FC: What Larry Did Get (just this once, mind you...)

From: Declan McCullagh (declanat_private)
Date: Wed Jan 15 2003 - 22:16:50 PST

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    I've tangled with Larry Lessig over politics for many years -- longtime 
    Politech readers will remember Larry registering what-declan-doesnt-get.com 
    and his related book chapter. (http://www.politechbot.com/p-00712.html) 
    Because Larry can be very wrong at times, we will frequently continue to 
    disagree. :)
    
    But Larry's work against the Copyright Term Extension Act has been 
    diligent, thorough, and praiseworthy. It's true that I think he's right 
    (http://news.com.com/2010-1071-960918.html) about the desired outcome here, 
    but I believe I'd be writing the same thing if I didn't.
    
    It's also true that, as Eben Moglen suggests 
    (http://news.com.com/2100-1023-980792.html), there might have been a 
    different outcome if Larry and his colleagues had waited a decade to 
    challenge the law. Courts, even the Supreme Court, can be influenced by 
    public outcry over too-restrictive technologies. Even justices listen to 
    grandchildren. But this is hindsight, and now we know where the court stands.
    
    The tussle leading up to the Supreme Court case has done two interesting 
    things. First, it has highlighted some of the recent expansions of 
    copyright law -- I think of the DMCA, NET Act, and CTEA as the troika of 
    the late 1990s -- and their problems. Second, it's catalyzed a movement 
    that will last beyond today. The second outcome would not have happened 
    without Larry championing this case.
    
    The 1973 Roe v. Wade decision was also 7-2. It galvanized conservative 
    activists in much the same way today's decision outrages members of this 
    ragtag movement of geeks, librarians, and Internet publishers. Whatever 
    your views on abortion, recognize that from the perspective of the 
    activists of the 1970s, Roe violated their values and had government 
    crossing a line that it ought not to have crossed. The aftershocks continue 
    today, with President Bush's faith-based initiative plans as the latest.
    
    But today's movement can't wait decades to seek more clueful justices -- 
    not that this tactic would work anyway -- and Congress seems studiously 
    uninterested (http://www.politechbot.com/p-04318.html) in mending its 
    errant ways.
    
    Still, Larry's blog entry today is more dispirited than it should be:
    >So I've got to go get onto a plane to go to my least favorite city (DC). 
    >My inbox is filling with kind emails from friends. Also with a few of a 
    >different flavor. It's my nature to identify most closely with those of 
    >the different flavor. David Gossett at the law firm of Mayer Brown wrote 
    >Declan, "Larry lost Eldred, 7-2." Yes, no matter what is said, that is how 
    >I will always view this case. The constitutional question is not even 
    >close. To have failed to get the Court to see it is my failing. 
    >(http://cyberlaw.stanford.edu/lessig/blog/)
    
    Yes, Larry lost the case. Or, more precisely, the justices veered in the 
    opposite direction. But Larry did the best job possible with the facts at 
    his disposal and the precedents in place at the time. The very fact that 
    (as we've heard so much) Congress has extended copyrights something like 11 
    times so far must have made the majority reluctant to go along. And the 
    decisions from the district court and the appeals court and the pointed 
    questioning during oral arguments should have presaged today's news. 
    (http://news.com.com/2100-1023-961467.html)
    
    The problem now is what to do with this movement's angry fire. To his 
    credit, Larry will be one of the most prominent torchbearers. I made my 
    suggestions in August (http://news.com.com/2010-1071-949275.html), and I 
    suspect Larry will post his on his site. If Politechnicals would like to 
    send along their own, I'll dutifully compile and forward.
    
    -Declan
    
    PS: Here's the best roundup of info on the decision I've seen so far, 
    compiled by Donna Wentworth:
    http://www.corante.com/copyfight/20030101.shtml#18051
    
    
    
    
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