Wednesday, April 8, 2015

Assignment 16

Copyright Infringement



            Imagine you're a small time videographer that is trying to make it big on YouTube. You constantly put up original idea videos hoping people will end up seeing it and enjoying it. Now imagine that one or more of those video ideas someone saw and took, making it their own and getting the money that you should get from it. Sadly there isn't much you can do to prove they took your idea due to the copyright infringement laws. This is just one general scenario of what is wrong with YouTube and the governments current copyright infringement laws.
            Copyright is a form of protection that is grounded in the United States Constitution that is granted by law for original works of authorship fixed in a tangible medium of expression that protects original works of authorship. It protects and covers both published and unpublished works the moment it is created. And with YouTube becoming more and more popular as time goes on and more people trying to become online entrepreneurs, one thing that must be adjusted is YouTube's current copyright policies. Currently many people on YouTube have experienced theft of an idea from work they uploaded online, but there isn't much we can currently do to prove it was stolen. The United States Code Service, consolidation and codification by subject matter of the general and permanent laws in the United States, suggest that you register your work within three months of uploading it onto the internet [1], which may be nice for directors who have a big project they want to protect, but isn't beneficial for many YouTubers who upload each week and are trying to stay relevant. Ashlee Knuckey is an associate in Lock Lord's (an American law firm) Business Litigation and Arbitration practice group and represents client in state and federal court. Knuckey has focused her practices on complex litigation and arbitration and also handles matters that involve fraudulent business practices, state taxation issues, breach of commercial contracts, loss sensitive insurance programs, regulatory and government enforcement issues, and Medicare reimbursement issues. In the article YouTube--The Next Generation of Infringing on Creative Works: What Can Be Done to Protect the Screenwriters? Knuckey talks about the copyright policies and how registering a video/idea within the three months before uploading it will make that person eligible to sue for any sort of damages, but  "even if they register their work within the three-month period, they would not be eligible to recover damages for any infringement taking place prior to the copyright registration." [2]. Meaning that even if someone was to register one of their works that was stolen in the past, they would be protected, but couldn't do anything about that incident since it was before the registration. And the United States Code Services on Title 17, Copyrights Chapter 4 on Copyright Notice, Deposit, and Registration it talks about  the fact that with registering content, there is a registration fee and yearly renewal that shall also cost money. And Knuckey says even if content is registered, " Direct proof of copying is often impossible for the plaintiff to show; thus, copying must often be inferred from proof that the defendant had access to the plaintiff's work, as well as that there are "substantial similarities" between the two works." So what could be done to help protect YouTubers from theft of content? One thing that many people have talked about is that YouTube and Google (since Google now is a parent company that bought out YouTube) should look at is adjusting their privacy setting on their websites. From before I brought up that the direct proof courts need to decide whether the content was stolen and does indeed belong to the plaintiff, if YouTube and Google adjusted their privacy settings, making it easier to see who viewed your video and when they viewed it, the plaintiff would have a time frame of when the defendant saw their video in comparison to when the defendant made their content. This being solid evidence that could be used in the court room. And now with YouTube's new software called Content ID it makes it easier to find copyright materials in use. The system makes it so copyright holders can have choices on how their content is showed on YouTube. The copyright holder gives YouTube copies of their songs and/or videos they want YouTube to look for and YouTube puts it in their system as reference files. So every time a new video is being uploaded to YouTube, it goes through all of their reference files to make sure they don't have any copyright materials in their video. But ContentID does not always work 100% of the time. Youtube took down NASA's own footage from the Mars rover landing a few hours after it landed because of copyright claims from a private news service. NASA's Deputy Associate Administrator for Communications, Bob Jacobs, says, "The good thing about automation is that you don't have to involve real people to make decisions. The bad thing about automation is that you don't have to involve real people to make decisions." [7].
            Now a days nothing is original. With the amount of people that have been on this Earth and the amount of ideas and works that have been created, everything is inspired from something else, works now are a imitation of something before that we adjust to make our own. But how can we tell the difference between something that is inspired from something else compared to something that is appropriated. One thing to look at is Marvin Gaye vs. blurred lines case. A case where Robin Thicke and Pharrell Williams were accused of copyright infringement towards Marvin Gaye's song "Got to Give it Up" because their hit single "Blurred Lines" sounded too much like Gaye's song. When listening to the two songs, the melodies are somewhat similar but the two songs differ greatly. Williams and Thicke ended up having to pay $7.4 million to Gaye's family. I personally feel that the two songs differ substantially, but this raises many questions with copyright infringement. Music inspires more music, authors inspire more authors, movies inspire more movies, and youtubers inspire more youtubers. So when does inspiration and an homage to a certain work cross the line of copyright infringement? What makes a certain work cross the line of having copy written work? And with this trial will this open the door to more