Content-Type: text/html
Copyright Term Extensions
INTRODUCTION
This fall, the Supreme Court will consider the constitutionality of the Sonny Bono Copyright Term Extension Act,[1] which grants twenty years of extra copyright protection to works about to move into the public domain. Petitioners[2] in Eldred v. Ashcroft,[3] have challenged the Act, which protects copyrighted works for the life of the creator plus seventy years, on two counts. First, they argue that the CTEA's retrospective twenty-year extensions violate the Constitution's copyright clause,[4] which grants Congress the power to promote progress by protecting works for limited times, as well as the Copyright Act's requirement of originality. [5] Second, they argue that the CTEA's prospective and retrospective extensions impinge upon their First Amendment freedoms of speech and press[6] by denying them access to millions of works that will now be kept out of the public domain for another twenty years.[7]
The case is significant not only because its outcome has the potential to determine the constitutionality of multiple and lengthy term extensions, but because it will determine the value that our legal system places on the public domain. Moreover, it may determine whether the First Amendment can be considered applicable to copyright law at all.
Eldred v. Ashcroft comes to the Supreme Court on appeal from the District of Columbia Circuit Court of Appeals, which in upholding the CTEA formed two surprising conclusions. In rejecting the petitioners' copyright and First Amendment challenges to the CTEA, the court held: 1) that Congress is not bound by the introductory language in the Constitution's copyright clause[8] and 2) that the copyright clause is immune from First Amendment challenges.[9]
Petitioners had argued that Congress had overstepped the bounds of the copyright clause which grants Congress the power "to promote the progress of science and the useful arts, by securing for limited times to authors and inventors the exclusive right to their respective writings and discoveries"[10] by enacting term extensions that were not limited and therefore did not promote progress.[11] But the appeals court refused to acknowledge that Congress is bound by the clause's "promote progress" preamble. [12] Referring to its earlier ruling in Schnapper v. Foley, [13] the appeals court restated its position that the introductory language places no limits on congressional power to enact copyright legislation.[14] Relying on a more literal interpretation of the clause, the court pointed out that the new term is in fact limited in the sense that protection does not carry on in perpetuity, and therefore it is within Congress's power to set.[15]
The Court of Appeals also rejected petitioners' argument that the CTEA should fall because originality is a requirement of copyright protection and extending the term lengths of works that have already been protected does not meet that requirement. The court said "originality is by its nature a threshold inquiry relevant to copyrightability, not a continuing concern relevant to the authority of the Congress to extend the term of copyright."[16] The question of originality in relation to copyrighted texts, or any text for that matter, is one that is debated in both literary and legal scholarship and one that has larger implications for the public domain to be discussed later in this article.[17]
But what is particularly significant about the case in terms of communication law is the appeals court's treatment of the petitioners' First Amendment challenge. More than simply dismissing the value of the petitioners' arguments about the effect of term extensions on free expression, the court made the surprising statement that "copyrights are categorically immune from challenges under the First Amendment."[18] The D.C. Circuit Court based this conclusion on its own earlier opinion in United Video, Inc. v. F.C.C. [19] and the Supreme Court's holding in Harper & Row Publishers, Inc. v. Nation Enterprises,[20] which the court of appeals interpreted to provide First Amendment 'immunity' for copyright legislation.[21]
Many legal scholars believe the court of appeals' conclusion that there can be no First Amendment challenge to a copyright statute sets an astounding precedent with enormous implications for copyright law that go beyond the realm of term extensions discussed in this case to other laws that also have the potential to harm freedom of expression and the public domain. [22] Despite the court's dismissal of First Amendment arguments regarding copyright law, there is a growing body of legal scholarship spotlighting copyright's encroachment on freedom of expression.[23] Moreover, the Eleventh Circuit Court of Appeals recently made a strong case for First Amendment rights in relation to copyright law when it recognized the need to protect a defendant's fair use to parody a copyrighted work.[24]
CTEA supporters argue that far from inhibiting First Amendment concerns, term extensions will encourage creative expression.[25] This argument alludes to the Supreme Court's assertion in Harper & Row that copyright serves an "engine of free expression."[26] The Court theorized that without limited monopoly protection for authors fewer works would be produced, thus lessening the availability of original works that promote progress.[27] Proponents of the Act also note that the legislation serves the rational purpose of bringing U.S. term limits for copyright protection in line with proposed European Union term limits, facilitating trade.[28]
Opponents of the CTEA believe the Act violates the spirit of the Constitution's copyright clause and the original intent of the framers, many of who passed the first copyright statute that protected creative works for only 14 years.[29] Considering that this term extension is the eleventh in forty years,[30] opponents argue that Congress seems to be pursuing a course of extension by degrees until works are protected in perpetuity.[31] They note that if the purpose of limited protection of works is to provide authors with an incentive to create, an additional twenty years is unlikely to provide much added incentive prospectively and absolutely none retrospectively.[32] They also argue that copyright's First Amendment justification as an engine of free expression is valid only so long as it serves that purpose, and that by keeping works out of the public domain for longer periods, Congress is denying the public access to the very building blocks upon which progress in arts and science is supposed to be based.[33]
This article considers whether the petitioners in the case have raised a legitimate First Amendment issue, and if so, what a valid First Amendment argument for protecting the public domain might be. Part one of this article describes the CTEA; part two considers whether First Amendment analysis is warranted; part three sketches the contours of the public domain; and part four examines the public domain's relationship to freedom of expression.
THE COPYRIGHT TERM EXTENSION ACT
Congress passed the Sonny Bono Copyright Term Extension Act and the president signed it into law in October of 1998.[34] The Act was named for its original sponsor who died in a skiing accident that year. The CTEA's primary purpose was to amend the 1976 Copyright Act, extending terms for copyright protection by an additional twenty years.[35]
Under the 1976 Copyright Act, copyrighted works were protected for the extent of their creators' lifetimes plus fifty years.[36] Congress enacted the 1976 Copyright Act to bring the United States into compliance with the Berne Convention international copyright agreement.[37] The treaty mandates that all member nations protect copyrights for a minimum period of life plus fifty years. To comply with the treaty the United States lengthened domestic copyright term limits and eliminated requirements for registration or official copyright notice on protected works.[38]
The CTEA amended section 302 of the Copyright Act to extend the duration of copyright in a work created on or after January 1, 1978, to a term equal to the lifespan of the author plus seventy years.[39] In the case of jointly created works, the term now extends seventy years beyond the death of the last surviving author.[40] The CTEA extended the duration of copyright in anonymous or pseudonymous works or works made for hire from the original seventy-five-year term of protection to ninety-five years from the date of first publication, or 120 years from the year of creation, whichever expires first.[41]
Under Sec. 303 of the 1976 Act, works that were not published or registered before January 1, 1978, were destined to fall into the public domain on or before December 31, 2002.[42] But if such a work were published before the 2002 deadline, then it would receive protection until 2027.[43] The CTEA extended that term of protection until 2047.[44] The CTEA also amended Sec. 304 of the Copyright Act to lengthen the renewal term for works created before 1978, extending the total length of protection for such works from 75 to 95 years from the date the original copyright was secured.[45]
Several justifications have been put forward for the legislation, suggesting that it provides additional encouragement to create, adjusts copyright protection to correspond to increased life expectancy and encourages the preservation of older works. But the primary reason sponsors gave for supporting the bill was to ensure that U.S. intellectual property remained competitive abroad, particularly in terms of trade within the European Economic Union. Arguing for term extensions, Senator Orrin Hatch said, "[A]t a time when we face trade deficits in many other areas, we cannot afford to abandon twenty years' worth of valuable overseas protection now available to our creators and copyright owners."[46]
Hatch and other proponents of the legislation were responding to pressures to alter U.S. copyright term limits to conform to those set by the European Union. In 1993, the EU's Council of Ministers issued a directive, requiring members of the Union to harmonize their individual laws for copyright protection.[47] The directive specified that the duration of copyright protection within the European Union would be equal to the life of the author plus seventy years.[48] Because the Berne Convention's standard of protection is considered a minimum requirement, some European Union countries had adopted longer terms of protection.[49] The directive also altered the standard of protection European Union nations could offer nonmember works, including those from the United States. Up until that point, EU nations had two options regarding the length of protection they could offer U.S. works in their countries. They could offer U.S. works the same duration of protection they gave to their own works and those of other EU nations; or, they could protect U.S. works for the length of time specified by U.S. copyright law. The Council of Ministers' directive announced that, with respect to non-EC works, member nations would now follow the rule of the shorter term.[50]
Applying the rule of the shorter term meant that European Union nations would protect member nations' works for the life of the author plus seventy years, but U.S. works would only be protected for the life of the author plus fifty years, the term length established by the 1976 Copyright Act. Intellectual property is one of the United States' main exports.[51] Fear of losing twenty years of returns on intellectual property became the driving impetus to enact the Copyright Term Extension Act.[52]
Professor Arthur Miller has pointed out that Congress undoubtedly had a rational reason to extend term limits - harmonization of our laws with those of European Union nations that are large consumers of American intellectual property.[53] However, opponents to term extensions argue that the United States does not need to revamp its copyright system to meet the demands of other nations.[54] The United States has traditionally resisted international rules that would alter the domestic balance between author and societal rights to intellectual property.[55] A prime example of this is U.S. refusal to comply with the Berne Convention's mandate that member nations recognize authors' moral rights in intellectual property. Under a moral rights theory, author rights are primary. "Copyright is a natural property right that the author obtains by virtue of the labor he or she has expended to create the artistic literary work."[56] Even after selling the economic rights in a work, the author preserves the moral rights to protect the work from "any distortion, mutilation or any other modification which would be prejudicial to his or her honor or reputation."[57] As a signatory to the Berne Convention, the United States is obligated to protect authors' moral rights (something U.S. copyright has traditionally not done), but has skirted the issue by concluding that current domestic laws, such as unfair competition, defamation, privacy and contract law, adequately protect authors' work.[58] A moral rights system arguably would interfere with our own copyright system's basic tenet that copyrights are not a natural property right but a monopoly right secured for limited times to promote progress. CTEA opponents note that a similar argument could be made about the twenty-year term extension - that while it might be suitable for countries that view copyright as a natural property right, it is not appropriate for one that views copyright as a limited monopoly that ultimately serves the public welfare.[59]
From an economic perspective, the Act's opponents also argue that the market for U.S. intellectual property traded abroad is likely to be at its height during the early stage of a work's lifetime, not after a span the length of the life of the author plus seventy years.[60] Their assumption is that the social costs of depriving the public domain of any new works until the year 2018 are unlikely to justify the potential benefit to copyright holders who profit from term extensions.
