Articles by Tim Lee

Timothy B. Lee (Contributor, 2004-2009) is an adjunct scholar at the Cato Institute. He is currently a PhD student and a member of the Center for Information Technology Policy at Princeton University. He contributes regularly to a variety of online publications, including Ars Technica, Techdirt, Cato @ Liberty, and The Angry Blog. He has been a Mac bigot since 1984, a Unix, vi, and Perl bigot since 1998, and a sworn enemy of HTML-formatted email for as long as certain companies have thought that was a good idea. You can reach him by email at leex1008@umn.edu.


Sigh…

by on June 19, 2008 · 3 comments

This is how political debates get lost:

While nobody is suggesting the bipartisan breakthrough on an update to the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act is in trouble, it’s clear that many liberal Democrats will be disappointed in a measure that provides a modest level of lawsuit immunity to telecommunications firms that helped the Bush administration with warrantless wiretaps.

In fact, despite Steny Hoyer’s best efforts to obfuscate matters, it’s quite clear that telcos are virtually guaranteed to get immunity. All they have to do is get the attorney general to send the judge a letter saying that the White House had told them it was OK. Since we know the White House wants immunity for these companies, it’s a safe bet that the administration will produce the necessary “certification” and the telcos will get their get-out-of-jail-free card. There’s nothing “modest” about the level of immunity the legislation offers to telcos, and it’s disappointing to see journalists buying this plainly misleading spin.

FISA Doesn’t Expire

by on June 19, 2008 · 4 comments

The Hill generally does a great job of covering the Hill, but this story needed some fact-checking:

The Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA) will be brought to the House floor on Friday, Majority Leader Steny Hoyer’s (D-Md.) office said.

The Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act was brought to the House floor 30 years ago. What’s being brought to the floor tomorrow is an amendment to FISA that is likely to significantly weaken the system of judicial scrutiny established in that law.

This isn’t just nitpicking. Back in February, the president and his allies did their best to create the impression that FISA itself was expiring, and that the NSA would no longer have the authority to spy on terrorists. This was nonsense. FISA isn’t set to expire ever, and on top of that the president has all the authority granted by the FISA provisions of the Patriot Act. Writing that Congress is bringing “FISA” to the floor re-enforces this misleading narrative.

Kozinski on Copyright

by on June 18, 2008 · 9 comments

I agree with Jim that the media’s treatment of Judge Kozinski has been outrageous. While reading up on the controversy, I was interested to come across this interview with Reason magazine. Here are his very sensible thoughts on copyright:

Reason: Do you see any big threats to free speech out there today?

Kozinski: There are always threats to free speech. Government doesn’t like to be criticized. Owners of copyrights and other intellectual property rights are very grabby. They think they own everything, or they think they invented everything. And the big problem is drawing the line between what’s protected by copyright and what’s in the public domain.

Nobody writes anything from scratch. We all build on the past from a shared public domain of ideas. We use copyrighted ideas to communicate with each other. For instance, when you say someone has a Barbie personality, it describes something without having to go into a thousand details. But Mattel, the inventor of Barbie, hates it. People who own those trademarks and copyrights want to control the way people communicate, and they have the ear of Congress right now. Congress just extended copyright terms again [in 1998].

Reason: So have we tipped the balance too much on the side of inventors as opposed to society’s interest in accessing their ideas when it comes to intellectual property rights?

Kozinski: The problem is that some people think of copyrights as an extension of property rights. And that’s OK. But maintaining a public domain makes property more valuable. A lot of things that copyright owners complain about are things that are actually good for them. Movie studios were really worried about Betamax. It seems quaint now, but they almost killed the video store business. It’s now a big source of revenue for them.

As a friend points out, he’s not a perfect libertarian by any means, taking the wrong side on the Kelo decision, for example. But he’s certainly one of the most libertarian (and pro-free-speech) judges in the federal judiciary.

