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دسته بندی: قانون ویرایش: 7 نویسندگان: Marshall A. Leaffer سری: Understanding Series ISBN (شابک) : 1531010067, 9781531010065 ناشر: Carolina Academic Press سال نشر: 2019 تعداد صفحات: 1203 زبان: English فرمت فایل : PDF (درصورت درخواست کاربر به PDF، EPUB یا AZW3 تبدیل می شود) حجم فایل: 10 مگابایت
در صورت تبدیل فایل کتاب Understanding Copyright Law, Seventh Edition (Understanding Series) به فرمت های PDF، EPUB، AZW3، MOBI و یا DJVU می توانید به پشتیبان اطلاع دهید تا فایل مورد نظر را تبدیل نمایند.
توجه داشته باشید کتاب درک قانون حق چاپ، ویرایش هفتم (سریال درک) نسخه زبان اصلی می باشد و کتاب ترجمه شده به فارسی نمی باشد. وبسایت اینترنشنال لایبرری ارائه دهنده کتاب های زبان اصلی می باشد و هیچ گونه کتاب ترجمه شده یا نوشته شده به فارسی را ارائه نمی دهد.
ویرایش هفتم درک حق نسخهبرداری یک بازنگری عمده از این رساله کلاسیک دانشجویی است. این نسخه علاوه بر شامل آخرین تحولات رویه قضایی، قانون نوسازی موسیقی 2018 را نیز در بر می گیرد. ویرایش هفتم تمام جنبه های MMA را پوشش می دهد، یک بازنگری قانونی خیره کننده از حق نسخه برداری موسیقی، که در میان سایر مقررات آن، مجوز کلی جدیدی ایجاد می کند. برای تحویل دیجیتال و محافظت از ضبط صداهای قبل از 1972 را فراهم می کند.
The seventh edition of Understanding Copyright is a major revision of this classic student treatise. In addition to including the latest case law developments, this edition incorporates the Music Modernization Act of 2018. The seventh edition covers all aspects of the MMA, a dazzling legislative overhaul of the musical copyright, which among its other provisions, creates a new blanket license for digital deliveries and provides protection to pre-1972 sound recordings.
Preface Chapter 1 · Introduction to Copyright and Intellectual Property Law Introduction § 1.01 Introduction and Chapter Overview Part I. Historical Overview of Copyright § 1.02 From the Beginnings to the Statute of Anne (1710) § 1.03 From the Constitution to the Copyright Act of 1909 § 1.04 The 1909 Act [A] General Provisions of the 1909 Act [B] United States' Exclusion from the Berne Convention [C] Legislative Attempts to Re-tool the 1909 Act § 1.05 The Copyright Act of 1976 [A] Important Changes in the 1976 Act [B] The Berne Convention Implementation Act of 1988 [C] Amendments to the Copyright Since 1978 [D] The Continuing Importance of the 1909 Act and the 1976 Act as Originally Enacted [E] Copyright Legislation in Perspective Part II. Philosophical Justifications for Copyright Law § 1.06 Generally § 1.07 The Natural Law Justification [A] Natural Law and the Author [B] Locke and the Labor Model [C] Hegel and the Personality Model § 1.08 The Utilitarian Conception of Copyright Law [A] The Economic Rationale of the Copyright Clause [B] Why Should Property Rights Be Created for Information? § 1.09 The Future of Copyright and the Digital Challenge [A] From Gutenberg to the Internet [B] The Digital Challenge and Copyright Law [C] The Future of Copyright Part III. Copyright, Patent, Trademark, and Trade Secret Compared § 1.10 Generally § 1.11 Patent Law [A] Generally [B] Procedures for Obtaining a Patent [C] Types of Patents [D] Utility Patents: Requirements for Validity [E] Patent Infringement § 1.12 Trademark Law [A] Generally [B] Federal Registration of Trademarks [C] Federal Unfair Competition Law: Section 43(a) of the Lanham Act [D] Trademark Infringement [E] Trademark Dilution § 1.13 Trade Secrets § 1.14 Chart Comparing Copyright, Patent, Trademark, and Trade Secret § 1.15 State Intellectual Property Law [A] State Trade Secret Law [B] Unfair Competition Law [C] Common Law Copyright [D] The Right of Publicity [E] Misappropriation Chapter 2 · Subject Matter of Copyright: General Standards § 2.01 Introduction and Chapter Overview Part I. Fixation § 2.02 Fixation and the Distinction Between the Material Object and the Copyright § 2.03 Tangible Medium of Expression [A] The Fixation Requirement: Generally [B] “Fixed Under the Authority of the Author” [C] Perception by Machine or Device [D] Fixation and the Digital Challenge: RAM Copies and Videogames § 2.04 The Anti-Bootleg Provisions: An Exception to the Fixation Requirement? § 2.05 Works Not Fixed in a Tangible Medium of Expression: Common Law Copyright Part II. Originality and Authorship § 2.06 Original and Creative Authorship [A] Authorship [B] Independent Creation [C] The Quantum of Originality: Creative Authorship Part III. Compilations and Derivative Works § 2.07 