lawsuits that aren't valid towards big hits, but will just end up being paid away. Then there is Michelle Phan, a makeup tutorial youtuber with over 7.5 million subscribers, who was sued for copyright infringement back in 2014 for using popular EDM songs by artist such as Deadmau5, Kaskade, and Calvin Harris in her tutorial videos without permission. But the problem isn't that Michelle Phan was using these EDM artist's songs, the problem is that many people who make YouTube videos use music all the time in videos without permission from artist or record label and it goes unnoticed. The only time it becomes noticed is when money and fame is involved. This goes for majority of all copyright infringement suits, people only seem to get involved when someone else is gaining money and/or fame for something that is "not theirs". The one case that does not meet this expectation was an incident with YouTube and NyanCat. NyanCat was posted back in April 5, 2011 and at the time earned more that 89 million views. But one thing many people forget is YouTube took down NyanCat in late June 2011 for copyright infringement. Why? Because YouTube ran the video through their ContentID and cited a copyright claim saying the owner of the NyanCat video is not the owner of NyanCat, which was true. The real owner is Torres, the artist who originally created the pop-tart cat gif. The artist wrote on his blog saying he did not file the copyright complaint to try and stop the hate mail he was receiving for the video coming down. After Torres coming out saying this, YouTube realized it's mistake and put the video back up. Torres now has a partnership with Sara Reihani, the woman who owns the well know "NyaNyaNya" song in all the NyanCat videos and says "To me, it's less about cashing in and more about keeping it classy." [7]. If more copyright owners had the same thinking as Torres, many copyright infringement cases would be a lot less messy.
            In our current generation anything you see and hear whether you are looking at a logo in a store, looking at memes online, deciding what brand of cereal to get, or even listening to a song on the radio, somebody somewhere owns that. Everything is owned by someone now a days. Somebody owns the copyrights to the first "Hey Girl" Ryan Gosling meme other than Ryan Gosling, which does seem weird the idea of somebody having copyrights over a photo of you. With how big things can get on the internet now a days, it is important to file for copyright and trademark of your work. Torres, the owner of NyanCat, talks about how when he got around to trying to file for copyright and trademark of his icon he found out many other people have already try to file for copyright of his creation. This making the process way harder than it should be to prove he is the creator and owner of NyanCat. But it is important to have copyright ownership of your product so you do get all the rights that come along with it. With every person that has copyright over something (a logo, image, song, book, etc.) they have five different legal rights. The Right to Reproduce the Work makes it so the owner has the right to  reproduce, copy, duplicate, and/or transcribe their work in any form. The Right to Derivative Works gives the owner the right to modify their work to create something new, a new work that is based upon their existing work is a "derivative work". The Right to Distribution makes it so they have the right to distribute their work to the public by sale, rental, lease, or lending. The Public Display Right gives them the right to show a copy of their work directly to the public by displaying it on a website, putting it in a film, hanging a copy in a public place, or and other way of transmitting it to the public. And last is the Public Performance Right, the right to recite, dance, act, show, or play their work at a public place or transmit it to the public. Each of these rights helps the owner make sure they have full custody over their product, and if any of these rights are broken by an outside person without the copyright owners consent than it then can file for copyright infringement. And that's what it all comes down to when it comes to copyright infringement, if there isn't consent then it is copyright infringement. But how can we tell when someone is breaking someone else copyright rights? Not all cases that involve copyright infringement are black and white, majority of these cases fall in the grey area where it is unsure if someone is taking from someone else's idea.
            With everything humans have created so far and everything being a recreation of something else, how can we tell when someone is stealing something? The rights that come with being a copyright owner tells you all about what you can legally do with your product and what others can not do with it, but no where does it say how to determine whether or not someone is taking your idea/creation. With the Blurred Lines vs. Marvin Gaye trial, a court had to decide whether or not Blurred Lines was just a recreation of Gaye's song Got to Give it Up. And even after the trial said it was, many people disagree saying they are two different songs. This situation does not only happen with songs, in 2014 Disney and Deadmau5 had a similar situation. Joel Zimmerman a.k.a Deadmau5 was filing for his trademark in the United States of his well known Deadmau5 symbol. A trademark is made to protect words, phrases, symbols, or designs identifying  the source of the goods or services of one party and distinguishing them from others. Copyright only protects original works of authorship. The problem was Disney was preventing him from doing so, their argument being that it was too similar to the Mickey Mouse icon (similar to Blurred Lines vs. Marvin Gaye). Yes the two are both mouse icons, but the two are both greatly different from one another. Just because it is a mouse, doesn't mean that it is a copy of Mickey Mouse. This theory following many situations in the copyright infringement world, just because two things have similar qualities does not always mean one thing is copying another. Many copyright owners must understand that before filing against someone for copyright infringement, if it is a grey area situation (blurred lines vs. Marvin Gaye), that everything is inspired from something else. Even their creation was inspired from something else and for new ideas and creations to exist, old ones can not hold a grasp on advancement.






