By , January 17, 2025.

U.S. Copyright Office Activities in 2024: A Year in Review — The U.S. Copyright Office accomplishs an incredible amount of work given its lean staff. The Copyright Alliance’s Rachel Kim highlights some of the Office’s legal and policy efforts over the past year and previews what to expect in the year ahead.

Zuckerberg Appeared to Know Meta Trained AI on Pirated Library — “In an email to Joelle Pineau, vice president of AI research at Meta, Sony Theakanath, director of product management, wrote, ‘After a prior escalation to MZ [Mark Zuckerberg], GenAI has been approved to use LibGen for Llama 3 […] with a number of agreed upon mitigations.’ The note observed that including the LibGen material would help them reach certain performance benchmarks, and alluded to industry rumors that other AI companies, including OpenAI and Mistral AI, are ‘using the library for their models.’ In the same email, Theakanath wrote that under no circumstances would Meta publicly disclose its use of LibGen.”

Telegram Shuts Down Z-Library & Anna’s Archive Channels Over Copyright Infringement — Torrentfreak reports, “Telegram is one of the most popular messaging tools, chosen by many online services to stay connected with their audiences. Major shadow libraries Z-Library and Anna’s Archive used Telegram until this week, when both accounts were terminated for copyright infringement. While these websites offer infringing content, both were cautious to avoid copyright troubles on Telegram.”

8th Cir.: Realtors’ use of home design floorplans in listings is fair use — “In a significant ruling for the real estate industry, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit has affirmed summary judgment in favor of real estate agents who were sued for copyright infringement after including floorplans in their listings of homes designed by an architect and his company Designworks Homes, Inc. The court held that creating simplified floorplans to market existing homes constitutes fair use of architectural designs because it serves a different purpose than the original designs and does not harm the architect’s market for designing and building home.”

Government seeks responses on copyright and AI consultation — “The UK Government has launched a consultation seeking views on potential changes to UK copyright law and the potential establishment of licensing schemes, aiming to resolve the tension between creative industries and AI developers. The tension exists because AI developers want to access large volumes of data – whether that be text, graphics, photographs or other inputs – to train their AI models, but the owners of copyright and related rights in such data want to be able to control the use of their works by AI models and/or receive remuneration if permission is granted.”

By , January 10, 2025.

Meta Secretly Trained Its AI on a Notorious Piracy Database, Newly Unredacted Court Docs Reveal — “In his order, Chhabria referenced an internal quote from a Meta employee, included in the documents, in which they speculated, ‘If there is media coverage suggesting we have used a dataset we know to be pirated, such as LibGen, this may undermine our negotiating position with regulators on these issues.’ Meta declined to comment.”

Copyright Cases in 2024: A Year in Review — “Over the past year, all eyes have understandably been on the various ongoing cases brought by copyright owners against generative AI companies. But while we await decisions in those cases, which we’ll cover in an upcoming blog, there were a few non-AI copyright cases decided that could have a lasting impact on copyright owners, users of copyrighted works, internet service providers and others. Below are summaries of these 2024 copyright cases, some of which will see further developments on appeal in 2025.”

PW Talks with Maria Pallante, President & CEO of the Association of American Publishers — “Recently, we have begun to see access agreements and other AI licenses emerge, which is good news, because licensing should be a win-win-win for tech, publishers, and authors. It permits developers to work with content that is safe, sophisticated, and curated, and to obtain a measure of relief from copyright liability. Licensing also permits publishers and authors to collaborate with tech companies as both partners and clients, authorizing some AI uses for a fair price but prohibiting other uses, such as market substitutes. Creativity and innovation are supposed to be symbiotic like this.”

The Hidden Cost of ‘Free’: The Big Steal Shines a Light on the Domestic Threat to U.S. IP Rights — “The Big Steal provides more hope than despair. Its message suggests that America’s embrace of property and rule-of-law are alive, if not so well, when it comes to IP rights over the past decade. Greater IP certainty, better awareness of the role of patents, copyrights, trademarks and trade secrets, and legislation, can help to neutralize the effects of systematic IP infringement and serve to keep the U.S. competitive in the battle for innovation leadership it has come to take for granted.”