Of course, as more than one commentator on this issue has observed, there is no empirical data to show that creators would strongly benefit from term extensions; nor is there any data regarding the impact that closing off the public domain for twenty years would have on the development of creative works.[61] The conclusion one draws depends on the theoretical perspective one takes when approaching the issue.
SHOULD THE COURT GRANT A FIRST AMENDMENT REVIEW ?
In a recent copyright case, the Eleventh Circuit stated that "the public interest is always served in promoting First Amendment values and in preserving the public domain from encroachment. [62] While a few courts have appeared to recognize the potentially negative implications that aspects of copyright law have had on freedom of expression,[63] historically most courts have been reluctant to acknowledge a conflict between copyright law and the First Amendment. Many have found copyright's capacity to restrict speech is ameliorated by the doctrine of fair use, which gives secondary writers and artists the right to use limited portions of a work for the purposes of comment, criticism, reporting and scholarship.[64] Other have found that copyright's idea/expression dichotomy protects First Amendment concerns by allowing secondary writers to use the facts and ideas of a primary writer without appropriating the exact wording used to express the facts and ideas.[65]
In fact, in reaching the conclusion that copyright law cannot implicate the First Amendment, the D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals based its analysis, in part, on the idea/expression dichotomy.[66]
It cited the Supreme Court's opinion in Harper & Row, to conclude that copyright law was immune from First Amendment challenges, but the court of appeals seems to have misread that decision. In Harper & Row, Nation Enterprises asked the Court to craft a public figure exception to copyright to shield The Nation magazine, which quoted from former President Gerald Ford's unpublished memoirs. Refusing to do so, the Court explained that copyright has built-in First Amendment protections - fair use and the idea expression dichotomy - that normally preserve the First Amendment interests of secondary writers.[67]
The Court never said, however, that copyright was immune from First Amendment challenges.
The theory behind the idea/expression dichotomy is generally credited to Melville Nimmer who in 1970 wrote an influential law review article about the potential conflict between the First Amendment's dictate that "Congress shall make no law...abridging the freedom of speech" and the Copyright Act's regulation of speech. [68] Nimmer theorized that conflicting interests could be accommodated with definitional balancing.[69] Under this balancing approach, ideas would fall on the free speech side of the line, while the specific statement of the idea - its form - would fall on the copyright side of the line. While acknowledging the existence of some speech interest in the actual expression of an idea, Nimmer theorized that the speech interest did not supercede copyright's interest in encouraging creativity as long as ideas remained accessible to everyone.[70] But Nimmer also balanced this approach by stating that after a certain period of time, the copyright interest in a work would decline while the speech interest remained constant.[71] At that point, the speech interest should prevail.[72]
Nimmer recognized that under certain circumstances copyright could pose constraints on freedom of expression that were not mitigated by the idea-expression dichotomy, such as when the particular form of expression might be crucial to convey a message.[73] This, he said, is particularly true where visual works, such as photographs and films, are concerned. He used the example the Zapruder film of President John F. Kennedy's assassination.[74] Two years after Nimmer wrote his article another image captured the world's attention and arguably altered American sentiment for the Vietnam War - Nick Ut's Pulitzer Prize winning photo of nine-year-old Kim Phuc suffering from the effects of napalm. Nimmer proposed an exception to copyright in cases in which newsworthiness was an issue.[75] Similar exceptions exist in the areas of defamation and privacy law, but courts have accepted no such exception for copyright.[76] Fair use is intended to fulfill that purpose. But scholars have lamented its efficacy in that area and pointed to its chilling effects.[77] Nimmer also pointed to insufficient protection for speech that may ensue from over-reliance on the fair use doctrine. He noted that "The scope and extent of fair use falls within the discretion of the Congress. The limitations of the First Amendment are imposed upon Congress itself."[78]
Nimmer also expressed concern over then pending legislation that would lengthen the term of copyright on works already protected under the law.[79] He argued that retrospective term extensions burdened free speech without providing additional incentives to create because the works were already in existence.[80] He added, "I can but conclude that a serious question exists as to the constitutional validity of the proposed extension, given the countervailing interests in free speech."[81] He also suggested that the Constitution's mandate to "promote the progress of science and the useful arts" might render retrospective term extensions beyond Congress' power.[82]
Several commentators have noted similarities between Nimmer's warning against retrospective term extensions and the potential impact of the Sonny Bono Copyright Term Extension Act.[83] But in Eldred v. Reno, the D.C. Circuit Court of Appeal appeared oblivious to Nimmer's concern as it cited Justice Brennon in Harper & Row, citing Nimmer, to conclude that copyright's idea-expression dichotomy rendered the statute invulnerable to First Amendment challenges.[84]
However, while Nimmer warned against perpetual copyrights and retrospective extensions, he did not oppose prospective extensions.[85] In fact, when he wrote his article, Congress was contemplating a copyright term extension from 56 years to life plus 50 years to comply with the Berne Convention. The prospective extension granted by the CTEA is not so different from the Berne Convention extension in that it also attempts to align U.S. copyright terms with copyright protection offered by other nations. Viewed in terms of global trade, copyright term extensions appear to make economic sense.
Without a larger issue, such as freedom of speech, to trigger heightened scrutiny, the Supreme Court is likely to defer to congressional reasoning rather than question whether the means Congress employed to serve trade will actually lead to the ends desired. It is precisely for this reason that the question of whether copyright term extensions violate the First Amendment is important to the Supreme Court's analysis of this legislation. The CTEA is a content-neutral law; it was not imposed for the purpose of restricting speech based on its communicative impact. If the Supreme Court opts to apply First Amendment analysis to the CTEA, it will likely examine the law using the heightened scrutiny test for content-neutral legislation. The Court will have to determine whether the CTEA furthers an important government interest and, if so, whether the legislation is narrowly tailored to further that interest.[86] In other words, heightened scrutiny would demand that the Court determine whether the government's goal of extending term limits prospectively and retrospectively to bring U.S. laws in line with European law warrants the legislation's attendant impact on expression.
In performing this analysis, the Court need not reach a final determination on the legislation's constitutionality. It may simply remand the case with instruction to the court below to review the case under heightened scrutiny. But in either case, is will be difficult to determine what the balance should be without a better understanding of what the public domain is, how it functions and what its relationship is to free expression. The rest of this article focuses on these questions.
WHAT IS THE PUBLIC DOMAIN?
Drawing its boundaries
The public domain sits at the opposite end of the intellectual property scale. It is the counterweight to intellectual property, the body of work and knowledge that is "characterized by rights held in common over information, as opposed to the individual rights granted in a positive and defined form by the different branches of intellectual property law."[87] The term intellectual property encompasses three separate areas of law with different theories: copyright, patent and trademark law. In assigning protection to various expressive works, processes and inventions, and distinctive terms and symbols, each area of law places information into a proprietary realm. Information that falls outside of this proprietary realm is assumed to be in the public domain.
While trademark law finds its origins in common law intended to prevent consumer confusion in the marketplace, copyright and patent law draw their force from the Constitution, which grants Congress the power to protect intellectual property "to promote progress."[88] The common understanding of the copyright and patent clause is that protection of intellectual property will serve as an economic incentive to encourage individuals to produce more work, thereby contributing to the progress of science and the arts, which in turn benefits the general public welfare.[89] Thus copyright law is intended to balance the interests of two competing parties - the creators who have an economic interest in the preservation of the work and the general public which has an interest in access to those works.[90] In fact, between the two competing parties, it could even be argued that the rights of the public are the stronger, or at least should be.[91] In United States v. Paramount Pictures, the Supreme Court said "copyright law, like the patent statutes, makes reward to the owner a secondary consideration."[92]
While there is no legal definition for public domain in any statute, and courts have been reluctant to pin down its borders, the public domain has been recognized as worthy of protection. In SunTrust Bank v. Houghton Mifflin Co. (2001), the Eleventh Circuit said
"The Copyright Clause was intended 'to be the engine of free expression.' To that end, copyright laws have been enacted to achieve the three main goals: the promotion of learning, the protection of the public domain, and the granting of an exclusive right to the author."[93]
In terms of copyright, legal theorists generally agree on three categories of works that belong to the public domain: 1) works that were previously protected by copyright, but whose copyright protection has expired; 2) works that were never protected by copyright, such as those produced by the federal government[94] and those that lack the criteria for copyright such as fixation or originality;[95] and 3) and works that although deserving of copyright protection have fallen into the public domain because their creators have allowed them to, either purposely or by accident.