Work Cited
1.         "§ 411. Registration and Civil Infringement Actions." UNITED STATES CODE SERVICE, 19 Dec. 2014. Web. 3 Mar. 2015.

2.         Knuckey, Ashlee M. "YouTube--The Next Generation of Infringing on Creative Works: What Can Be Done to Protect the Screenwriters?"LexisNexis Academic. N.p., 2009. Web. 23 Feb. 2015.

3.         "TITLE 17. COPYRIGHTS CHAPTER 4. COPYRIGHT NOTICE, DEPOSIT, AND REGISTRATION." Http://www.lexisnexis.com.ezproxy.lib.uwm.edu/lnacui2api/results/pubTreeViewDoc.do?nodeId=TAARAAFAAJ&pubTreeWidth=325. UNITED STATES CODE SERVICE, 19 Dec. 2014. Web. 3 Mar. 2015.

4.         K, Nicole. "Robin Thicke & Pharrell Sued For $7 Million Over Blurred Lines."SourceFed. N.p., 11 Mar. 2015. Web. 14 Mar. 2015.

5.         "How Content ID Works." - YouTube Help. Google, n.d. Web. 14 Mar. 2015.
https://support.google.com/youtube/answer/2797370?hl=en

6.         Welch, Chris. "YouTube Star Sued for Copyright Infringement over Music in Her Videos." The Verge. N.p., 21 July 2014. Web. 14 Mar. 2015.

7.         Considine, Austin. "Copycats, Takedowns, and Ass Rainbows: What Does Copyright Mean for Internet Memes?" Motherboard. Vice, 7 Dec. 2012. Web. 05 Apr. 2015. http://motherboard.vice.com/blog/copycats-takedowns-and-ass-rainbows-what-does-copyright-mean-for-internet-memes0.

8.         "Copyright Law of the United States of America." U.S. Copyright Office. N.p., n.d. Web. 06 Apr. 2015. http://www.copyright.gov/title17/92chap2.html


9.         Rosenbaum, Murray. "Deadmau5 vs. Disney." The Huffington Post. TheHuffingtonPost.com, 15 Sept. 2014. Web. 06 Apr. 2015.0

3 comments:

  1. The introduction scenario seems very precise and heavy. For your audience it may be hard to really grasp the struggles of a youtube or in other wors put themselves in the shoes of a youtuber whos stuff is being inappropriately used. Maybe a lighter scenario might work a little better. Like building a broader idea of someones ideas being stolen and how people try to protect there ideas but others steal them and then relate that back to youtubers. I don’t know I thing you could play around with it and try something different. Maybe even establish the idea that youtube should be a protected place where where indivduals ideas and creative project can be secure and should be secure and once that is established show how it isn’t secure or protecting its users ideas. I think in the beggening of your second paragraph you could dive deeper into the copyright idea you say “It protects and covers both published and unpublished works the moment it is created.” How does the copyright law actually do this. Maybe you could pull a quote directly out of the legislation that point to the exact words that says the copyright law protects the creations and artworks videos what ever is on youtube. The idea in this sentence is good “Knuckey has focused her practices on complex litigation and arbitration and also handles matters that involve fraudulent business practices, state taxation issues, breach of commercial contracts, loss sensitive insurance programs, regulatory and government enforcement issues, and Medicare reimbursement issues.” But the credentials is a little over kill and kinda just drags on. Why does the audience really care that she deals with medicare. The stuff you did with this quote was good “"even if they register their work within the three-month period, they would not be eligible to recover damages for any infringement taking place prior to the copyright registration." [2].” You really brought it into context and forwarded nicely. I think your talk about googles privacy laws is nudging a very touchy subject of scensorship. Many people might not want the world to know what videos the are watching on youtube and google. Take this into account and weigh out the values this part has in your paper if you think you need it I think that you will need to bring in the other side of those who may appose this idea

