Crawford Paper on the Broadcast Flag

Ernest’s link to Susan Crawford’s post Chimps and Copyrights made me remember to point to her new paper available at SSRN: The Biology of the Broadcast Flag.



“We should pay attention to the evolutionary ecosystem of the law as the background medium in which innovation occurs, business models evolve, and social factions grow and prosper. This article argues that preserving the flexibility and evolutionary richness of the code/law background medium (code/law) should be our aim. We need to avoid both codes and laws that unduly freeze innovation, so that code/law can continue to evolve. Competitive DRM systems - self-enforcing private ordering - are a better solution in this context than harmonized code/law.”

Inside the Courtroom of an RIAA v. P2P User Case

Berkmanite Mary Bridges was at yesterday’s court proceeding for Capitol Records et. al. v. Alujan, one of the RIAA’s suits against P2P users.  She filed this excellent report.  See also the Berkman Center’s amicus brief in the case.

The DMCA, Is-Oughts, and Piracy Rhetoric

EFF’s Fred von Lohmann posted recently on the iTunes-iPod tie, as I did two weeks back.  Hopefully you didn’t miss this exchange between Ernest and a commentor at Copyfight.  This post isn’t so much about the particulars of Ernest’s and Brad’s argument, as it is a way of tying together what I see going on there with the bigger picture and a few other posts that sprung to my mind. Queue a somewhat mystified, somewhat angry post:


Why is a world with the DMCA now presumptively right, with all alternatives shouldering the burden of proof?  This is the is-ought fallacy at its worst.  The world has a DMCA, therefore it ought to have a DMCA. 


Even more disturbing, is-ought’s simplistic seduction trumps all other sensibilities that people would typically look to in these arguments. Right or wrong, many people will latch on to “free market” and “competition” as the defense against so many policies. At the very least, people will immediately and seriously consider these powerful concepts.  But here, not so much.  In what other case would people so easily defend government graced control instead of unfettered competition?   As Lessig writes in Free Culture, if copyright’s harm to artists is a “crunchy-lefty story” of “free culture,” then you’re probably the type that should be turned on by a story of “free markets.” But with the DMCA, even those stories don’t always catch on. 


To fit with other sensibilities about how the market works, the story of free markets is twisted into a story about theft.  The DMCA may be “paracopyright,” but it’s led to more of the piracy-talk that copyright already produced. Now it’s theft and “freeloading” just to create a compatible player for iTunes music.


As I said before, I don’t doubt Brad Hutching’s point that the iTunes-iPod tie has some offsetting social welfare benefits.  iTunes prices could be lower and it could have motivated them to invest in the biz in the first place.  In this case, I would argue that that does little to offset the benefits we could derive from a non-DMCA world: more vigorous competition from current parties not having to compete essentially in both markets at once; more vigorous competition from more players in general; innovation and competition not dictated by incumbent players; lower prices from more competition; network effects from the elimination of format fragmentation; and more.


But that in some sense is beside the point (one Ernest made, too), which is that the law would typically deal with this issue in a much more complex, nuanced, and balanced fashion.  We have anti-trust and misuse.  We have patents, copyrights, trade secrets, contract.  And yet the blunt instrument of the DMCA is presumptively so clearly right? Why?


That the answer is essentially “because” implies another cost of the DMCA (which makes me think of some of Frank’s writings).  By altering people’s expectations of how things ought to be, it sets the stage for a very different, very dire digital media environment to come.  By extending the piracy rhetoric, it simplifies the issue.  Buying legally means buying DRM means buying the DMCA means buying into whatever the piracy rhetoric demands.


We don’t have to buy into that.  To quote Lessig quoting the Supreme Court, we need “common sense to revolt.”

Other Napster Notes

1.  Napster exec Chris Gorog says that premium subscribers will be able to move songs to portable devices using the Microsoft Janus DRM at no additional charge.  Real, in all its wisdom, plans to charge more.


2.  Napster launched in the UK with prices much higher than the domestic service.  In anticipation of the launch, OD2 cut its prices in the UK. (via PaidContent.org)

More Copyright v. the University

Follow this great thread from Jason (here, here, and here) and Ed, with comments from Donna here.  They brilliantly critique Penn St.’s banning student use of servers without faculty permission.  While Penn St’s adopting Napster 2.0 was a desperate act, this is just plain stupid.


On the Napster 2.0 front, see the stats in Jason’s first post.  It seems like no one’s using it that much.  Even though 75% say they use the service a few times a week or every day, students stream on average around a mere 5 tracks per day (80,000 tracks per day / 16,500 students).  60% of people say they can’t find the content they want and around 15 percent are pleased with the $.99 price to buy and burn tracks.  I think this lends more credence to my previous criticisms.  This hasn’t solved any problems, while taking money away from more valuable services that lie closer to the university’s mission.