Over at Techdirt, Mike Masnick has a great post talking about my Cato Unbound essay on the future of copyright. He thinks I’m proposing a step in the right direction, but that I don’t go far enough:

I’m still not convinced that the restrictions are necessary even for commercial use. Part of the problem is that the distinction between “personal use” and “commercial use” is extremely blurry. Is my personal blog “personal” or “commercial” if I put Google ads on it? What if I don’t have ads, but use it to get a job or promote my company? Commercial use and personal use are not clear cut.

This is a good opportunity to illustrate the narrowness of what I’m suggesting: yes, if you put up a website with old Golden Girls episodes and you stuck ads alongside them, you’d be opening yourself up to a lawsuit. The non-commercial use exception would only apply in cases such as using a peer-to-peer file sharing program where there was clearly no commercial intent.

However, it’s important to emphasize that this would be an addition to, not a substitute for, fair use. If you used a copyrighted work in a way that would be fair use under current precedents, it would continue to be fair use under the regime I’m suggesting even if it were done for commercial use. The current law on fair use and contributory liability—Sony, Arriba Soft, Grokster, and the rest—would continue to apply. If your use was fair, or if your technology had a “substantial non-infringing use” under Sony, or if you qualified for the DMCA safe harbor, all of those defenses would remain available to you.

There is admittedly some fuzziness in the concept of commercial use, but I think it’s clearly a lot less fuzzy than the four-factor test that currently governs fair use. All I’m suggesting is adding an additional step: first the courts decide if a use is commercial or non-commercial. If non-commercial, that would be the end of the analysis and the defendant would be not guilty. If commercial, the courts would then proceed to consider other defenses, including fair use and the DMCA safe harbor.

Mike’s other substantive criticism is that I don’t go far enough:

if someone else is able to do something commercially valuable with my content, why should that be a problem? If anything, that should be encouraged — and the end result will often be that it makes the original content more valuable. Google uses fair use defenses to protect itself from copyright infringement charges, but it’s ridiculous to think that anyone is even complaining, since Google makes their content easier to find. And Google is most certainly a commercial entity. Having someone else do something commercial with content is a good way to help increase the value of that content, which is likely to flow back to the original creator anyway.

I’m sympathetic to this argument in many cases. He’s clearly right about most of the things Google does. Google News, Google Book Search, and the rest are pretty clearly not harming the market for the copyrighted works they use, and may even be enhancing their value. However, I don’t think this is the case across the board. Consider movie theaters. Mike correctly notes that going to the movies is as much about the experience as it is about the movie itself, which suggests that peer-to-peer file sharing won’t destroy the market for movie tickets. However, in a world with no copyright, I think you’d quickly see a network of digital movie theaters that would dramatically erode Hollywood’s ticket revenues by showing Hollywood movies without sending any ticket revenues back to the studio that made the movie. Revenues wouldn’t drop to zero—it would still be possible to generate some revenue the first few days, before the movie had leaked to the pirate theaters—but I can’t see how the legalization of pirate theaters would work to Hollywood’s benefit.

It’s true that the end result of unauthorized copying will often be to make the original content more valuable. But if that’s the case, then the use is likely to already fall under fair use. The question is what to do in those cases where unauthorized copying does harm the market for the original. I agree with Mike that this is a less common case than is commonly supposed. But it’s not a null set, and when it happens, I think it’s entirely legitimate for copyright law to intervene.

Copyright Podcast

by on June 11, 2008 · 25 comments

I neglected to mention that I’m on Cato’s Daily Podcast today discussing the themes of my copyright essay. Just to be clear, the complete home-recorded Golden Girls VHS collection Caleb references is purely hypothetical. I don’t collect copyright-infringing videos, and if I did they wouldn’t be on VHS, nor would they consist of Golden Girls re-runs.

Update: I guess it’s possible people would have liked a link

Congrats to Fred Von Lohmann and EFF as well as Joe Gratz and his colleagues at Keker & Van Nest, for their victory in the promo CD copyright case I wrote about last summer:

Like other record labels, UMG distributes free CDs to radio stations and music reviewers in the hopes of drumming up publicity. The CDs come stamped with the label “promotional copy, not for sale.” Based on this notice and the fact that the copies were given away rather than sold, the labels argue that these “promo CDs” remain the property of the labels and are only leased to recipients for their personal use.