U.S. Trade Representative Lists the Most Notorious Piracy Threats — “The Office of the United States Trade Representative has published its annual list of problematic piracy websites and other “notorious markets.” This year’s overview includes the usual suspects operating in the torrent and streaming sectors, as well as some intermediaries, including various hosting companies. The USTR hopes that by highlighting the threats, platform operators or foreign authorities will take action.”

By , January 07, 2025.

In The Big Steal: Ideology, Interest, and the Undoing of Intellectual Property,1Also available at Amazon. Jonathan Barnett, a law professor at University of Southern California Gould School of Law, explores the dramatic shift in intellectual property law over recent years that has disproportionately benefited big tech companies: online platforms, aggregators, and social media services that rank among the world’s wealthiest and most influential companies. Despite the popular narrative that the balance of power in IP politics favors rights owners, Barnett argues these changes have led to an involuntary transfer of wealth from rights owners to large tech firms that has, at best, gone unnoticed and, at worst, been celebrated.

The Big Steal offers a crucial corrective to this conventional wisdom by taking a fresh look at the politics and economics behind IP law in the digital economy. It shows how weak IP rights favor digital platforms over creators, explores the common forces driving the erosion of IP rights, and challenges the “information wants to be free” chorus from scholars and advocates.

For online platforms, copyright protections impose costs. These companies rely on other people’s content to make money. Lowering those costs is good. Even better is getting rid of them entirely and minimizing any legal risks to accomplish that.

Barnett argues that big tech has achieved this goal by persuading policymakers and judges to take any action that weakens copyright protections or renders them less effective. He highlights two examples: first, the dramatic expansion of fair use through the early 2000’s and second, the “renegotiation” of the Section 512 safe harbor through litigation in a way that “heavily favors Tech at the expense of Content.”

The Big Steal addresses a similar shift in patent law. I sometimes see copyright folks assume that while big tech firms favor weaker copyright protections, they must be in favor of strong patent protections, given their focus on technology and innovation. This assumption is largely incorrect: most large information-technology firms advocate for weaker patent protections because they are either net users of technology inputs that other firms have developed—in which case, patent protections impose costs—or monetize their own R&D investments indirectly through an integrated organizational structure like a platform or network—in which case, patent protections are less relevant to their bottom line. The result is significant overlap among those who advocate for both weaker patent and weaker copyright protections.

Advocates have been incredibly successful in implementing this shift in IP policy. But how were they able to accomplish this?

Barnett explains that, in part, big tech has adopted the rhetoric of the public interest in their efforts to lobby for weaker IP protections by arguing that weaker IP protections benefit consumers because they reduce costs and increase access to creative and technological assets. Tech’s arguments happen to converge with like-minded scholars and advocacy groups that are philosophically skeptical of IP rights. This “accidental” alliance, as Barnett dubs it, promotes a policy package that is inherently attractive to consumers—who doesn’t like free stuff?—and thus an “easy sell” to policymakers and judges.

But it would be a mistake to assume the public interest is equivalent to big tech’s business interests. Barnett ends by underscoring what we lose by weakening IP rules. Weaker IP protections undermine the ability of creators and innovators to directly monetize their work, constrain the range of feasible business models available, and relegate creation and innovation to second-class status (or worse). Barnett argues that weaker IP regimes may paradoxically concentrate market power in a few integrated firms that can control innovation and commercialization internally. In contrast, stronger IP rights not only incentivize innovation but also lower entry barriers and promote competition.

More broadly, I would add, by limiting the ability of companies to organize around and directly commercialize creation and innovation, we risk losing those aspects of their work that are socially and culturally important. How do we ensure rigorous journalism, high-quality educational materials, or emotionally resonant films when creation is commodified into content?

The Big Steal comes at a critical time for copyright policy with the rise of generative AI, which depends on creative works for training. Will policymakers and judges recognize the importance of strong IP rights that will not only protect the ability of rights owners to control how their works are used and share in the value they generate but also lead to greater innovation and competition across the board? Or will we instead witness the further involuntary transfer of wealth from creators to big tech, with profound consequences for the public interest?

References

References
1 Also available at Amazon.
By , January 03, 2025.

Happy New Year!

