Archive for the ‘Copyright’ Category

Harry Potter Lexicon: Fine Online, But Not For Print

Earlier this week we found out that JK Rowling and Warner Brothers were successful in their copyright infringement case against RDR Books for their planned publication of The Harry Potter Lexicon, an encyclopedia about all things Harry Potter.
Everyone was quick to discuss the decision, including The NY Times, WSJ, TechDirt, Stanford Law School, The Berkman [...]

Why isn’t state legal content better accessible?

First it happened in Oregon, where the state claimed it violated copyright for websites like Justia to republish their law. According to TechDirt, “the state admits that the text of the laws are not covered by copyright, but that everything else about the way the law is presented is covered by copyright (such as the [...]

Judge Defends DMCA, Veoh Prevails in Lawsuit

Judge Howard Lloyd of the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of California dismissed a copyright infringement case against Veoh, a video sharing site, ruling that the DMCA does not require such sites from reviewing the content they host for potential infringement. The judge said, “The DMCA was intended to facilitate the growth [...]

Designing A Digital Bill Of Rights

Erick Schonfeld at Techcrunch proposes a “Digital Bill of Rights” with:
The Right to Use and Reuse Content: Consumers know that digital copies of songs, words, and videos are qualitatively different than physical copies, yet copyright law treats them the same way. When the economics of scarcity no longer apply, consumers start to behave differently. They [...]