As recently
reported, the city of Inglewood in California filed last March a copyright
infringement suit in the Central District of California against Joseph Teixeira,
one of its residents. The complaint
claims he “copied and distributed no less
than five of Plaintiff’s copyrighted works by making derivative works and
posting copies of the derivative works on the Internet without authorization.”
The case is City of Inglewood v. Joseph Teixeira, 2:15-cv-01815.
The “copyrighted works” at stake are videos of Council
meetings, and the allegedly infringing use is the making and publishing on
YouTube, under the name “Dehol Truth,” of six videos using footage of five
meetings to comment on topics related to the meeting or to Council members.
Defendant is heard in voice over, narrating his point of view on a particular
topic. Footage of the meetings sometimes cut to documents, such as a letter or
a statute, to further enhance the narrative. Defendant also added sometimes written
text over the images. The complaint states that Defendant “merely use[d] the [videos]
to get attention, generate income, and
avoid having to create Defendant’s own legitimate videos.”
Defendant moved to dismiss the case, claiming that Plaintiff
was precluded by California law from securing copyright protection in these
public records, and that, even if Plaintiff indeed owned the copyright for the
videos, their use by Defendant is protected by Section 107 of the
Copyright Act. See here,
here
and here
for Defendant’s arguments. Defendant is represented pro bono and the briefs are
a delight to read.
Can a City hold a
Copyright in Recordings of its Meetings?
Section 105 of the
Copyright Act precludes copyright protection for any work of the United
States Government, but applies only to the federal government. Plaintiff cited County of Santa Clara v. Superior Court,
a California Court of appeals case, to posit that state law determines whether
copyright may be claimed in works of state and local government. In this case,
the California Court of appeals was not convinced by the County’s
interpretation of Section 6254.9(e) of the California
Public Records Act (CPRA), which applies to computer software developed by
a state or local agency, and states that "Nothing in this section is intended to limit any copyright protections,”
as “expressly provid[ing] for copyright
protection despite production of public records" (at 1332).
Plaintiff conceded in its Opposition that California law
precluded it from copyrighting the videos, but then argued that it is not bound
by state law.
Are Defendant’s
Videos Protected by Fair Use?
Even if the videos are indeed protected by copyright (not
likely), is their use by Defendant fair?
The complaint alleged that Defendant “had made derivative works of the [videos] by reproducing [them] in
substantial part. The derivative works have no critical bearing on the
substance or style of the original composition. The derivative works
(“Infringing Copies”) merely use the Copyrighted Works to get attention,
generate income, and avoid having to create Defendant’s own legitimate videos.”
Photo of tapes courtesy of Flickr user makelessnoise under a CC BY 2.0 license.
Defendant addressed the four fair use factors. He first
claimed that the purpose and character of the use weighed in his favor as his
videos were transformative. Defendant’s videos used “short clips from lengthy City Council meeting heavily modified and
interspersed with original text and audio, for the entirely different purpose
of criticizing officials for their conduct at these proceedings.”
While noting he would prove that his use was non-commercial
should the case survive the motion to dismiss, Defendant argued that even if
the court would be convinced that the use was commercial, a commercial use can
still be fair, citing the Supreme Court Hustler Magazine, Inc. v. Falwell
case.
Defendant also claimed the second fair use factor, the
nature of the work used, to be in his favor, as the videos were “purely informational works” with a
copyright “at best thin,” if any. As
for the third factor, the amount taken, Defendant “use[d] a reasonable amount of the footage [of the meetings]” to create his videos.
As for the fourth factor, the effect of the market,
Defendant argued that “[n]ot only does [this factor] unequivocally
favor fair use, this inquiry also exposes the completely baseless nature of
this action,” as Plaintiff cannot claim any economic harm since its duty is
to provide a copy of meetings for free to the public, and thus, there cannot be
a market for such meeting videos. Plaintiff conceded that California law
prohibits it from making money from these public records, but argued that it
had to recoup the cost of installing a video recording system. But Defendant argued that Section 6253(b) of the CPRA
provides that public agencies may only charge the public for “direct costs of duplication” and thus
the cost of producing the public record cannot be charged to the public.
Defendant’s Videos and
First Amendment
Defendant claims that Plaintiff is using copyright to
silence political speech, even though “copyright
law is not designed to stifle critics” (citing Fisher
v. Dees, a 1986 9th Circuit case). Defendant also cited California’s
Brown
Act which states that “public
commissions, boards and councils and the other public agencies in this State
exist to aid in the conduct of the people's business. It is the intent of the
law that their actions be taken openly and that their deliberations be
conducted openly.”
For Defendant, assessing a copyright in a public record
would limit public access to this information. He claims that his “speech concerning public affairs is more
than self-expression; it is the essence of self-government… and it occupies the
highest rung of the hierarchy of First Amendment values, and is entitled to
special protection,” citing the Supreme Court Snyder
v. Phelps case, at 1215. Also, “[t]he City’s aim is clearly to silence [him],
and to punish him for his harsh criticism of the Mayor. But his speech is
constitutionally protected, and fully consistent with our “profound national
commitment to the principle that debate on public issues should be uninhibited,
robust, and wide-open, and that it may well include vehement, caustic, and
sometimes unpleasantly sharp attacks on government and public officials” New York Times Co. v. Sullivan, 376 U.S. 254, 270 (1964).”
A decision of the Court is expected soon. I will keep you
informed.
Photo of tapes courtesy of Flickr user makelessnoise under a CC BY 2.0 license.
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