"I was somewhat dismayed by the recent post on this weblog about FOCAL and Hubert Best. Hubert might claim to speak for libraries and archives, but he represents ones that are commercial in their operation and that are more accurately categorised as image libraries. The vast majority of libraries and archives in the UK are non-commercial and most are in the public sector. They might engage in a certain amount of commercial activity, to boost their funding, but the services they provide to the public are for the most part given free of charge. The interests of the bulk of the UK library and archival communities are thus very different from those of the small sector that Hubert and FOCAL represent. To suggest that Herbert represents the views of archives generally is extremely misleading; so far as I know, he is unknown to the Archives and Records Association, the professional body for archivists, or CILIP, the professional body for librarians.
Over the last 20 years or so, copyright has been significantly reformed, as the result of directives agreed by the EU. The direction has been consistently to strengthen rights and to lessen the freedom of users: copyright term has been extended, new rights have been introduced (rental and lending, communication to the public) and exceptions have been limited (for instance, fair dealing for research has been limited to non-commercial research). The balance that was created in the 1988 Act between the interests of rights owners and users has been tilted in favour of rights owners. There were no complaints from rights owners about the manner in which those reforms were introduced to UK law. Now governments in the UK and elsewhere have recognised that rights that are too strong restrain innovation: all creators are also users, and need some freedom to benefit from the works of others. And now that the reform is aimed at extending the exceptions and limitations we hear cries that what is being done or proposed is unconstitutional.
The Enterprise and Regulatory Reform Bill contains several measures that will assist most libraries and archives in the UK, even if only in a small way:
• It gives the Government the power to remove the absurd 2039 terms: all unpublished literary works, of any age (even from say the 16th century), are protected by copyright until 2039 at the earliest. This means that copyright is an issue that every archivist dealing with conventional materials (company and government files, private papers) has to understand, because almost all their written collections are in copyright. Harmonisation of copyright term to life plus 70 years in Europe gave rights owners extra years but that harmonisation should apply across the board, resulting in the ending of copyright for older works.The IPO is expected to make public soon its plans for reforms to exceptions and limitations, which will probably for the most part be the subject of regulations under the 1972 Act. Libraries and archives in the UK that are represented by LACA (FOCAL has never sought representation, though LACA does represent all types of public sector library as well as some private sector legal and commercial libraries) are hoping to see, among other things:
• It gives the Government power to amend exceptions by statutory instrument. The purpose of this provision has been clearly stated to be to allow criminal penalties to be raised. The Government already has similar powers under the European Communities Act 1972 and these were used to reform the exceptions in accordance with the Information Society Directive. It is notable that those regulations dealt with all changes to exceptions in a single instrument, and of course those changes were uniformly restrictive. Now that there is the prospect of regulations to extend exceptions we are told that the process is flawed and that every change must be the subject of a separate statutory instrument. You state in your blog: ‘FOCAL says that what this all means is that in the future important reforms to UK copyright law will be able to be made by a Minister without the need for either debate or indeed seek sanction by Parliament. As Hubert says, these are "huge powers" and should not be "handed over by Parliament to Ministerial Order" - in effect future copyright reforms could be made by a Minister at an time without the need for debate or vote in Parliament.’ This is nonsense and I am surprised that you published it. As a lawyer, Hubert should know better. Regulations under the new provision, just like the regulations already made or to be made in the future under the 1972 Act, are by the affirmative procedure, under which both Houses of Parliament must debate and vote on them. This takes a lot of Parliamentary time, and it seems unlikely that time could be spared for a succession of instruments when a single one can do the job and has done the job in the past.
• Extended collective licensing is a voluntary process: collecting societies and their members must decide that they would like to extend their collective licensing to non-members, they must demonstrate that they represent a substantial proportion of the rights owners in the field and they must allow people to opt out. As it happens, much conventional archival material is outside the scope of ECL because there is no-one to represent the relevant rights owners, for instance of copyright in private letters. It is likely to be of benefit to conventional libraries, including some large ones, that wish to digitise their holdings.
• The orphan works proposals are a licensing solution to the problem of orphan works. One would expect rights owners to find this more acceptable than the exceptions-based approach adopted for the recent Orphan Works Directive. It requires a diligent search for the rights owner of every work and so will not assist libraries or archives with their large-scale digitisation projects, but could assist researchers wishing to use a relatively small quantity of potentially orphan material.
• reform of the exception for preservation copying, permitting preservation copies of all kinds of work and permitting preservation copies to be made as required (for instance when digital files need to be migrated)
• reform of the exceptions for library and archive copying for users, permitting copies of all kinds of work to be made
• similar reform of fair dealing for private study and non-commercial research purposes; and
• extension of the definition of designated archives for the purposes of the preservation of folksongs".
In 1709 (or was it 1710?) the Statute of Anne created the first purpose-built copyright law. This blog, founded just 300 short and unextended years later, is dedicated to all things copyright, warts and all.
Tuesday, 18 December 2012
FOCAL, UK copyright reform and the public sector: a rsponse
A correspondent who wishes to preserve anonymity but who supports the Libraries and Archives Copyright Alliance (LACA) has taken issue with some of the comments made by Hubert Best (FOCAL) and reported a couple of days ago on Ben's post, "FOCAL re-warns archive owners on the dangers of giving ministers exceptional powers", here. Our correspondent writes:
Copyright law never ceases to amaze. I thought EU had harmonised the term of copyright in 1996, but now we hear that Britain still has perpetual copyright of unpublished works. Can you explain to us non-Brits how this works in practice. Who is the rights owner of a 16th century manuscript? What documentation is needed to prove ownershop?
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