To this description of the public domain, three other categories also can be attributed. These are not categories of creative works, per se, but rather building blocks for creative works. The first, and most important, is made up of facts, which are not copyrightable. In Feist Publications v. Rural Telephone Service Co., Justice Sandra O'Connor explained that facts cannot be copyrighted "because facts do not owe their origin to an act of authorship. The distinction is one between creation and discovery: The first person to find and report a particular fact has not created the fact; he or she has merely discovered its existence."[96] Also included in this category are ideas, procedures, processes, systems, methods of operation, concepts, principles, or discoveries, regardless of the form in which they are described, explained, illustrated, or embodied in such work.[97]
The second category includes scenes a faire. Judge Leon Yankwich, who sat on the federal district court for the Southern District of California, introduced the French literary term, meaning a scene "which must be done," into U.S. copyright case law in the early 1940s.[98] Judge Yankwich explained that scenes a faire "are the common stock of literary composition - 'cliches' - to which no one can claim literary ownership."[99] Using the example of a couple seeking shelter from a storm in a church, he said "Courts have held repeatedly that such similarities and incidental details necessary to the environment or setting of an action are not the material of which copyrightable originality consists." [100]
The third category, which is somewhat more controversial, is that area of copyrighted work that is protected but would fall under the privilege of fair use. The fair use doctrine entitles individuals who ordinarily would not have the right to use copyrighted material without the permission of the owner to use small portions of a copyrighted work for the purpose of criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching, scholarship or research.[101] Some commentators argue that because it is generally permissible to make fair use of small portions of a work, those uses fall into the public domain.[102]
A positive or negative creation?
Some legal theorists have refuted the proposition that the public domain is a positive creation at all. In his discussion of the public domain, Edward Samuels describes the public domain as "the 'negative' of whatever may be protected."[103] It is the sum total of what is leftover after protected works are accounted for and therefore not really capable of serving as a public policy or legal principle with a life of its own.[104] Moreover, Samuels argues that many of the limitations on the scope of copyright protection attributed to the growth of the public domain were really "created in response to major copyright expansions, and are therefore ultimately part of copyright's expanding scope."[105]
At the other end of the spectrum there are legal scholars who not only see the public domain as a positive entity, but who have attempted to map it and its adjacent terrain.[106] Pamela Samuelson suggests that the public domain is akin to its own nation-state and that various categories of public domain information are regions of that nation.[107] In her visual diagram, one state is allocated for "ideas, concepts, discoveries, theories, hypotheses" and another for "facts, information, data, know-how and knowledge."[108] Others are established for government materials, innovations involving intellectual property protection in which no rights were claimed or rights have expired, and innovations not qualifying for intellectual property protection.[109] Some of the residents in these states have more than one home. And property lines are subject to change. As Samuelson points out, the public domain varies in size and scope, changing with the passage of new laws, legal interpretations of established law, and additions to the public domain over time.[110] So, although a visual interpretation of the public domain is conceptually helpful, it is still only an approximation that is readily subject to change.
But if indistinct boundaries are a characteristic of the public domain, they are also a quality of the protected domain. While there is no complete compilation of public domain works - no database with a listing of all works freely accessible to the public, the same statement could be made about copyrighted works. Although the Patent and Trademark Office records copyrights individuals register, the listing is nowhere near complete. When the United States became a signatory to the Berne Convention agreement, the obligation to register works for copyright protection was removed.[111] Now that copyright notice, deposit and registration are no longer required, millions of copyrighted works exist outside the government's database of protected works.[112]
In fact, David Lange, one of the first legal scholars to write about the public domain, observes "that intellectual property theory must always accept something akin to a 'no-man's land' at the boundaries."[113] Thus recognition of an exclusive interest in intellectual property ought to imply an affirmative recognition of its conceptual opposite - the public domain. [114] Lange compared the public domain's value with public lands subject to over grazing or the Alaskan tundra's fragile ecosystem, suggesting that it might be prudent to require an environmental impact statement of some kind before we permit the territory to be appropriated.[115]
An intellectual commons?
Lange is not the only theorist to analogize the public domain to real property.[116] The public domain is sometimes called our intellectual commons, a term that alludes to the English Enclosure Movement and the history of propertization that is part of our inherited Western European culture.[117]
Economic historians suggest that the enclosure movement, which fenced off public property in fifteenth through nineteenth century England for private use, remedied the tragedy of the commons.[118] The theory assumes that public lands used for common consumption are generally mismanaged and underdeveloped, and that transferring that land into the hands of a single owner provides incentives for large-scale investment, protects the resource from over exploitation, and generally encourages more efficient management. [119] A similar argument has been applied to copyrighted materials about to enter the public domain, suggesting that allowing copyright holders to have exclusive control over those works for longer periods of time encourages progress, because without exclusive control, there would be no incentive to invest in the work, market it broadly or preserve it from deterioration.[120]
While the tragedy of the commons theory may be applicable to shared land, it is not applicable to the public domain because information is not a limited resource. As literature scholar John Frow notes, "Rather than being exhausted by use, knowledge actually increases when it is shared."[121] Where copyright is concerned, the primary economic issue is really one of nonexclusion, meaning that because information is not exhausted by use, the same unit can satisfy an infinite number of users at a marginal cost.[122] The challenge for copyright law then is to provide an incentive to create the work in the first place. The law responds to that challenge by creating a limited monopoly called an intellectual property right.[123]
But the key word here, of course, is limited. Copyright is a statutory right, not a natural right in property.[124] Although our founding fathers were heavily influenced by natural rights theory, they recognized perpetual copyright to be a monopoly that they opposed.[125] They justified granting limited exclusive rights to copyright holders on the theory that the public would eventually have access to a greater body of knowledge, now generally understood to be the public domain.[126]
The comparison of the public domain to an intellectual commons is a double-edged sword that can be used for varying purposes depending on who wields it. In once sense, it reinforces the conception of copyrighted material as real property. Real property carries with it the notion of perpetual ownership and restrictions of use based on scarcity of resources. In another sense, characterizing the public domain as an intellectual commons may also allow individuals to conceptualize the public domain as a common resource that is worthy of protection.
Recognizing a conceptual difficulty in coming to grips with the concept of public domain as an entity entitled to protection, James Boyle posits the need for a new vocabulary to deal with identification of the public domain. He analogizes the public domain to the natural environment, a concept that had to be invented in the mind of the public before people became interested in protecting it for the common good.[127] Boyle observes that the environmental movement gained power by highlighting two structural reasons our society has traditionally made poor choices regarding its preservation - "a legal system based on a particular notion of what 'private property' entailed and an engineering or scientific system that treated the world as a simple, linearly related set of causes and effects."[128] He notes that in both of these conceptual systems, there was no place for analysis of environmental impacts. The environment simply disappeared. Likewise, Boyle argues, similar structural issues impair our ability to preserve the public domain.
The fundamental tensions in the economic analysis of information issues, the source-blindness of an 'original author'- centered model of property rights, and the political blindness to the importance of the public domain as a whole...all come together to make the public domain disappear, first in concept and then, increasingly, as a reality.[129]
In their effort to reify the environment, naturalists focused attention on the idea of ecology - a fragile system with unpredictable interconnections, and "welfare economics - the ways in which markets can fail to make activities internalize their full costs."[130] These issues are also present in analysis of the impact of term extensions on the public domain among those who argue that a rich public domain is integral to the system of creative production and that supporting authors rights to the detriment of "authorship" may yield unexpected social costs.[131]
Looking at the public domain using a systems theory perspective, as Boyle and other scholars have done, may make it easier to see how the addition of new intellectual property laws that alter the balance between the protected and the public domain may have an impact on the future creation of expressive works.
A SYSTEM APROACH: INTERTEXTUALITY AND THE PUBLIC DOMAIN
Our Western European conception of authorship relies on the assumption that authors create original works. In certain respects, copyright law adopts this view as well. [132] In fact, in Feist v. Rural Telephone Service, Justice Sandra O'Conner explained that originality is "[t]he sine qua non of copyright" and "the very premise of copyright law."[133]
However, numerous philosophers,[134] legal scholars,[135] and professors of communication and literature[136] have pointed out that the concept of originality is elusive, considering that what all authors "create" is actually predicated upon earlier works and influences, many of which are found in the public domain.
Rejecting the concept of the romantic author who creates in a vacuum, some legal scholars are employing an interdisciplinary approach to textual analysis. They are looking beyond traditional legal reasoning and methodologies employed by courts, to embrace theories and techniques used by post-structural literary critics, who study intertextual relationships in their search for the social construction of meaning.[137] Intertextuality, viewed in a copyright context, appears to suggest that the public domain has a powerful impact on expression.
The theory of intertextuality assumes that linguistic signs are differential - that is, that their meanings can be understood only in relation to other linguistic signs. Likewise, the meaning of texts can be understood only in relation to other texts. "Text" as this theory uses the term, refers to literary, visual and aural works.[138] Intertextual theorists assume that texts influence one another in numerous ways, not just through direct references to other works, but through indirect references of which the writer may or may not be aware. Julia Kristeva, who first coined the term intertextuality in the 1960s, explains that the theory is based on the presumption that "any text builds itself as a mosaic of quotations, any text is an absorption and transformation of another text."[139] Viewed from this perspective, literary theorist Graham Allen suggests that literary works are "no longer the product of an author's original thoughts...the literary work is viewed not as the container of meaning but as a space in which a potentially vast number of relations coalesce."[140]
Intertextuality is both an outgrowth and a rejection of Ferdinand de Saussure's, structural view of semiotics.[141] Saussure, who is considered the father of modern linguistics, developed a theory of linguistic signs in which he separated the signifier (used to name a concept) from the signified (the concept named). His intent was to emphasize that "a sign is not a word's reference to some object in the world but the combination, conveniently sanctioned, between a signifier and a signified."[142] Noting that the signifier changes from language to language and culture to culture, Saussure observed that the signs are relational and arbitrary, "possessing meaning not because of referential function, but because of their meaning within a linguistic system as it exists within any one moment in time."[143] Saussure rejected the notion that signs had an independent, positive meaning of their own, postulating instead that signs draw their meaning from their associations with other signs in a linguistic system.
