Working Paper
Copyright Law, Libraries, and Universities
Overview, Recent Developments, and Future Issues
For Presentation To:
Association of Research Libraries
October 1992
Prepared By:
Kenneth D. Crews, J.D., Ph.D.
Associate Professor of Business Law
College of Business
San Jose State University
San Jose, CA 95192-0070
TEL: (408) 924-1342
FAX: (408) 924-3419
For current contact information and publications, see: Indiana
University School
of Library and Information Science (Oct. 2001)
Copyright 1992 by Kenneth D. Crews. Copying in excess of
rights otherwise established under copyright law is permitted,
without individual permission or payment of a fee, provided
that copies are made or distributed for non-profit purposes and
credit is given for the source. Abstracting with credit is
permitted.
This paper is intended for information and discussion
only. It is not intended to serve as legal advice.
Outline of Contents
Introduction: "Opportunities to Exercise Fair Use Rights in the Nineties
and Beyond"
Part I: THE BASICS OF COPYRIGHT
Fair Use
Library Reproduction Rights
Part II: RECENT DEVELOPMENTS
1. Kinko's and Photocopying for Classroom Use.
2. Texaco and Photocopying for Personal Research Use.
3. Fair Use of Unpublished Works.
4. Library Circulation of Computer Software.
5. Elimination of the Copyright Notice Requirement.
6. Elimination of Eleventh Amendment Immunity for State Institutions.
Part III: FUTURE DEVELOPMENTS
1. Guidelines for Fair Use of Computer Software.
2. Increased Reliance on License Terms.
3. Participation in Collective Licensing Arrangements.
Part IV: POTENTIAL STRATEGIES AND OPTIONS
1. Reevaluation of Copyright Policy Statements.
2. Effective Leadership for Emerging Issues.
3. Coordinating Responses to Copyright Issues.
Appendix A: Further Reading
Appendix B: Text of Sections 107 and 108 of the Copyright Act of 1976
Introduction:
"Opportunities to Exercise Fair Use Rights in the Nineties and Beyond"
Findings:
A fundamental difficulty of current copyright dilemmas has been
the tendency of many observers to assert that some court rulings
have a greater effect on libraries and universities than the
decisions would actually justify.
Another difficulty has been the willingness of some officials to
accept those misleading analyses.
A better understanding of copyright can allow libraries and
universities to identify opportunities and strategies for action
that they may pursue, while also minimizing risks of lawsuits.
- Universities and research libraries are caught in a
copyright squeeze. Recent court decisions against Kinko's Copies
and Texaco have challenged whether simple photocopying for personal
research and classroom use may pass a fair use test. Expanding
technologies and the availability of copyrighted works on videotape
and in electronic databases raise questions about the applicability
of copyright rules at all. Libraries are on the front line of these
copyright dilemmas as they face daily questions about protecting the
rights of copyright owners and providing optimal access by patrons
to the library resources. Universities are also home to numerous
different activities that stir copyright concerns.
- This report will survey recent developments in copyright law
that affect universities and research libraries. Part I of this
report is a summary of copyright basics, with a focus on ownership
of copyrights, fair use, and library reproduction rights. Part II
is a brief examination of recent cases and legislation with
significant potential effects on research libraries and
universities. Part III is a projection of future copyright concerns
that do not yet figure in judicial decisions or legislation. With
respect to these issues, institutions can begin their advance
planning and perhaps exert their influence on the shape of future
law.
- The objectives of this report are to inform, to give a brief
roadmap through some of the most troublesome issues, and to
stimulate discussion regarding effective strategies and improved
responses to copyright problems. One fundamental difficulty of the
latest copyright dilemmas has been the tendency of many observers to
assert that some court rulings have a greater effect on universities
and libraries than the decisions would actually justify. Another
difficulty has been the willingness of some university or library
officials to accept those misleading analyses. The institutions are
often ill-equipped to resist the threats of litigation. Accepting
restrictive positions on copyright issues are often an expedient way
to address a difficult issue with a minimal exposure to liability.
A better understanding of copyright can allow libraries and
universities to identify opportunities and strategies for action
that they may pursue under copyright law, while also minimizing
risks of lawsuits.
Part I: THE BASICS OF COPYRIGHT
Findings:
Fair use is both a privilege and source of confusion.
Congress deliberately created an ambiguous fair use statute that
gives no exact parameters--fair use depends on the circumstances of
each case.
Many uses require a fresh fair use analysis, and they may never
produce easy or foolproof answers.