Of course, as the server ban exemplifies, Penn St. has moved away from its academic mission in many ways.  This is becoming all too common in the copyfight.  As Jason writes, “When institutions like Penn State begin to make copyright enforcement more important that academic freedom, education, and self-expression, we should question those decisions and how they relate to the overall mission of higher education.”

Tuesday EFF Meetup in SF

UPDATE: Hm, seems that the event is cancelled.  I’ll try again some other time.


I’ll be at the San Francisco EFF MeetUp on Tuesday, May 18 at the People’s Cafe.  If you can come, do sign-up at eff.meetup.com because if less than five sign-up Meetup.com registers the event as cancelled.  Would love to see you there.

Welfare Economics of FairPlay and DRM Lock-in

This week I got a veritable hit parade from my rant on Sony’s DRM and format lock-in.  There, I considered the lock-in in terms of whether it was good or bad for Sony; I’ve similarly examined Apple’s FairPlay DRM as well as whether the lock-in is good for the music industry.  These considerations are important, but, to really understand lock-in’s impact, we must put it in a broader normative perspective.  One can rather loosely do so under the label of “consumer perspective,” including harm to innovation and competition.  Drawing these and other considerations together, we can think more generally in terms of welfare economics.  After reading Ernest’s post on DRM last week, I wanted to bring this up for further discussion.


In iTunes: How Copyright, Contract, and Technology Shape the Business of Digital Media, the Berkman Center’s Digital Media Project considered the relation between iTunes, FairPlay, the iPod, and the DMCA in terms of social welfare as well as from Apple’s business perspective (see p. 33-47, 44-45 in particular).  As to the latter, the tying of the Music Store to the portable player may be wise. As to the former, our account is not favorable.  The fragmentation and barriers to entry caused by DRM will inhibit competition and innovation in the music store and portable player markets primarily as well as the market for compression standards (please forgive the typo “DRM compression standards” - copying to PDF missed a strike-thru; will update in next draft).  Compatibility would generate substantial network effects - ”[j]ust like having different standards of incompatible fax machines would reduce the value of all fax machines, having incompatible portable players and DRM is likely to affect the value of the players.”


This analysis is relevant independent of the DMCA.  That is, had the market simply evolved this way without a DMCA, these harms could still raise some concerns.  However, it is doubtful that the market would have done so. The DMCA provides the necessary impediment to legitimate reverse engineering for interoperability.  The impact of fragmentation and DRM lock-in would be minimized as people could create products that play all formats.  Moreover, without the DMCA, the incentive to create these barriers in the first place would be greatly diminished, because compatible products would have a much easier time of getting to market.


The iTunes-iPod tie is just one example of the DMCA’s effect, of course.  Among many articles on the subject, Professor Dan Burk’s Anti-circumvention Misuse excellently covers how the DMCA’s enables copyright holders (and whoever else controls the DRM) to control secondary markets, inhibit competitors, and dictate innovation.  Rather than innovation flourishing in an environment of limited control, where all technologists can compete to bring the best products to market, the DMCA gives certain parties tight control over digital media use.  As Burk points out (and Ernest noted), this control can be particularly dangerous in the hands of powerful incumbents, who will reap enormous benefits from the technologies they choose to allow while not suffering the consequences of technologies that undermine their business model.


The best part of Burk’s article is how he sets this against legal background in patent and copyright.  We typically have a rather nuanced approach for this subject, including consideration of anti-trust (e.g., tying) as well as rules like misuse which take into account basic public policy considerations.  In misuse cases, a critical component is whether the actions of the IP holder allow them to appropriate rights beyond the scope of the IP grant.  Traditionally, we would allow the sort of interop that FairPlay and other DRM prevents.


In steps the DMCA, a blunt instrument, unchecked by any of the balances we have built into copyright. In Burk’s terms, it provides a “paracopyright” far beyond the scope of copyright’s intended bounds or even the DMCA’s stated purposes.  As Cory said, the copyright holder has gotten control of the record but never the record player; and the copyright holder’s control over the record has never given Apple or Sony and all the other involved vendors the right to dictate compatible technologies.  All this done in a law whose purpose was to stop piracy.  


This all leads to a final key point.  One can certainly point to ways in which reverse engineering and interop could in certain circumstances lead to some social harm (for instance, by reducing some incentive to innovate of those who would have had control).  But to justify the DMCA on these grounds is myopic.  I accept that standard setting and this control over secondary markets is a complex issue that could have differing consequences in different situations; however, the DMCA ignores those many complexities that we have traditionally examined when treating this issue, particularly in the IP context.  Also, it is oversimplified and misleading to call, for instance, the current digital music standards situation “the market at work.”  Indeed, given how the DMCA steps into the market to limit competition, this is hardly just the market functioning ”normally”.  It is a market born out of a particular legal framework that rejects the careful balancing we would typically employ, and the balance we had struck to allow reverse engineering and decryption for interop.