Saussure's theory was revolutionary in its implication for social scientific research on the construction of meaning. As Graham Allen explains, "If traditional notions present us with a vision of a human speaker originating the meanings contained in his or her chosen works, then Saussure's linguistics replaced that vision with the recognition that all acts of communication stem from choices made within a system which pre-exists the speaker."[144]
Like Saussure, intertextual theorists reject the notion that meanings are inherent in the words we speak, but unlike Saussure, they do not assume that meaning making is divorced from human action. M.M. Bakhtin, a Russian literary theorist whose work heavily influenced Kristeva, was particularly concerned with the social contexts in which individuals used language to create meaning.[145]
While Saussure viewed the relational nature of words as stemming from a generalized and abstract system that was almost scientific in nature, Bakhtin, whose work was influenced by Marxism, considered linguistic relationships to be inherent to specific social sites, moments of utterance and reception.[146] For Bakhtin, language was a living thing, always in a state of becoming.[147]
Kristeva superimposes the fluctuating nature of linguistics onto texts, viewing them as always in a state of production. Referring to the "intersection of textual surfaces," she argues that the literary word (and by extension, text) has no fixed meaning, but is a dialogue among the writer, the addressee, and the contemporary or earlier cultural context.[148] She locates texts along horizontal and vertical axes, in which the horizontal dimension serves as a communication between the writer and the addressee and the vertical dimension serves as a communication between earlier and later texts.[149] Thus the meaning of a text is constantly changing, depending on its audience and its spatial and temporal locale.
Employed as a literary device, intertextuality operates in number of ways. Some texts, for example, are simply informed by others. Consciously or subconsciously, writers incorporate references, allusions and stories from other texts. These borrowed elements may come from the public domain or other protected works. They may be facts, ideas, expressive passages or scenes a faire. Other texts are adaptations and reinterpretations of earlier works. Adaptations may move a creative form forward by improving its quality, reinterpreting a work to heighten its relevance to a broader audience, or modernizing a piece that has value but for whatever reason may have fallen out of popularity.[150]
Our cultural history is filled with examples of transformative works and adaptations. One of literature's most respected writers, William Shakespeare, was known for his adaptations of earlier writers' tales.[151] Mark Twain, a well-known advocate of perpetual copyright, based his "A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur's Court" on a public domain work.[152] In music, Johann Sebastian Bach based his Concerto for Four Harpsichords on Antonio Vivaldi's Concerto for Four Violins in B Minor; Wolfgang Mozart adapted Joseph Haydn's work for his Jupiter Symphony; and Ludwig van Beethoven borrowed from French composers Francois-Joseph Gossec and Etienne Mehul.[153] Vaudeville performer Groucho Marx admitted that he and his brothers evolved their personalities by first borrowing the works of others as they sought to establish their own personas.[154] Warner Brothers' Wile E. Coyote was adapted from Hopi Indian stories about a coyote who kept falling victim to his own schemes.[155] In film, "West Side Story" reinterpreted Shakespeare's "Romeo and Juliet,"[156] and Disney, the primary lobbyist for the Copyright Term Extension Act, has made millions reinterpreting Victor Hugo's Hunchback of Notre Dame and other tales from the public domain including Pocahontas, Cinderella, and Snow White and the Seven Dwarves.[157]
Intertextuality, a factor in the production of texts, is also a factor in the reception of texts.[158] Just as a multitude of influences bear on the writer as he or she produces a work, the reader's or viewer's interpretation of a text will necessarily be informed and influenced by exposure to earlier works.[159] In fact, Roland Barthes, one of Kristeva's contemporaries who was also very influential in the construction of intertextual theory, argued that audiences, not authors, write texts. In his famous essay, "The Death of the Author," Barthes wrote:
We know now that a text is not a line of words releasing a single 'theological' meaning (the 'message' of the Author-God) but a multidimensional space in which a variety of writings, none of them original, blend and clash. The text is a tissue of quotations drawn from the innumerable centers of culture....[A text] is made of multiple writings, drawn from many cultures and entering into mutual relations of dialogue, parody, and contestation, but there is one place where this multiplicity is focused and that place is the reader, not as was hitherto said, the author. [160]
Barthes assumes, as most intertextual theorists do, that readers bring their own histories to the table when they interact with a text. Thus a text's meaning to a particular audience member is determined by that person's previous exposure to other texts. Likewise, if the reader or viewer comes back to the text after many years and exposure to other texts, the meaning will have changed. "However, to the extent that audiences share cultures, which is another way of saying they share texts, they bring some common textual knowledges to bear upon text construction."[161]
Intertextuality is a theory that not only applies to texts in the form of books, plays, films and musical compositions, but to culture in general.[162] Our cultural fabric is woven of all the stories, music, food, pictures and traditions that have been passed down, appropriated and reinterpreted throughout our history. Media theorists Brian Ott and Cameron Walter argue that "intertextual allusions found in post modern texts allow viewers to exercise specialized knowledge and to mark their membership in particular cultures."[163] Using the example of viewers watching television shows with intertextual references and visiting fan Web sites during the show or immediately after to discuss those references, Ott and Walker observe that intertextual media encourage viewers to identify with one another in a manner that less consciously intertextual media do not.[164] These researchers also see intertextuality as becoming more important in the management of information and meaning in our society. They write that "The collage-like, participatory nature of intertextual media fosters an aggregative rather than sequential way of seeing and knowing. Instead of processing data as a finite set of causal relations, audiences favor a spatial orientation in which everything is related to everything else."[165]
Viewed even more broadly, it is clear that intertextuality also applies to human beings. We are the sum total of our experiences, our connections to others, and our exposure or lack of exposure to particular ideas and concepts. We are defined not only by who we are, but also by who and what we know and do not know. We are texts written by a multitude of authors - essentially derivative works.
Viewed from this perspective, it is difficult to divorce the creation of texts, culture or ourselves from the appropriation of others' expression or the public domain. The idea/expression dichotomy, which divorces facts from their expression, appears inadequate for analysis of such a system.[166] If all expression comes from the past, the pubic domain - the pool of past expression - becomes exceptionally important.
Litman's theory of the public domain
Noting the ingrained author conception in traditional legal copyright analysis, Jessica Litman has attempted to articulate a theory of the public domain that embraces the theory of intertextuality within our legal system.
Litman begins with the legal premise that the core requirement for copyright protection is originality,[167] and the practical observation that very little of what is copyrighted is truly original.[168] She observes that from a legal perspective the incorporation of others' works into a new work should weaken a potential copyright holder's claim to originality, but that this is rarely a problem for the potential copyright holder because copyright law does not require that originality be demonstrated before copyright is established.[169] She also observes that while the intertextual relationships that influence the new work may come from the public domain, fair uses of other copyrighted works, or even undiscovered theft of others' protected work, these relationships may never be realized as outside of the new author's own creation.[170] In fact, if put to the wall, the new author may not even be able to recognize the source of the influences in his or her work. The influences may be subconscious. Nevertheless, once these intertextual influences are subsumed by the new work that gains copyright protection, the new author has the exclusive right to use them, along with the right to deny their uses to others.[171] The rest of society loses the right of access to these same influences that the writer borrowed. If those influences were part of the public domain, then part of the public domain has been fenced off.[172]
Technically copyright law protects what is original in a work, not what is borrowed from someone else.[173] But, copyright protection is generally applied to the entire work because the Copyright Office has no way to determine which aspects of the work are original, and for that matter, neither do the courts.[174] Copyright holders, unlike applicants for patent protection, are never asked to first delineate what is actually theirs and what is actually borrowed from others before receiving copyright protection for a work.[175] Furthermore, a system that forced copyright holders to go through this process would be unworkable under our present copyright scheme, which enables writers to copyright their work without official registration.[176] Litman observes that in order to preserve the system as it is we must maintain the legal fallacy of originality.
She postulates that the public domain is the tool that makes this legal fallacy workable.[177] She writes "Were we to take the legal concept of originality seriously, we would need to ensure that authors' copyrights encompassed only those aspects of their works that were actually original.... such a dissection would be impossible... If it were it possible, I am confident that authors would not welcome it."[178] Litman suggests that the public domain permits authors to "avoid the harsh light of a genuine search for provenance," preserving the illusion of originality.[179] It is, in essence, the solution to fuzzy logic.
Litman observes that we often view the public domain as a realm of material either undeserving of protection or as a public toll paid in exchange for a limited monopoly on copyrighted works.[180] She argues that the public domain should instead be understood as a "device that permits the rest of the system to work by leaving the raw material of authorship available for others to use."[181]
To Litman's theory I would also point out that denial of a concept of originality in copyright law is a dangerous business because the refusal to protect facts in our copyright system is predicated upon the belief that facts are nonoriginal.[182] The theory assumes that a discoverer of a fact cannot claim copyright to it because he is not the author of that fact; he may only claim expression of that fact.[183] Once we deny the concept of originality of expression, we drop the barrier between facts and expression. If the two concepts are lumped together, then facts may lose their place of honor and become subject to proprietary use.[184]
And, as professor Jane Ginsburg has pointed out, that barrier is already porous. Ginsburg observes that contrary to the Platonic view of fact discovery, facts do not exist independently of individual perception.[185] Researchers work from a variety of theoretical, methodological and perceptual perspectives that color their interpretation of facts.[186] When broken down, every scientific study has one or more qualitative aspects - the design of the study, the choice of research question, the sample selection, the evidence gathered, the data manipulation. All are based on researcher choices. Consequently, all data are open to interpretation and contain some expressive elements.
In a circular fashion, the concept of originality protects what is nonoriginal - both in expression and in fact. But it is a concept in need of an opposing force, which is the public domain. Protecting the public domain as a wellspring of creativity, not only preserves the illusion of originality for authorial integrity and legal purposes, but serves the utilitarian purpose of protecting expression and the pursuit of knowledge
CONCLUSION
In its brief to the Court the government essentially challenges the petitioners to show why the idea/expression dichotomy does not resolve their First Amendment concerns regarding the public domain.[187] This paper has attempted to answer that challenge by pointing out that authorship is systematic, and that while the idea/expression dichotomy may be an appropriate analysis for the use of one work, it is not appropriate for an entire system. The CTEA does not just burden one work, it burdens the system by delaying access to work already protected for extensive periods by another 20 years.
