- writing. Effects was free to sell the same footage to other moviemakers.
-
- WORK MADE FOR HIRE: If a work qualifies as a work made for hire, the
- company is the author for purposes of copyright, and copyright initially
- vests in the company. A work is a work made for hire under either of two
- circumstances. First, if it is a work prepared by an employee within the
- scope of employment. Second, if the work was specially commissioned, is
- one of a short list of relatively esoteric types (a contribution to a
- collective work, a part of a motion picture or other audiovisual work, a
- translation, a supplementary work, as a compilation, as an instructional
- text, a test, answer material for a test, or an atlas), and the parties
- agreed in writing that it was to be considered a work for hire. 17
- U.S.C. 101.
-
- To determine if a work is one prepared by an employee within the scope of
- employment, there are two important considerations.
-
- First, was the work prepared by an employee, or by an independent
- contractor? Several facts, such as whether taxes were withheld, who
- supervised the work, artistic control, setting of working hours, etc.,
- will be examined to determine this factor. A good case discussing these
- factors is CCNV v. Reid, 490 U.S. 730 (1989).
-
- The second consideration is whether the work was within the scope of the
- employment.
-
- Unless these two considerations are met, the work will not be considered
- one made for hire under the employee test, and the "employee" will retain
- copyright. Of course, the same considerations discussed above regarding
- an implied license might exist, even in cases where the work-made-for-
- hire doctrine does not apply.
-
-
- 3.2) [reserved.]
-
-
- 3.3) Is copyright infringement a crime, or a civil matter?
-
- It's always at least a civil matter (a tort). 17 U.S.C. 501(b) details
- the mechanisms by which an owner of a copyright may file a civil suit,
- and 28 U.S.C. 1338 expressly refers to civil actions arising under the
- copyright act.
-
- However, under certain circumstances, it may also be a federal crime. A
- copyright infringement is subject to criminal prosecution if infringement
- is willful and for purposes of commercial advantage or private financial
- gain. 17 U.S.C. 506(a). If the offense consists of the reproduction or
- distribution, during any 180-day period, of 10 or more copies having a
- retail value of more than $2,500, the offense is a felony; otherwise, the
- offense is a misdemeanor. 18 U.S.C. 2319.
-
- As a side note, although 18 U.S.C. 2319 purports to prescribe the
- penalties for criminal infringement, all crimes covered by Title 18 have
- their penalties determined by the U.S. Sentencing Guidelines, another
- part of Title 18.
-
-
- 3.4) What is the statute of limitation for copyright infringement?
-
- For both civil suits and criminal prosecutions, the statute of
- limitations for copyright infringement is three years. 17 U.S.C. 507.
-
-
- 3.5) Can the government be sued for copyright infringement?
-
- Yes. The United States has expressly waived its immunity to suit for
- copyright infringement. 28 U.S.C. 1498.
-
- For some time, it was unclear whether the Eleventh Amendment of the U.S.
- Constitution operated to make a state immune from suit for copyright
- infringement. In BV Engineering v. University of California at Los
- Angeles, 858 F.2d 1394 (9th Cir., 1988), UCLA successfully defended a
- copyright infringement suit on the ground that it had such immunity.
- Although UCLA won that suit, Congress responded by passing the Copyright
- Remedy Clarification Act, PL 101-553, in 1990. This law added section
- 511 to the Copyright Act, which had the effect of removing the immunity
- defense. It became effective June 1, 1991.
-
- Today the law is very clear: the United States government and the
- governments of each state may be sued for copyright infringement, and may
- not plead immunity as a defense.
-
-
- 3.6) Can the government copyright its works?
-
- This one has to be taken slowly, and we'll look at federal and state
- governments separately, because the rules are different.
-
- With one exception, works of the United States government are public
- domain. 17 U.S.C. 105. The only exception is for standard reference
- data produced by the U.S. Secretary of Commerce under the Standard
- Reference Data Act, 15 U.S.C. 290e.
-
- However, there's a big loophole here: while the U.S government can't get
- copyright for its own works, it can have an existing copyright assigned
- to it. So if the U.S. government produces a work, it's not copyrighted.
- But if an independent contractor working for the government produces a
- work, it is copyrighted, and nothing prevents that contractor from
- assigning the copyright back to the government. This reconciles the fact
- that the U.S. government can't copyright its works with the fact that if
- you stay up late on weekends, you'll see Public Service Announcements
- against drunk driving that say "Copyright U.S. Department of
- Transportation."
-
- Also, there are some entities that might seem to be part of the U.S.
- government, but are not. For example, the U.S. Postal Service is no
- longer a branch of the U.S. government. In addition, while under U.S.
- control, the District of Columbia, Puerto Rico, and organized territories
- of the U.S. are not considered to be part of the U.S. government for
- purposes of copyright law.
-
- Whether a state can copyright its works is a different matter. Unlike
- the U.S. government, a state government's works are subject to copyright.
- It is up to each state to decide whether to retain the copyright or
- whether such works are to be automatically made public domain.
-
- A related question that sometimes comes up is whether a government may
- copyright its laws. In the case of the federal government, because of
- the factors discussed above, the answer is clearly that it cannot. With
- state governments, it's a little less clear. There is no statute, case,
- or regulation that indicates that a state cannot copyright its laws.
- However, it is the position of the U.S. Copyright Office that a state's
- laws may not be copyrighted. The Compendium of Copyright Office
- Practices (Compendium II) section 206.01 states, "Edicts of government,
- such as judicial opinions, administrative rulings, legislative
- enactments, public ordinances, and similar official legal documents are
- not copyrightable for reasons of public policy. This applies to such
- works whether they are Federal, State, or local as well as to those of
- foreign governments."
-
- Now, the Compendium II does not have force of law. But this does
- indicate that any state trying to register a copyright in its laws would
- be refused registration by the Copyright Office. As a result, it would
- either have to successfully sue the Office to force registration, or it
- would bear the burden of establishing that its work was indeed
- copyrighted in the event of an infringement suit (normally, a
- registration fulfills that burden). It's a safe bet that any state or
- city trying to assert a copyright in its laws would have an uphill battle
- ahead of it.
-
-
- 3.7) Can I legally make a cassette copy of a musical CD for my own use,
- so I can play it in my car?
-
- This issue has been argued back and forth for many years, with consumers
- groups arguing that this was a fair use (see sections 2.8 and 2.9), and
- the recording industry arguing that it was not. The issue was finally
- settled by Congress when the Audio Home Recording Act (AHRA) (P.L. 102-
- 563, 106 Stat. 4237, codified at 17 U.S.C. 1001 - 1010) was passed in
- October 1992. This Act added ten sections to Title 17, one of which
- provided an alternative to the fair use analysis for musical recordings.
- The new section states:
-
- No action may be brought under this title alleging infringement
- of copyright based on the manufacture, importation, or
- distribution of a digital audio recording device, a digital
- audio recording medium, an analog recording device, or an
- analog recording medium, or based on the noncommercial use by a
- consumer of such a device or medium for making digital musical
- recordings or analog musical recordings.
-
- 17 U.S.C. 1008.
-
- As the legislative history to this statute noted, "In short, the reported
- legislation would clearly establish that consumers cannot be sued for
- making analog or digital audio copies for private noncommercial use."
- H.R. Rep. 102-780(I).
-
- Does this mean you can make copies for your family and friends, as long
- as it's not "commercial?" A strict reading of the words in the statute
- would seem to say that you may. This is not as outrageous as it sounds.
