Speculations on the Unknowable Future of Copyright
The Next Twenty Years
Copyright (c) 1995 Paul Schaffner
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED
Even if copying, publishing, deriving, using, performing, and displaying
were to be governed in fact by the law by which they are governed in theory,
I am not confident about being able to predict the future of that law. But
the world of copyright practice is much larger than the law, its future
influenced by everything from immigration patterns to religious enthusiasms,
to say nothing of unpredictable technical innovations: to predict its
future is an exercise in speculative fiction. Such unpredictable
factors have been at play in the twenty years since the last major
revision of U.S. Copyright Law, and should continue to mark the next
twenty. The best that I can hope to do is point out some trends that
seem likely to continue, that I fear will continue, or that I dare
hope will continue. Some of the trends are at odds with each other;
I cannot even guess at how the differences will be resolved.
- Moralizing protestations by all parties will continue ("user's
rights," "intellectual property rights," "authorial rights"), even
as the law will continue to command little respect except as a cloak,
a tattered garment snatched at by all to cover the nakedness
of their self-interest. In fact, the law will continue to say
little about grand rights of any kind and will continue to have
almost nothing to say about the dubious concept of "intellectual
property," but will continue to be an eclectic list of
statutory privileges creating a set of limited and regulated
monopolies.
- I believe that the current law is unconstitutional and has grown
progressively more so, especially in so far as it has expanded
horizontally to include more works and classes of works (from
the constitutionally sanctioned "writings" to photographs, sound
recordings, computer code, and unpublished ephemera), and
vertically to extend for longer and longer periods of time (from
a constitutionally sanctioned termination of rights within the
life of the author to now proposed life plus seventy years).
Though there are some external reasons for some of the changes
(technical changes, European precedents), the trend has been
driven by the superior political power and plausibility of
publishers and producers, who are able to portray copyright
expansion as essential to their economic viability and (less
often) their cultural vitality. This fundamental
equation has been constant and seems likely to remain so: expect
more severe penalties for infringment, and further expansion,
not only by inclusion of new technologies as they appear, but
also by erosion of first-sale rights, fair-use rights, the merger
doctrine and the exclusion of useful designs, and perhaps also
the more galling enumerated exemptions (e.g. reverse engineering,
if the courts agree that that is currently exempt).
- This erosion will in many cases be accomplished through
the systematic
evasion of statutory rights by means of licensing and technical
protections (per-use metering, copy-protection, etc.).
- Expect to see further harmonization of copyright, licensing, and
enforcement procedures among at least those countries with the
most at stake in the production of "intellectual properties," with
ever stronger efforts to enforce the same on all countries. Like
all cartels, the copyright cartel will continue to have renegades.
- It must be admitted that not all changes to the law in the past
twenty years have belonged to the trend toward greater restriction.
There has been a good deal of deliberate conservatism and legislative
deference toward the courts. Expect this inertia to preserve much of
the law in the same state in which we now see it, especially as
regards mature media (e.g., books), and to resist some of the more
radical new restrictions (e.g., the addition of a "public lending
right" -- too radical by half). There have also been some limited
movements towards liberalization, e.g. the 1992 fair-use amendment
for unpublished materials (liberalizing for derivative authors, users,
and publishers, restrictive for original creators) and the 1990
artists' rights act (liberalizing insofar as it created inalienable
authorial rights not assumable by corporate copyright holders.
Some sort of hedged "browsing" right would not be an inconceivable
addition to the law in the next twenty years, since it has the
support of long-engrained public habit.
- Though I would like to see it, I do not expect there to be any
substantial rethinking of the copyright scheme in general,
least of all in such a way as to recognize the non-monetary
rewards that are at least as powerful as the monetary ones in
promoting the creation of works that serve to promote science
and the useful arts, or in such a way as to recognize the public
good realizable, in an era of instant and cheap distribution, by
moving works quickly into the public domain. We will not see
a reversion of the copyright term to twenty or twenty-five years
(my preference), or a full set of legislated authorial moral
rights (the latter being simply too dangerous for the creators of
expensive derivative works to tolerate).
- A more stringently guarded stock of copyrighted properties will
nevertheless not go without competition, chiefly from two sources:
(1) free or cheap materials, self-published, much of it awful, but some
of it, in some fields, especially academic fields, quite competitive,
even dominant. And (2) pirated materials, made readily available
by inexpensive technical means (CD recorders, networks, whatever
is current), and the political unpalatability of restricting those
means once they become widespread and once their illegal use becomes
habitual, as video and software recording now has become. The latter
is to be hoped for, I think, though it cannot be counted on. Current
legislation and litigation threatening (e.g.) the manufacture of
decoding and protection-defeating devices, anonymous postings,
and the common-carrier status of network-access providers all
suggest the need to sign up more voters on the internet before
the congress and the courts are able to shut it down! Why should
piracy be encouraged? I agree with Esther Dyson that its effect
(or rather the effect of the two factors combined: cheap generic
self-published software and pirated software) has had a generally
beneficial effect on the software industry. Though it has perhaps
encouraged code bloat, complexity, and application integration
(all things to be discouraged), it has also caused software prices
to be quite low, in many cases essentially nil, driving companies
to recoup costs through other means: service, installation,
rapid upgrades, etc. It has not noticeably impeded the profitability
or creativity of programming.
- More importantly, perhaps, the extended experience of networking
will, by the end of twenty years, have introduced into a large
segment of the population an acquaintance with shared or
collective authorship--plagiarism as a cultural way of life--,
and thus perhaps begun to create the conditions under which
copyright, basically a system under which corporate
entities exercise privileges legitimated by a myth of personal,
individual, creative authorship, might lose its public legitimacy.
This may especially be the case if the same experience has driven
copyright owners into calling for yet more restrictive and
(to this new public) unreasonable versions of the copyright scheme
to be enacted.
As for librarians and "information professionals," they will always
be, as they are now, on the front lines of the war over
intellectual property, fighting for quality, access and
affordability (if they represent users), or fighting for quality,
control and return (if they represent producers or distributors),
or just keeping their heads down between the lines.
Paul Schaffner / pfs@umich.edu / 11 Dec 1995
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