Legal scholars who believe Congress has gone too far by extending copyright term limits argue that an additional twenty years is unnecessary to encourage creators to produce new works, and possibly counter-productive to creativity that relies on the public domain.[188] Proponents of the extension counter that even if copyright is not serving as an incentive to produce new works, it is arguably serving as an incentive to market established works to their fullest capacity, and in doing so, contributing to the economy.[189] Under this theory, copyright's purpose is served when protectionism encourages greater marketing of works, which in turn leads to greater consumption of these cultural products and increased profits, which may be reinvested in the creation of more works.
This is ultimately a trade-based argument that in order to compete internationally the United States has to comply with terms set by other countries. But even after changing the term of copyright protection, the United States does not comply with the copyright philosophies of most of its European trading partners.[190]
We do not observe the continental tradition of recognizing moral rights. Moreover, offering the minimum amount of protection allowable under the Berne Convention, the United States has become one of the largest producers (if not the largest producer) of intellectual property in the world.[191]
Perhaps that is because we have followed our own path where intellectual property is concerned. While other countries protected moral rights, we encouraged derivative and fair use. When other countries signed the Berne Convention Agreement in 1886, we held out until 1988.[192]
Under critical examination, the argument to extend protection to the European standard of life plus seventy years, really comes down to the need to protect American works whose protection will lapse in foreign countries after they are probably more than 100 years old. Will the demand for 100-year-old American works in foreign countries be so great that the profits are worth putting a twenty-year freeze on the public domain? Who will incur these profits, and is the balance in the interest of society?
Twice in its brief, the government points out that the petitioners' argument that Congress is restricted by the "promote progress" language in the copyright clause is purely academic.[193] I suppose that the argument presented here for freedom of expression is also purely academic. But it is one that is gaining steam. Numerous legal scholars believe that Congress has already pushed copyright protection too far, that we are on a sliding slope, and to go any further not only risks permanently damaging the system upon which cultural developments thrive, but also eliminating any constitutionally grounded discourse in copyright law.[194] If this addition of twenty years is constitutionally permissible, will another twenty be added after that, and then again after that? At what point do we say "too much"? At what point do we acknowledge that the public domain is worth protection?
[1] Sonny Bono Copyright Term Extension Act of 1998, Pub. L. No. 105-298, 112 Stat. 2827 (1998) (codified as amended at 17 U.S.C. 108, 203(a)(2), 301(c), 302, 303 and 304).
[2] Lead petitioner is Eric Eldred, the publisher of Eldrich Press, a free Internet library of public domain works (last modified 2/2/02). Other petitioners are Higgenson Book Company; Jill A Crandall; Tri-Horn International; Luck's Music Library, Inc.; Edwin F. Kalmus & Co., Inc.; American Film Heritage; Association, Moviecraft, Inc.; Dover Publications, Inc.; and Copyright Commons.
[3] Eldred v. Reno, 239 F. 3d 372 (D.C. Cir. 2001); reh'g en banc denied, Eldred v. Ashcroft, 255 F. 3d 849 (D.C. Cir. 2001), cert. granted (U.S. Oct. 11, 2001) (No. 01-618). The Supreme Court's docket is posted on its Web site (last visited March 8, 2002) .
[4] U.S. Const., art. I, 8, cl. 8 (granting Congress the power "to promote the Progress of Science and useful Arts, by securing for limited Times to Authors and Inventors the exclusive Right to their respective Writings and Discoveries").
[5] See Appellant's Petition for Writ of Certiorari at 10-17, Eldred v. Ashcroft, 239 F.3d 372 (D.C. Cir. 2001), LEXIS No. 01-618, 2001 U.S. Briefs 618 (Oct. 11, 2001), also available on Berkman Center's Openlaw Web site (last visited March 8, 2002) [hereinafter Appellant's Petition].
[6] U.S. Const., amend. 1 (The First Amendment provides, in relevant part, that "Congress shall make no law...abridging the freedom of speech , or of the press...").
[7] See Appellant's Petition, supra note 5, at 17-24.
[8] See Eldred, 239 F.3d at 378.
[9] See id. at 375.
[10] U.S. Const., Art. I, 8, cl. 8.
[11] See Eldred, 239 F.3d at 377-78.
[12] See id. at 378.
[13] 667 F.2d 102, 112 (1981).
[14] But see Eldred, 239 F.3d at 383 (Sentelle, J. dissenting in part) (arguing that the language in Schnapper was not a holding the Circuit Court need follow, but "simply dicta").
[15] See Eldred, 239 F.3d at 377-78.
[16] Id. at 380.
[17] See infra notes 131-185 and accompanying text.
[18] Eldred, 239 F.3d at 375.
[19] 890 F.2d 1173 (D.C. Cir. 1989).
[20] 471 U.S. 539 (1985).
[21] See Eldred, 239 F.3d at 375 (describing the two cases as "insuperable bars to plaintiffs' first amendment theory").
[22] See Brief Amici Curiae of Copyright Law Professors in Support of the Petition at 3-7, Eldred v. Ashcroft 239 F.3d 372, LEXIS No. 01-618, 2001 U.S. Briefs 618 (Nov. 26, 2001). See also Brief Amici Curiae of Jack M. Balkin, Yochai Benkler, Bert Neuborne, and Jed Rubenfeld (Constitutional Law Professors) in Support of the Petition at 1-3, Eldred v. Ashcroft 239 F.3d 372, available online at the Berkman Center Openlaw Web site (last visited March 8, 2002)
.
[23] See, e.g., Neil Weinstock Netanel, Locating Copyright Within the First Amendment Skein, 54 Stan. L. Rev. 1 (2001); Lawrence Lessig, Copyright's First Amendment, 48 UCLA L. Rev. 1057 (2001); Yochai Benkler, Free as the Air to Common Use: First Amendment Constraints on the Enclosure of the Public Domain, 74 N.Y.U. L. Rev. 354 (1999); Mark A. Lemley & Eugene Volakh, Freedom of Speech and Injunctions in Intellectual Property Cases, 48 Duke L.J. 147 (1998); Stephen Fraser, The Conflict Between the First Amendment and Copyright Law and Its Impact on the Internet, 16 Cardozo Arts/Ent. 1 (1998); and Ann Brill & Ashley Packard, Silencing Scientology's Critics on the Internet: A Mission Impossible?, 19 Comm. & L. 1 (1997).
[24] See Suntrust Bank v. Houghton Mifflin Company, 136 F. Supp. 2d, 1357 (N.D. Ga. 2001) rev'd, 252 F.3d 1165 (2001) (The Eleventh Circuit recognized Alice Randall's "The Wind Done Gone" as a parody of "Gone With the Wind" written from the viewpoint of a slave with the specific intention of refuting the stereotypes in Margaret Mitchell's original novel. When Mitchell's heirs brought a copyright action against Randall's publisher, a Georgia district court preliminarily enjoined the book's publication under the theory that it was likely to interfere with the market for the original work. The Eleventh Circuit reversed, describing the injunction as "an unlawful prior restraint in violation of the first amendment.").
[25] See S. Rep. No. 104-315, at 10 (1996) (statement of the Committee of the Judiciary)(concluding that the extensions would serve as an intergenerational incentive to produce more work).
[26] Harper & Row, 471 U.S. 539, 558 (1985).
[27] See id.
[28] See, e.g., Jane C. Ginsburg, Wendy J. Gordon, Arthur R. Miller & William F. Patry, Symposia: The Constitutionality of Copyright Term Extension: How Long Is Too Long? 18 Cardozo Arts/Ent. L.J. 651, 690-92 (2000).
[29] See Hannibal Travis, Comment, Pirates of the Information Infrastructure: Blackstonian Copyright and the First Amendment, 15 Berkeley Tech. L.J. 777, 815 (2000).
[30] See Pub. L. No. 87-668, 76 Stat. 555 (1962); Pub. L. No. 89-142, 79 Stat. 581 (1965); Pub. L. No. 90-141, 81 Stat. 464 (1967); Pub. L. No. 90-416, 82 Stat. 397 (1968); Pub. L. No. 91-147, 83 Stat. 360 (1969); Pub. L. No. 91-555, 84 Stat. 1441 (1970); Pub. L. No. 92-170, 85 Stat. 490 (1971); Pub. L. No. 92-566, 86 Stat. 1181 (1972); Pub. L. No. 93-573, Title I, 104, 88 Stat. 1873 (1974); Pub. L. No. 94-553, 304, 90 Stat. 2572 (1976); Pub. L. No. 105-298, 102(b), 112 Stat. 2827 (1998). In contrast, during copyright's first 150-year period, there were only two term extensions. Act of February 2, 1831, 1-2, 4 Stat. 36, and Act of March 4, 1909, 4, 35 Stat. 1075, 1076.
[31] See statement of Professor Peter Jaszi, Washington College of Law, American University, Hearings on S. 4839, The Copyright Term Extension Act of 1995, Before the Senate Judiciary Comm., 104th Cong., 1st Sess. (1995), available at 1995 WL 1052-4355 (commenting that Congress, using the practice of extending the term of subsisting copyrights without limits, could achieve perpetual copyright protection "on the installment plan") and Christina N. Gifford, Note, The Sonny Bono Copyright Term Extension Act, 30 U. Mem. L. Rev. 363, 398 (2000) ("If history repeats itself, the owners of these copyrights will lobby Congress for a third term extension in 2018, just as they did for the first time in the 1970s and again in the 1990s."). See also, Eldred v. Reno 239 F.3d at 382 (Sentenelle, J. dissenting in part).
[32] See Gifford, supra note 31, at 384 ("Due to the enactment of the CTEA, no new works will fall into the public domain until the year 2018. This fact is of great concern to many institutions such as libraries and archives that depend on woks in the public domain for a large part of their collections.")