Does Interdiction Work?

Frank’s been taking great notes at iLaw.  This section from Professor Fisher’s and Nesson’s presentation stood out:



“Another stick: a ‘first in line auto-competition’ system
The objective is to protect new releases that have immediate commercial value. Preservation incentive for novelty.


At T0, the file exists only at the artist’s. Someone gets a copy, and puts it into the P2P net. As soon as that happens, it is now visible - until then, it’s invisible. So, we set up a system that searches the net, and finds the first release of the file on the network, and then – here’s the big deal – (1) the program starts hogging access to that single file excluding others and (2) notifying the poster that s/he’s been identified as the source of the infringing copy.


This technology has been developed and is being tried out. Stats for three weeks of protecting a file on KaZaA and Gnutella. 20 seeds (initial drops into the net); total sharers: 500 – others. What we see is that, on a day by day basis, there’s a big bounce when radio plays start up. And the program seems to be effective at getting people to take the file down. Only a few evaders.


So, this is a proof of concept – it is possible to inject something into the technology so that you can get ahead of the rate of “seeding” the network; downloads may behave exponentially, but uploading does not - so it can be attacked. Stopping the seeder seems to have meaningful effects - so the trick is to monitor all networks (and thus, a problem, IMHO)”


Very interesting.  Again, this is a key component of the speed bumps argument.  What I hadn’t seen before is any actual stats on interdiction - I’d love to see more.  Putting aside methodological problems, getting such stats is difficult because no one really admits on record that they’re using interdiction.

Music Industry Evolution

Jason makes an excellent point (via Donna) about what it means to preserve the music industry.  We don’t need to preserve the record labels; however, just because most artists don’t make money off of CD sales doesn’t mean the record labels and CD sales do not benefit artists.  The record labels have served an important role in the production, distribution, and marketing of music, most of which is paid for by CD sales.  Live performances, for instance, may remain a viable revenue stream in a post-Napster world, but losing the current structures of music production will impact those other streams.  The point is not that we need to preserve the current structures, but, if we lose them, we may need new ones.


The obvious rejoinder, made quite well by Professor Raymond Ku, is that we have replacements for all three major record label functions.  The Internet makes distribution virtually costless.  Digital technology is making the home studio, and even the studio on a laptop, much cheaper.  All that’s left is marketing, which is aided by efficient distribution schemes, recommendation engines, and other new methods of discovering music online.  And, to the extent that there’s less marketing, that’s a good thing, Ku says; marketing can be distortative, giving disproportionate attention to wealthy artists and enhancing the “winner-take-all” nature of creative good markets. (See also this Netanel article.)


Now, I’m not really convinced by Ku that it’s as simple as letting the record labels die and we all live happily ever after.  I’ve expressed my uncertainty about alternative business models that do not rely on selling copies. There are many complexities that are overlooked by people who discount the importance of the current industry structures.


It’s also worth considering Ku’s argument if transplanted to movies (something he purposely and explicitly avoids).  Distribution costs are just as low, but production costs have not been reduced by nearly the same amount.

Great Reads

Made it through three great articles recently:


1.  As noted before, I read Lemley and Reese’s UDRP for P2P infringement cases.  It’s a worthwhile read no matter what you think should be done about P2P infringement.  If you think that the lawsuits should continue, then it’s a more efficient and possibly more humane method.  They suggest lower penalties in a less costly legal system for both copyright holder and P2P user.  More lawsuits with lesser penalties would help counter the critique that the lawsuits are unfair, leveling enormous penalties on a few of many million infringers (see Lemley and Reese in other paper as well as Lichtman).  The authors also explicitly discuss how this streamlined enforcement process would work for the EFF’s VCL.  After all, you would still need some threat of enforcement against “stragglers.”  It makes more sense to do so in a cheaper, streamlined fashion than through the costly civil infringement process with huge penalties.


2.  Sonia Katyal’s The New Surveillance provides a fascinating framework to understand numerous privately-enforced ways of policing consumers.  These ways include section 512 (including notice-and-takedown and the expedited subpoena provision), DRM and section 1201, “bots” that search for copyrighted materials, and interference (primarily interdiction).  This policing matters in terms of the threat to privacy but also in how it ties into controlling and chilling legitimate use of copyrighted materials.  It is particularly problematic because it is extrajudicial in nature; enabled by certain laws, but determined mostly by private actors, namely copyright holders.  Katyal discusses the resulting panopticism and the effects on speech, privacy, and autonomy.  I’m not quite sure yet if it makes sense to lump so many technologies and actions together, but it is a helpful lens.