- Part of the impetus behind the AHRA was the perception that blank tapes
- were being used mostly to copy commercial musical sound recordings. As a
- result, the AHRA provided that a royalty payment (referred to as a "DAT
- tax" by its detractors) be paid for each sale of digital audio tape to
- compensate authors of musical works and sound recordings for the profits
- lost due to these copies. See 17 U.S.C. 1003, 1004. Arguably, the AHRA
- anticipates and allows exactly this type of copying, and a literal
- reading of section 1008 would tend to support this position. But the
- AHRA is still sufficiently new this hasn't been tested in court yet.
-
- Note, also, that this section applies only to musical recordings; it
- clearly does not include spoken word recordings. Of course, it is still
- possible that such a use of a spoken word recording might still be
- considered a section 107 fair use (see sections 2.8 and 2.9), even though
- section 1008 does not apply to provide a clear exemption.
-
-
- 3.8) Are Usenet postings and email messages copyrighted?
-
- Almost certainly. They meet the requirement of being original works of
- authorship fixed in a tangible medium of expression (see section 2.3).
- They haven't been put in the public domain; generally, only an expiration
- of copyright or an unambiguous declaration by an author is sufficient to
- place a work into public domain.
-
- However, at least with Usenet postings, there are two doctrines which
- probably allow at least some copying: fair use (see sections 2.8 and 2.9)
- and implied license.
-
- Whether a particular use of a Usenet posting is a fair use is, as always,
- a very fact-specific determination. However, it's probably safe to say
- that it's a fair use if the use was not commercial in nature, the posting
- was not an artistic or dramatic work (e.g.,, it was the writer's opinion,
- or a declaration of facts, and not something like a poem or short story),
- only as much of the posting was copied as was necessary (e.g., a short
- quotation for purposes of criticism and comment), and there was little or
- no impact on any market for the posting.
-
- A similar argument can be made for quoting of private email messages. Of
- course, revealing the contents of a private email message could run afoul
- of any of a number of non-copyright laws: defamation, invasion of
- privacy, and trade secrecy, to name a few. So even if you won't be
- violating any copyright laws, you should consider other factors that may
- expose you to legal liability before revealing a private message's
- contents.
-
- Proponents of the implied license idea point out that Usenet postings are
- routinely copied and quoted, and anyone posting to Usenet is granting an
- implied license for others to similarly copy or quote that posting, too.
- It's not clear whether such implied license extends beyond Usenet, or
- indeed, what "Usenet" really means (does it include, for example,
- Internet mailing lists? Does it include netnews on CD-ROM?). If a
- posting includes an express limitation on the right to copy or quote,
- it's not at all certain whether the express limitation or the implied
- license will control. No doubt it depends on the specific facts. For
- example, was the limitation clearly visible to the person who did the
- copying? Was the limitation placed such that it would be visible only
- after the person who did the copying invested time and money to get the
- posting, believing it to be without any limitation?
-
- With private email messages, a copier who relies solely on the implied
- license argument will probably lose, since it's hard to argue that by
- sending the private message to a limited audience, the sender intended
- for it to be copied and quoted. For email messages to a public mailing
- list, the implied license argument may still be sound.
-
- These theories are largely speculative, because there has been little
- litigation to test them in the courts. As a practical matter, most
- postings, with a small number of notable exceptions, are not registered
- with the Copyright Office. As such, to prevail in court, the copyright
- holder would need to show actual damages (see section 2.5). Since most
- of these cases will result in little or no actual damage, no cases have
- been be brought; it's simply too expensive to sue for negligible damages.
-
-
- 3.9) Are fonts copyrighted?
-
- First, let's distinguish between a font and a typeface. A typeface is
- the scheme of letterforms (which is really what you're probably talking
- about), and the font is the computer file or program (or for that matter,
- a chunk of metal) which physically embodies the typeface.
-
- A font may be the proper subject of copyright, but the generally accepted
- rule is that a typeface embodied in the font is not (see Eltra Corp. v.
- Ringer, 579 F.2d 294, 208 U.S.P.Q. 1 (4th Cir., 1978), and the House of
- Representatives Report on the Copyright Law Revision, 94-1476, 94th
- Congress, 2d Session at 55 (1976), reprinted in 1978 U.S. Cong. and
- Admin. News 5659, 5668).
-
- The letterforms themselves are not copyrightable under U.S. law as a
- typeface. 37 CFR 202.1(e). A font is copyrightable if it adds some
- level of protectable expression to the typeface, but that protection does
- not extend to the underlying uncopyrightable typeface itself (see 17
- U.S.C. 102(b)).
-
- In essence, a font will be protectable only if it rises to the level of a
- computer program. Truetype and other scalable fonts will therefore be
- protected as computer programs, a particular species of literary works.
- Bitmapped fonts are not copyrightable, because in the opinion of the
- Copyright Office, the bitmap does not add the requisite level of
- originality to satisfy the requirement for copyright.
-
- So, to summarize this point, a typeface is not copyrightable. While a
- scalable font might be copyrightable as a program, merely copied the
- uncopyrightable typeface, and creating your own font, either scalable or
- bitmapped, is probably not an infringement, assuming you did not copy any
- of the scalable font's code.
-
- Two warnings:
-
- First, even if typefaces can't be copyrighted, they can be patented under
- existing design patent laws. 35 U.S.C. 171. Copying a typeface and
- distributing such a font, while not a violation of copyright, might be an
- infringement of the patent.
-
- Second, Congress has been considering design protection legislation for
- many years (most recently, the 102nd Congress' H.R. 1790) which, if
- passed, would protect typeface design. If such a bill is enacted, the
- above opinion will be obsolete and incorrect.
-
-
- 3.10) What does "All Rights Reserved" mean?
-
- One of the earliest international copyright treaties to which the U.S.
- was a member was the 1911 Buenos Aires Convention on Literary and
- Artistic Copyrights (see section 4.1 for more information). This treaty
- provided that, once copyright was obtained for a work in one signatory
- country, all other signatories accorded protection as well without
- requiring any further formalities (i.e., notice or registration),
- provided that the work contained a notice reserving these rights. The
- typical notice complying with Buenos Aires was "All Rights Reserved."
-
- As noted in section 4.1, the Buenos Aires Convention is essentially dead
- today, and the "All Rights Reserved" notice no longer serves much useful
- purpose. It lives on mostly as a testament to inertia on the part of
- U.S. publishers.
-
-
- 3.11) What's the difference between a copyright and a patent?
-
- This answer is included in both the Copyright and Patents FAQs.
-
- There are basically five major legal differences between a copyright and
- a patent in the United States: subject matter protected, requirement for
- protection, when protection begins, duration, and infringement. There's
- also a sixth practical one: cost.
-
- Subject matter: A copyright covers "works of authorship," which
- essentially means literary, dramatic, and musical works, pictorial,
- graphic, and sculptural works, audio-visual works, sound recordings,
- pantomimes and choreography. A patent covers an invention, which
- essentially means a new and non-obvious useful and functional feature of
- a product or process.
-
- Requirement for protection: In order for a work to be copyrighted, it
- must be original and fixed in a tangible medium of expression; no
- formalities are required (see section 2.3). In order for an invention to
- be patented, it must be novel (i.e., new), non-obvious, and useful and a
- patent must be issued by the United States Patent and Trademark Office.
-
- Start of protection: Copyright protection begins as soon as a work is
- created. Patent protection does not begin until the patent is issued.