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  2. I'll start out by saying that in the first paragraph I did detect a certain tone that does not quite sound like it is perfectly scholarly, at least to me. I am not exactly sure how I can articulate it better, but I think that if you made different word choices the tone would be more scholarly. I also noticed a tonal issue later in the paper, “Now a days nothing is original. With the amount of people that have been on this Earth and the amount of ideas and works that have been created, everything is inspired from something else, works now are a imitation of something before that we adjust to make our own”.
    I did not see that issue appearing as much in the rest of your paper, but again just tighten up some of the statements you make about the number of people on Earth and the works that have been created.

    Something else that I noticed in one of the previous revisions of your paper was a comment that you made about Google owning YouTube. I feel that you should either better explain why this is relevant or don't bother dropping in that fact. As it stands, that piece of information is dropped in there without much context or direction in the sense that Google can do very much about it – so more or less information would be useful. A particularly strong, and broadly relevant, part of your paper was when you talked about how memes are copy righted. The quote, “Somebody owns the copyrights to the first "Hey Girl" Ryan Gosling meme other than Ryan Gosling, which does seem weird the idea of somebody having copyrights over a photo of you” is particularly interesting because it gives everyone, not just YouTubers, something to relate to. You do not need to give too much more background information about memes, but might consider expanding upon that idea so that your audience can more closely relate to issues which they might not be too personally invested in. I felt that that quote was particularly thought provoking in that most of us use or are at least exposed to memes, so pointing out that whenever we use the phrase“All your base are belong to us” we are using a quote from a game, that someone owns, to taunt a friend.

    Just looking through your works cited, I was not sure what are considers “scholarly” sources. I do see a few popular ones, but I did not notice see academic journals and I was not sure if the books you were working out of are considered academic. I also saw that you were using several quotes directly from policy statements and related legal forms and disclaimers. This is not a problem, I do the same, but I found that it can be different process to contextualize and summarize those types of documents than a journal or newspaper article. Overall I would say that you are mostly borrowing your sources with some amount of extending in there as well. You seem to using your sources “ethically” and efficiently, but I think that there could be more dialog between your sources.

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  3. Since I don’t personally know the community of scholars I really have no idea how would they think about the paper or is it even relevant at all. I do, however, believe that not a lot of people in a civilized country aren’t familiar with youtube or cybercrime. Therefore even though they might have never been ripped off before there’s a pretty damn big chance that they will be able to relate to the issues addressed in the paper. The significance of the paper is, no doubt, sort of, significant…But seriously though the only people who wouldn’t mind getting their ideas stolen are either genius or ones who don’t ever come up with anything. So yes the paper’s work is important, to this new age world of advance technology and theft. On other note, I can’t seriously think of how the scholars would response to the concerns of others and of their sources, as I myself am not a scholar (nor will I ever be) and I have never, will probably never intend to have an in-depth conversation with said people (about the stuff that I don’t like of course). If anything, I can only but imagine they would be glad.
    I’m having a hard time understanding who “they” are so I’m skipping question 2.
    There are about nine sources being used throughout the paper so I’d say that’s more than enough. I’m not sure which one is scholarly but I’m guessing there wouldn’t be less than 2, so that’s ok.
    Again back to what I said earlier, the paper is illustration-based so there are anything but not enough contexts for the sources. This issue has gradually become a global matter so I don’t see there would that much of difficulties using the sources in everyday conversations. We are constantly using sets of ideas/theories to try to make sense of this world so, again, the question answers itself.
    I don’t want to nor am I planning on ever being a scholar in any field so therefore I don’t want to have to put myself in the state of mind of someone whom I don’t want to be like. Hence I have literally no idea how a scholar would feel. But if I was a scholar in the field, I don’t think I would be reading a college paper just to pass the time. But if I was, I would love to see more critiquing of the examples in your paper.

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