[33] See Jane C. Ginsburg, Copyright Legislation for the "Digital Millennium," 23 Colum.-VLA J.L.& Arts 137, 171 (1999) (extending protection of existing works "cannot enhance the quantum of creativity from the past, but it can compromise the creativity of the future, by delaying for twenty years the time at which subsequent authors may freely build on these works.").
[34] Sonny Bono Copyright Term Extension Act of 1998, Pub. L. No. 105-298, 112 Stat. 2827 (1998) (codified as amended at 17 U.S.C. 108, 203(a)(2), 301(c), 302, 303 and 304).
[35] In addition to term extensions, the CTEA also amended or added to the 1976 Copyright Act in three other respects by altering transfer rights, providing a new infringement exception, and clarifying congressional recommendations for division of fees related to audiovisual works.
[36] 17 U.S.C. 105, 302(a) (Supp. 1977).
[37] Berne Convention for the Protection of Literary and Artistic Works, Sept. 9, 1886, revised Paris, July 24, 1971, 25 U.S.T. 1341. The Berne Convention is the oldest international agreement protecting copyrighted works. The United States joined the Berne Convention in 1989.
[38] See Berne Implementation Act of 1988, Pub. L. No. 100-568, 102 Stat. 2853 (codified at 17 U.S.C. 101-04, 116, 301, 401-02, 404-08, 801 (1988) [hereinafter Berne]
[39] See Sonny Bono Copyright Term Extension Act, 102(b)(1).
[40] See id. at 102(b)(2).
[41] See id. at 102(b)(3).
[42] See 17 U.S.C. 303 (Supp. 1977).
[43] See id.
[44] See Sonny Bono Copyright Term Extension Act, 102(c).
[45] See id. at 102(d)(1)(B).
[46] 141 Cong. Rec. S3391 (daily ed. Mar. 2, 1995) (statement of Sen. Hatch).
[47] See Jenny Dixon, The Copyright Term Extension Act: Is Life Plus Seventy Too Much?, 18 Hastings Comm/Ent L.J. 945, 968 (1996), citing Council Directive 93/98, 1993 O.J. (L 290).
[48] See id.
[49] See id. at 969.
[50] See id. at 970-01.
[51] See S. Rep. No. 105-190 at 10 (1998) (statement of the Committee of the Judiciary) (In the report, relating to the Digital Millennium Copyright Act of 1998, the Senate noted that according to International Intellectual Property Alliance, in 1996 U.S. copyright industries achieved foreign sales and exports of $60 billion, for the first time leading all major industry sectors. U.S. creative industries accounted for 3.65% of the U.S. gross domestic product - $278.4 billion.)
[52] See, e.g., H.R. Rep. No. 105-452 at 4 (1998) (statement of the Committee of the Judiciary) ("U.S. works will generally be protected for the same amount of time as works created by the European Union authors; therefore, the United States will ensure that profits generated from the sale of U.S. intellectual property abroad will come back to the United States") and The Copyright Term Extension Act of 1995: Hearings on S4839 Before the Senate Judiciary Comm., 104th Cong. 4 (1995) (statement of Sen. Feinstein) (observing that "perhaps the most compelling reason for this legislation is the need for greater international harmonization of copyright terms).
[53] Miller, supra note 28, at 700.
[54] See Copyright Term, Film Labeling and Film Preservation Legislation: The Copyright Term Extension Act, hearings on H.R. 989 Before the Subcomm. on Courts and Intellectual Property of the House Comm. on the Judiciary, 104th Cong., 1st Sess., 291-94 (statement of Professor Dennis Karjala) [hereinafter House Subcomm. Hearings].
[55] For example, the first copyright statute gave no protection to foreign works (See Act of May 31, 1790, ch. 15, 1 Stat. 124). The policy continued for more than a century. (See Act of March 3, 1891, ch. 565, 26 Stat. 1106.) Also, it was not until the United States became a member of the Berne Convention in 1988 - 102 years after it was originally implemented, that the United States agreed to eliminate the requirement for registration to protect copyrights. (See Berne supra note 38).
[56] Dixon, supra note 47, at 965.
[57] Id. at 967.
[58] See id. at 967.
[59] See House Subcomm. Hearings supra note 54, at 290-94 (statement of Professor Dennis Karjala).
[60] See Gifford, supra note 31, at 392.
[61] See Dixon, supra note 47, at 979; and Jessica Litman, The Public Domain, 39 Emory L.J. 965, 997-98 (1990).
[62] Suntrust Bank v. Houghton Mifflin Co., 136 F. Supp. 2d 1357 (N.D. Ga. 2001), rev'd, 252 F.3d 1165, 268 F.3d 1257, 1276 (11th Cir. 2001).
[63] See Triangle Publ'ns, Inc. v. Knight-Ridder Newspapers, Inc., 445 F. Supp. 875 (S.D. Fla. 1978) (aff'd on other grounds, 626 F.2d 1171 (5th Cir. 1980); New Era Publ'ns Int'l V. Henry Holt & Co., 873 F.2d 576, 588 (2d Cir. 1989)(Oakes, C.J., concurring)(stating that imposing a permanent injunction in the copyright case would "diminish public knowledge" creating first amendment concerns); and Universal City Studios Inc. v. Reimerdes, 111 F. Supp. 2d 294, 327-33 (S.D.N.Y. 2000) (applying first amendment analysis to provisions of the Digital Millennium Copyright Act of 1998, but finding no conflict).
[64] See, e.g., Roy Export Co. v. CBS, Inc., 672 F.2d 1095, 1099 (2d Cir. 1982) ("No circuit that has considered the question...has ever held that the first amendment provides a privilege in the copyright field distinct from the accommodation embodied in the 'fair use' doctrine."); A&M Records, Inc. v. Napster, Inc. 239 F.3d 1004 (9th Cir. 2001) ("First amendment concerns in copyright are allayed by the presence of the fair use doctrine."); (Religious Tech. Ctr. v. Netcom On-Line Communication Servs., 923 F. Supp. 1231, 1258 (stating that the Copyright Act balances First Amendment concerns with the rights of copyright holders); Chi. Sch. Reform Bd. Of Trustees v. Substance Inc. , 79 F. Supp. 2d 919 (N.D. Ill. 2000)(refusing to let a paper print copies of standardized tests to raise public debate on the subject);
[65] See, e.g., Harper & Row, Publishers, Inc. v. Nation Enters., 471 U.S. 539, 560 (1985) (stating that first amendment protections are "already embodied in the Copyright Act's distinction between copyrightable expression and uncopyrightable facts and ideas"); Sid & Marty Krofft Television Prods., Inc. v. McDonald's Corp., 562 F.2d 1157, 1170 (9th Cir. 1977) (concluding "the idea-expression dichotomy already serves to accommodate the competing interests of copyright and the first amendment. The 'marketplace of ideas' is not limited by copyright because copyright is limited to protection of expression."); United Video, Inc. v. FCC, 890 F.2d 1173, 1191 (D.C. Cir. 1989) ("Although there is some tension between the Constitution's copyright clause and the first amendment, the familiar idea/expression dichotomy of copyright law, under which ideas are free but their particular expression can be copyrighted, has always been held to give adequate protection to free expression."); and Iowa State University Research Found. v. ABC, 621 F. 2d 57, 61 (2d Cir. 1980) ("The public interest in the free flow of information is assured by the law's refusal to recognize a valid copyright in facts.").
[66] Eldred, 239 F.3d at 375-76.
[67] Harper & Row Publishers, Inc. v. Nation Enters. 471 U.S. 539, 556 ("[C]opyright's idea/expression dichotomy 'strike[s] a definitional balance between the first amendment and the Copyright Act by permitting free communication of facts while still protecting an authors expression.'") (citations omitted).
[68] Melville Nimmer, Does Copyright Abridge the First Amendment Guaranties of Free Speech and the Press?, 17 UCLA L. Rev. 1180, 1181-86 (1970).
[69] See id. at 1188-89.
[70] See id. at 1193.
[71] See id.
[72] See id.
[73] See id. at 1197.
[74] See id. at 1197-98.
[75] See id. at 1198-99.
[76] In fact, in Harper & Row, the defendants tried to persuade the Court that such an exception was warranted without success. (See 471 U.S. at 556 ("Respondents advance the substantial public import of the subject matter of the Ford memoirs as grounds for excusing a use that would ordinarily not pass muster as a fair use")).
[77] See, e.g., Matthew D. Bunker, Eroding Fair Use: The "Transformative" Use Doctrine After Campbell, 7 Comm. L. & Pol'y 1 (2002) and Keith Aoki, Authors, Inventors and Trademark Owners: Private Intellectual Property and the Public Domain, 18 Colum-VLA J.L. & Arts 1 (Part 1) (1993).
[78] Nimmer, supra note 68, at 1200 ("I would suggest that a grave danger to copyright may lie in the failure to distinguish between the statutory privilege known as fair use and an emerging constitutional limitation on copyright contained in the first amendment.").
[79] See id. at 1194-95.
[80] See id. at 1195 ("It can hardly be argued that an author's creativity is encouraged by such an extension, since the work for which the term is extended has already been created.").
[81] Id. at 1195.
[82] See id. at 1195 ("Though the language is not conclusive, it strongly suggests that the proposed extension of existing copyrights...is beyond the Congress' copyright power, quite apart from its possible invalidity by reason of the first amendment.").
[83] See, e.g., Benkler, supra note 23, at 386-87 and Netanel, supra note 23, at 71.
[84] Eldred v. Reno, 239 F.3d at 375 (citing Harper & Row Publishers Inc. v Nation Enters, 471 U.S. 539, 556, Brennan, J., concurring (citations omitted)).
[85] Nimmer, supra note 68, at 1195.
[86] See Turner Broad. Sys v. FCC, 520 U.S. 180, 189 (1997) ("A content-neutral regulation will be sustained under the first amendment if it advances important governmental interests unrelated to the suppression of free speech and does not burden substantially more speech than necessary to further those interests.")(citing United States v. O'Brien, 391 U.S. 367, 377 (1968)).