Anthropic Agrees to Enforce Copyright Guardrails on New AI Tools — “Plaintiffs sued Anthropic in October 2023 and sought an injunction in August, arguing it’s necessary to stop infringement of their works. Anthropic opposed the motion, arguing fair use over its adoption of the material to train its models since the AI tool was transforming the content, while claiming publishers hadn’t demonstrated irreparable harm without an injunction.”

How the Copyright Claims Board Can Lighten the Federal Court Docket — “The Copyright Claims Board (CCB), established by the Copyright Alternative in Small-Claims Enforcement (CASE) Act of 2020 in December 2020, and operational since June 16, 2022, is a voluntary government tribunal offering an alternative to federal court for copyright claims with damages of no more than $30,000 at stake. One lesser-known feature of the CCB is that it can help alleviate the pressure of an over-burdened federal court docket by hearing and deciding small copyright claims, including ones already filed in federal court.”

Voluntary Dismissals and Attorney Fees — “The Copyright Act and the Patent Act each include an attorney fee provision — permitting the district court to award ‘a reasonable attorney’s fee to the prevailing party.’ … On the Copyright side, there is a growing circuit split on the issue of whether defendants can recover attorney’s fees after a plaintiff voluntarily dismisses under Rule 41(a)(1). … Property Matters recently petitioned to the Supreme Court for review.”

[Event Report] 34th IPA Congress — “[T]he International Publishers Association (IPA) held the event. The Mexican Publishers Association (CANIEM) hosted the bi-annual congress in collaboration with the Association of American Publishers (AAP) and in coordination with the Guadalajara International Book Fair. The programme covered relevant aspects of the publishing sector, including copyright, industry cooperation, freedom to publish and the Sustainable Development Goals.”

OpenAI’s Promised Media Manager Tool Remains in Limbo Amid Copyright Concerns — “Media Manager was pitched as a tool to identify copyrighted content and provide creators with control over whether their works are included in OpenAI’s AI training datasets. It was intended to mend concerns from creators and fend off ongoing legal challenges regarding copyright violations. However, according to sources familiar with the project, the said tool never seemed to be a high priority internally.”

By , December 20, 2024.

Publishers Association wins High Court bid ordering internet service providers to block pirate websites — “Website blocking as a remedy for tackling piracy was first deployed by publishers collectively in 2015. The court can be asked to order intermediaries to intervene to prevent access to websites which infringe copyright. This order is the first of its kind for UK publishing, because it also targets ‘copycat’ domains that trade off existing pirate brands.”

The UK government mulls letting AI firms steal copyrighted work — “The UK government has launched an indescribably long and over-complicated consultation about copyright and AI. All it needed was one yes or no question.”

Netflix and Hollywood Obtain Canadian Site Blocking Order Against Pirate ‘Brand’ Soap2Day — “The Federal Court of Canada has issued a new site blocking order requiring major ISPs to block access to Soap2Day domains. The order was issued in response to a lawsuit filed by Netflix, Bell, and several major Hollywood studios alleging copyright infringement. The operators of the associated Soap2Day domains must pay millions of Canadian dollars in damages.”

Proposed copyright policy change sparks concerns among Universities of Wisconsin faculty — “Despite this assurance, many faculty members worry the policy will grant the university more control over their intellectual work and undermine academic freedom. Bernard-Donals argued the policy could make universities treat faculty-created materials like commodities. ‘With copyright control over course material, what’s to stop a university from bundling together syllabi, notes and PowerPoints and assigning non-experts to teach those courses?’ he asked. ‘It has the potential to make courses into cookie-cutter modules, which could be a serious problem for academic quality.'”

Because it is that time of year, please enjoy a series of 2024 recaps. Friday’s Endnotes will return in 2025:

By , December 13, 2024.

Photobucket users and subjects sue to stop images from being sold as deep fake fodder — “Photobucket users filed a federal class action against the image cloud company on Wednesday to prevent the sale of their pictures to biometric and generative AI companies — technologies that were the stuff of science fiction when many first signed up for accounts more than a decade ago.”

OpenAI Bid to Centralize IP Suits Follows Discovery Setbacks — “MDL centralizes pretrial activities such as discovery in cases that involve common factual questions. Though it could be more procedurally efficient for an MDL court to handle all the pretrial proceedings for the eight lawsuits—including those brought by New York Times Co.  and authors like comedian Sarah Silverman—the MDL court could also potentially decide dispositive motions like summary judgment, Santa Clara University School of Law professor Edward Lee said. That ‘would be quite a change from the multiple judges’ in New York and California to just one judge pre-trial, he said.”