-
- Duration: A copyright generally lasts for the life of the author, plus 50
- years (see section 2.4). In the U.S., a patent lasts for 17 years from
- the date granted (in some nations, particularly Japan and most European
- nations, the duration is 20 years, and is measured from date of
- application).
-
- Infringement: For a copyright to be infringed, the work itself must have
- actually been copied from (either wholly or to create a derivative work),
- distributed, performed, or displayed. If a person other than the
- copyright owner independently comes up with the same or a similar work,
- there is no infringement. In contrast, a patent confers a statutory
- monopoly that prevents anyone other than the patent holder from making,
- using, or selling the patented invention. This is true even if that
- person independently invents the patented invention.
-
- Cost: A copyright is essentially free. Even if you want to register the
- copyright, the cost is only $20, and the paperwork is much less
- complicated than the 1040A short form for filing your income tax, well
- within the capabilities of the person registering the copyright. A
- patent, on the other hand, is much more costly; there are fees to the
- Patent and Trademark Office, and the patent application process is much
- more complex, usually requiring the services of a registered patent agent
- (and perhaps a lawyer) to draft and prosecute the application, adding to
- the cost.
-
- Philosophically, you can look at a copyright as protecting the author's
- rights that are inherent in the work; in contrast, a patent is a reward
- of a statutory monopoly to an inventor in exchange for providing the
- details of the invention to the public.
-
-
- 3.12) Why is there so little in this FAQ about patents?
-
- Peter Treloar, the moderator of comp.patents, currently maintains a FAQ
- devoted exclusively to patents, and duplicating his effort here would be
- needlessly redundant.
-
- The comp.patents FAQ is periodically posted to the Usenet comp.patents
- newsgroup. A current copy is available by anonymous FTP from
- ftp.su.oz.au, in directory /pub/patents/incoming, and from
- ftp.uni-stuttgart.de [129.69.8.13], in directory /pub/doc/comp.patents.
-
- The comp.patents FAQ (or "The Internet Patent Book") is available in two
- versions. The file named "internet_patents.txt" is a plain ascii text;
- "internet_patents.ps" is a PostScript version. The PostScript version is
- by far the more readable of the two.
-
- For further information regarding the comp.patents FAQ, please correspond
- with Peter directly, at pjt@research.canon.oz.au.
-
-
- 3.13 - 3.18) [reserved.]
- FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS ABOUT COPYRIGHT (V. 1.1.3)
- Part 4 - International aspects.
-
- Copyright 1994 Terry Carroll
- (c) 1994 Terry Carroll
-
- Last update: January 6, 1994.
-
- This article is the fourth in a series of six articles that contains
- frequently asked questions (FAQ) with answers relating to copyright law,
- particularly that of the United States. It is posted to the Usenet
- misc.legal, misc.legal.computing, misc.int-property, comp.patents,
- misc.answers, comp.answers, and news.answers newsgroups monthly, on or
- near the 17th of each month.
-
- This FAQ is available for anonymous FTP from rtfm.mit.edu [18.70.0.209],
- in directory /pub/usenet/news.answers/law/Copyright-FAQ, files part1 -
- part6. If you do not have direct access by FTP, you can obtain a copy
- via email: send a message to mail-server@rtfm.mit.edu with the following
- lines in it:
-
- send usenet/news.answers/law/Copyright-FAQ/part1
- send usenet/news.answers/law/Copyright-FAQ/part2
- send usenet/news.answers/law/Copyright-FAQ/part3
- send usenet/news.answers/law/Copyright-FAQ/part4
- send usenet/news.answers/law/Copyright-FAQ/part5
- send usenet/news.answers/law/Copyright-FAQ/part6
- quit
-
-
- DISCLAIMER - PLEASE READ.
-
- This article is Copyright 1994 by Terry Carroll. It may be freely
- redistributed in its entirety provided that this copyright notice is not
- removed. It may not be sold for profit or incorporated in commercial
- documents without the written permission of the copyright holder.
- Permission is expressly granted for this document to be made available
- for file transfer from installations offering unrestricted anonymous file
- transfer on the Internet. Permission is further granted for this
- document to be made available for file transfer in the data libraries of
- associated with the following Compuserve Information Services fora: the
- Legal Forum, the Desktop Publishing Forum, the Show Business Forum, and
- the Ideas, Invention & Innovation Forum. This article is provided as is
- without any express or implied warranty. Nothing in this article
- represents the views of Santa Clara University or of the Santa Clara
- Computer and High Technology Law Journal.
-
- While all information in this article is believed to be correct at the
- time of writing, this article is for educational purposes only and does
- not purport to provide legal advice. If you require legal advice, you
- should consult with a legal practitioner licensed to practice in your
- jurisdiction.
-
- Terry Carroll, the FAQ-maintainer, is a computer professional, and is
- currently (January 1994) a student in his final semester at Santa Clara
- University School of Law, is currently Editor-in-Chief of the Santa Clara
- Computer and High Technology Law Journal, and is seeking employment as an
- attorney.
-
- If you have any additions, corrections, or suggestions for improvement to
- this FAQ, please send them to one of the following addresses, in order of
- preference:
-
- 71550.133@compuserve.com
- tcarroll@scuacc.scu.edu
-
- I will accept suggestions for questions to be added to the FAQ, but
- please be aware that I will be more receptive to questions that are
- accompanied by answers. :-)
-
-
- FAQ ORGANIZATION.
-
- The following table indicates the contents of each of the parts of the
- FAQ.
-
- Part 1 - Introduction (including full table of contents).
- Part 2 - Copyright basics.
- Part 3 - Common miscellaneous questions.
- Part 4 - International aspects.
- Part 5 - Further copyright resources.
- Part 6 - Appendix: A note about legal citation form, or, "What's
- all this '17 U.S.C. 107' and '977 F.2d 1510' stuff?"
-
- TABLE OF CONTENTS (for this part).
-
- Part 4 - International aspects.
-
- 4.1) What international treaties exist governing copyright, or
- "What is this Berne Convention I keep hearing about?"
- 4.2) Is Freedonia a signatory to either the Berne Convention or to
- the Universal Copyright Convention?
-
-
- 4.1) What international treaties exist governing copyright, or "What is
- this Berne Convention I keep hearing about?"
-
- The two major treaties governing copyright are the Berne Convention (U.S.
- Senate Treaty Doc. 99-27, KAV 2245, 1 B.D.I.E.L. 715; also reprinted at
- 17 U.S.C.A. 104). and the Universal Copyright Convention (U.C.C.), (25
- U.S.T. 1341, T.I.A.S. 7868, 1 B.D.I.E.L. 813 (1971 Paris text); and 6
- U.S.T. 2731, T.I.A.S. 3324, 216 U.N.T.S. 132 (1952 Geneva text)). (Note:
- the abbreviation U.C.C. to denote the Universal Copyright Convention
- should not be confused with the same abbreviation to denote the Uniform
- Commercial Code.)
-
- The Berne Convention for the Protection of Literary and Artistic Works
- was established in 1886 in Berne, Switzerland. The text has been
- revised, and the current edition (and the one to which the United States
- and most other nations are a signatory) is the 1971 Paris text. The
- treaty is administered by the World Intellectual Property Organization
- (WIPO), an international organization headquartered in Geneva,
- Switzerland.
-
- The Berne Convention has four main points: National treatment,
- preclusion of formalities, minimum terms of protection, and minimum
- exclusive rights.