[87] John Frow, Public Domain and Collective Rights in Culture, 13 Intell. Prop. J. 39 (1998).
[88] U.S. Const., art. I, 8, cl. 8.
[89] See Twentieth Century Music Corp. v. Aiken, 422 U.S. 151, 156 (1975) ("The limited scope of the copyright holder's statutory monopoly, like the limited copyright duration required by the Constitution, reflects a balance of competing claims upon the public interest: Creative work is to be encouraged and rewarded, but private motivation must ultimately serve the cause of promoting broad public availability of literature, music, and the other arts. The immediate effect of our copyright law is to secure a fair return for an 'author's' creative labor. But the ultimate aim is, by this incentive, to stimulate artistic creativity for the general public good.").
[90] See Sony Corp. of Am. v. Universal City Studios, Inc. 464 U.S. 417, 429 (1984)("The monopoly privileges that Congress may authorize are neither unlimited nor primarily designed to provide a special private benefit. Rather, the limited grant is a means by which an important public purpose may be achieved. It is intended to motivate the creative activity of authors and inventors by the provision of a special reward, and to allow the public access to the products of their genius after the limited period of exclusive control has expired.").
[91] See United States v. Paramount Pictures, Inc. et al., 334 U.S. 131, 158 (1948).
[92] Id.
[93] 268 F.3d 1257, 1261 (citations omitted).
[94] 17 U.S.C. 105.
[95] 17 U.S.C. 102 (a).
[96] 499 U.S. 340, 347 (1991) (citing 1 M. & D. Nimmer, Nimmer on Copyright S 2.11(A), at 2-157 (1990).
[97] 17 U.S.C. 102 (b).
[98] Schwarz v. Universal Pictures Co., 85 F. Supp. 270, 275 (S.D. Cal. 1945).
[99] Id. at 278.
[100] Cain v. Universal Pictures Co., 47 F. Supp. 1013, 1017 (S.D. Cal. 1942). See also Reyher v. Children's Television Workshop, 533 F.2d 87 (2d Cir.), cert. denied, 429 U.S. 980 (1976) and Bradbury v. CBS, 174 F. Supp. 733 (S.D. Cal. 1959), rev'd, 287 F.2d 478 (9th Cir.), cert. dismissed, 368 U.S. 801 (1961).
[101] 17 U.S.C. 107.
[102] See Benkler, supra note 23, at 362 ("Uses of information commonly perceived as permissible absent special circumstances, such as a brief quotation in a critical review or lending a book to a friend, fall within a functional definition of the public domain") and Bunker, supra note 77, at 22 ("The fair use of any work is always and already in the public domain.").
[103] Edward Samuels, The Public Domain in Copyright Law, 41 Journal of the Copyright Society 137, 137 (1993).
[104] See id.
[105] Id. at 144. See also M. William Krasilovsky, Observations on Public Domain, 14 Bull. Copyright Soc'y 205, 205 (1967) (observing that the public domain "is best defined in negative terms").
[106] Pamela Samuelson, Digital Information, Digital Networks, and The Public Domain 84 (Nov. 10, 2001) (unpublished manuscript presented at the Conference of the Public Domain) (last visited Jan. 24 2002).
[107] Id. at 83.
[108] Id. at 84.
[109] See id.
[110] Id. at 81.
[111] One of the effects of the Berne agreement is that citizens of all its member nations enjoy full copyright protection on their intellectual works in each of the member nations, whether or not their works are officially registered or display an official copyright notice. See 17 U.S.C. 408 (a) (Registration permissive.... Such registration is not a condition of copyright protection.").
[112] See Appellant's Petition, supra note 5, at 9, n. 5 ("Because protection is automatic and there is no longer any requirement of renewal, an extraordinary range of creative work now falls into a regulatory black hole - unusable because the 'owners' of this property are unknown...").
[113] David Lange, Recognizing the Public Forum, 44 Law and Cont. Prob.147, 150 (1981).
[114] See id.
[115] See id. at 176.
[116] See, e.g., James Boyle, A Politics of Intellectual Property: Environmentalism for the Net?, 47 Duke L.J. 87, 94 (1997); Benkler, supra note 23, at 354; Travis, supra note 29, at 780; and Pamela Samuelson, The Copyright Grab, Wired, Jan. 1996, at 134.
[117] See Travis, supra note 29, at 828 ("The ongoing copyright grab, which is being carried out on many fronts and which will set the ground rules for speech in the Information Age, shares the conceptual and tactical structure of the Great Enclosure of English common lands and of the efforts of the Stationers and others to revoke public rights in the intellectual commons."); James Boyle, The Second Enclosure Movement and the Construction of the Public Domain, 68 J. L. & Contemp. Probs. (forthcoming Autumn 2002) (manuscript at 1, presented Nov. 10, 2001 at the Conference of the Public Domain) (last visited Jan. 24 2002) ) (describing the enclosure movement, the fencing off of public property, as actually a series of enclosures of public lands that started in the 15th century and lasted until the 19th); and Lawrence Lessig, The Architecture of Innovation 84 (Nov. 10, 2001) (unpublished manuscript presented at the Conference of the Public Domain (last visited Jan. 24 2002)).
[118] See Garrett Hardin, The Tragedy of the Commons, 162 Science 1243 (1968).
[119] See id. at 1244-45 and Boyle, supra note 117, at 3.
[120] See Miller, supra note 28, at 692 ("We have enormous industries that invest millions of dollars into works of expression - from books to phonograph records, television shows, motion pictures, and Internet systems. That is the way we disseminate copyrighted works, and thank goodness - because that enables us to disseminate not simply on Fifth Avenue and Forty-Second Street, but to the four corners of the globe through the Internet. That takes money. It takes capital. You must attract capital into the copyright industries or you will not achieve the purposes of the Copyright Clause.")
[121] John Frow, Public Domain and the New World Order, 10 Social Semiotics, 173, 182 (2000).
[122] See Boyle, supra note 116, at 8.
[123] See id.
[124] See Fox Film Corp. v. Doyal et. al., 286 U.S. 123, 127 (1932) ("As this Court has repeatedly said, the Congress did not sanction an existing right but created a new one.") (citations omitted).
[125] See Travis, supra note 29, at 814 ("While the Founding Fathers generally supported a copyright law premised on natural rights and instrumental arguments, this support was accompanied by a historical mistrust of monopoly, thought to be a source of innumerable inefficiencies and oppressions....Madison sought to balance the rights of authors, and the encouragement of writing, with the principle, widespread by that time, that 'perpetual monopolies of every sort are forbidden . . . by the genius of free governments.' Even those limited monopolies granted to authors and inventors must be 'guarded with strictness against abuse.'"(citing James Madison, Monopolies, Perpetuities, Corporation, Ecclesiastical Endowments, in Aspects of Monopoly One Hundred Years Ago, Harper's Mag., March 1914, at 490 (published posthumously)); But see, Jane Ginsburg, supra note 28, 696 ("'To promote the Progress of Science and useful Arts' could be considered to be an instrumental objective. But Congress has also said 'by securing for limited Times to Authors.' I do not understand the term 'by securing' to mean to grant something that wasn't there before, but rather, to reinforce a pre-existing right. Indeed, that pre-existing right was acknowledged by Madison's justification for the Copyright Clause in Federalist 43, when - referring not to Donaldson v. Beckett but to Millar v. Taylor - Madison said that copyright had been adjudged in England as a right at common law. It is true that Donaldson v. Beckett [which overruled Miller v. Taylor] had, I think, already been decided when Madison made this declaration, but it seems that the news did not make it across the Atlantic by the time that Madison wrote his contribution to the Federalist papers. Thus, he was referring to the other traditional view of copyright law.").
[126] See Travis, supra note, 29, at 813-14 ("The Copyright Clause effectively constitutionalized the rule announced in [the English case] Donaldson that perpetual common-law copyright does not exist. Later, the Copyright Act of 1790 provided for a 14-year term from the time of prepublication filing of a copy with the local United States District Court, and gave the author (and apparently only the author) the right to renew the right for an additional 14 years. Thus, the work 'fell' into the public domain after 14 years if the author died or failed to renew in time, and after 28 years if he or she lived and renewed the right.").
[127] Boyle, supra note 117, at 39.
[128] Id at 40.
[129] Id at 41.
[130] Id.
[131] See Litman, supra note 61, at 969 ("Nurturing authorship is not necessarily the same thing as nurturing authors. When individual authors claim that they are entitled to incentives that would impoverish the milieu in which other authors must also work, we must guard against protecting authors at the expense of the enterprise of authorship.") and Wendy L. Gordon, An Inquiry into the Merits of Copyright: The Challenges of Consistency, Consent, and Encouragement, 41 Stan. L. Rev. 1343, 1460-61 (1989) ("A strong public domain makes important contributions to a nation's cultural and scientific health. An intellectual property system must therefore be sensitive to the needs and claims of the nonowning public as well as those of the authors....Since authors are part of the public - and in fact may constitute part of the public most in need of using prior works as bricks when building new works - it is likely that some privileges to copy will aid authors more than harm them.").
[132] See Litman, supra note 61, at 965 ("Our copyright law is based on the charming notion that authors create something from nothing..."); Boyle, supra note 117, at 98-99 (observing that our current copyright scheme lauds and encourages "the great creator"); and Travis, supra note 29, at 827 ("Romantic authorship should be understood...as a crucial buttress to natural rights arguments for expanded copyright. By effacing the moment of collectivity in cultural production, it makes the labor of authors seem all the more arduous and awe-inspiring. By casting transformative users in the role of talentless hacks, it mobilizes the taboo against plagiarism in support of exclusive authorial rights."). But see Mark A. Lemley, Romantic Authorship and the Rhetoric of Property, 75 Tex. L. Rev. 873, 898 (1997)(criticizing this argument, pointing out that the work for hire doctrine favors corporate authors over starving artists).
