Showing posts with label fair dealing. Show all posts
Showing posts with label fair dealing. Show all posts

Monday, 26 March 2018

THE COPYKAT goes back to school

Cartoonist sues Infowars over Political Pepe Poster

The illustrator behind Pepe the Frog, one of the internet’s most popular meme characters, is suing Infowars for copyright infringement.

Matt Furie first illustrated Pepe the Frog, a "blissfully stoned" and "peaceful frog-dude" in 2005. According to the website Know Your Meme, Pepe became associated with the “Feels Good Man” reaction. By 2015 however, the 4chan and Reddit communities perpetuated a connection of Pepe to Donald Trump, with the latter even re-tweeting an image of Pepe as himself.

Several news outlets have explored how fringe groups connected with the American "alt-right" movement have attempted to adopt Pepe, mixing him with various images of hate (see the Daily Beast’s How Pepe the Frog Became a Nazi Trump Supporter and Alt-Right Symbol). Unsurprisingly, Furie has vowed to “aggressively enforce his intellectual property rights” to prevent the unauthorised use of Pepe, as previously discussed by IPKat and the 1709 Blog.  

In this latest complaint, Furie alleges that the American conspiracy theorist website Infowars has misused the Pepe character in merchandise, and in particular, in a "Make America Great Again" poster. In the poster, Pepe appears alongside President Donald Trump, and various other individuals associated with the President and/or with white nationalist views. Infowars claims these are “the heroes of the 2016 anti-establishment revolution,” and notes that “the establishment wants this [poster] taken down.”

Furie's lawsuit notes that damages alone are insufficient compensation for the alleged copyright infringement. He is therefore also seeking a permanent injunction to prohibit Infowars from using Pepe the Frog, or any derivative work based on Pepe.

This is not the first time Infowars has been caught out for copyright infringement. As reported by Buzzfeed in November 2017, InfoWars has copied more than 1,000 articles produced by Russian state-sponsored broadcaster RT without permission.

Chicago landmark featured in controversial political advert without sculptor’s permission
Continuing with the theme of American politics, the artist who created the iconic Cloud Gate in Chicago is “disgusted” that the National Rifle Association (NRA) has featured his sculpture in a recent advertisement.

Nicknamed "the Bean," Cloud Gate is a three-storey high mirrored oblong in central Chicago, created by Indian-born British artist Anish Kapoor. In their video entitled “The Clenched Fist of Truth”, the NRA flashes footage of the sculpture without Kapoor’s consent. In an open letter, Kapoor writes:

Cloud Gate reflects the space around it, the city of Chicago. [...] In the NRA’s vile and dishonest video, Cloud Gate appears as part of a montage of iconic buildings that purport to represent ‘Liberal America’ [...] The NRA in it’s nationalist rhetoric uses Cloud Gate to suggest that these ideas constitute a ‘foreign object’ in our midst. The NRA’s video gives voice to xenophobic anxiety, and a further call to ‘arm’ the population against a fictional enemy. [...] The NRA’s nightmarish, intolerant, divisive vision perverts everything that Cloud Gate – and America – stands for.

Although members of the public are welcome to take and share photographs of Cloud Gate, Kapoor owns the copyright to commercial images of the sculpture, and did not give the NRA permission to use it for their campaign. It is worth noting that the NRA may have chosen to feature a Chicago landmark as a reference to one of Chicago’s most famous former residents, Barack Obama.
However, “much to his shame,” Kapoor has decided to forego legal action against the NRA for its use of Cloud Gate. He explained that after considering his legal options, he was “not prepared for the financial and emotional cost of a protracted fight against the extremely aggressive [and] legalistic” NRA. This story comes at a time of heightened debate surrounding gun control in the United States, after a recent mass shooting in a Florida school left 17 dead.
Fair dealing exemption for Canadian classrooms

Federal Members of the Canadian Parliament have begun a mandated review of the Copyright Act, which is expected to carry on throughout 2018. One issue MPs are examining is the application of “fair dealing” exemption to classroom uses of copyright-protected materials.

In 2012, the Canadian government changed the Copyright Act to include “education” as a stated purpose in the fair dealing exemption. Doing so permits teachers and students to use copyright-protected materials for educational purposes, without having to obtain copyright permission or pay copyright royalties.