-
- National treatment: Under Berne, an author's rights are respected in
- another country as though the author were a national (citizen) of that
- country (Art. 5(1)). For example, works by U.S. authors are protected by
- French copyright in France, and vice versa, because both the U.S. and
- France are signatories to Berne.
-
- Preclusion of formalities: Under Berne, copyright cannot be dependent on
- formalities such as registration or copyright notice (Art. 5(2)).
- However, as noted in sections 2.5 and 2.7, this provision apparently does
- not prevent a member nation from taking adherence to formalities into
- account when determining what remedies apply.
-
- Minimum terms of protection: Under Berne, the minimum duration for
- copyright protection is the life of the author plus 50 years (Art. 7(1)).
- Signatory nations may have provide longer durations if they so choose.
-
- Minimum exclusive rights: Under Berne, a nation must provide for
- protection of six rights: translation (Art. 8(1)), reproduction (Art.
- 9(1)), public performance (Art. 11(1), and Art. 11ter), adaptation (Art.
- 12), paternity (Art. 6bis(1)) and integrity (Art. 6bis(1)). In certain
- of these areas, U.S. copyright law does not quite align with Berne. For
- example, Berne requires that the paternity and integrity rights endure
- for the same term as the other rights (Art. 6bis(2)), while in the U.S.,
- those rights terminate at the death of the author (17 U.S.C. 106A(e)).
- The two have been reconciled by the premise that other sources of federal
- law, such as trademark, combined with the trademark, unfair competition,
- and defamation laws of the individual states, satisfy these requirements.
-
- The Universal Copyright Convention was originally written in 1952 in
- Geneva. It became effective in 1955. Like the Berne Convention, the
- text has been revised. As with the Berne Convention, the most recent
- revision was in Paris in 1971. The United States is party to both the
- 1952 Geneva text and the 1971 Paris text. The U.C.C. is administered by
- UNESCO, a United Nations agency.
-
- Like Berne, the UCC requires national treatment for authors. However,
- the UCC differs from Berne in four material ways. First, the UCC permits
- (but does not require) member states to require formalities such as
- copyright notice and registration as a condition of copyright (Art. III).
- Second, copyright duration must be until least 25 years after the
- author's death or after the first publication, depending on whether a
- nation calculates duration based on the author's life or on publication
- (Art. IV). Third, the UCC's provisions on minimum rights are
- considerably less demanding than Berne's; the UCC demands recognition
- only of the rights to reproduce, adapt, and to publicly perform or
- broadcast the work. Furthermore, the UCC expressly permits a nation to
- make exceptions to these rights, as long as the exceptions do not
- conflict with the spirit of the treaty (Art. IVbis). Fourth and finally,
- the UCC recognizes the Berne Convention, and includes language so that,
- between two nations which are signatories to both Berne and the UCC, the
- Berne Convention controls and the UCC does not apply. Furthermore, if a
- nation is a signatory to both conventions, and withdraws from Berne, it
- will not be protected by the UCC (Art. XVII and Appendix). These
- provisions were added by nations fearing that creation of the UCC in 1955
- would undermine the already existing Berne Convention.
-
- The United States was the primary mover behind the creation of the
- U.C.C., because the formalities that existed in U.S. copyright law at
- that time did not permit adherence to Berne. With the U.S. joining
- Berne, and consequently abandoning the formalities that were the driving
- force behind the U.C.C., the significance of the U.C.C. is waning.
-
- In addition to Berne and the UCC, other copyright treaties include the
- 1971 Geneva Convention for the Protection of Producers of Phonograms
- Against Unauthorized Duplication of Their Phonograms (25 U.S.T. 309,
- T.I.A.S. 7808, 888 U.N.T.S. 67), the 1984 Brussels Convention Relating to
- the Distribution of Programme-Carrying Signals Transmitted by Satellite
- (T.I.A.S. 11078), and the 1911 Buenos Aires Convention on Literary and
- Artistic Copyrights (38 Stat. 1785, T.S. 593, 1 Bevans 758), which
- regulated copyright in the Americas. The U.S. did not sign the Buenos
- Aires Convention when it was revised in 1948, and all of its signatories
- are now also signatories to either or both of Berne or the UCC. The
- Buenos Aires Convention is now essentially a dead letter in international
- copyright law.
-
- The texts of both versions of the U.C.C., the Buenos Aires Convention,
- and the Geneva Convention, are in Circular 38c, "International Copyright
- Conventions," available from the Copyright Office (see section 5.1).
- Texts of the Berne Convention and the U.C.C. are available by anonymous
- FTP from the Multilaterals Project (see section 5.2).
-
-
- 4.2) Is Freedonia a signatory to either the Berne Convention or to the
- Universal Copyright Convention?
-
- The answer in section 4.1 is generally almost always followed by a query
- as to whether a specific country has signed one or more of the
- conventions, so the following lists provide that information.
-
- This data comes from the January 1992 edition (the most current) of
- Treaties In Force, with some supplemental information as noted. Each
- list indicates only that the nations listed have signed the convention.
- It does not indicate whether a particular nation has also signed one or
- more of the optional protocols associated with the convention. For
- example, Protocol 1 of the U.C.C. establishes that stateless persons are
- to be considered nationals of the nation within which they reside for
- purposes of the convention; a number of nations have signed the U.C.C.,
- but have not signed that protocol. If you really want to get down to
- that level of detail, consult a current edition of Treaties In Force.
-
- If you're interested in knowing more detail about what copyright treaties
- are in effect between the U.S. and a particular nation, there is a table
- in the back of Treaties In Force containing an alphabetical list of
- countries, listing the copyright treaties (both unilateral and
- multilateral) to which it is a party with the U.S., including the dates
- on which each treaty entered into force. This table is also reproduced
- in the Copyright Office's Circular 38a, "International Copyright
- Relations of the United States," contains You can order it from the
- Copyright Office (see section 5.1). This circular is also included in
- Copyright Office information kit 100. A similar table is included as an
- appendix in the Nimmer treatise (see section 5.1).
-
- Note that, while the U.S.S.R. is listed as a signatory to the 1952 Geneva
- text of the U.C.C., the status of the former soviet states is unclear at
- this time. I've been told that Russia and some of the other newly
- independent states have announced that they will honor nearly all of the
- treaties of the former Soviet Union. Other states, for example, Estonia,
- Latvia, and Lithuania, take the position that they were never legally
- part of the Soviet Union, and that treaties entered into by the Soviet
- Union are totally irrelevant to their international obligations.
-
- In addition, I've been cited to an article entitled "Post-Soviet Law: The
- Case of Intellectual Property Law," by Peter Maggs (an attorney and
- professor at University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign) in the Harriman
- Institute Forum, Vol. 5, No. 3 (Nov. 1991), pp. 3-9. Professor Maggs
- reportedly concludes that, under international law, all newly independent
- states that were previously legitimate parts of the USSR (i.e., all
- except Estonia, Latvia, and Lithuania), remain bound by the UCC, although
- whether they actually have functional copyright protection is another
- matter altogether.
-
- Thank you to <marlen@sovam.com> for contacting Professor Maggs and
- providing me with most of the information in the preceding two
- paragraphs.
-
- In addition, in May 1993, the TASS news agency reported that Russia has
- enacted a new copyright law that is Berne-compliant, in preparation for
- an anticipated signing of the Berne Convention.
