C in a Circle: Why I Started this Blog Series — From Steven Tepp. “There are already plenty of blogs and public discussion about current events in copyright. My focus is a future-looking vision of what the Copyright Office and the American copyright system can and should be. That may from time to time include addressing current events, but that is not my focus. I will be writing about the big-picture questions of the Copyright Act, how individual issues and cases illustrate strengths and/or shortcomings, and the operation of the Copyright Office as the agency that administers the law and in particular the registration system.”
Authors, publishers near final approval of $1.5 billion Anthropic copyright settlement — “In addition to monetary relief for the plaintiffs, Anthropic will also be required to destroy the original files of the works they downloaded from the pirated book datasets within 30 days of the final judgment and certify that Library Genesis and Pirate Library Mirror datasets with pirated material were used in training any of the company’s commercially released large language models.”
Copyright isn’t dead in the age of AI, it’s key to growing UK creative industries — “In the 2010s, when I served as minister for culture and digital economy in David Cameron’s government, we heard the same chorus (though back then it was about illegal file-sharing): copyright is outdated and infringement is the price of modernity. It wasn’t true then and it isn’t true now. In reality, copyright is the market mechanism that underpins creativity and turns it into a precious asset: something you can buy, sell, license, finance and build a business around. If we want Britain to be both an AI superpower and a creative powerhouse, the answer is to recognise the market making power of copyright and support commercial licensing at speed and at scale.”
ECJ ruling on ancillary copyright: Meta must pay for press content in Italy — “A key point of the ruling concerns the power imbalance between platforms and publishers. The ECJ explains that publishers are in a weak negotiating position because often only the platforms have the data to quantify the economic value of a use. Therefore, it is lawful to oblige providers like Meta to disclose the information necessary for calculating remuneration. Furthermore, operators may not simply restrict the visibility of news content during ongoing negotiations to exert pressure or obscure the value of the content.”
Access to sites with pirated content blocked under copyright law revision — “A revision to the Copyright Act that was passed in January went into effect on Monday, allowing the Ministry of Culture, Sports and Tourism to order network operators to block user access to websites that repeatedly commit copyright offenses, namely piracy. Prior to revision, the consequences of copyright offenses were determined by the Korea Communications Commission’s review committee.”