[133] Feist, 499 U.S. at 345. Fixation and a moderate amount of creativity are the other two characteristics of a work required for copyright protection. But see, Emerson v. Davies, 8 F. Cas. 615, 619 (No. 4,436) (C.C.D. Mass. 1845) cited in Luther R. Campbell v. Acuff-Rose Music, 510 U.S. 569, 575 (quoting Justice Story saying that "in truth, in literature, in science and in art, there are, and can be, few, if any, things, which in an abstract sense, are strictly new and original throughout. Every book in literature, science and art, borrows, and must necessarily borrow, and use much which was well known and used before.").
[134] See, e.g., Michel Foucault, What Is An Author?, in The Foucault Reader 101, 118-19 (Josue V. Harari trans., 1979) (Paul Rainbow ed., 1984); Roland Barthes, The Death of the Author, in Image/Music/Text 142, 146 (Stephen Heath trans., 1977) and Jacques Derrida, Of Grammatology 8 (Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak trans., 1976).
[135] See, e.g., Peter Jaszi, Toward a Theory of Copyright: The Metamorphoses of "Authorship," 1991 Duke L. J. 455, 463 (1991) (arguing that our "full-blown Romantic conception of 'authorship,' devalues collective contributions and hides the inevitable reliance of writers on past sources and common cultural knowledge); Litman, supra note 61; Lange, supra note 113; and Keith Aoki, supra note 77.
[136] Kembrew McLeod, Owning Culture: Authorship, Ownership and Intellectual Property Law 25 (2001); Mark Rose, Authors and Owners: The Invention of Copyright 128 (1993); and John Frow, supra note 121, at 183.
[137] See, e.g., Robert Rotstein, Beyond Metaphor: Copyright Infringement and the Fiction of the Work, 68 Chi.Kent. L. Rev. 725 (1993); Litman, supra note 61, Jaszi, supra note 135, and McLeod, supra note 136.
[138] See Jaszi, supra note 135, at 458 and Rotstein, supra note 137, at 727.
[139] Julia Kristeva, Desire in Language: A Semiotic Approach to Literature and Art 66 (Leon S. Roudiez ed. & Thomas Gora et al. trans., Columbia Univ. Press 1980).
[140] Graham Allen, Intertextuality 12 (2000).
[141] Ferdinand de Saussure, Course in General Linguistics (Charles Bally et al. eds. & Wade Baskin, trans., Fontana, London 1974).
[142] Allen, supra note 140, at 8.
[143] Id.
[144] Id. at 9.
[145] See id. at 17.
[146] See id. at 11.
[147] See id. at 18.
[148] Kristeva, supra note 139, at 65.
[149] See id.
[150] See McLeod, supra note 136, at 38-40.
[151] Rotstein, supra note 137, at 789 ("[P]lagiarism did not exist before the Renaissance. Thus, Shakespeare could borrow nearly verbatim from Plutarch without raising in the minds of his audience thoughts of plagiarism...").
[152] Gordon, supra note 28, at 682 ("Twain is sometimes referred to as an advocate of extreme and perpetual copyright. But really, he could not have been. After all, in writing A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur's Court, he borrowed from the many bards who had told King Arthur's tales in prior years.") (citing Mark Twain, A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur's Court (Bantam Classic ed. 1981).
[153] McLeod, supra note 136, at 23.
[154] See G. Marx, Groucho and Me 88 (1959), as cited in Lange, supra note 113, at 162.
[155] See Ramson Lomatewama, Traditional Hopi Storytelling (National Public Radio broadcast, Jan. 10, 2002).
[156] See 3 Melville B. Nimmer & David Nimmer, Nimmer on Copyright, 13.03A at 13-29 to 13-31 (1992).
[157] See Christina Gifford, supra note 31, at 385-86 (noting that Disney's copyrights on Mickey Mouse, Goofy, Pluto and Donald Duck were scheduled to expired as early as 2003 and that ten out of thirteen sponsors for the bill in the House and eight out of twelve sponsors in the Senate received contributions from Disney.)
[158] McLeod, supra note 136, at 17.
[159] See J. Fiske, Television Culture 108 (1987) ("The theory of intertextuality proposes that any one text is necessarily read in relationship to others and that a range of textual knowledges is brought to bear upon it.").
[160] Barthes, supra note 134, at 146, 148.
[161] Brian Ott and Cameron Walter, Intertextuality: Interpretive Practice and Textual Strategy, 17 Critical Stud. in Mass Comm. 429, 432.
[162] See id. (noting that from a cultural studies perspective, "one can go further and define 'text' as a system of signs, whether those signs be a literary work, motion pictures, television shows, or the very things that structure 'real life'").
[163] Id. at 440.
[164] Id. at 441.
[165] Id.
[166] See Rotstein, supra note 137, at 759 ("Despite these attempts to define 'idea' and 'expression,' scholars generally agree that the distinction is elusive. The dichotomy has been called ad hoc, mythological and false") (citations omitted).
[167] See Litman, supra note 61, at 965. See also 17 U.S.C. 102(a) ("Copyright protection subsists, in accordance with this title, in original works of authorship fixed in any tangible medium of expression, now known or later developed, from which they can be perceived, reproduced, or otherwise communicated, either directly or with the aid of a machine or device.")
[168] See Litman, supra note 61, at 967 ("But the very act of authorship in any medium is more akin to translation and recombination than it is to creating....This is not parasitism: it is the essence of authorship.").
[169] See id. at 974, 1003.
[170] See id. at 1010-11.
[171] Litman, supra note 61, at 1002-03 (noting that in an infringement action, a plaintiff may prove that the defendant copied her work by introducing evidence that the defendant had access to it, but if a defendant tries to disprove that the plaintiff's work was original to begin with, the plaintiff can simply wave her certificate of copyright registration (a prerequisite to suit) as prima facie evidence of the validity of her copyright and the originality of her work); Lange, supra note 113, at 163, n. 66 ("In general, the question of originality is ignored or taken for granted...treated as though it were an existential quality presumptively evidenced by the fact of the defendant's borrowing"); Frow, supra note 121, at 183 ("The paradox of the relation between first and second authors resides in the fact that all first authors are themselves always second authors, indebted to their predecessors in an endless chain.").
[172] See Litman, supra note 61, at 1015 ("Giving an author a copyright in something that is a basic building block of her art thus risks denying that basic building block to all other authors who come into even fleeting contact with the first author's work.").
[173] 17 U.S.C.S. 103(b) (2001) ("The copyright in a compilation or derivative work extends only to the material contributed by the author of such work, as distinguished from the preexisting material employed in the work, and does not imply any exclusive right in the preexisting material. The copyright in such work is independent of, and does not affect or enlarge the scope, duration, ownership, or subsistence of, any copyright protection in the preexisting material.")
[174] See Litman, supra note 61, at 1003-04 ("Prominent commentators discuss originality as if it were an actual legal condition that a court could ascertain. Judicial decisions similarly invoke the concept of originality. They do not, however, essay the task of determining whether and to what extent a plaintiff's work is original.").
[175] See id. at 972-74.
[176] See id. at 974-75. See also 17 U.S.C. 408(a) ("[R]egistration is not a condition of copyright protection.")
[177] Litman, supra note 61, at 967.
[178] Id. at 1111-12.
[179] Id. at 1012.
[180] Id. at 1013.
[181] Id. at 968.
[182] Melville Nimmer, The Subject Matter of Copyright Under the Act of 1976, 24 U.C.L.A. L. Rev. 978, 1015-16 (1977).
[183] Feist, 499 U.S. at 347 ("'No one may claim originality as to facts.' This is because facts do not owe their origin to an act of authorship. The distinction is one between creation and discovery") (citing M. & D. Nimmer, Nimmer on Copyright, 2.11[A], p. 2-157)
[184] This idea is not as farfetched as it may seem. Before Feist Publications v. Rural Telephone Service, courts held that reproductions of factual information from copyrighted directories could constitute infringement (See, e.g., Jeweler's Circular Publishing Co., 281 F. 83 (2d. Cir 1922); Leon v. Pacific Tel. & Tel. Co., 91 F.2d 484 (9th Cir. 1937); and Adventures in Good Eating, Inc. v. Best Places to eat, Inc., 131 F.2d 809 (7th Cir. 1942)) Moreover, recently Congress has considered and the House of Representatives has on three occasions passed legislation that would extend intellectual property protection to the factual content of collections of factual information in computer databases. (See H.R. 354, 106th Cong., 1st Sess. (1999); H.R. 2281, 501-502, 105th Cong, 2d Sess. (Engrossed House Bill 1998); H.R. 2652, 105th Cong., 1st Sess. (1997)).
[185] Jane Ginsburg, Sabotaging and Reconstructing History: A Comment on the Scope of Copyright Protection in Works of History After Hoehling v. Universal Studios, 29 Bull. Copyright Soc'y U.S.A. 647, 658 (1982).
[186] Id. at 658.
[187] Brief for the Respondent in Opposition at 20, Eldred v. Ashcroft, 239 F.3d 372 (D.C. Cir. 2001), LEXIS No. 01-618, 2001 U.S. Briefs 618 (Oct. 11, 2001). [Hereinafter Respondent in Opposition]
[188] See supra note 22 and accompanying text.
[189] See Miller, supra note 28, at 692-93
[190] See Dixon, supra note 47, at 963.
[191] See McLeod, supra note 136, at 6 (noting that by the mid-1990s, intellectual property accounted for more than 20% of world trade, amounting to $240 billion U.S. dollars).
[192] See Berne supra note 38.
[193] Respondent in Opposition, supra note 187, at 11.
[194] See Peter A. Jaszi, Goodbye to All That - A Reluctant (and Perhaps Premature) Adieu to a Constitutionally Grounded Discourse of Public Interest in Copyright Law, 29 Vand J. Transnat'l L. 595, 599-600 (1996).