Courts are not insensitive to academic needs, and the fair use
statute expressly acknowledges the importance of educational
uses.
Section 108 (on reproduction of works by libraries) is generally
not regarded as the source of rights for reserve operations; reserve
room copies are made pursuant to fair use law. The distinction
between Section 108 and 107 for reserve rooms is important. Section
108 provides only for single copies of items, while the fair use
statute specifically permits some multiple copies for classroom use,
although subject to the four factors of fair use.
The United States has had federal copyright legislation since
1790, when Congress first exercised its constitutional power "to
promote the progress of science" by "securing for limited times to
authors . . . the exclusive right to their . . . writings. . . ."
Only Congress is empowered to make such laws, so the federal statute
is the foundation of copyright in this country. Congress last fully
revised the law in 1976. The Copyright Act of 1976 gives creators
and their assignees exclusive rights to reproduce, distribute, and
make most other uses of their original works. Copyright also applies
to much more than traditional writings--it protects artwork,
sculpture, sound recordings, videotapes, motion pictures, maps,
graphs, computer programs, databases, and a host of other original
creations. Certain works are exempted from copyright protection.
In particular, works of the U.S. government are not copyrightable,
but many disagreements arise about the copyrightability of works
produced with governmental funding or works that are co- authored
with one government employee.
Fair Use
If copyright were merely a set of rights belonging exclusively to
owners, we would have to seek permission for every use. But the law
also grants a right of "fair use" to the public. Fair use is both a
privilege and source of confusion. Nearly everyone will disagree on
what is "fair," and no one has a definitive, legally binding
"answer." In fact, Congress deliberately created an ambiguous fair
use statute that gives no exact parameters--fair use depends on the
circumstances of each case. The law offers four factors to consider:
(1) the purpose of the use, including a non-profit educational
purpose; (2) the nature of the copyrighted work; (3)�the amount of
the copying; and (4) the effect of the copying on the potential
market for, or value of, the original work. The full text of
"Section 107" on fair use appears in Appendix B to this report.
Applying these factors, observers generally agree that most short
quotations from published sources in a scholarly work are fair use.
Difficult judgement calls surround more complex cases--the longer
quotations or copies from distinctive materials, such as
standardized survey instruments, questionnaires, videotapes, or
computer software. Possible "fair use" examples abound. Many uses
require a fresh analysis, and they may never produce easy or
foolproof answers. Some of the most difficult questions relate to
uses of copyrighted works at universities and their libraries:
multiple photocopies for classroom distribution, access to software
by multiple users or at multiple locations, use of videotapes or
broadcasts of television programs, circulation of tapes or software
in libraries, and access to unpublished manuscript collections.
Courts also have provided little guidance on most fair use
issues. The fair use of materials for academic purposes is rarely
the subject of judicial decisions--the litigation costs and
attorneys' fees are prohibitive. Yet courts are not insensitive to
academic needs, and the fair use statute expressly acknowledges the
importance of educational uses. Developments in the law, however,
have been far from strictly favorable to the academe. For example,
courts have ruled that a teacher may not draft new arrangements of
copyrighted music and distribute copies to a school choir,[1] and an
educational television station cannot broadcast a protected motion
picture without permission.[2] Another court ruled that the
recipient of unpublished letters could not read them to students
without the copyright owner's permission.[3] On the other hand,
courts often have allowed greater rights of fair use of some
materials for writing history or biography.[4]
Library Reproduction Rights
A second source of user rights of particular significance to
libraries is "Section 108" of the 1976 Act, which permits copying of
materials by libraries pursuant to relatively specific standards.
Unlike the fair use statute, Section 108 does not inherently depend
on analysis and interpretation for every application. Much of the
language of Section 108 can instead have practical meaning for many
libraries without resorting to substantial external guidance or
elaborate interpretations. Some of the principal activities allowed
under Section 108 include the following:
Section 108(b): permits reproductions of unpublished works for
preservation or security or for deposit at another library.
Section 108(c): permits reproductions of published works for
replacing a damaged, deteriorated, lost, or stolen copy, but only if
"an unused replacement cannot be obtained at a fair price."
Section 108(d): permits reproductions of articles, or
contributions to collections, or small parts of larger works for a
patron's private study, scholarship, or research.
Section 108(e): permits reproductions of entire works for a
patron's private study, scholarship, or research, if "a copy . . .
cannot be obtained at a fair price."
Section 108(f)(1): exempts libraries and their employees from
liability for copying made by patrons on unsupervised machines where
appropriate notices are posted.