-
- The following nations are signatories to the Berne Convention (1971 Paris
- text): Argentina, Australia, Austria, the Bahamas, Barbados, Belgium,
- Benin (formerly Dahomey), Brazil, Bulgaria, Burkina Faso (formerly Upper
- Volta), Cameroon, Canada, the Central African Republic, Chad, Chile,
- Colombia, Congo, Costa Rica, Cote d'Ivoire (Ivory Coast), Cyprus,
- Czechoslovakia, Denmark, Ecuador, Egypt, Fiji, Finland, France, Gabon,
- Germany, Ghana, Greece, Guinea, Holy See (Vatican City), Honduras,
- Hungary, Iceland, India, Ireland, Israel, Italy, Japan, Lebanon, Lesotho,
- Liberia, Libya, Liechtenstein, Luxembourg, Madagascar (Malagasy
- Republic), Malawi, Malaysia, Mali, Malta, Mauritania, Mauritius, Mexico,
- Monaco, Morocco, the Netherlands, New Zealand, Niger, Norway, Pakistan,
- Peru, Philippines, Poland, Portugal, Romania, Rwanda, Senegal, South
- Africa, Spain, Sri Lanka (formerly Ceylon), Suriname, Sweden,
- Switzerland, Thailand, Togo, Trinidad and Tobago, Tunisia, Turkey, the
- United Kingdom, the United States, Uruguay, Venezuela, Yugoslavia, Zaire,
- and Zimbabwe. According to U.S. State Department Dispatches published
- since January 1992, additional nations to sign Berne include Gambia (Dec.
- 12, 1992), China (July 10, 1992) and Kenya (March 11, 1993).
-
- The following nations are signatories to the Universal Copyright
- Convention (1971 Paris text): Algeria, Australia, Austria, the Bahamas,
- Bangladesh, Barbados, Bolivia, Brazil, Bulgaria, Cameroon, Colombia,
- Costa Rica, Cyprus, Czechoslovakia, Denmark, the Dominican Republic,
- Ecuador, El Salvador, France, Germany, Grenada, Guinea, Hungary, Italy,
- Japan, Kenya, Korea, Mexico, Monaco, Morocco, the Netherlands, Norway,
- Panama, Poland, Portugal, St. Lucia, St, Vincent and the Grenadines,
- Senegal, Seychelles, Spain, Sri Lanka (formerly Ceylon), Sweden, Trinidad
- and Tobago, the United Kingdom, the United States, Vatican City, and
- Yugoslavia.
-
- The following nations are signatories to the Universal Copyright
- Convention (1952 Geneva text): Algeria, Andorra, Argentina, Australia,
- Austria, the Bahamas, Bangladesh, Barbados, Belgium, Belize, Bolivia,
- Brazil, Bulgaria, Cambodia, Cameroon, Canada, Chile, Colombia, Costa
- Rica, Cuba, Cyprus, Czechoslovakia, Denmark, the Dominican Republic,
- Ecuador, El Salvador, Fiji, Finland, France, Germany, Ghana, Greece,
- Grenada, Guatemala, Guinea, Guyana, Haiti, Holy See, Hungary, Iceland,
- India, Ireland, Israel, Italy, Japan, Kenya, Korea, Laos, Lebanon,
- Liberia, Liechtenstein, Luxembourg, Malawi, Malta, Mauritius, Mexico,
- Monaco, Morocco, the Netherlands, New Zealand, Nicaragua, Nigeria,
- Norway, Pakistan, Panama, Paraguay, Peru, Poland, Portugal, St. Lucia,
- St, Vincent and the Grenadines, Senegal, Seychelles, Spain, Sri Lanka
- (formerly Ceylon), Sweden, Switzerland, Tunisia, the Union of the Soviet
- Socialist Republics, the United Kingdom, the United States, Venezuela,
- Yugoslavia, and Zambia.
- FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS ABOUT COPYRIGHT (V. 1.1.3)
- Part 5 - Further copyright resources.
-
- Copyright 1994 Terry Carroll
- (c) 1994 Terry Carroll
-
- Last update: January 6, 1994.
-
- This article is the fifth in a series of six articles that contains
- frequently asked questions (FAQ) with answers relating to copyright law,
- particularly that of the United States. It is posted to the Usenet
- misc.legal, misc.legal.computing, misc.int-property, comp.patents,
- misc.answers, comp.answers, and news.answers newsgroups monthly, on or
- near the 17th of each month.
-
- This FAQ is available for anonymous FTP from rtfm.mit.edu [18.70.0.209],
- in directory /pub/usenet/news.answers/law/Copyright-FAQ, files part1 -
- part6. If you do not have direct access by FTP, you can obtain a copy
- via email: send a message to mail-server@rtfm.mit.edu with the following
- lines in it:
-
- send usenet/news.answers/law/Copyright-FAQ/part1
- send usenet/news.answers/law/Copyright-FAQ/part2
- send usenet/news.answers/law/Copyright-FAQ/part3
- send usenet/news.answers/law/Copyright-FAQ/part4
- send usenet/news.answers/law/Copyright-FAQ/part5
- send usenet/news.answers/law/Copyright-FAQ/part6
- quit
-
-
- DISCLAIMER - PLEASE READ.
-
- This article is Copyright 1994 by Terry Carroll. It may be freely
- redistributed in its entirety provided that this copyright notice is not
- removed. It may not be sold for profit or incorporated in commercial
- documents without the written permission of the copyright holder.
- Permission is expressly granted for this document to be made available
- for file transfer from installations offering unrestricted anonymous file
- transfer on the Internet. Permission is further granted for this
- document to be made available for file transfer in the data libraries of
- associated with the following Compuserve Information Services fora: the
- Legal Forum, the Desktop Publishing Forum, the Show Business Forum, and
- the Ideas, Invention & Innovation Forum. This article is provided as is
- without any express or implied warranty. Nothing in this article
- represents the views of Santa Clara University or of the Santa Clara
- Computer and High Technology Law Journal.
-
- While all information in this article is believed to be correct at the
- time of writing, this article is for educational purposes only and does
- not purport to provide legal advice. If you require legal advice, you
- should consult with a legal practitioner licensed to practice in your
- jurisdiction.
-
- Terry Carroll, the FAQ-maintainer, is a computer professional, and is
- currently (January 1994) a student in his final semester at Santa Clara
- University School of Law, is currently Editor-in-Chief of the Santa Clara
- Computer and High Technology Law Journal, and is seeking employment as an
- attorney.
-
- If you have any additions, corrections, or suggestions for improvement to
- this FAQ, please send them to one of the following addresses, in order of
- preference:
-
- 71550.133@compuserve.com
- tcarroll@scuacc.scu.edu
-
- I will accept suggestions for questions to be added to the FAQ, but
- please be aware that I will be more receptive to questions that are
- accompanied by answers. :-)
-
-
- FAQ ORGANIZATION.
-
- The following table indicates the contents of each of the parts of the
- FAQ.
-
- Part 1 - Introduction (including full table of contents).
- Part 2 - Copyright basics.
- Part 3 - Common miscellaneous questions.
- Part 4 - International aspects.
- Part 5 - Further copyright resources.
- Part 6 - Appendix: A note about legal citation form, or, "What's
- all this '17 U.S.C. 107' and '977 F.2d 1510' stuff?"
-
- TABLE OF CONTENTS (for this part).
-
- Part 5 - Further copyright resources.
-
- 5.1) Where can I get more information on copyright?
- 5.2) What materials related to copyright are available on the
- Internet?