California resident Troy Augustino makes a living selling various merchandise, including promo CDs, on eBay. UMG sued him in May for copyright infringement, claiming that it had merely licensed the CDs rather than transferring ownership and that Augustino was therefore committing copyright infringement by reselling them.

The fundamental issue in the case is the First Sale Doctrine, which says that when a copyright holder sells a copy of a CD, the new owner of the CD is entitled to give or sell that copy to someone else without getting the copyright holder’s permission. This is the principle that makes libraries and used book stores possible. It was first articulated by the Supreme Court in 1908 and has since been codified into statute.

Fred describes the ruling:

In its ruling, the district court found that the initial recipients of “promo CDs” own them, notwithstanding “not for resale” labels. The court rejected the notion that these labels create a “license,” concluding that the CDs are gifts. According to the opinion, “UMG gives the Promo CDs to music industry insiders, never to be returned. … Nor does the licensing label require the recipient to provide UMG with any benefit to retain possession.” (The court also found that federal postal laws relating to “unordered merchandise” establish that promo CDs are gifts to their recipients.)

I’m nominally on vacation this week so I won’t have time to read the decision for a while, but it looks like a great ruling.

We did a podcast on the case and its implications, featuring Fred and Randy Picker of the University of Chicago law school, last summer.

As I mentioned, Cato Unbound this month is focusing on the challenges technological changes are creating for copyright law. My first contribution to the discussion is now online. I find myself basically persuaded by Rasmus’s argument that the war on file sharing will fail for the same reason that the wars on drugs, gambling, prostitution, and other vices will fail. Personal copying is becoming too cheap and easy for the law to effectively control what goes on in the privacy of peoples homes.

It’s a conclusion I’ve reached with some reluctance. I’m personally not comfortable with peer-to-peer file sharing and if I thought there was a practical way to prevent it I’d probably be in favor of it. But it has become increasingly clear that stopping file sharing is futile, and the strategies used to curb file sharing have grown more and more illiberal. If we have to choose between file sharing or a police state, and I think we do, then I choose file sharing.

But it’s important that we don’t over-state the consequences of a de facto legalization of non-commercial file sharing:

It is often supposed that giving individuals more freedom to share copyrighted materials with one another will amount to the abolition of copyright. But this is far from true. The starkness with which the copyright debate is often framed reflects a misunderstanding of the function copyright served in the 20th century. Copyright is commonly conceived as a system of restrictions on the copying of creative works. But until recently, it would have been more accurate to describe copyright as governing the commercial exploitation of creative works. From this perspective, the inevitable legalization of non-commercial file sharing looks less like a radical departure from copyright’s past, and more like an incremental adjustment to technological change. It will require the rejection of some misguided policy developments of the last decade, to be sure, but in a sense it will simply restore the common-sense principles of 20th-century copyright law.

In my essay, I argue that copyright law will continue to be important for the music, movie, software, and other content industries. And I contend that there will still be plenty of opportunities for people to make a living producing creative works.

Every month, the Cato Institute has an online symposium on an important public policy issue. This month, the focus is on copyright law, and they’re kicking things off with a fascinating piece by copyright activist Rasmus Fleischer arguing that technological progress will make it impossible for the state to prevent people from sharing copyrighted works:

Record industry lobbyists smell the danger, and now they are urging governments to criminalize [stream ripping]. On their orders the so-called PERFORM Act (”Platform Equality and Remedies for Rights Holders in Music Act”) was introduced in the U.S. Senate last year. [4] The proposed law would force every Internet radio station to encrypt the transmission of file information, such as the name of the song. Yet anything visible on the screen can still be easily obtained by special software, encryption notwithstanding, and such restrictions would therefore be ridiculously easy to circumvent. Thus the PERFORM Act includes a follow-up clause banning the distribution of this class of software.