Each of these provisions includes various additional technical
requirements. The full text of Section 108 is therefore reprinted
in Appendix B to this report.
- Section 108 does not apply to every activity in every
library. Its provisions apply only to libraries that are open to
the public, or at least open to researchers not affiliated with the
institution. Most university libraries probably meet that standard.
The rights of Section 108 also apply only if "the reproduction or
distribution is made without any purpose of direct or indirect
commercial advantage. . . ." The legislative history to the 1976
Act, however, indicates that Section 108 can have some application
even in libraries operated by for-profit institutions.[5] The rights
of reproduction also do not extend to all types of copyrighted
works. Many of the rights do not apply to "a musical work, a
pictorial, graphic or sculptural work, or a motion picture or other
audiovisual work other than an audiovisual work dealing with news. .
. ." (See Section 108(h)).
- Section 108 is generally not regarded as the source of
rights for reserve operations. Reserve room copies are made
pursuant to fair use law; reserve rooms may be located in libraries,
but they function as an extension of classroom teaching. The
distinction between Section 108 and 107 for reserve rooms is
important. Section 108 provides only for single copies of items,
while the fair use statute specifically permits some multiple copies
for classroom use, although subject to the four factors of fair use.
Multiple copies are often essential for effective reserves.
- Librarians are no doubt familiar with the "Five-Year
Reports" that Section 108 originally required. The U.S. Copyright
Office sponsored the studies in order to report every five years to
Congress on the effects of Section 108. Congress received reports
in 1983 and 1988, and in 1992 it repealed the requirement of further
studies.[6]
Part II: RECENT DEVELOPMENTS
Findings:
Libraries and universities must be careful not to read either the
Kinko's case or the Texaco case more broadly than necessary. A
careful analysis of these decisions will show that fair use is alive
and well, and it continues to offer significant benefits,
particularly for non-profit educational purposes.
While the Kinko's case renews concerns about copyright on campus,
it also leaves substantial room for fair use to survive, especially
when the copying is not conducted for profit. The case also calls
into question the reliability of the Classroom Guidelines as a
legally meaningful standard.
The Texaco decision is a significant endorsement of the Copyright
Clearance Center. If permissions are easily forthcoming through the
CCC, then fair use is of lessened importance for fulfilling research
objectives--according to this case. That decision from the court is
both stunning and foreboding, although it is still limited to fair
use in the profit sector.
Recent cases have established an extremely narrow right of fair
use with respect to unpublished works. Two developments may
alleviate this construct of fair use: a 1991 court decision allowed
fair use of journals and letters, and both houses of Congress have
passed bills that attempt to assure the survival of fair use for
unpublished works.
Libraries must prepare for the steady transfer of unpublished
works to the public domain, a process that will begin on January 1,
2003.
An amendment to the Copyright Act specifically allows non- profit
libraries to circulate computer software, but libraries should be
sure to meet the notice requirements of the new law.
Neither the formal copyright notice nor registration is now
required to obtain copyright protection. Therefore, the failure to
register or to use the notice no longer puts the work into the
public domain, and fair use and other user rights continue to define
the limits on copying.
1. Kinko's and Photocopying for Classroom Use.
- In April 1991 the Federal District Court in New York City
ruled that Kinko's Graphics Corporation had exceeded its rights of
fair use when it photocopied "anthologies" or "course packs" of
textbook chapters for use at local universities.[7] The court
determined that nearly every factor in the fair use equation worked
against Kinko's. The court was particularly influenced by the
profit motive behind the Kinko's operation; it was unpersuaded that
the copying--at least in the hands of Kinko's--was for educational
purposes.
- The case renewed fears at many colleges and universities
that fair use was coming to an end. In fact, the court noted
repeatedly that the peculiar facts of this case led to the finding
of copyright infringement: the copying was conducted for profit; the
copies were from textbook chapters; the copies competed for
potential sales of those textbooks; and the amount copied from each
book was substantial. Copying of other materials or under other
circumstances may not be an infringement.
- The court also refused to apply the strict prohibition
against anthologies set forth in the so-called "Classroom
Guidelines" on photocopying for classroom and research needs. Most
academicians have seen the guidelines; they establish rigorous word
limits on copying. Those guidelines emerged from discussions among
interest groups leading to passage of the 1976 Copyright Act, and
they received congressional endorsement as a reasonable
interpretation of "minimal" fair use rights.[8] Most research
universities use the guidelines as official institutional policy.