Compilations and Derivative Works § 2.08 Derivative Works [A] Originality in Derivative Works [B] Originality in Derivative Works: Reproductions of Works of Art [C] Digital Processes and Creative Authorship: The Colorization Controversy § 2.09 Other Issues in the Scope of Protection of Derivative Works [A] The Lawful Use Requirement [B] Use of Derivative Works in the Public Domain § 2.10 Compilations: Generally § 2.11 Originality in Compilations [A] Originality in Compilations: An Overview [B] The Feist Case and the Demise of the Industrious Effort Doctrine [C] Originality in Selection and Arrangement After Feist [D] Computer Databases [E] Protection of Databases Outside Copyright Law: Should There Be a Sui Generis Federal Right? § 2.12 Collective Works Part IV. Non-Copyrightable Subject Matter § 2.13 Ideas and Systems Under § 102(b) [A] Generally [B] Idea and Expression: The Doctrine of Baker v. Selden [C] Fictional Literary Characters [D] Historical Research § 2.14 Other Issues on Non-Copyrightable Subject Matter [A] Copyright in Immoral, Illegal, and Obscene Works and Other Works of Negative Utility [B] Government Works Chapter 3 · Works of Authorship: Categories of Copyrightable Subject Matter § 3.01 Introduction and Chapter Overview Part I. Works of Authorship: Overview § 3.02 The Eight Categories [A] Generally [B] Excluded Writings [C] Copyrightable Subject Matter: The 1909 and 1976 Acts Compared [D] Importance of How a Work Is Categorized Part II. Literary Works § 3.03 Generally § 3.04 Computer Programs (Software) [A] Historical Background: CONTU [B] Copyrightability of Programs: Initial Doubts § 3.05 Computer Technology [A] Computer Hardware: The Basics [B] Computer Software: Development Stages [C] Application and Operating System Programs § 3.06 Computer Programs in the Courts: Apple Computer, Inc. v. Franklin Computer Corp. [A] Apple Computer, Inc. v. Franklin Computer Corp.: The Issues Involved [B] First Issue: Copyright in a Program Expressed in Object Code [C] Second Issue: Copyrightability of a Program Embedded in a ROM [D] Third Issue: Copyrightability of Operating Systems § 3.07 Computer-Generated Works § 3.08 Other Forms of Intellectual Property Protection for Computer Software [A] Trade Secret Protection for Computer Software [B] Patent Law Protection for Computer Software [C] State Contract Law [D] Protecting Technological Safeguards: The Digital Millennium Copyright Act § 3.09 Semiconductor Chips [A] The Technological Background, the Economic Stakes, and the Legal Dilemma [B] The Semiconductor Chip Act: Statutory Overview Part III. Pictorial, Graphic, and Sculptural Works: The Utilitarian Object § 3.10 Generally § 3.11 Works of Applied Art and the Design of Useful Objects § 3.12 Useful Articles and Industrial Design Under the 1976 Act [A] Pictorial and Graphic Works and the Separability Doctrine [B] The Separability Doctrine in the Case Law Before Star Athletica § 3.13 The Separability Doctrine Redefined by the Supreme Court: Star Athletica v. Varsity Designs § 3.14 Other Forms of Protection for Works of Applied Art: Vessel Hull Designs, Design Patent, and Proposed Design Legislation [A] Design Patent [B] Design Legislation [C] Protection of Design Under Trademark and Unfair Competition Law [D] The Sui Generis Protection of Vessel Hull Designs § 3.15 Architectural Works [A] Generally [B] Architectural Works Constructed Before December 1, 1990 [C] The Architectural Works Protection Act of 1990 § 3.16 Maps Part IV. Other Categories of Copyrightable Subject Matter § 3.17 Musical Works § 3.18 Sound Recordings [A] Distinguishing the Sound Recording from Other Works of Authorship and the Phonorecord [B] Originality in Sound Recordings [C] Federal Protection for Pre-1972 Sound Recordings § 3.19 Dramatic Works § 3.20 Pantomimes and Choreographic Works § 3.21 Motion Pictures and Other Audiovisual Works Chapter 4 · Publication, Notice, and Other Formalities § 4.01 Introduction and Chapter Overview Part I. Publication § 4.02 Publication: Its Role in Copyright Law [A] Generally [B] Historical Overview of the Publication Doctrine [C] Justification of the Publication Doctrine § 4.03 “Publication” Defined § 4.04 Publication Under the 1909 Act: Its Continuing Importance § 4.05 Two Court-Made Efforts to Ameliorate the Publication Requirement's Harsh Effect Under the 1909 Act [A] Generally [B] Divestive and Investive Publication [C] Limited versus General Publication § 4.06 The Importance of Publication Under the 1976 Act [A] Generally [B] Publication and Compliance with Formalities [C] Publication and International Copyright [D] Publication: Durational Consequences § 4.07 Special Publication Contexts: 1909 and 1976 Acts Compared [A] Performance as Publication [B] Publication by Display [C] The Distribution of Phonorecords as Publication of the Sound Recording and the Musical Work [D] Publication of a Derivative Work Part II. Notice § 4.08 Generally: Justification for Notice Requirement [A] The Background [B] Abrogation of the Notice Requirement: The Berne Convention Implementation Act of 1988 [C] Chart: Notice Provisions for Published Works Under the 1909, 1976, and Berne Convention Implementation Acts § 4.09 Notice Requirements Under the 1976 Act Before the Berne Convention Implementation Act of 1988 Amendments § 4.10 Form and Position of Notice Under the 1976 Act [A] Form of Notice on Copies [B] Form of Notice on Phonorecords for Sound Recordings [C] Year Date [D] Name of Copyright Owner [E] Location of the Notice § 4.11 Omission of Notice [A] Generally [B] Omission of Notice and Forfeiture of Copyright [C] Omission of Notice: The Savings Provision [D] Discovery of Omission [E] Reasonable Efforts to Cure Omitted Notice [F] Discovery of Omitted Notice After the Berne Convention Implementation Act [G] Omitted Notice and Innocent Infringement § 4.12 Error in Name and Date [A] Generally [B] Error in Name [C] Error in Date [D] Omission of Name or Date § 4.13 Special Notice Subsections [A] Notice for Publications Containing Government Works [B] Notice for Contribution to Collective Works § 4.14 Notice Under the 1909 Act [A] Generally [B] Form of Notice [C] Location of Notice [D] Year Date [E] Omission of Notice [F] U.S. Works First Published Outside the United States Part III. The Manufacturing Clause § 4.15 The Demise but Continuing Importance of the Manufacturing Clause § 4.16 The Manufacturing Clause Under the 1976 Act [A] Generally [B] The “Preponderantly” Requirement [C] Exceptions to the Manufacturing Provisions [D] Effect of Non-Compliance Under the 1976 Act § 4.17 The Manufacturing Clause Under the 1909 Act [A] Generally [B] Ad Interim Protection [C] Forfeiture by False Affidavit and General Non-Compliance Chapter 5 · Ownership of Copyright § 5.01 Introduction and Chapter Overview Part I. Initial Ownership: Works Made for Hire and Joint Works § 5.02 Works Made for Hire [A] Generally [B] Works Made for Hire: An Overview of the Basic Standards § 5.03 Distinguishing Between Employers and Independent Contractors [A] Clarifying the Categories: Community for Creative Non-Violence v. Reid [B] Who is an “Employee”: Applying the Restatement of Agency Criteria After CCNV [C] CCNV in Perspective: Will It Help the Independent Contractor? § 5.04 Works Prepared Within the Scope of Employment § 5.05 Works Made for Hire Under the 1909 Act § 5.06 Joint Works Under the 1976 Act [A] Generally [B] Intent to Create a Joint Work [C] Joint Work Authorship: Copyrightability and Ownership of Individual Contributions [D] Joint Works Created by Non-Collaborative Means [E] Consequences of Joint Ownership [F] Joint Works and Derivative Works Compared § 5.07 Joint Ownership Under the 1909 Act § 5.08 Ownership of Contributions to Collective Works [A] Distinguishing Between Copyright in the Collective Work and Copyright in a Contribution to the Collective Work [B] The Collective Works and the Revision Right in the Digital Environment § 5.09 Ownership of Copyright as Distinguished from Ownership of the Material Object: The Pushman Doctrine Part II. Transfers of Copyright Interests § 5.10 Divisibility of Copyright [A] Generally [B] Consequences of Divisibility: Standing to Sue [C] Does an Exclusive Licensee Have the Right to Sublicense the Copyrighted Work? § 5.11 Indivisibility of Ownership Under the 1909 Act § 5.12 Drafting and Construing Licenses [A] In General [B] The Problem of New Media § 5.13 Transfers of Copyright: The Writing Requirement [A] The 1976 Act [B] The Writing Requirement Under the 1909 Act § 5.14 Recordation [A] Generally: The Importance of Recordation [B] What Should Be Recorded? [C] Recordation: Priority Between Conflicting Transfers (Assignments and Exclusive Licenses) [D] Priority Between a Transferee and a Non-Exclusive Licensee [E] Reliance on Copyright Office Records: Practical Limitations [F] Recordation Under the 1909 Act § 5.15 