People with some programming skills, however, won’t need to do much more than combining a few readily available and otherwise perfectly legal code libraries to compile their own streamripping tool, one that would circumvent the PERFORM Act. For regulations like these to be effective, it is necessary also to censor the sharing of skills that potentially can be useful for coding illegal software. The circle of prohibition grows still larger: Acoustic fingerprinting technologies, which have nothing copyright-infringing to them, but which can be used for the same feared identification of individual tracks, must probably also be restricted.

This domino effect captures the essence of copyright maximalism: Every broken regulation brings a cry for at least one new regulation even more sweepingly worded than the last. Copyright law in the 21st century tends to be less concerned about concrete cases of infringement, and more about criminalizing entire technologies because of their potential uses. This development undermines the freedom of choice that Creative Commons licenses are meant to realize. It will also have seriously chilling effects on innovation, as the legal status of new technologies will always be uncertain under ever more invasive rules.

Tomorrow I’ll be offering my reaction to Rasmus’s essay. I don’t want to steal my own thunder, but in a nutshell, my take is that Rasmus is basically right to predict that copyright will grow increasingly difficult to enforce as technology continues to reduce the cost of storing and transmitting information. However, I think it’s a mistake to view this as the end of copyright. Even if the war on file sharing is hopeless, copyright can and should adapt to continue serving its essential function, which is not to stop all copying, but rather to reward the creation of creative works. Watch the site tomorrow to see my suggestions for how copyright law can adapt to the stresses placed on it by digital technologies.

Seasteading

by on June 10, 2008 · 4 comments

Don’t miss my Ars interview with Patri Friedman:

An audacious new project aims to create new competition for the world’s sovereign nations. The Seasteading Institute, the brainchild of two Silicon Valley software developers, aims to develop self-sufficient deep-sea platforms that would empower individuals to break free of the cozy cartel of 190-odd world governments and start their own autonomous societies. They envision a future in which any group of people dissatisfied with its current government would be able to start a new one by purchasing some floating platforms—called seasteads—and build a new community in the open ocean.

History is littered with utopian schemes that petered out after an initial burst of enthusiasm, something the Seasteading Institute’s founders readily acknowledge. Indeed, they chronicle these failures in depressing detail on their website. With names like the Freedom Ship, the Aquarius Project, and Laissez-Faire City, most of these projects accomplished little more than receiving a burst of publicity (and in some cases, raising funds that were squandered) before collapsing under the weight of their inflated expectations.

There are many reasons to doubt that the Seasteading Institute will realize its vision of floating cities in the sea; but there are at least two reasons to think that seasteading may prove to be more successful than past efforts to escape the grasp of the world’s governments. First, the project’s planners are pragmatic—at least by the standards of their predecessors—pursuing an incrementalist strategy and focusing primarily on solving short-term engineering problems. Second, they recently announced a half-million dollar pledge from PayPal co-founder Peter Thiel, giving them the resources to begin serious engineering and design work. While there are many obstacles to be overcome before they will have even a functioning prototype—to say nothing of a floating metropolis—their project doesn’t seem as obviously hopeless as most of the efforts that have preceded it.

I go into some detail about the project and the challenges they’re likely to face. In my judgment, the really difficult problems aren’t engineering or (as a lot of people seem to assume) pirates, but the world’s governments. The moment they got big enough to pose a serious threat to governments’ control over their citizens, the US Navy (or some other navy, depending on where it was located) is likely to come up with a pretext to invade and forcibly impose American jurisdiction over them. This might be technically illegal under international law, but international law has never had sufficient teeth to restrain a world power

Zuneral

by on June 8, 2008 · 10 comments

Awesome…

One of the cool things I noticed about this is that the guy whose blog post brought this to my attention is an English major. Back in 2001 when I was trying to organize an anti-DMCA organization, I don’t think I found anyone who even knew what DRM was, to say nothing of being excited about the issue, who wasn’t a CS major. This is progress.