The publishers urged the court to ban all anthologies, as the
Guidelines suggest, but the court declined, preferring to evaluate
the fair use of each item in the photocopied collection.
- Thus, while the Kinko's case renews concerns about copyright
on campus, it also leaves substantial room for fair use to survive,
especially when the copying is not conducted for profit. The case
also calls into question the reliability of the Classroom Guidelines
as a legally meaningful standard. On the other hand, the case makes
clear that common practices at many campuses are potentially subject
to copyright scrutiny. An entirely non-profit education purpose
cannot sanction all uses.
2. Texaco and Photocopying for Personal Research Use.
- A second case seems to have surrounded the university from
the other side. In July 1992 the same Federal District
Court--although a different judge--ruled that an employee of Texaco
had infringed the copyright held by a journal publisher when he made
individual copies of articles, notes, and letters to the editor
solely for his own research purposes.[9] Once again, the economic
circumstances played a significant role in the outcome. The court
was greatly influenced by these findings: the copying was ultimately
intended to promote Texaco's commercial purposes; the copies were of
the full "works," and not merely excerpts; and the copies had a
harmful effect on the potential market value of the copyrighted
work.
- That last point is perhaps the most important aspect of the
case. The decision is an significant endorsement of the Copyright
Clearance Center; the court reasoned that the relatively easy
availability of permissions through the CCC reduced the scope of
fair use rights. In recent years, the CCC has successfully
negotiated annual license agreements with many corporations,
including several in the oil industry. With one fee, the company
receives permission to photocopy materials from all publications
registered with the CCC. According to the Texaco decision, the
CCC's program not only establishes evidence of a publication's
economic value, but it also can displace fair use. If permissions
are easily forthcoming through the CCC, then fair use is of lessened
importance for fulfilling research objectives. That decision from
the court is both stunning and foreboding, although it is still
limited to fair use in the profit sector.
- As with the Kinko's case, the facts in the Texaco decision
can be distinguished from the circumstances generally occurring on
campus. In particular, copying on campus typically is without a
profit motive, and copyright licensing programs are not yet well
established in the university community. But the case does show
that a court may be willing to construe even individual copying for
research needs as a copyright infringement. The case is an open
invitation for the CCC to extend its programs to more types of
organizations, including research libraries and universities.
Indeed, the CCC has completed a pilot program involving several
universities, and it is discussed more fully in Part III of this
report.
- Libraries and universities must be careful not to read
either the Kinko's case or the Texaco case more broadly than
necessary. Each case should compel a reexamination of photocopying
practices, but each case offers a tempting lure for cautious
administrators. In particular, in order to avoid potential
liabilities, Kinko's seems to suggest that all photocopies in
anthologies require permission. Texaco similarly suggests that
individual research copying is either banned or constrained, or that
every institution must now participate in all CCC licensing
programs. These conclusions might help fend off litigation, but
they are also serious misreadings of the cases and are detrimental
sacrifices of fair use privileges that the law still preserves for
most research libraries and universities.
- Attorneys for ARL have prepared a more detailed analysis of
the Texaco decision and its effects on fair use and library copying
rights. Please refer to that analysis for further information.
3. Fair Use of Unpublished Works.
- Recent cases from the Second Circuit Court of Appeals
involving author J.D. Salinger and Scientology founder L. Ron
Hubbard have established an extremely narrow right of fair use with
respect to unpublished works, particularly correspondence, journals,
diaries, and other materials that are commonly housed in library
collections and used in writing history and biography.[10] These
cases do not diminish the specific rights to copy unpublished works
under Section 108. Instead, they have limited rights to quote
from--or even to paraphrase--the unpublished works.
- Two developments may alleviate this confining construct of
fair use. First, a 1991 decision from the Second Circuit allowed a
biographer to reprint brief excerpts from the journals and letters
of author Richard Wright.[11] Second, both houses of Congress have
passed bills that attempt to assure the survival of fair use for
unpublished works.[12] Neither of these developments is an enormous
expansion of user rights, and the unpublished nature of a work can
still be a factor that limits fair use.
- Libraries that retain manuscript collections should be
prepared for regular questions from patrons about their rights to
quote from unpublished works. Such fair use issues may be described
in the institution's copyright policy statement. The uncertainty of
this law can also be addressed when libraries acquire manuscript
collections. The donor or seller may own the copyrights to
materials in the collection, because the donor either is the author
or obtained the rights from the author. The acquiring library
should routinely seek to obtain possession of the copyrights as well
as possession of the materials themselves. If the donor is unable
or unwilling to transfer the copyrights, the library should
carefully document the copyright owner's name and address and
encourage the owner to seek advice on maintaining or managing the
copyright and providing for its clear and orderly transfer upon
future sale or upon the owner's death. Users of the manuscript
collections will likely need to obtain the owner's permission for
even common quoting, and the availability of such information at the
library will significantly expedite the researcher's quest.