Involuntary Transfers § 5.16 Orphan Works: Works Whose Copyright Owners Cannot Be Found [A] The Orphan Works Dilemma [B] Orphan Works Legislation Chapter 6 · Duration, Renewal, Termination of Transfers, and Restoration of Copyright § 6.01 Introduction and Chapter Overview Part I. Duration § 6.02 Generally: The 1909 and 1976 Acts Compared § 6.03 The Copyright Term Extension Act of 1998: Its History and Justification [A] From Life-Plus-Fifty to Life-Plus-Seventy [B] The Constitutional Challenge: Eldred v. Ashcroft and Beyond § 6.04 The Mechanics of Duration Under the 1976 Act [A] All Terms Run to the End of the Calendar Year [B] The Basic Term: Life of the Author Plus Seventy Years [C] Anonymous and Pseudonymous Works and Works Made for Hire [D] Joint Works [E] Duration of Pre and Post 1972 Sound Recordings [F] Death Records [G] Works Created but Not Published or Copyrighted Before January 1, 1978 Part II. Renewal § 6.05 Works Published or Copyrighted Before January 1, 1978: An Overview [A] Generally [B] The Renewal Registration Requirement Under the 1976 Act [C] Works in Their Second Term as of January 1, 1978 [D] Summary Chart: Duration Under the 1976 Act § 6.06 Renewal: Copyrights in the First Term as of 1978 [A] Generally: The Continuation of the Renewal System Under the 1976 Act [B] Renewal Claimants § 6.07 Exceptions to the Author's Right to the Renewal Term [A] Generally [B] Posthumous Works [C] Composite Works and Corporate Works [D] Employer of a Work Made for Hire § 6.08 Transfers of the Renewal Term: Fisher v. Witmark § 6.09 Automatic Renewal for Copyrights Originally Secured Between January 1, 1964 and December 31, 1977 [A] Generally [B] How Automatic Renewal Works [C] Continuing Incentives to Register § 6.10 The Renewal Term and Derivative Works [A] Generally [B] Stewart v. Abend: Demise of the New Property Theory of Derivative Works [C] Stewart v. Abend Reassessed Part III. Termination of Transfers § 6.11 Termination Generally [A] Sections 304(c), 304(d) and 203 Distinguished [B] “Agreements to the Contrary” § 6.12 Termination of the Extended Renewal Term Under §§ 304(c) and 304(d) [A] Termination of the Extended Renewal Term [B] The Mechanics of § 304(c) and 304(d) § 6.13 Termination Formalities § 6.14 Termination of Transfer Under § 203 § 6.15 Sections 304(c) and 203 Compared § 6.16 Some Works Enjoy No Termination Right, and Other Works Have Both Termination and Renewal Rights [A] Certain Grants Subject to No Termination [B] Grants Subject to Both Termination and Renewal § 6.17 Termination of Transfers and Derivative Works Exception Part IV. Restoration of Copyright in Works Previously in the Public Domain § 6.18 Retroactivity Under Article 18 of the Berne Convention and the Constitutional Dilemma § 6.19 Restoration of Copyright in Certain Foreign Public Domain Works Under Section 104a: From NAFTA to the Uruguay Round Agreements Act [A] The North American Free Trade Agreement Act [B] The Uruguay Round Agreements Act [C] The Constitutionality of Restoration: Golan v. Holder Chapter 7 · Copyright Registration and Deposit § 7.01 Introduction and Chapter Overview Part I. Registration § 7.02 The Copyright Office § 7.03 Why a Registration System? § 7.04 Registration of Copyright: An Overview § 7.05 Registration Procedures [A] Generally [B] Who Can File for Registration? [C] Expediting and Streamlining the Process: Special Handling, Pre-Registration Procedures [D] Copyright Application Forms and Deposit Copies [E] Examination of a Claim to Copyright § 7.06 The Importance of Registration [A] Prerequisite to Bringing Suit for Infringement [B] The Date When Registration “Has Been Made” [C] The Registration Exception for Berne Works [D] Registration as Prima Facie Evidence of Validity [E] Registration as a Prerequisite for Obtaining Statutory Damages and Attorney's Fees [F] The Interplay of Registration and Recordation § 7.07 Registration of Derivative Works and Individual Components of Collective Works [A] The Importance of Registration [B] Derivative Works and the Registration Requirement [C] Registration of Collective Works and Their Individual Components § 7.08 Refusal of Registration: § 411(a) § 7.09 Registration Under the 1909 Act: The “Prompt” Deposit and Registration Requirement § 7.10 Summary Chart: Registration Provisions for Published Works Under the 1909, 1976, and Berne Convention Implementation Acts Part II. Deposit § 7.11 Generally § 7.12 Mandatory