[Politech] Michael Geist on impact of Canadian copyright decision [ip]

From: Declan McCullagh (declan@private)
Date: Mon Mar 22 2004 - 10:27:13 PST

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    -------- Original Message --------
    Subject: Canada's Copyright Revolution
    Date: Mon, 22 Mar 2004 07:03:36 -0500
    From: Michael Geist <mgeist@private>
    To: Declan McCullagh <declan@private>
    References: <405A9942.1080309@private>
    
    Declan,
    
    Of possible interest -- my regular Toronto Star Law Bytes column
    examines the recent
    Canadian Supreme Court LSUC v. CCH copyright decision. The column
    argues that the case instantly ranks as one of the strongest pro-user
    rights decisions from any high court in the world, showing what it
    means to do more than pay mere lip service to balance in copyright.
    It then proceeds the case from four perspectives --
    
    1. The litigants (the Law Society emerged victorious, though not a
    complete loss for the publishers)
    2. The interpretation of copyright law (new standards for fair
    dealing and for authorization as well as the articulation of users
    rights)
    3. The broader perspective on copyright law (the need to adopt a
    balanced perspective)
    4.  The societal shift of the view of copyright (a personalization of
    the importance of copyright).
    Column at
    <http://shorl.com/fybrigrotekytu> [Toronto Star]
    Decision at
    http://www.lexum.umontreal.ca/csc-scc/en/rec/html/2004scc013.wpd.html
    
    MG
    
    
    Low-tech case has high-tech impact
    
    MICHAEL GEIST
    LAW BYTES
    
    While the public's attention has been focused this month on the
    Canadian Recording Industry Association's lawsuit against 29 unnamed
    file sharers and the related issue of whether Internet service
    providers should be compelled to disclose the file sharers'
    identities, Canadian copyright law was hit recently with a decision
    of far greater import.
    
       The Law Society of Upper Canada v. CCH Canadian, a Supreme Court of
    Canada decision released by a unanimous court several weeks ago,
    instantly ranks as one of the strongest pro-user rights decisions
    from any high court in the world, showing what it means to do more
    than pay mere lip service to balance in copyright.
    
    The case involved a dispute between the law society - the body that
    governs the legal profession in Ontario - and several leading legal
    publishers.  Unlike many high-profile cases that involve the
    Internet, this case centred on the use of a distinctly old-style
    copying technology: photocopiers.
    
    The law society, which maintains the Great Library, a leading law
    library in Toronto, provided the profession with two methods of
    copying cases and other legal materials. It ran a service that
    allowed lawyers to request a copy of a particular case or article. It
    also maintained several photocopiers that could be used by library
    patrons.
    
    The legal publishers objected to the law society's copying practices
    and sued for copyright infringement. They maintained the materials
    being copied were subject to copyright protection and the law society
    was authorizing others to infringe their copyright.
    
    It is worth examining the outcome of the case as well as the court's
    analysis from four perspectives, each of which is progressively more
    significant.
    
    First, the case can be examined from the perspective of the
    litigants. The law society emerged victorious on most counts in this
    regard as the court ruled it had neither infringed the publishers'
    copyright nor authorized others to do so.  The case, however, was not
    a complete loss from the publishers' perspective. The court affirmed
    that although the legal decisions themselves were not subject to
    copyright, its test for originality ensured the value-added material
    supplied by the publishers, including summaries of the cases and the
    specific compilation of decisions, was sufficiently original to
    warrant copyright protection.
    
    Second, the case can be examined from the perspective of the court's
    interpretation of several important aspects of copyright law. The
    court provided a detailed discussion of the fair dealing exception
    (the Canadian counterpart to the U.S. fair use doctrine), and
    concluded the exception should be granted a large and liberal
    interpretation. In fact, the court remarkably fashions exceptions to
    copyright infringement as new copyright rights - users' right - that
    must be balanced against the rights of copyright owners and creators.
    