- Libraries must also prepare for the steady transfer of
unpublished works to the public domain, a process that will begin on
January 1, 2003. The previous rule was that unpublished works
enjoyed copyright protection in perpetuity. Thus, the diaries and
letters of even the most prominent individuals were subject to
copyright restrictions without expiration. Congress abolished that
rule with passage of the 1976 Act and subjected unpublished works to
the duration limits of all copyrights: generally the life of the
author, plus fifty years. Rather than immediately assigning
centuries of protected works to the public domain, the law postpones
operation of the new rule until 2003.[13] In that year, the
unpublished writings of authors who died more than fifty years
before will be available for use without copyright limitations. Each
year, new materials written by authors who lived a year longer will
come available. In only ten years this new rule will have a
significant effect on the acquisition and use of new manuscript
works.
4. Library Circulation of Computer Software.
In 1990 Congress amended the Copyright Act to proscribe the
commercial lending of computer software. The amendment expressly
states:
Nothing in this subsection shall apply to the lending of a
computer program for nonprofit purposes by a nonprofit library, if
each copy of a computer program which is lent by such library has
affixed to the packaging containing the program a warning of
copyright in accordance with requirements that the Register of
Copyrights shall prescribe by regulation.[14]
The purpose of the amendment was clearly to restrict lending of
software for profit, but not to eliminate its use in the non-profit
educational context. Libraries should review their policies and
practices to be sure they conform to the requirements of the new
law, and to be sure that they are not more restrictive than the law
allows.
5. Elimination of the Copyright Notice Requirement.
- In 1989 the United States joined the Berne Convention, a
multinational treaty providing for the mutual protection of
copyrights originally secured under each country's laws. Thus, a
copyright obtained under U.S. law can enjoy protection in many other
countries. In order to join and conform to Berne, Congress amended
the U.S. Copyright Act in several respects. One significant change
for libraries and universities was the elimination of the
requirement to include a copyright notice on copyrighted works. The
requirement had been relaxed in the original 1976 Act, but now the
familiar copyright notice--usually the "C" in a circle, name, and
year--is not required at all. Registration of the work also has
been optional since passage of the 1976 Act.
- With neither notice nor registration required, users must
now assume that all copyrightable works are in fact protected by
copyright. The failure to register or to use the notice no longer
puts the work into the public domain, and fair use and other user
rights continue to define the limits on copying. In addition, the
absence of these formalities may also make certain information about
the works difficult to obtain. Catalog librarians frequently rely on
the copyright notice, for example, when establishing the date of a
work.
6. Elimination of Eleventh Amendment Immunity for State
Institutions.
- In the late 1980s a few courts ruled that copyright lawsuits
could not be brought against state universities. The result was
virtual immunity for hundreds of institutions across the country.
This peculiar situation did not last long. The Eleventh Amendment
to the U.S. Constitution precludes states from being sued for
monetary damages in federal courts. The purpose of the Eleventh
Amendment is to protect state coffers from the powerful authority of
the federal government. But federal law also specifies that all
infringement actions brought under the Copyright Act must be filed
in federal court.
- In one notable case, a software producer sued UCLA, alleging
infringement of it copyrighted programs. The federal district court
dismissed the case against UCLA; the state university could not be
held liable in federal court. The Court of Appeals affirmed that
decision, and the U.S. Supreme Court refused to hear the case. The
immunity of UCLA and other state institutions was established.[15]
In earlier, unrelated cases, the Supreme Court had allowed cases to
proceed against states in federal courts if Congress explicitly
manifested its intent to abrogate the Eleventh Amendment immunity
with respect to the particular law in question. In 1990 Congress
amended the Copyright Act to make that explicit statement of intent.
The immunity of state universities is now gone.[16] State and
private institutions are now subject to the same copyright
rules.
Part III: FUTURE DEVELOPMENTS
Findings:
A 1992 report from the Congressional Office of Technology
Assessment recommended that librarians and others participate in
developing guidelines on fair use and library use of computer
software. Librarians must take the initiative and accept that
challenge.