Paul McCartney warns AI ‘could take over’ as UK debates copyright laws — “He spoke out amid growing concern that the rise of AI is threatening income streams for music, news and book publishers. Next week the UK parliament will debate amendments to the data bill that could allow creators to decide whether or not their copyrighted work can be used to train generative AI models.”

Can You Copyright a Vibe? — “Professor Fromer described the lawsuit as one of the first of its kind, in which one social media user is suing another — rather than the tech company behind the platform. Despite its seeming outlandishness, this ‘kitchen sink intellectual property complaint’ could hold up in court, she said, adding that the most substantial claim was copyright infringement.”

CJEU Clarifies Copyright Protection for Software Variables — “The CJEU ruled that such modification did not constitute copyright infringement, as it did not affect the expression of the program, which is embodied in the source and object code. The CJEU explained that the content of the variables constitutes an element of the program in which users use the functionalities of the program, but not an expression of the program itself. The court noted in particular that the modification of the variables did not enable the reproduction or further execution of the program, but rather required that the program be running simultaneously.”

By , November 22, 2024.

Generative AI Licensing Isn’t Just Possible, It’s Essential — “When technological advancements change the way copyrighted works are reproduced or distributed, those who question whether the use is infringing are often accused of standing in the way of innovation. Similarly, the idea of licensing is dismissed as unnecessary, impossible, and something that would hinder technological progress. Now more than ever, these positions must be rejected.”

Asian News International (ANI) sues OpenAI for copyright violation — “Asian News International, one of India’s largest news agencies, sued OpenAI in a court in India alleging that the US artificial intelligence company misused its copyrighted news content.”

Computer Programmer Convicted for Helping Run One of the Biggest Illegal Television Show Streaming Services in the United States — “After a two-week trial, a federal jury in Las Vegas yesterday convicted a Cuban citizen and U.S. permanent resident for helping operate an illegal streaming service with one of the largest quantities of infringing works. The defendant, who was convicted of one count of conspiracy to commit criminal copyright infringement, is the eighth and final defendant to be convicted in the case.”

OpenAI accidentally deleted potential evidence in NY Times copyright lawsuit — “In this case and others, OpenAI has maintained that training models using publicly available data — including articles from The Times and Daily News — is fair use. In other words, in creating models like GPT-4o, which ‘learn’ from billions of examples of e-books, essays, and more to generate human-sounding text, OpenAI believes that it isn’t required to license or otherwise pay for the examples — even if it makes money from those models.”

Mediaset secures copyright infringement judgement against Cloudflare — “According to a technical analysis released by Mediaset, Guardaserie used Cloudflare’s services to repeatedly change its domain name extensions over time, circumventing controls put in place by the media regulator Agcom, and making it difficult to identify the portals and the locations of pirate servers. The court found Cloudflare liable for ‘facilitating the illegal distribution of audiovisual programs’ to which Mediaset holds exclusive rights.”

By , November 15, 2024.

Perlmutter Says Copyright Office Is Still Working to Meet ‘Ambitious Deadline’ for AI Report — “The Senate Judiciary Committee’s Subcommittee on Intellectual Property held an oversight hearing yesterday in which Register of Copyrights Shira Perlmutter told the Subcommittee members that the Office is still working to get parts two and three of its promised report on Copyright and Artificial Intelligence out by the end of this year.”

USPTO Director Kathi Vidal Announces Resignation Ahead of Administration Change — “As USPTO director, Vidal led a $4.2 billion operation with more than 13,500 employees across the 50 states and Puerto Rico. She also served as the principal intellectual property adviser to the Biden administration through the secretary of commerce.”

International Copyright Law: Infringer in Canada But Not in the United States — This week, Canadian Standards Association petitioned the Supreme Court for review of a July 5th Circuit decision reversing an injunction to enforce a Canadian copyright infringement decision. Read a full discussion of that 5th Circuit decision in the linked article.

