Fair Use Doctrine Vital for All of Us
11/18/2009
Fair Use Doctrine Vital for All of Us
As proponents of free speech we support the right of the authors of the op-ed "Google and the Copyright Wars"
(Nov. 13) to question how much access the public should have to
copyrighted information—but we can't support their misstatement of key
facts. They suggest that search engine indexing is not "fair
use"—i.e., permitted by federal copyright regulations—when in fact
multiple federal courts have ruled that it is.
Some copyright lawyers
don't like the fact that there remain parts of the information economy
that are not regulated by their discipline. The means by which these
activities are freed from regulation is the fair use doctrine. Among
copyright lawyers, not liking fair use is actually code for not liking
the fact that all innovators don't have to pay tolls to use
information. Opposing fair use means opposing DVRs like TiVo, the
ability to put music on an MP3 player, "Saturday Night Live" spoofing
pop culture, or Jon Stewart replaying clips of the day's news.
Opponents of fair use want to erect a toll booth before all those
activities, even those that are constitutionally protected speech.
We
in the technology industries think Americans value these things, and
that they shouldn't be sacrificed on the altar of some law firm's
fourth-quarter revenues. Businesses dependent upon exceptions to
copyright contribute $2.2 trillion to the U.S. economy. They are
responsible for one in eight jobs, for a total payroll of $1.2 trillion
in 2006. Fair use is serious business; it is the glue that holds the
Internet and new technology together. It is worth protecting.
Ed Black
President and CEO
Computer & Communications Industry Association
Washington