The lack of reliable guidance on the fair use of software and
other new media has compelled producers and users alike to rely
increasingly on license agreements for delineating rights and
obligations.
The increasing reliance on license agreements as replacements for
copyright law creates inconsistent rules and many times leads to new
restrictions that exceed the law's requirements.
Fair use and license agreements are not simply substitutes for
one another.
One of the most significant developments in collective licensing
has been the "University Pilot Program" that the CCC conducted in
1990 for a proposed annual license, but the anticipated agreement
has certain deficiencies.
1. Guidelines for Fair Use of Computer Software.
- The fair use of computer software is the greatest unknown of
greatest significance to libraries and universities. Congress in no
way limited the fair use statute to certain media, but the
traditional rules of fair use often do not seem relevant to
software. For example, one factor in the fair use analysis is the
amount of the work copied, but software is seldom of any utility
unless it is copied in full. Nevertheless, many fair use
possibilities remain: non-simultaneous use of a single software
package at more than location; displays of program sequences at
training sessions; or reverse engineering of protected software.
The possibilities for fair use applications are numerous, but they
are also far from settled.
- A 1992 report from the Congressional Office of Technology
Assessment recommended that librarians and others participate in
developing guidelines on fair use and library use of computer
software.[17] Librarians must take the initiative and accept that
challenge. The failure to act and the failure to identify and
preserve user opportunities will leave a vacuum for other interest
groups--with potentially contradictory objectives--to give shape to
understanding this crucial aspect of copyright.
2. Increased Reliance on License Terms.
- The lack of reliable guidance on the fair use of software
and other new media has compelled producers and users alike to rely
increasingly on license agreements for delineating rights and
obligations. The result is an inconsistent application of rules and
the possible acceptance of restrictions that exceed the law's
requirements. Contracts or "licenses" are inevitably diverse. In
the software trade, sellers frequently draft agreements that are
intended to be binding on purchasers. Those agreements often
include restrictions on the using, copying, lending, or selling the
work. An institution that purchases many different software
packages from many different suppliers will likely be subject to a
multitude of diverse rules. The complexity alone can inhibit
exploration of user rights.
- Another consequence of relying on licenses is that they
often include new restrictions that reach beyond the owner's
privileges under copyright law. Until future statutes or court
rulings clarify rights, no one can state with certainty whether a
user is allowed to carry a program from one computer to another.
The principles of fair use offer a good argument to support the
lawfulness of transporting the disk. Yet many licenses prohibit
exactly that activity. When libraries and universities acquire
their collections they should recognize that licenses are subject to
negotiation. They should review the terms and critically examine
their potential effects on fulfilling institutional objectives.
They should also resist entering into agreements that expressly or
implicitly limit rights established under law.
- In this context, the need to pursue innovative guidelines
for fair use of software becomes of increasing importance. Fair use
and license agreements are not simply substitutes for one another.
Instead, a clearer understanding of fair use opportunities can be a
crucial step toward negotiating improved agreements.
3. Participation in Collective Licensing Arrangements.
- As described above, the Texaco case has given new visibility
to the Copyright Clearance Center as a means of obtaining permission
for copying--even copying for individual research needs. Although
most attention has focused on the CCC, other agencies offer similar
or complementary programs. For example, the National Association of
College Stores, the Association of American Publishers, and
University Microfilms--among other organizations--have established
systems for granting copyright permissions or supplying copies of
articles and books with clearance from copyright owners.
- One of the most significant developments in collective
licensing has been the "University Pilot Program" that the CCC
conducted in 1990 for a proposed annual license. Six colleges and
universities participated in the study, and the CCC collected data
on the types and quantities of materials copied for various
purposes. The CCC has yet to issue a full public report on the
study, and it has yet to offer a long-term license agreement for
colleges and universities. But the anticipated agreement has
certain deficiencies. For example, it is not expected to include
the making of "anthologies" for classroom use; it may not cover
reserve room copies; the CCC does not represent all publishers and
copyright owners; and the CCC does not define any scope of fair use
that does not require permission or payment of fees.[18]
- Collective administration--whether through the CCC or
another agency--offers many valuable benefits to libraries and
universities. It can expedite the permission process and grant
security from many potential infringement claims. While the
temptation and impetus to participate is growing, participants
should scrutinize any forthcoming "blanket license" and recognize
its limitations. In its expected form, the CCC's license would not
embrace all needs at the library or university, leaving the
institution to continue the burdensome task of defining fair use and
seeking individual permissions for much copying.