Deposit for the Library of Congress § 7.13 Failure to Comply with Deposit Requirements § 7.14 Mechanics of Deposit § 7.15 Mandatory Deposit Under § 407 and the Deposit Requirement for Registration Under § 408 Compared § 7.16 Summary Chart: Deposit Provisions for Published Works Under the 1909, 1976, and Berne Convention Implementation Acts § 7.17 The Future of the Copyright Office Chapter 8 · The Exclusive Rights and Their Limitations § 8.01 Introduction and Chapter Overview Part I. Exclusive Rights, Limitations, and Compulsory Licenses § 8.02 Introduction to the Exclusive Rights and Their Limitations § 8.03 The Compulsory Licenses and Their Administration [A] What Is a Compulsory License? [B] Are the Compulsory Licenses Justifiable? [C] Administering the Compulsory Licenses; From the Copyright Royalty Tribunal to Copyright Arbitration Panels [D] The Current System: The Copyright Royalty Board (Copyright Royalty Judges) Part II. The Reproduction and Adaptation Rights and Their Limitations § 8.04 The Reproduction Right: Generally [A] Fixation in a Copy or Phonorecord: Material and Temporal Requirements [B] The Reproduction Right and the Fixation Requirement [C] The Reproduction Right and the Digital Challenge: The RAM Copy Doctrine § 8.05 The Right to Prepare Derivative Works [A] The Adaptation Right: Generally [B] The Adaptation Right and Cross Media Infringement [C] Infringement of the Adaptation Right: Fixation and Computer Enhancements [D] The Adaptation Right and Authorial Control § 8.06 Library Photocopying Under § 108 § 8.07 Limitations to the Reproduction and Adaptation Rights: Ephemeral Recordings, § 112 § 8.08 Limitations to the Reproduction and Adaptation Rights: Reproduction of Pictorial, Graphic, and Sculptural Works in Useful Articles, § 113 § 8.09 Limitations to the Reproduction and Adaptation Rights: Sound Recordings, § 114 [A] The Independent Fixation Limitation [B] Sampling [C] Certain Noncommercial Uses of Pre-1972 Sound Recordings § 8.10 Limitations to the Reproduction and Adaptation Rights: The Compulsory License for Making and Distributing Phonorecords (The Mechanical License), § 115 [A] The “Mechanical Compulsory License” [B] The Compulsory License for Digital Phonorecord Deliveries § 8.11 Limitations to the Reproduction and Adaptation Rights: Computer Uses, § 117 § 8.12 Limitations to the Reproduction and Adaptation Rights: Architectural Works, § 120 § 8.13 Limitations to the Reproduction and Adaptation Rights: Reproduction for the Blind or Other People with Disabilities [A] Section 121: Exceptions for to the Reproduction and Adaptation Rights for the Visually Impaired [B] § 121A Limitations on Exclusive Rights: Reproduction for Blind or Other People with Disabilities in Marrakesh Treaty Countries Part III. The Distribution Right and Its Limitations § 8.14 The Distribution Right: Generally § 8.15 Limitations on the Distribution Right: The First Sale Doctrine [A] Generally [B] Should There Be a Digital First Sale Doctrine? § 8.16 Modifications and Exceptions to the First Sale Doctrine [A] Record Rental [B] Software Rental [C] Importation of Copies and Phonorecords [D] Imported Copies Legally Obtained Abroad: The Gray Market [E] The Right to Dispose of Copies or Phonorecords of a Restored Work [F] The Resale Royalty Right (Droit de Suite) [G] The Public Lending Right Part IV. The Performance and Display Rights and Their Limitations § 8.17 The Performance Right: Generally § 8.18 What Is a Public Performance or Display? [A] Generally [B] Performances in Places Open to the Public [C] The Size and Composition of a Public Audience [D] Transmission of a Work to the Public § 8.19 Nonprofit and Other Exemptions to the Performance Right, § 110 [A] Generally [B] Face to Face Teaching, § 110(1) [C] Transmissions of Instructional Activities, § 110(2) [D] Religious Services, § 110(3) [E] Exemption for Certain Non-Profit Performances, § 110(4) [F] Incidental Public Reception and the Multiple Performance Doctrine, § 110(5) [G] Agricultural and Horticultural Fairs, § 110(6) [H] Retail Sales of Sheet Music and Phonorecords, § 110(7) [I] Exemption for Transmissions of Nondramatic Literary Works to the Handicapped, § 110(8) [J] Transmissions of Dramatic Works to the Handicapped, § 110(9) [K] Veterans and Fraternal Organizations, § 110(10) [L] Muting and Skipping of Motion Picture Content for Private Home Viewing § 110(11) § 8.20 Secondary Transmissions, § 111 [A] Generally [B] Overall Structure of § 111 [C] General Exemptions, § 111(a) [D] The Compulsory License for Cable Systems, § 111(c) [E] Reporting Requirements and Royalty Fees for Cable Systems, § 111(d) [F] The Computation and Distribution of Royalty Fees [G] Afterthoughts: Is § 111 an Anachronism? § 8.21 Satellite Retransmissions [A] Satellite Retransmissions for Private Home Viewing: § 119 Statutory License [B] Satellite Retransmissions Within Local Markets: § 122 § 8.22 The Jukebox License § 116 [A] The Rise and Fall of the Compulsory Jukebox License [B] The Jukebox Licensing Procedure: A Voluntarily Negotiated License § 8.23 Performing Rights Societies [A] Why They Are Needed: Capturing the Valuable But Elusive Performance Right [B] How They Operate: The ASCAP Model [C] Performing Rights Societies and Antitrust Regulation [D] Dramatic (Grand Rights) and Non-Dramatic (Small Rights) [E] Synchronization Rights [F] Digital Network Transmissions § 8.24 The Compulsory License for Public Broadcasting, § 118 § 8.25 Performance Rights in Sound Recordings (Neighboring Rights) § 8.26 The Digital Performance Right in Sound Recordings [A] Introduction [B] Highlights of the Digital Performance Right for Sound Recordings Act § 8.27 The Right of Public Display, § 106(5) § 8.28 Limitations on the Display Right [A] Public Display of an Owned Copy, § 109(c) [B] Other Exemptions to the Display Right Part V. Beyond Conventional Copyright Protection: The Moral Right § 8.29 The Moral Right [A] Generally [B] Analogs of the Moral Right in State and Federal Law [C] State Art Preservation Acts § 8.30 Copyright Protection of Moral Rights: The Visual Artists Rights Act of 1990 (“VARA”) [A] Generally [B] Summary of the Provisions of VARA [C] VARA Applied: Carter v. Helmsley-Spear [D] Beyond Moral Rights for Visual Artists? Part VI. Rights Beyond Copyright in the Digital Age: The Audio Home Recording Act of 1992 and the Digital Millennium Copyright Act of 1998 § 8.31 The Audio Home Recording Act of 1992 [A] The Challenge of Digital Recording Technology [B] Provisions of the Audio Home Recording Act of 1992 [C] The Audio Home Recording Act and Digital Hardware Devices § 8.32 Copyright Protection Systems and Copyright Management Information Under the Digital Millennium Copyright Act: The Background § 8.33 Section 1201: The Prohibition Against Manufacture and Use of Devices to Defeat Copyright Protection Systems § 8.34 Technological Controls on Access: Circumvention by Conduct § 8.35 Technological Controls on Access: Circumvention by Technology or Device [A] Technologies and Devices Covered by § 1201(a)(2) [B] The Developing Case Law § 8.36 Circumvention of Technological Measures Protecting Rights of a Copyright Owner § 8.37 Exceptions to the Prohibition on Circumvention § 8.38 The Basic Provisions of § 1201: A Schematic Diagram § 8.39 The Protection of Copyright Management Information (“CMI”) [A] The Integrity of Copyright Management Information [B] Exemptions and Limitations § 8.40 Civil Remedies and Criminal Penalties Chapter 9 · Infringement and Remedies § 9.01 Introduction and Chapter Overview Part I. Infringement: Substantive Issues § 9.02 The Elements: Ownership, Copying, and Improper Appropriation § 9.03 Circumstantial Proof of Copying: Access and Probative Similarity [A] Access [B] Probative Similarity § 9.04 Improper Appropriation [A] The Requirement of Substantial Similarity [B] Verbatim Similarity and Pattern Similarity Compared [C] Verbatim Similarity [D] Pattern Similarity [E] Determining Pattern Similarity: The Learned Hand Abstractions Test [F] Applying the Abstractions Test to Computer Programs: From Whelan Associates to Computer Associates (Altai) [G] De Minimis Copying § 9.05 Improper Appropriation in the Litigation Process [A] Generally [B] The Ordinary Observer or Audience Test [C] Bifurcated Tests: Arnstein and Krofft § 9.06 Improper Appropriation and Judicial Control Over the Litigation Process Part II. Third Party Liability (Contributory Infringement and Vicarious Liability) Including the Liability of Online Service Providers Under the Digital Millennium Copyright Act § 9.07 Related Defendants: Contributory Infringement and Vicarious Liability [A] Generally [B] Contributory Infringement: Causing, Contributing, or Inducing the Direct Infringer [C] Applying Sony: Third Party Liability and Peer-to-Peer Filing Sharing [D] Vicarious Liability: The Right to Supervise and a Financial