-
-
- 5.1) Where can I get more information on copyright?
-
- The U.S. Copyright Office General Information Package 118 provides
- general information on copyright law. Copyright Office Circular 2,
- "Publications on Copyright," provides a complete list of publications
- relating to copyright which are available from the Copyright Office.
-
- These materials and many others may be ordered (generally free of charge)
- by calling the Copyright Office Hotline at 202-707-9100 and leaving a
- voice mail message. Call the Hotline only if you already know the number
- of the publication you want. If you don't know the publication number,
- the Copyright Office maintains a prerecorded information line at 202-707-
- 3000. This line provides an automatic voice mail attendant that provides
- information according to responses presented from a touch-tone keypad.
- Much of the information in section 2.6 was obtained from this information
- line.
-
- The book "Intellectual Property in a Nutshell," by Arthur R. Miller of
- Harvard Law School and Michael H. Davis of Cleveland-Marshall College of
- Law (West Publishing, 1990, ISBN 0-314-75738-4), provides a fine
- introduction not only to copyright law, but also to patent and trademark
- law. It's typically available from college or law school bookstores for
- about $15.
-
- The authoritative secondary source for information on copyright is the
- five-volume loose-leaf opus, "Nimmer on Copyright." Originally written
- and maintained by the late Professor Melville Nimmer and now maintained
- by his son, David Nimmer, this is the most respected source of copyright
- information, short of the texts of the statutes, regulations, and cases
- themselves. Nimmer is frequently cited by courts, including the U.S.
- Supreme Court, as an authority to justify their opinions. I've been
- surprised to find short essays on even the most obscure copyright
- questions (e.g., whether a food recipe is subject to copyright). I
- heartily recommend it as an initial source for research. It is, however,
- a bit dense for casual reading.
-
- Several readers have recommended L. Ray Patterson & Stanley W. Lindberg,
- "The Nature Of Copyright" (1991), ISBNs 0-8203-1362-9 (paperback) and 0-
- 8203-1347-5 (hardback). Patterson and Stanley reportedly argue for a
- broad interpretation of a user's rights in a work, and a more narrow
- interpretation of the right of the copyright holder. Be aware that this
- interpretation may or may not match the law of your jurisdiction.
-
- In preparing this FAQ, I consulted the casebook that was used in my
- Copyright class in Fall of 1991 at Santa Clara University School of Law:
- Joyce, Patry, Leaffer and Jaszi, "Copyright Law, Second Edition" (1991),
- ISBN 0-8205-0115-8. Like most casebooks, it contains edited versions of
- most of the landmark decisions in the law, including most of the cases
- that are cited in this FAQ. It's not for beginners, but it's well-
- written, and often contains illustrations of the works being discussed in
- the cases (a very useful feature, since copyright questions often turn on
- questions of similarity or originality that can only be determined by
- seeing the work). The book's best features are a good review of the
- history of copyright, an excellent description of the international
- treaties covering copyright, and a detailed bibliography at the end of
- each chapter. An unfortunate feature is the index, which is not the best
- organized, and often provides incorrect page numbers (perhaps because of
- the editors' hurry to include the Feist case that had been decided only a
- few months before the book was in stores).
-
- Nolo Press publishes two books on copyright for the lay reader: "The
- Copyright Handbook: How to Protect and Use Written Works," by Stephen
- Fishman, ISBN 0-87337-130-5 ($24.95) and "How to Copyright Software," by
- M.J. Salone, ISBN 0-87337-102-X ($39.95). My knowledge of these books is
- limited to the entries in the catalog, but Nolo Press generally enjoys an
- excellent reputation for publishing accurate and understandable books on
- law. Nolo's telephone number is (510) 549-1976.
-
-
- 5.2) What materials related to copyright are available on the Internet?
-
- The following is a list of materials relating to copyright that I have
- been able to verify are available on the Internet.
-
- STATUTES:
-
- - FATTY.LAW.CORNELL.EDU -
-
- Most portions of the current copyright law have been made available by
- Cornell University. To review the statute, enter the command
-
- telnet fatty.law.cornell.edu 8210
-
- and sign on with a user ID of "www." No password is necessary. This
- will allow you to use the World Wide Web software to navigate the
- copyright law. It also includes access to the Berne Convention.
-
- TREATIES:
-
- - THE MULTILATERALS PROJECT -
-
- The Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy maintains the Multilaterals
- Project, an anonymous ftp site with a number of multilateral treaties, at
- jade.tufts.edu. This archive includes versions of both the Berne
- Convention and the Universal Copyright Convention. The treaties are in
- directory /pub/diplomacy. The following files are of particular
- interest:
-
- README - A one-page description of the Multilaterals Project, by Peter
- Stott, its director.
-
- INDEX - An index of all the treaties and other documents available from
- the project.
-
- BH006-1971.txt - The 1971 Paris text of the Berne Convention for the
- Protection of Literary and Artistic Works.
-
- UNTS11850.txt - The 1967 Stockholm text of the Berne Convention for the
- Protection of Literary and Artistic Works. The United States is not a
- party to the this text.
-
- UNTS13444.txt - The 1971 Paris text of the Universal Copyright
- Convention.
-
- In addition, The Berne Convention may also be viewed via telnet to
- fatty.law.cornell.edu as noted above, under "STATUTES."
-
- OTHER RESOURCES:
-
- - THE CNI-COPYRIGHT MAILING LIST -
-
- The Coalition for Networked Information (CNI) sponsors CNI-Copyright, an
- Internet mailing list devoted to copyright issues. To join, send a
- message to LISTSERV@CNI.ORG with a single line of text in the body that
- says:
-
- SUBSCRIBE CNI-COPYRIGHT your name
-
- If that doesn't work, send a message to CRAIG@CNI.ORG (Craig Summerhill)
- and ask him to manually add you to the list. After joining, messages may
- be sent to the list at CNI-COPYRIGHT@CNI.ORG.
-
- Archives of the CNI-COPYRIGHT list are available and may be searched
- online via telnet. To access them, telnet to a.cni.org, login with the
- ID "brsuser" (no password is required), and follow the instructions
- presented. CNI-COPYRIGHT archives are in the COPY database.
-
- CNI is a not for profit corporation and is a joint project of the
- Association of Research Libraries (ARL), CAUSE, and EDUCOM. It promotes
- the creation of and access to information resources in networked
- environments in order to enrich scholarship and to enhance intellectual
- productivity.
-
- - COPYRIGHT GUIDE FOR PHOTOGRAPHERS -
-
- FTP site moink.nmsu.edu (128.123.4.58) has a repository, /pub/rec.photo,
- for files related to photography. Among the files contained in this
- directory is the Copyright Guide For Photographers, produced by the
- American Society of Media Photographers, Inc. While the Guide is
- particularly oriented towards photographers, much of the information it
- provides will be of use to anyone interested in copyright. The file
- asmp-copyright-guide is an ASCII version of this document. A TeX version
- is also available, in asmp-copyright-TeX.tar.z.
-
- - USENET NEWSGROUPS -
-
- There are several newsgroups that from time to time discuss copyright
- issues.
-
- misc.legal: the main newsgroup covering legal issues, including copyright
- law.
-
- misc.legal.moderated: A moderated analog to misc.legal, but moderated,
- and probably with a higher signal-to-noise ratio as a result.
-
- misc.int-property: Discussions of intellectual property; copyright,
- patent, trademark and trade secrecy, and their alternatives.