Part IV: POTENTIAL STRATEGIES AND OPTIONS
Findings:
The objective of an institutional copyright policy should be not
merely to achieve compliance with the latest standards, but also to
identify maximum opportunities for the institution to lawfully
pursue its informational and academic objectives.
Many standard form policies, particularly the Classroom
Guidelines, are questionable responses to a flexible law that should
address diverse circumstances.
Members of the library staff and university community must work
together to identify their needs and perspectives and to devise
standards that reflect actual demands and that garner widespread
support.
Librarians must not perceive copyright as strictly an external
force directing the range of activities allowed at the institution.
Copyright is a set of opportunities, and the librarian's task is to
identify maximum opportunities under the law for meeting the needs
of scholars and the research community.
Libraries and universities must assume a leadership role in
shaping copyright issues as they emerge. Many fair use rights are
not well identified, and those voids in the law are invitations for
diverse interest groups to propose and negotiate guidelines.
1. Reevaluation of Copyright Policy Statements.
- Changes in the law and the increased litigation of copyright
issues have motivated many librarians to review their existing
copyright policy statements. The objective of such a review should
be not merely to achieve compliance with the latest standards, but
also to identify maximum opportunities for the institution to
lawfully pursue its informational and academic objectives. The
Kinko's and Texaco cases, for example, are sending a signal of
shrinking fair use, but a careful analysis of those decisions will
show that fair use is alive and well, and it continues to offer
significant benefits, particularly for non- profit educational
purposes.
- The growing complexity of the law also demonstrates that
"simple solutions" are often no solution at all. Many standard form
policies, particularly the Classroom Guidelines, are questionable
responses to a flexible law that should address diverse
circumstances. In 1982 the American Library Association offered an
alternative model policy for photocopying. Although it may need a
fresh review, it demonstrates that different interpretations of fair
use are available, and some interpretations are better suited to the
library's or university's objectives.[19]
2. Coordinating Responses to Copyright Issues.
- The most meaningful resolution of copyright issues will
result from a coordinated effort. Diverse members of the library
staff and university community must work together to share their
needs and perspectives and to devise standards that reflect actual
demands and that garner widespread support. Librarians must seek
guidance from faculty, administrators, and legal counsel when they
formulate policies. A widely accepted set of standards also needs
support from outside the library and university communities. When
the Office of Technology Assessment recommended development of
guidelines for software, it rightly urged diverse groups to
meet--including software producers, educators, and members of the
public at large. Moreover, it recommended that the U.S. Copyright
Office take charge of the process. Endorsements from diverging
interest groups and from the central government agency would no
doubt give enormous credibility to any resulting guidelines.
Librarians and university officials must be sure to find or create a
prominent role in any such proceedings.
3. Effective Leadership for Emerging Issues.
Librarians must not perceive copyright as strictly an external
force directing the range of activities allowed at the institution.
Copyright is a set of opportunities, and the librarian's task is to
identify maximum opportunities under the law for meeting the needs
of scholars and the research community. Copyright is also not just
a negative force; the law offers protection for new works created by
the library or on campus, and owners' rights are an incentive for
the creation and dissemination of many new materials. Most of all,
libraries and universities must assume a leadership role in shaping
copyright issues as they emerge. As described earlier with respect
to computer software, many fair use rights are not well identified,
and those voids in the law are invitations for diverse interest
groups to propose and negotiate guidelines.
EndNotes
[1] Wihtol v. Crow, 309 F.2d 777 (8th Cir.
1962).
[2] Rohauer v. Killiam Shows, Inc., 379 F.Supp.
723 (S.D.N.Y. 1974), rev'd on other grounds, 551 F.2d 484 (2d Cir.
1977), cert. denied, 431 U.S. 949 (1977).
[3] Sinkler v. Goldsmith, 623 F.Supp. 727
(D.Ariz. 1985).
[4] See, for example, Meeropol v. Nizer, 560
F.2d 1061 (2d Cir. 1977), cert. denied, 434 U.S. 1013 (1978);
Rosemont Enterprises, Inc. v. Random House, Inc., 366 F.2d 303 (2d
Cir. 1966), cert. denied, 385 U.S. 1009 (1967).
[5] U.S. Congress, House Committee on the
Judiciary, Copyright Law Revision: H. Rept. 94- 1476 on S. 22, 94th
Cong., 2d Sess., 1976, pp. 74-75.
[6] Copyright Amendments Act of 1992, Pub. L.
No. 102-307, Section 301, 106 Stat. 264, 272 (1992).