Shein will continue to face RICO charges in copyright infringement lawsuit — “Shein will continue to face RICO charges in a copyright infringement lawsuit filed last year, after a federal judge denied the fast fashion giant’s request to dismiss the racketeering claims, according to court documents filed Friday. In July 2023, Shein was sued by a group of independent designers after it allegedly ‘produced, distributed, and sold exact copies’ of the artists’ work.”

Horses for courses: English court refuses copyright protection for equestrian garments as works of artistic craftsmanship — “While the outcome on the facts of the case is not particularly exciting, what is more interesting is that the case is another example in a line of cases that have highlighted the tension between the domestic closed category system under the CDPA 1988 and the criteria for protection of works under EU law, most notably the EU approach to originality.”

By , November 08, 2024.

Ed Sheeran’s ‘Thinking Out Loud’ Win Upheld by Second Circuit — “Park said the elements focusing on a similar chord progression and syncopated rhythm that plaintiff Structured Asset Sales LLC argued were infringing weren’t original enough to be protectable under copyright law. He added the songs weren’t ‘substantially similar taken as a whole’ and that no reasonable jury would find that Sheeran copied [Marvin] Gaye’s song.”

October 2024 Roundup of Copyright News — From the Copyright Alliance’s Rachel Kim, a “quick snapshot of some of copyright-related activities that occurred during the month of October as well as a few events to look forward to in November.”

Artist Deborah Roberts Receives Mixed Ruling in Contentious Copyright DisputeDecision here. The lawsuit was brought by a renowned collage artist against a gallery and artist who created works that are alleged to mimic Roberts’ distinctive style. On a motion to dismiss, the court dismissed copyright claims against nine of the allegedly infringing works but allowed claims against six to proceed. The court also dismissed Roberts’ trade dress claim.

Prompts as code? — “Some of the more complex prompts would probably be protectable as a “normal” literary text, but it is also true that these are instructions for a generative AI system, i.e., a computer, to perform a function. Advanced prompts often involve specific syntax, parameters, and even logical operators to refine the AI’s output. This structured approach mirrors the logic and organization found in traditional programming languages.”

UMG Sues Believe and TuneCore for $500 Million, Alleging ‘Industrial-Scale Copyright Infringement’ — “Universal Music Group, ABKCO and Concord claim that Believe has achieved significant growth by acting as a hub for distributing unauthorized copies of copyrighted recordings to major platforms including TikTok, YouTube, Spotify, Apple Music and Instagram. UMG et al allege: ‘Often, Believe distributes overtly infringing versions of original tracks by famous artists with notations that they are “sped up” or “remixed”.'”

By , November 01, 2024.

US Copyright Office Response to October 25, 2024 Committee on House Administration Letter Regarding Initiative on Copyright and Artificial Intelligence — “While our self-imposed, ambitious timelines have shifted by a few months, due in part to competing statutory and judicial deadlines, we are well along in the process of producing the rest of the report. Our current goal is still to complete the other two parts by the end of 2024. However, given the complexities of the issues involved and the important public interest, we must prioritize the quality and soundness of our analysis over strict adherence to the target dates that we set. We will keep the Committee informed of any further timing adjustments.”

What Intellectual Property Policy Should Look Like in the Age of AI — “As we near the end of 2024, policy discussions about AI and IP should prioritize the rights of creators and innovators while upholding the principles that have long governed our IP system.”

Turn the Bill Around: Is 2024 a Turning Point for Copyright? — “Over the last decade, South Africa, India, and Mexico each introduced a series of legislative proposals, with varying effects on the copyright community. After years of sitting stagnant, summer 2024 brought movement on all three fronts.”

Infringing AI: Liability for AI-generated outputs under international, EU, and UK copyright law — “Empirical research shows that large generative AI models may memorize training data which may include or consist of copyright-protected works and other protected subject-matter, or parts thereof. When prompted appropriately, these models may produce outputs that closely resemble such works and other subject-matter.”

Geoblocking measures sufficient to prevent a “communication to the public”? The CJEU gets a second chance — “The central issue for the Dutch Supreme Court is whether the making available of the works by Stichting et al on a Belgian website, even if geoblocked, still constitutes a communication to the public in the Netherlands, given that users can circumvent this geoblocking measure by using a virtual private network (VPN) or similar service.”