    The court also adopted an important new standard for authorization,
    which has long been used by copyright owners to hold parties
    accountable for allowing others to infringe copyright. On this issue,
    the court ruled authorization should be taken to mean "sanction,
    approve or countenance" and concluded "a person does not authorize
    copyright infringement by authorizing the mere use of equipment (such
    as photocopiers) that could be used to infringe copyright."
    
    This finding will have an immediate impact on copyright issues
    involving the Internet.
    
    By adopting an approach that allows the providers of equipment to
    presume their equipment will be used lawfully, the court has opened
    the door to Internet service providers and even peer-to-peer
    providers to argue they legitimately presume their subscribers act
    lawfully and thus cannot be said to authorize copyright infringement.
    
    Third, the case can be examined from the court's broader perspective
    on copyright law. Just two years ago, the Supreme Court's view on
    copyright law was that it was there solely to benefit creators.
    Today, the court now speaks openly of users' rights and the need to
    balance rigorously the interests of creators and users.
    
    For example, in arriving at its interpretation of authorization, the
    court concluded that the "mere provision of photocopiers for the use
    of its patrons did not constitute authorization to use the
    photocopiers to breach copyright law" since taking the opposite
    approach "shifts the balance in copyright too far in favour of the
    owner's rights and unnecessarily interferes with the proper use of
    copyrighted works for the good of society as a whole." Similarly, its
    liberal interpretation of fair dealing is based on the analysis that
    "it is a user's right (and) in order to maintain the proper balance
    between the rights of a copyright owner and users' interests, it must
    not be interpreted restrictively."
    
    Balance as the central goal of copyright is likely to cause a
    significant reinterpretation of Canadian copyright law. As the court
    demonstrated in this case, taking users' rights seriously requires a
    careful examination of the effects of any copyright test on both
    users and creators. Moreover, the need for balance will affect not
    only the current version of Canada's Copyright Act but also any
    subsequent amendments.
    
       As Canada considers copyright reform similar to that found in the
    United States, those reforms will be interpreted and applied by
    Canadian courts with the overarching goal of maintaining an
    appropriate copyright balance.
    
    Fourth, and perhaps most important, this case signals a societal
    shift in views on copyright.  This case may have been seen by the
    judges as a very personal one since the work at issue was their own
    and the conduct called into question - the copying of cases -
    something they themselves likely had done throughout their careers.
    
    These facts point to the growing personalization of copyright.
    Copyright is no longer viewed as being primarily about large-scale
    commercial infringement claims that do not resonate with the average
    person. Rather, copyright is now very personal, focusing on the work,
    creativity, and activities of millions of individuals - including
    judges - who will increasingly question standards of what is right
    and wrong through the lens of their own actions.
    
    As society has shifted in its view of copyright, so, too, have
    Canadian courts. The result is a genuine revolution in the state of
    Canadian copyright law that will manifest itself long after the
    current battle over peer-to-peer file sharing has been resolved.
    
    Michael Geist is the Canada Research Chair in Internet and E-commerce
    Law at the University of Ottawa and technology counsel with the law
    firm Osler Hoskin & Harcourt LLP. He is online at
    http://www.michaelgeist.ca and http://www.osler.com
    (mgeist@private). The opinions expressed herein are personal and
    do not necessarily reflect those of the University of Ottawa or
    Osler, Hoskin & Harcourt LLP.
    
    -- 
    **********************************************************************
    Professor Michael A. Geist
    Canada Research Chair in Internet and E-commerce Law
    University of Ottawa Law School, Common Law Section
    Technology Counsel, Osler, Hoskin & Harcourt LLP
    57 Louis Pasteur St., P.O. Box 450, Stn. A, Ottawa, Ontario, K1N 6N5
    Tel: 613-562-5800, x3319     Fax: 613-562-5124
    mgeist@private              http://www.michaelgeist.ca
    
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