-
- misc.legal.computing: Legal issues related to computers. Copyright and
- patent issues predominate.
-
- comp.patents: Moderated newsgroup discussing issues related to computers
- and patents, including software patents. The newsgroup is moderated by
- patents-request@cs.su.oz.au (Peter Treloar). Please note that the focus
- of this group is more on patent law than copyright law.
-
- comp.software.licensing: Trends, practices, and techniques in software
- licensing.
-
- gnu.misc.discuss: Discussions in this group frequently include issues of
- software patents, copyright, and "copyleft."
-
- FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS ABOUT COPYRIGHT (V. 1.1.3)
- Part 6 - Appendix: A note about legal citation form, or, "What's all this
- '17 U.S.C. 107' and '977 F.2d 1510' stuff?"
-
- Copyright 1994 Terry Carroll
- (c) 1994 Terry Carroll
-
- Last update: January 6, 1994.
-
- This article is the last in a series of six articles that contains
- frequently asked questions (FAQ) with answers relating to copyright law,
- particularly that of the United States. It is posted to the Usenet
- misc.legal, misc.legal.computing, misc.int-property, comp.patents,
- misc.answers, comp.answers, and news.answers newsgroups monthly, on or
- near the 17th of each month.
-
- This FAQ is available for anonymous FTP from rtfm.mit.edu [18.70.0.209],
- in directory /pub/usenet/news.answers/law/Copyright-FAQ, files part1 -
- part6. If you do not have direct access by FTP, you can obtain a copy
- via email: send a message to mail-server@rtfm.mit.edu with the following
- lines in it:
-
- send usenet/news.answers/law/Copyright-FAQ/part1
- send usenet/news.answers/law/Copyright-FAQ/part2
- send usenet/news.answers/law/Copyright-FAQ/part3
- send usenet/news.answers/law/Copyright-FAQ/part4
- send usenet/news.answers/law/Copyright-FAQ/part5
- send usenet/news.answers/law/Copyright-FAQ/part6
- quit
-
-
- DISCLAIMER - PLEASE READ.
-
- This article is Copyright 1994 by Terry Carroll. It may be freely
- redistributed in its entirety provided that this copyright notice is not
- removed. It may not be sold for profit or incorporated in commercial
- documents without the written permission of the copyright holder.
- Permission is expressly granted for this document to be made available
- for file transfer from installations offering unrestricted anonymous file
- transfer on the Internet. Permission is further granted for this
- document to be made available for file transfer in the data libraries of
- associated with the following Compuserve Information Services fora: the
- Legal Forum, the Desktop Publishing Forum, the Show Business Forum, and
- the Ideas, Invention & Innovation Forum. This article is provided as is
- without any express or implied warranty. Nothing in this article
- represents the views of Santa Clara University or of the Santa Clara
- Computer and High Technology Law Journal.
-
- While all information in this article is believed to be correct at the
- time of writing, this article is for educational purposes only and does
- not purport to provide legal advice. If you require legal advice, you
- should consult with a legal practitioner licensed to practice in your
- jurisdiction.
-
- Terry Carroll, the FAQ-maintainer, is a computer professional, and is
- currently (January 1994) a student in his final semester at Santa Clara
- University School of Law, is currently Editor-in-Chief of the Santa Clara
- Computer and High Technology Law Journal, and is seeking employment as an
- attorney.
-
- If you have any additions, corrections, or suggestions for improvement to
- this FAQ, please send them to one of the following addresses, in order of
- preference:
-
- 71550.133@compuserve.com
- tcarroll@scuacc.scu.edu
-
- I will accept suggestions for questions to be added to the FAQ, but
- please be aware that I will be more receptive to questions that are
- accompanied by answers. :-)
-
-
- FAQ ORGANIZATION.
-
- The following table indicates the contents of each of the parts of the
- FAQ.
-
- Part 1 - Introduction (including full table of contents).
- Part 2 - Copyright basics.
- Part 3 - Common miscellaneous questions.
- Part 4 - International aspects.
- Part 5 - Further copyright resources.
- Part 6 - Appendix: A note about legal citation form, or, "What's
- all this '17 U.S.C. 107' and '977 F.2d 1510' stuff?"
-
- APPENDIX: A note about legal citation form, or, "What's all this '17
- U.S.C. 107' and.'977 F.2d 1510' stuff?"
-
- Citations to legal materials can be intimidating when first encountered.
- The purpose of this entry is to provide a short description of the legal
- citations used in this article to reduce that intimidation. It's not
- intended as a be-all and end-all to legal research, but just a way of
- letting you find the sources that are cited in this FAQ if you head to a
- law library. If you don't care about looking up any of the legal
- materials cited in this FAQ, you can skip this entry. On the other hand,
- if you find this interesting and would like more information, I recommend
- Mark Eckenwiler's Legal Research FAQ. This FAQ is archived at
- rtfm.mit.edu, directory /pub/usenet/news/answers/law/research, files
- part1 and part2. If you do not have direct access by FTP, you can obtain
- a copy via email: send a message to mail-server@rtfm.mit.edu with the
- following lines in it:
-
- send usenet/news.answers/law/research/part1
- send usenet/news.answers/law/research/part2
- quit
-
- Questions regarding the Legal Research FAQ should be directed to Mark at
- eck@panix.com.
-
- CASES: Cases are reported in books called "reporters." A reporter
- generally consists of a series of bound volumes. Often when the volume
- number becomes too high, the reporter publisher starts over with volume
- 1, designating the new set as a "second series," "third series," etc., as
- appropriate.
-
- Because copyright is almost entirely a matter of federal law, most (if
- not all) cases referenced in this FAQ are federal cases. The most common
- reporters (with their abbreviations shown in parentheses) are:
-
- United States Reports (U.S.) - This is the official reporter for cases
- from the United States Supreme Court. This is the standard reporter
- reference provided when referencing a Supreme Court case. If a case is
- especially recent, it may not yet be published in the U.S. Reports, in
- which case, the proper reference is to one of the unofficial reporters
- (either the Supreme Court Reporter or the Lawyers' Edition).
-
- The unofficial reporters are also cross-indexed by the U.S. Report's
- volume and page numbers, so that given a citation to a case in the U.S.
- Reports, you should be able to also find it in either of the unofficial
- reporters. The converse is not true: if, for example, you have a
- citation to the Supreme Court Reporter, you will not be able to find the
- case in the U.S. Reports. All law libraries carry a set of books called
- Shepard's Citations, which will permit you to cross-reference this way.
- See your law librarian for help using these intimidating-looking books.
-
- Supreme Court Reporter (S.Ct.) - This is an unofficial reporter published
- by West Publishing. It too reports cases from the United States Supreme
- Court. The advantages of this reporter is that it comes out more quickly
- than the official reporter, and also includes West's headnotes and case
- summaries.
-
- United States Supreme Court Reporter, Lawyers' Edition (L.Ed.) - This is
- another unofficial reporter, similar to the Supreme Court Reporter, but
- published by the Lawyers Cooperative Publishing Co. In addition to the
- advantages offered by the Supreme Court Reporter, it often includes short
- essays (called annotations) on points of law dealt with in a case.
-
- Federal Reporter (F.) - This is an unofficial reporter, published by
- West, that reports cases from the various United States Courts of Appeal.
- There is no official reporter for these cases, and the Federal Reporter
- de facto fills that role.