The Copyright Consortium of the Council of Ministers of Education, Canada (CMEC), has recently released the Education Ministers' Policy Statement on Fair Dealing. As Zach Churchill, Minister of Education and Early Childhood Development for Nova Scotia and Chair of the CMEC Copyright Consortium explained,  "It's important that copyright law balances the necessary protection of artists and writers works with the ability of teachers and students to use short excerpts from copyright-protected materials in their school work."

Fair dealing does not allow teachers to make unlimited use of any copyright-protected work without permission or payment. Rather, the fair dealing exemption only permits the use of “short excerpts” for educational purposes.

However, the Writers’ Union of Canada says poorly defined changes to the Copyright Act prompted many Canadian schools “to adopt radically expanded copying practices, abandoning the established licensing structure that saw writers and publishers compensated for the use of their work.”

The CMEC statement concludes by asserting that the current Copyright Act works to support Canadian students, without harming the publishing industry.

Copyright fees hit the wrong note with Japanese music schools

Fair dealing for educational purposes is also a hot political story in Japan. The Japanese Society for Rights of Authors, Composers and Publishers (JASRAC) is Japan’s largest copyright management agency. As reported by the Japan Times last year, JASRAC says that “when teachers play a song on the piano in front of their students without permission, they are committing a copyright violation.”

JASRAC announced that private music schools will be required to pay copyright fees, as the use of music to teach piano or other instruments infringes on the “right of performance” under Article 22 of the Japan’s Copyright Law. Kenzo Ohashi, a managing director at JASRAC, explained that music schools must pay copyright fees, because the schools cannot benefit from the exception for performances that are not for profit. JASRAC seeks to collect 2.5 per cent of all annual fees charged by the music schools.

Critics of the move include the Yamaha Music Foundation, which teaches nearly 400,000 students across more than 3,300 schools. Together with about 350 music school operators and other music businesses, they filed a lawsuit in Tokyo District Court against JASRAC, to argue that copyright fees should not be payable when using music for educational purposes.

In December 2017, the group of music-schools and instrument-makers asked the Agency for Cultural Affairs to suspend copyright fee collection until their ongoing lawsuit with JASRAC concludes. However, the collection of fees is supported by the Agency for Cultural Affairs. In a recommendation published on Monday, Ryohei Miyata of the Agency for Cultural Affairs issued a ruling in support of JASRAC collecting such fees. In response to this, JASRAC announced that collection of copyright fees will be started from the music class from April 1.

Calls to reform Australian fair dealing provisions

The Australians are also looking at Copyright law reform and modernisation in respect of fair dealing.

50 years after the passage of the Copyright Act 1968, the Government is now seeking commentary from the public in respect of how Australian copyright law can be modernised and updated. In a consultation paper (PDF) published earlier this month,  the Government highlights three areas of the Copyright Act which may benefit from modernisation: flexible exceptions, contracting out of exceptions, and access to orphan works.

While American “fair use” doctrine is rather flexible by comparison, the key difference between “fair use” and the Australian principle of “fair dealing” is that Australia’s laws set out defined categories of acceptable uses in statute. By way of illustration, Lifehacker explains that in the United States, the fair use doctrine made it permissible to use a VCR to record television at home in 1984. Doing so In Australia however was not legal until parliament created a specific exception in 2006, by which time VCRs were already obsolete.

The current fair dealing regime in Australia allows access to copyright content for criticism or review, parody or satire, reporting news, research or study, giving professional advice, and disability access. The government is now considering adding several new provisions, including those for the purposes of quotation, non-commercial private use, incidental or technical use, data mining and library use, and certain educational uses.

Amongst other questions, the consultation asks the public to what extent they would support the introduction of fair dealing exceptions, and what factors should be considered in determining fairness. Responses to the consultation may lead Australian lawmakers to consider a more adaptable approach to copyright law which is more in line with recent technological advances. The Australian Law Reform Commission has already proposed arguments in favour of adopting fair use.

The Department invites submissions by email, post, or website before 5.00 pm on Monday 4 June 2018.

Bollywood star calls copyright laws “rubbish”

Amitabh Bachchan is generally considered one of the greatest and most influential actors in Indian cinema. In addition to being a world-famous actor, director and producer himself, Bachchan is also the son of a famous Hindu poet and literary scholar, Harivansh Rai Srivastava (known by his pen name of Bachchan) .

Bachchan's work has been used in Movies and music multiple times, including in films "Silsila" and "Agneepath," both starring his son Amitabh. Indian newspaper FirstPost notes that Amitabh also often recites lines from his father's poetry at public functions and on TV shows.