3.  Tim Wu’s Copyright’s Communications Policy provides another amazing framework, this time in the ways copyright resembles other communications policy, governing distributors of information.  Like in telecom policy, copyright involves choosing a “stewardship” or “competetive and open” model for distributors; whether assigning a strong property right to incumbents or removing barriers to market entry for new innovators will lead to the best result. Wu takes on a trip through copyright’s history as well as telecom’s to show similarities.  He also addresses the Sony doctrine in the P2P age as a communications issue.  One really interesting, somewhat unusual point he makes is that, contra Litman, a less complicated copyright statute wouldn’t necessarily be better when looking at it from this communications policy viewpoint. A “future proof” copyright law that could work no matter what technology comes along would not necessarily have the vagueness and uncertainty that allows those new technologies to come along.  Uncertainty in the law can be bad for copyright owners and technology creators, but it can also enable new entry because incumbents do not have by definition have control.  While this uncertainty leads both sides to spend large sums trying to get government on its side, that process can lead to better, compromise solutions.  Ambiguity is thus a feature, not a bug - sound familiar?

News on Napster-University Pricing

Frank points to this story, which gives us a hint of what Napster charges the universities.  For reasons I’ve made clear before, I’m glad that Ohio is planning to make it voluntary, regardless of price.

Why Didn’t The Anti-Valentis Cite Felten, Too?

The public interest advocates made great arguments at yesterday’s DMCRA hearing, but, having read their testimony, I feel that one was underemphasized.  Why didn’t anyone really go after the assumption that the DMCA actually reduces infringement?  We know DRM benefits copyright holders in ways aside from reducing piracy, but that’s not what the Congress critters care about.  They care about “theft.”


Maybe making the argument in this forum would have been too difficult.  It might have been better to just make the Robert Moore argument that tech and entertainment companies can work together privately to make workable DRM, and most consumers are honest anyway.  But can’t someone submit to the committee the Darknet paper at least?  How come Valenti cited Felten but the other side didn’t?

DRUMS

Have a look at Scott Matthews’ DRUMS.  Can’t really say I’m capable of judging the idea technically, but making referencing, finding, and possibly licensing works very efficient sounds cool to me.  As I’ve expressed to Scott, I don’t really get how it’s a new file-sharing “rhetoric”; it could help P2P in numerous ways, too, so it’s not like this is just a tool for improving the legit services.  But that’s even better - it’s a neutral tech that might enhance the way we experience digital media in many contexts.  Maybe you want to identify shareable content, maybe you want a reference that you can use when moving between various media tools, maybe you want to identify the author and relevant copyright holders to license samples - all might be helped by something like DRUMS.

DMCRA Hearing Provides Glimmer of Hope

I have never known (in brief conversations and reading numerous interviews) Fred von Lohmann to be overly or consistently optimistic.  Not pessimistic, certainly, but not someone who I’d label an optimist.  For that reason, his final line from his DMCRA hearing report gives me great hope:



“Today was a good day for fair use, for consumers, and for our nation’s tradition of balance in copyright law.”


Did the hearing go THAT well?  I only saw the end of Panel 3, and it seemed like plenty of Congressmen had already decided that the DMCRA was evil.  On the other hand, Robert Moore was really strong, concretizing everything the academics had said; he managed to play the part of ordinary average citizen while making excellent, clear arguments.  And some people seemed sympathetic, but not all.


Fred’s satisfaction came not just from the hearing, but from something that happened during the lunch session:



“It was there that Rep. Joe Barton, Chairman of the full House Energy and Commerce Committee and a co-sponsor of H.R. 107, announced that he intends to see the bill marked up (a prerequisite to approval), passed by the subcommittee, passed by the full committee, passed by the full House of Representatives, and ultimately signed into law by the President.


This year.


Needless to say, Rep. Barton’s support isn’t enough to guarantee all of these results — but because he is committee chairman, his support means a great deal.”


Very, very interesting.  Fred also made three related posts.  See also reports from SethF, Ed Felten, and Matt Morse (I knew you’d be back!).

Sony Music-Tech Makes Me Wanna Retch

Joe Gratz gives a nice update on Sony’s stupidity, including its new Sony Connect music service and iPod-like device.  Apparently, Sony’s hard drive player cannot play MP3s, WMA and (of course) Apple FairPlay-locked AAC.  It only plays Sony’s proprietary ATRAC3 format; if it’s like Sony’s MiniDisc players, forcing consumers to convert to ATRAC3 also forces them to accept certain DRM restrictions. In related news, the Washington Post and New York Times both deemed Connect embarassing, noting its poor interface, proprietary DRM format and codec, copying restrictions … too many to count.  I’ve been over this before (see earlier rant on Sony Connect) in some detail.  How could Sony not have learned from the numerous music services that have come before it?

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