Interest § 9.08 Liability for the Activities of Online Services [A] Background to Title II of the Digital Millennium Copyright Act [B] Who Are Online Service Providers? [C] Eligibility for the OSP Exemption: Threshold Conditions [D] Safe Harbors [E] Subpoena to Identify Infringers: § 512(h) Part III. Remedies § 9.09 Injunctive and Other Coercive Relief [A] In General [B] Preliminary Injunctions [C] Permanent Injunctions [D] Impounding and Disposition of Infringing Articles § 9.10 Damages and Profits: Generally § 9.11 Actual Damages and Profits § 9.12 Recovery of Profits [A] Advantages to Claiming Lost Profits [B] Costs Defendant May Deduct [C] Apportionment of Profits to Infringing Activity [D] Indirect Profits § 9.13 Statutory Damages [A] Overview of the Statutory Damage Remedy [B] Computing Statutory Damages: Statutory Maxima and Minima [C] Multiple Works [D] Multiple Plaintiffs and Defendants [E] The Timing of the Election to Recover Statutory Damages § 9.14 Costs and Attorney's Fees [A] In General [B] Attorney's Fees [C] Costs [D] No Punitive Damages § 9.15 Criminal Penalties [A] Generally [B] Willful Infringement for Commercial Advantage and Private Financial Gain [C] Criminal Liability Without a Profit Motive: No Electronic Theft Act [D] Criminal Liability for the Unauthorized Distribution of Prerelease Commercial Works [E] Other Criminal Penalties and Offenses [F] Criminal Penalties for Unauthorized Recording of Motion Pictures in Theaters Part IV. Infringement: Procedural Matters § 9.16 Jurisdiction [A] “Arising Under” Jurisdiction [B] Supplemental Jurisdiction [C] Personal Jurisdiction § 9.17 Pleading, Proof, Jury Trials [A] Pleading [B] Burden of Proof [C] Venue [D] Cases Involving Both Patents and Copyright [E] Jury Trial § 9.18 Parties to Suit: Plaintiff's Standing § 9.19 Standing to Sue Federal and State Governments [A] Federal Government [B] State Government: The Eleventh Amendment Issue Chapter 10 · Fair Use and Other Defenses to Copyright Infringement § 10.01 Introduction and Chapter Overview Part I. Fair Use: The Background § 10.02 Generally § 10.03 Historical Origin of Fair Use: Folsom v. Marsh § 10.04 Section 107 of the 1976 Act: Generally § 10.05 The Preamble to § 107 [A] In General [B] Fair Use as Transformative Use [C] Fair Use and Market Failure § 10.06 The Four Criteria Part II. The Four Factors Individually Examined § 10.07 First Factor: The Purpose and Character of the Use § 10.08 Second Factor: Nature of the Copyrighted Work § 10.09 Third Factor: The Amount and Substantiality of the Portion Used in Relation to the Copyrighted Work as a Whole § 10.10 Fourth Factor: The Effect of the Use upon the Potential Market for, or Value of, the Copyrighted Work Part III. Special Applications of Fair Use Analysis: New Technologies, Parody, and the First Amendment § 10.11 Fair Use and the New Reproductive Technologies: Videotaping, Photocopying, Internet File Sharing [A] Copyright and the New Reproductive Technologies: Generally [B] Videotaping: The Betamax Case [C] Photocopying: Williams & Wilkins [D] Internet File Sharing: A & M Records, Inc. v. Napster, Inc. [E] Walking the Fair Use Tightrope: Case by Case Litigation Versus Industry-Wide Resolution § 10.12 Avoiding Fair Use Determinations: Industry-Wide Resolution of the Photocopying Dilemma [A] Library Photocopying Under § 108 [B] Multiple Copies for Classroom Use [C] A Private Collecting Agency: The Copyright Clearance Center § 10.13 Reverse Engineering of Computer Software: Sega Enterprises Ltd. v. Accolade, Inc. § 10.14 The Problem of Parody [A] Generally [B] Parody and the Four Factors: Campbell v. Acuff-Rose [C] How Much Can the Parody Take from the Original? [D] Parody and the Fourth Fair-Use Factor: Market Effect [E] Does the Parody Have to Target the Copyrighted Work? § 10.15 Fair Use and the First Amendment [A] Generally: No Irreconcilable Tension [B] The Merger of Idea and Expression § 10.16 Fair Use: A Synthesis Part IV. The Future of Fair Use § 10.17 Fair Use in the Digital Network Environment [A] The Background [B] Fair Use and Technological Safeguards [C] Fair Use and the Digital Millennium Copyright Act [D] Mass Digitization and Fair Use: The Google Book Search Project § 10.18 Fair Use in Comparative Perspective § 10.19 International Treaties and the Future of Fair Use [A] The Berne Convention Challenge: The Tripartite Test of Article 9(2) [B] The TRIPS Challenge: Article 13 of the