In a recent blog entry, 75 year-old Amitabh voiced strong opposition to the prospect that his father’s works may come into the public domain, writing: “I oppose, disagree, lament, dispute, be in variance of, in vehement loud screams of voice”. The post continues in a rather upset, rambling tone. In particular, he expressed that he did not want his father’s works to be available “for the entire Universe to tread, scratch, mutilate, use in commercial consideration on their own creative discretion.”

Under India’s Copyrights Act 1957, original literary works enjoy copyright protection for a 60-year period which begins from the year following the death of the author. Bachchan passed away in 2003.

For Berne convention signatories, copyright must exist until a minimum of 50 years after the author's death (Berne Convention, Article 7). A number of jurisdictions, including the European Union and the United States, have chosen longer terms of 70 years after the author's death. India’s length is 60 years, but many countries have even shorter terms - some even at 25 years.

Nevertheless, Amitabh writes that his father’s writings are Amitabh’s alone, because “that is my inherited right .. it shall prevail .. ” He continues, “My inheritance be mine.. not another’s after the passing of its stipulated time in years .. 60 .. I am genetically my father’s son .. he be willed to me of all that be in asset of his .. his writings be his .. his heir be me .. his writings be mine .. MINE ! I shall not and will not allow its dilution to general public .."

Amitabh calls copyright law “rubbish” and asks, “how can individual property become public property?” It is somewhat disappointing to see that a man famous for his work in the dramatic arts is seemingly unable to appreciate the benefit of works entering the public domain. Maybe he should have skimmed through the 1709 Blog before sharing his own post...

Is Taylor Swift getting a copycat Reputation?

Taylor Swift’s latest music video, Delicate, has been criticised for its suspicious similarities to a 2016 Kenzo perfume advert directed by Spike Jonze.

In the Kenzo advert, we see a young woman portrayed by actress and dancer Margaret Qualley at a posh black tie event in a hotel. Looking beautiful in an evening dress but nevertheless seemingly uncomfortable and bored, she quietly slips out of the ballroom to pensively roam the hallways of the hotel alone. What made the advert so memorable was that Qualley suddenly starts a wild and garish dance to an upbeat song. W Magazine lauded the advert as “one of the best perfume commercials of all time,” and the Guardian called itone of the most engaging ads” of the year.

Earlier this month, Taylor Swift released the video for Delicate, the latest single off of her sixth studio album, Reputation. The video follows Swift as she walks through a glamourous hotel, increasingly fatigued with the attention of the press and her adoring fans. She manages to escape through the corridors and, under the premise of being invisible, performs a bizarre dance routine through the hallways.

In addition to the plot - in which a bored young woman has a crazy dance party in a fancy hotel - the videos share a colour scheme, choreography, and camera angles. Although Taylor’s dress is blue and Qualley’s is green, both are deep jewel tones and cut a similar, sleeveless silhouette. Twitter users were quick to point out that even the facial expressions of the two women appeared to mirror each other.

The Kenzo advert was a viral success because, as AdWeek explained, “the exuberantly choreographed video was less about technical innovation than about how it changes the way women are portrayed in marketing.” Fans of Swift may therefore be somewhat unnerved that the international pop star, known for being a creative, self-made woman (see Taylor Swift: from saccharine songstress to fearless feminist) has chosen in this instance to be so heavily inspired by another artist’s originality.

Despite claims that Swift’s video is a “blatant rip off”, a Kenzo representative told Dazed that they will not be making a comment on the matter. Although a lawsuit or formal complaint is unlikely, the controversy is already being heard out in the court of public opinion. Taylor Swift’s representation are yet to respond to the criticism.


Upcoming Events

The Humboldt Institute for Internet and Society in Berlin is hosting a workshop series to discuss the most urgent issues around music and copyright law in the digital society. The next workshop is “Deconstructing Intellectual Property Protection for Music” on 19 April - it’s been confirmed that at least one IPKat will be there! For more information visit the workshop website here.

The University of Cyprus is hosting a conference entitled "Pluralism or universalism in international copyright law" from 31 May through 1 June 2018. For more information visit the conference website here.

This CopyKat by Kelsey Farish

Monday, 20 November 2017

THE COPYKAT



A federal judge in California last week issued a preliminary injunction preventing Canada’s Supreme Court from forcing Google to de-list a website on its American search engine. The ruling greatly limits the reach of a Canadian judgement that was widely welcomed by the music community as a step forward in helping copyright owners tackle online infringement.

