4 research outputs found
Copyright's Digital/Analog Divide
This Article shows how the substantive balance of copyright law has been
overshadowed online by the system of intermediary safe harbors enacted as
part of the Digital Millennium Copyright Act (“DMCA”) in 1998. The Internet
safe harbors and the system of notice-and-takedown fundamentally changed
the incentives of platforms, users, and rightsholders in relation to claims
of copyright infringement. These different incentives interact to yield a
functional balance of copyright online that diverges markedly from the
experience of copyright law in traditional media environments. This article
also explores a second divergence: the DMCA’s safe harbor system is being
superseded by private agreements between rightsholders and large commercial
Internet platforms made in the shadow of those safe harbors. These
agreements relate to automatic copyright filtering systems, such as
YouTube’s Content ID, that not only return platforms to their gatekeeping
role, but encode that role in algorithms and software.
The normative implications of these developments are contestable. Fair use
and other axioms of copyright law still nominally apply online; but in
practice, the safe harbors and private agreements made in the shadow of
those safe harbors are now far more important determinants of online
behavior than whether that conduct is, or is not, substantively in
compliance with copyright law. The diminished relevance of substantive
copyright law to online expression has benefits and costs that appear
fundamentally incommensurable. Compared to the offline world, online
platforms are typically more permissive of infringement, and more open to
new and unexpected speech and new forms of cultural participation. However,
speech on these platforms is also more vulnerable to over-reaching claims
by rightsholders. There is no easy metric for comparing the value of
non-infringing expression enabled by the safe harbors to that which has
been unjustifiably suppressed by misuse of the notice-and-takedown system.
Likewise, the harm that copyright infringement does to rightsholders is not
easy to calculate, nor is it easy to weigh against the many benefits of the
safe harbors.
DMCA-plus agreements raise additional considerations. Automatic copyright
enforcement systems have obvious advantages for both platforms and
rightsholders; they may also allow platforms to be more hospitable to
certain types of user content. However, automated enforcement systems may
also place an undue burden on fair use and other forms of non-infringing
speech. The design of copyright enforcement robots encodes a series of
policy choices made by platforms and rightsholders and, as a result,
subjects online speech and cultural participation to a new layer of private
ordering and private control. In the future, private interests, not public
policy will determine the conditions under which users get to participate
in online platforms that adopt these systems. In a world where
communication and expression is policed by copyright robots, the
substantive content of copyright law matters only to the extent that those
with power decide that it should matter.
Keywords: Copyright, DMCA, Infringement, Internet, Safe harbors,
Enforcement, Fair use, Automation, Algorithms, Robots