[7] Basic Books, Inc. v. Kinko's Graphics
Corp., 758 F.Supp. 1522 (S.D.N.Y. 1991).
[8] U.S. Congress, House Committee on the
Judiciary, Copyright Law Revision: H. Rept. 94-1476 on S. 22, 94th
Cong., 2d Sess., 1976, pp. 68-70.
[9] American Geophysical Union v. Texaco Inc.,
___ F.Supp. ____ (S.D.N.Y. 1992).
[10] New Era Publications International, ApS
v. Henry Holt and Company, Inc., 873 F.2d 576 (2d Cir. 1989), cert.
denied, 110 S.Ct. 1168 (1990); Salinger v. Random House, Inc., 811
F.2d 90 (2d Cir.), cert. denied, 484 U.S. 890 (1987).
[11] Wright v. Warner Books, Inc., 953 F.2d
731 (2d Cir. 1991).
[12] S. 1035, 102d Cong., 1st Sess. (1991);
H.R. 4412, 102d Cong., 2d Sess. (1992).
[13] Copyright Act of 1976, 17 U.S.C. Section
303 (1988).
[14] Copyright Act of 1976, 17 U.S.C. Section
109(b) (1988), as amended by Computer Software Rental Amendments Act
of 1990, Pub. L. No. 101- 650, 104 Stat. 5089 (1990).
[15] BV Engineering v. University of
California, Los Angeles, 858 F.2d 1394 (9th Cir. 1988), cert.
denied, 489 U.S. 1090 (1989).
[16] Copyright Act of 1976, 17 U.S.C. Section
511 (1988), as amended by Copyright Remedy Clarification Act, Pub.
L. 101-553, 104 Stat. 2749 (1990).
[17] U.S. Congress, Office of Technology
Assessment, Finding a Balance: Computer Software, Intellectual
Property, and the Challenge of Technological Change (Washington,
D.C.: Government Printing Office, 1992), 31 & 35.
[18] Jane C. Ginsburg, "Reproduction of
Protected Works for University Research or Teaching," Journal of the
Copyright Society of the USA. 39 (Spring 1992): 209-211.
[19] Two ARL publications include numerous
examples of library and university copyright policies, including
policies based on the Classroom Guidelines and the ALA Model Policy.
Kenneth D. Crews, University Copyright Policies, SPEC Kit No. 138
(Washington, D.C.: Association of Research Libraries, October 1987);
Nancy Kranich, Copyright Policies in ARL Libraries, SPEC Kit No. 102
(Washington, D.C.: Association of Research Libraries, March
1984).
Appendix A
Further Reading
Crews, Kenneth D. Copyright, Fair Use, and the Challenge for
Universities: Promoting the Progress of Higher Education. Chicago,
IL: The University of Chicago Press, forthcoming 1993.
______ "Federal Court's Ruling Against Photocopy Chain Will Not
Destroy 'Fair Use'." Chronicle of Higher Education, April�17, 1991,
p. A48.
______ "Unpublished Manuscripts and the Right of Fair Use:
Copyright Law and the Strategic Management of Information
Resources." Rare Books & Manuscripts Librarianship 5 (1990):
61-70.
Goldstein, Paul. Copyright: Principles, Law and Practice. 3
vols. Boston, MA: Little, Brown and Co., 1989 (with annual
supplements).
Johnston, Donald F. Copyright Handbook. Second edition. New
York: R.R. Bowker Co., 1982.
Nimmer, Melville B. and David Nimmer. Nimmer on Copyright. 5
vols. New York: Matthew Bender, 1992 (with periodic
supplements).
Patry, William F. The Fair Use Privilege in Copyright Law.
Washington, D.C.: Bureau of National Affairs, Inc., 1985.
Patterson, L. Ray and Stanley W. Lindberg. The Nature of
Copyright: A Law of Users' Rights. Athens, GA: The University of
Georgia Press, 1991.
Strong, William S. The Copyright Book: A Practical Guide.
Fourth edition. Cambridge, MA: The MIT Press, 1992.
Appendix B
Text of Sections 107 and 108 of the Copyright Act of 1976
The original document distributed at the Fall meeting of the
Association of Research Libraries contained Photocopies of Sections
107 and 108 in this appendix. Electronic copies of these documents
are available via anonymous FTP in the FTP archives of the Coalition
for Networked Information.
ftp ftp.cni.org
login anonymous [send e-mail address as password]
cd /ARL/fairuse
get US.Copyright.sec.107.txt
get US.Copyright.sec.108.txt