The dispute isn’t entirely resolved with last week’s injunction, and further legal wrangling is incoming. Though Davila’s ruling does seem to limit the reach of June’s Canadian judgement, which – of course – the music industry was so keen to welcome.

For its part, digital rights campaign group the Electronic Frontier Foundation welcomed last week’s ruling, but said more needs to be done to stop other courts from issuing wide-ranging internet injunctions, like that issued by the Canadian Supreme Court in June.


A US judge has ruled that world+dog must help block Sci-Hub, a publisher of scientific texts, which will likely result in protracted battles with Internet companies over their responsibility for copyright infringement.

The block order was handed down late last week by Judge Leonie Brinkema of the Eastern District Court of Virginia, in response to a case brought by the American Chemical Society (ACS).

Sci-Hub paints itself as a protest site against the academic publishing business model, which makes access to published material expensive. Academic publishers led by Elsevier see it as a pirate operation and have been pursuing both Sci-Hub and its operator, Alexandra Elbakyan, since 2015.


The production company that made The Cosby Show has sued the BBC (.pdf) over a documentary the British network aired about the rape allegations against Bill Cosby. Carsey-Werner, the production company that is the plaintiff in the case, says that the documentary is infringing its copyright because it uses eight audiovisual clips and two musical cues from The Cosby Show.

The documentary, titled Bill Cosby—Fall of an American Icon, was broadcast on a BBC channel in the United Kingdom on June 5 of this year. That was the same day that Cosby's prosecution for one assault began in Pennsylvania. (The trial ended in a hung jury.) The UK production company that made the documentary, Sugar Films, is also named as a defendant in the case.



The push and shove of a copyright battle.
Image Ben Challis (c) 2017
ResearchGate has moved at least 1.7 million articles to make them less easily available, according to a publishers' group that sent mass take-down notices against papers they said were in breach of copyright laws. At the beginning of October, the CRS, a group of five publishers including Elsevier, Wiley and Brill, issued a wave of take-down notices. Since then, 93 per cent of the CRS publishers' papers had been made less accessible, explained Dr Milne, so that instead of being instantly downloadable, users had to request a copy from the author.


CBS Corp. is at least one-third of the way back toward trial on whether it owes royalties under California law for streaming pre-1972 music over the internet.

Federal Circuit Judge Richard Linn, sitting as a visiting judge on the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit, sounded extremely skeptical Thursday of the broadcaster’s defense that the process of digitally remastering hits from the ’60s and ’70s made them derivative works of the 1980s and therefore subject to post-1972 federal copyright law.

But Ninth Circuit Judges Marsha Berzon and Paul Watford sounded somewhat more open to CBS’s argument, which if it stands could shut down a campaign that’s produced tens if not hundreds of millions in settlements from other internet broadcasters.

We shall await eagerly any update from this case as it progresses.


It's been no secret that the MPAA has been sticking its nose in the copyright laws and enforcement of Australia for some time now. From pressuring government officials in the country to force ISPs to act as copyright police, to trying to keep Australian law as stuck in antiquity as it possibly could be, to trying to force the country to enforce American intellectual property law except the parts it doesn't like, the MPAA nearly seems to think of itself as an official branch of the Australian government. Given the group's nakedly hostile stance towards fair use, it should be no surprise that it doesn't want to see that sort of law exported to other countries and has worked to actively prevent its installation Down Under.

It seems these efforts are not working, however, as the Australian government is currently entertaining not only adopting American-style fair use laws, but also adding exceptions to geo-blocking as well. The MPAA, as you'll have already guessed, is not happy about this.

Also breaking at the time of writing this piece is the news that The NSW government is being sued for $7.5 million in copyright fees. We will update you once we know more on this.


Shani, the developer of the popular Kodi-addon ZemTV, is asking the public for help so he can defend a lawsuit filed by American satellite and broadcast provider Dish Network. A proper defense is needed to avoid a bad precedent, he stresses. "The fight is rigged against the little guy, they are trying to make something illegal that shouldn't be illegal."

The case is perhaps not as straightforward as either side presents it. However, it is in the best interests of the general public that both sides are properly heard. This is the first case against a Kodi-addon developer and the outcome will set an important precedent.


This CopyKat from Matthew Lingard (Walker Morris LLP)