-
- Federal Supplement (F.Supp) - This is an unofficial reporter, published
- by West, that reports cases from the various United States District
- Courts (that is, from the courts of "original jurisdiction," where trials
- are originally held and often appealed to the higher courts). There is
- no official reporter for these cases, and the Federal Supplement de facto
- fills that role.
-
- United States Patent Quarterly (U.S.P.Q.) - This is a topical reporting
- service from the Bureau of National Affairs (BNA). It reports cases from
- various courts, but because it's a "topical reporter," it only reports
- cases dealing with a certain topic, in this case, intellectual property
- (despite its name, it's not limited to patent cases).
-
- This is only a very small subset of the reporters and services that
- report cases. For a more complete list, see "The Bluebook: A Uniform
- System of Citation, 15th Edition," in particular, tables T.1 (United
- States Jurisdictions), T.2 (Foreign Jurisdictions) and T.16 (Services).
-
- The standard way of referencing a case is in the format:
-
- case-name volume-number reporter [series, if applicable] page-number
- (jurisdiction, date)
-
- "Jurisdiction" is omitted for U.S. Supreme Court cases; the fact that the
- reporter is U.S., S.Ct., or L.Ed. is enough to show that it's a U.S.
- Supreme Court case. If two page numbers are included, the first page
- number is the page on which the case begins, and the second is the page
- that contains the particular point being referenced (called a "pinpoint
- cite" or "jump cite").
-
- Here is an example of a case citation:
-
- Sega v. Accolade, 977 F.2d 1510, 1520 (9th Cir., 1993).
-
- From this citation, we know that the parties in the case are Sega and
- Accolade; the case is reported in volume 977 (second series) of the
- Federal Reporter; the case begins on page 1510, but the particular point
- being referenced is on page 1520; the case was decided in the 9th Circuit
- Court of Appeals, in 1993.
-
- STATUTES: A federal statute is generally enacted as a "public law," and
- is assigned a P.L. number. This number indicates the Congress in which
- it was enacted, and the law number within the Congress. For example, the
- Copyright Act of 1976 was the 553rd law enacted by the 94th Congress, and
- so is officially catalogued as P.L. 94-553. If you know the P.L. number
- of a law, you can generally find it in the United States Code
- Congressional and Administrative News (U.S.C.C.A.N.), or in Statutes at
- Large (see below) easily.
-
- Once enacted, Public Laws are catalogued in a official statute list
- called "Statutes At Large." Citations to Statutes at Large ("Stat.") are
- similar to that for cases: volume, service identifier, and page number.
- For example, the Copyright Act of 1976 may be cited as 90 Stat 2541,
- meaning that it is in Statutes At Large, volume 90, page 2541.
-
- However, most statutes, as enacted, are not very useful to read. They're
- generally written in a style saying that a prior act is amended by adding
- certain words or phrases, and deleting others. Without seeing the
- context of the modified portion, you really can't see what the statute
- actually does.
-
- This problem is handled by statutory codifications. In particular, most
- U.S. laws are organized into "titles" of the U.S. Code (U.S.C.). Each
- title governs a particular area of law. For example, Title 17 deals with
- copyright law. These codifications are periodically updated by taking
- the original laws and applying the modifications made by subsequent laws
- so that the result is the text of the law as it is in effect today. In
- practice, almost every citation to law (including the majority of those
- in this FAQ) are to the U.S.C., not to the individual public laws.
-
- A typical citation to the U.S.C. looks like this: 17 U.S.C. 107. This is
- a reference to U.S. Code, Title 17, section 107 (which happens to be the
- fair use provisions of copyright).
-
- While there is an official U.S. Code published by the U.S. government,
- there are two commercially published versions of the code, too. These
- are West Publishing's U.S. Code Annotated (U.S.C.A.) and Lawyers
- Cooperative Publishing Co.'s U.S. Code Service (U.S.C.S.). In practice,
- because of the private versions are frequently updated, and contain
- extras such as cross-references to other statutes, cases, law review
- articles and other resources, they are used far more frequently than the
- official U.S.C.
-
- REGULATIONS: In addition to statutes passed by Congress, law also comes
- in the form of regulations promulgated by the various federal agencies.
- In the case of copyright, the regulations we're most interested in are
- those promulgated by the Copyright Office.
-
- Regulations become effective by publication of the regulation in the
- Federal Register (Fed. Reg.). Like statutes, they are then periodically
- codified, in this case in the Code of Federal Regulations (C.F.R.).
- Usually, regulations are cited to the C.F.R. for the same reason that
- statutes are usually cited to the U.S.C. However, the promulgation
- documents as published in the Federal Register include not only the
- regulation itself, but usually information justifying or explaining the
- regulation, so occasionally the Fed. Reg. citation is used.
-
- Here are some examples of citations to a regulation, in this case, to a
- regulation preventing registration of a copyright in a blank form:
-
- 45 Fed. Reg. 63297, 63299 (Sep. 24, 1980). (Federal Register volume 45,
- beginning on page 63297, with a pinpoint cite to page 63299.)
-
- 37 C.F.R. 202.1(c) (1992). (the same regulation, as codified in the
- C.F.R.)
-
- TREATIES: Treaties are compiled in several treaty sources. If the U.S.
- is a party, the treaty will generally be found in United States Treaties
- and Other International Agreements (U.S.T.) or Treaties and Other
- International Acts Series (T.I.A.S.). In some cases (especially with
- older treaties signed before the State Department took on their
- publication), they'll be in Statutes at Large; in some case (especially
- with important newer treaties not yet published by the State Department),
- they'll be in the private versions of the U.S. Code.
-
- If the U.S. is not a party, the treaty won't be in the above sources. It
- might be found the United Nations Treaty Series (U.N.T.S.) (or the League
- of Nations Treaty Series (L.N.T.S.) for older treaties), the Pan-American
- Treaty Series (Pan-Am. T.S.) or European Treaty Series (Europ. T.S.).
-
- In addition, treaties may be found in many unofficial compilations, e.g.,
- International Legal Materials (I.L.M.), Basic Documents of International
- Economic Law (B.D.I.E.L.), Bevans, and Kavass (KAV).
-
- This is only a small list of treaty sources. For more sources, see "The
- Bluebook: A Uniform System of Citation, 15th Edition," in particular,
- table T.4 (Treaty Sources).
-
- Generally, treaties are cited in the standard way: volume number,
- reporter, and page number (e.g., the Berne Convention is 1 B.D.I.E.L.
- 715). A few series (e.g., T.I.A.S. and Europ. T.S.) are cited by treaty
- number within the series, with no volume number specified.
-
- The document "Treaties In Force" lists all the treaties to which the U.S.
- is a party, and it lists all the other nations that are also a party.
- This is a good source to find out if a particular nation is a signatory
- to a particular treaty.
-
- One final note on treaties: In section 4.1, many citations to treaties
- look like typographical errors: "Art. 6bis" and "Art. 11ter," for
- example. Well, these aren't typos. "bis," "ter, and "quater" are
- suffixes derived from the French words for "second," "third," and
- "fourth," respectively These suffixes are used when a treaty has already
- been written, and a revision will insert a new article between already
- existing articles. This avoids the need to renumber the treaty articles,
- and so provides a consistency between multiple revisions of the treaties.
- For example, Article 6bis of the Berne Convention is an article that was
- inserted between Article 6 and Article 7 when the convention text was
- revised. (This is also the reason why some modems are advertised as
- supporting the V.32 protocol, while others support V.32bis, in case
- you've ever wondered.)
-