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Demanding Free Culture
by Brad Holland and Cynthia Turner
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March 8, 2005
Two weeks ago we notified you that the U.S. Copyright Office is conducting
a study of “orphaned works” to determine if copyright protection should be
removed from creative work because others wishing to exploit it find the
authors “difficult” to locate.
In Kahle v. Ashcroft, two commercial archives have asked the U.S.
District Court for the Northern District of California to declare
unconstitutional statutes that guarantee the term of copyright protection.
The plaintiffs argue that four copyright laws, including the 1976
Copyright Act, are collectively keeping people from gaining access to
these orphaned works. The case was dismissed on November 19, 2004, but
attorney Lawrence Lessig says the decision will be appealed. He says they
had always planned to fight the decisive battle in the appellate
courts.
Lawrence Lessig is the Founder of Creative Commons and a leading spokesman
for the “Free Culture” movement. The stated mission of Creative Commons is
to roll back copyright law to allow “open access to the information
commons.” It's allied to another group called PK (for Public Knowledge),
which appears to be the financial support behind Kahle v Ashcroft. PK
receives funding from the MacArthur Foundation, Ford Foundation,
Rockefeller Foundation, and Andy Warhol Foundation, among others. http://www.publicknowledge.org
Kahle v. Ashcroft is one of a series of lawsuits designed to force
protected creative work into the public domain. The suits are being
planned and executed as “phases” by the Stanford Law School Center for
Internet and Society. Lawrence Lessig is Founder and Director of that
organization as well.
An example of the direction the Free Culture movement is taking can be
found in an Associated Press story, excerpted from the DOW JONES NEWSWIRES
January 29, 2005:
PORTO ALEGRE, Brazil (A) “In a packed warehouse on the sprawling grounds
where tens of thousands were attending the World Social Forum in Brazil,
[Free Culture advocates from the United States] urged developing nations
to vault themselves into the information age [by undermining copyright].
[They] said proprietary software and copyright laws used by corporations
to protect intellectual property prevent people in poor countries from
access to the power of information and the creation of wealth and
creativity. “
“'Free software! Free culture! Demand it now!' [Lawrence] Lessig said to
cheers from the crowd of mostly young activists from around the world.”
Lessig and others of this “social movement” have targeted Big Media for
attack because media giants are easy targets for populist rhetoric. Who's
going to defend the right of corporate giants to keep copyrights from “the
people”? But when it comes to the specific issue of protecting
artists’ rights, these activists dismiss individual authorship as a
“romantic myth.”
Lessig, like other “copy leftists” believes that “most commercial culture
depends on the unpaid appropriation of older material.” Therefore they
argue that any individual's work is, in effect, a creation of the culture
itself. And since the individual is only a conduit through which the
culture creates the work, no individual should have the right to withhold
from the culture the work it created.
Whether or not one wants to subscribe to this Deconstructionist theory of
creativity is a personal matter. But it's another thing to make it a case
for enacting laws regarding the ownership of private property, which is
what your art is.
The computer, internet, Photoshop, and access to stock and royalty-free
archives have all opened up careers as content providers for people
who see the appropriation of others' work as an unstoppable trend. “The
mission of the Free Culture movement is to build a bottom-up,
participatory structure to society and culture,” says the Free Culture
Manifesto. “We will make, share, adapt, and promote open content. We will
listen to free music, look at free art, watch free film and read free
books.” http://www.freeculture.org/manifesto.php
But if potential users can have legal free access to creative work simply
because they want to use it, and if the law is changed to
permit it because certain authors are “hard to find,” then the
principle that you own your own work will have been subverted. And the
beneficiaries of all this will not be limited to teenagers wanting to make
interactive art using “free” material from the internet.
There are fortunes to be made by entrepreneurs who want to sell
access to creative work. But as we've seen with the case of
Napster, current copyright laws interfere with their plans. If the Free
Culture movement is successful in eroding copyright protections, it's
unlikely the business interests who profit from it will be any different
from the media giants the copy left is demonizing today. But that success
would cost us copyright protections that have been built up over
centuries.
This wouldn't be the first time in history that some people have demanded
the right to give away the property of others. And for those who see power
for themselves in orchestrating the giveaway, “entitlements” for “the
people” will always serve as a righteous mask.
But the era of immediate access to corporate libraries of images, sounds
and words is still new. Most individual creators have not yet found the
means to create alternative ways to distribute their work directly to the
public. If legal scholars really wanted to insure future creativity,
they'd work with artists to help build a system for tracking and clearing
protected rights as they already exist. That would insure that you
retained control of your work, while giving others the means to license
those rights from you. This, not the progressive emasculation of copyright
law, would be a worthwhile agenda for activists to pursue.
— Brad Holland and Cynthia Turner for the Illustrators'
Partnership
This may be republished, posted or forwarded in its entirety to any
interested party.
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