Congress,
the new copyright bully
By
Eric Goldman
August 6, 2003, 4:00 AM PT
http://news.com.com/2010-1071-5060347.html
Congress
has become exasperated with its inability to get Americans to stop engaging
in copyright infringement.
So Rep. Howard Berman jokes that he "probably" does not favor
the death penalty for infringers, Sen. Orrin Hatch half-jokes that he would
like to blow up the computers of infringers and Rep. John Carter wants to see
infringing college kids thrown in jail for 33 months.
However, in more candid
moments, members of Congress admit that they don't know what to do next, from a
policy standpoint, to combat infringement. A prime example of this policy
vacuum is Congress’ proposal du jour, the Author, Consumer and Computer Owner
Protection and Security (ACCOPS)
Act.
Having criminalized willful
nonprofit copyright infringement in 1997 through the No Electronic Theft Act
without much success, some in Congress believe the law is too weak and needs
more teeth. Thus, the new bill proposes a clear and simple standard for
criminal copyright infringement: You commit a felony if you upload one
infringing copyrighted work to the Internet.
Have an infringing MP3 in
your shared peer-to-peer software directory? Go to jail. Post a newspaper
article to your blog? Go to jail. Upload a photo taken by your wedding
photographer to a family album Web site? Go to jail.
The bill does not reflect a
well-thought-out policy toward criminal copyright infringement. It cannot even
be blamed on pandering to the copyright owner lobby. Instead, the bill simply
reflects Congress’ stubborn determination to bully the American people into
doing what it wants.
In the past decade, through
dozens of congressional oversight hearings where usually only industry
representatives testify, Congress has been completely convinced that rampant
copyright infringement threatens to destroy the American economy. Having
internalized this threat, Congress is now determined to fix that problem the
only way it knows how--threaten ordinary citizens with jail, despite collateral
consequences.
And yet, just about
everyone outside the Beltway knows that criminal copyright law has already gone
too far. We necessarily commit copyright infringement as an unavoidable
consequence of living in a digital society. But the criminal law already treats
much of that conduct the same as it treats the blatant piracy that poses more
serious jeopardy to copyright owner interests. With the rules so bluntly
delineated, we cannot respect them or comply.
Rather than making a
seemingly endless number of ad hoc proposals, Congress needs to develop an
integrated policy about criminal copyright infringement. To do so, Congress
needs to realize two things.
|
Have an
infringing MP3 in your shared peer-to-peer software directory? Go to jail.
Post a newspaper article to your blog? Go to jail. |
First, it is
not acceptable to put average Americans at the peril of going to jail for doing
everyday activities. Second, if the existing laws are not yielding the desired
results, perhaps they were bad policy, in which case making them tougher only
compounds the initial policy failure.
There is a solution to
Congress' copyright conundrum, and it does not require more legislation. If
copyright owners want to curb infringement, they need to bear more
responsibility. Ideally, copyright owners would develop better business models
that work even in the face of widespread micro-infringements. But if such
business models are not possible, copyright owners can control infringements by
bringing lawsuits themselves.
The record industry has
already vowed to do so, and such lawsuits should be respected, not criticized.
If the record industry
thinks that its problems warrant litigation, they should use the laws that are
already on the books. Of course, those lawsuits come at some risk, as they
require the industry to sue its customers. But the record industry, much more
so than government prosecutors, can determine the cost benefit of suing
customers to reduce infringement. If the record industry decides that lawsuits
are not worth it, what does that say about the need for criminal enforcement?
Thus, Congress' anger at
the American public for continuing to infringe is misdirected. Instead,
Congress should be angry with copyright owners for failing to use the many
powerful tools that Congress has already given them. If Congress wants a
sensible policy to stem infringement, try this: Before giving industry
advocates new laws, make them prove that they took full advantage of the laws
that Congress gave them the last time they asked.