'One chapter is on the early 18th-century English cases from whence fair use arose, and the other chapter is on current international issues. The old English cases are both interesting and important for showing the boldness of the common law judges in forging the doctrine. I expect to expand the international chapter in the next edition given the increased importance of limitations and exceptions and the debates about the three-step test. The book will be updated once a year and will be reissued every year.'
Could those judges who were so bold in the early days of the Copyright Act 1709 (such as Lord Hardwicke, pictured here, who introduced the concept of 'fair abridgement' in 1740) have sliced through the Gordian knot of the 21st-century's copyright tangle?
1 comment:
Hi Hugo, thanks for the post. There are some contemporary judges who are bold, common law judges with fair use: in the U.S.: Posner and Leval. In Canada, the Chief Justice of the Supreme Court and a majority of others. Whether our U.S. Supreme Court would be so bold is an open question.
Post a Comment