Agreement Part V. Other Affirmative Copyright Defenses § 10.20 Generally § 10.21 Legal and Equitable Defenses [A] Statute of Limitations [B] Laches and Estoppel [C] Abandonment or Forfeiture of Copyright [D] Misuse of Copyright [E] Fraud on the Copyright Office [F] Innocent Intent Chapter 11 · Copyright Law in a Federal System: Preemption of State Law § 11.01 Introduction and Chapter Overview Part I. Preemption Before the 1976 Act § 11.02 The Misappropriation Doctrine and Other State Attempts to Protect Intellectual Property: The 1909 Act Background [A] Two Divergent Tendencies [B] The Classic Statement: The INS Case § 11.03 Preemption Reborn: Sears and Compco § 11.04 The Aftermath of Sears and Compco Part II. Preemption Under § 301 of the 1976 Act § 11.05 Section 301: Generally § 11.06 Rights Equivalent: The Language of the Statute and the Legislative History [A] Rights Equivalent: The Peculiar Structure of § 301 [B] The Legislative Odyssey of § 301 § 11.07 Rights Equivalent: The Case Law Applying § 301 [A] The Extra Elements Approach [B] Preemption of State Contract Law [C] Reconciling § 301(a) and the Supremacy Clause § 11.08 The Necessary Return to Traditional Preemption Analysis: Four Examples [A] State Anti-Blind-Bidding Statutes [B] State Law Conferring Broader or Narrower Rights [C] Are Rights Equivalent to Those Provided Under §§ 107–121? [D] The California Resale Royalty Act [E] State Misappropriation Law and the “Partial Preemption Doctrine”: NBA v. Motorola § 11.09 Subject Matter: The Second Requirement for Preemption of State Law [A] Non-Original Works and Works in the Public Domain or Excluded by § 102(b) [B] Subject Matter Which Congress Could Have, But Did Not, Include § 11.10 Non-Preempted Works § 11.11 Other Preemption Provisions of the Copyright Act [A] The Visual Artists Rights Act of 1990: § 301(f) [B] The Architectural Works Protection Act of 1990: § 301(b)(4) [C] Pre-1972 Sound Recordings Chapter 12 · An Overview of International Copyright § 12.01 Introduction and Chapter Overview Part I. The Major International Treaties Involving Copyright § 12.02 Generally § 12.03 The Universal Copyright Convention (“U.C.C.”) [A] Generally [B] Basic Provisions of the U.C.C. [C] The Paris Revision of the U.C.C. § 12.04 The Berne Convention [A] Generally [B] Berne Convention: Summary of Its Basic Provisions § 12.05 U.S. Entry into Berne [A] Generally [B] The Berne Convention Implementation Act of 1988 [C] Benefits to American Authors and Copyright Owners from Berne Membership § 12.06 Updating the Berne Convention: WIPO Copyright Treaties [A] From the Berne Protocol to the New WIPO Treaties [B] Overview of the WIPO Copyright Treaty and the WIPO Performances and Phonograms Treaty [C] U.S. Participation in the New Order § 12.07 Other Copyright-Related Conventions [A] Convention for the Protection of Producers of Phonograms Against Unauthorized Duplication of Their Phonograms (The Geneva Phonograms Convention) [B] Brussels Satellite Convention [C] Marrakesh Treaty for the Blind and Print Disabled [D] Copyright in the Americas: Buenos Aires Convention Part II. Foreign Authors and Conflicts of Law in International Copyright § 12.08 Foreign Authors [A] Unpublished Works [B] Published Works: The Five Bases for Protection in § 104(b) § 12.09 The Extraterritorial Application of U.S. Law to Foreign Infringing Acts § 12.10 Choice of Forum and Choice Law in International Copyright [A] Choice of Forum and the Application of Foreign Copyright Law by U.S. Courts [B] Choice of Law Rules in International Copyright Conflicts § 12.11 Recognition and Enforcement of Foreign Judgments Part III. Trade Regulation Affecting International Copyright Matters § 12.12 Infringing Importation of Copies or Phonorecords [A] Sections 602 and 603 of the 1976 Copyright Act [B] Section 337 of the Tariff Act of 1930: The U.S. International Trade Commission [C] Broad Based Trade Legislation Part IV. Multilateral and Regional Approaches to International Copyright Protection § 12.13 Beyond the International Treaties: A WTO Solution [A] The Shortcoming of the International Treaties [B] From the GATT to the World Trade Organization [C] Intellectual Property Under the WTO: The TRIPS Agreement [D] TRIPS and the Berne Convention § 12.14 Regional Integration and Copyright Law: The European Union and NAFTA [A] The European Union (“EU”) [B] The North American Free Trade Agreement (“NAFTA”) Table of Cases Index