Restating Copyright Law’s Originality Requirement

J. Hughes
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

In 2015, the American Law Institute (ALI) launched a project to create a Restatement of the Law, Copyright.  Concern, objection, and disagreement about the ALI’s Restatement projects is not new, but the Restatement of Copyright project seems to be particularly controversial among industries dependent on copyright protection.  The drafting group has now worked through several versions of some proposed sections; a handful of these have been approved by the ALI Council and are ready to go before the ALI general membership. So now is a good time for close analysis of the chunks of the projects that have crystallized. This Article reviews the 2020 draft Restatement’s presentation of American copyright law’s threshold requirement for protection: that copyright protects only “original works of authorship,” and how that “originality” requirement should be understood in light of the Supreme Court’s 1991 decision in Feist v. Rural Telephone.  Copyright’s originality requirement is a challenging subject for a Restatement because what is unquestionably agreed is that black letter law is  limited, formulaic, and opaque.  Not surprisingly, the Restatement’s handling of this topic hews close to the words of the Supreme Court’s modern pronouncement on the issue, sometimes to the detriment of a richer, potentially more enlightening discussion. The discussion here is based principally on “Tentative Draft No. 1” of the Restatement, released on April 8, 2020,3 but the discussion will also include consideration of the earlier “Council Drafts”4 that led to the 2020 proposal. Part I of the Article briefly describes the controversial beginnings of this Restatement project—and, as of 2021, the continuing animosity of copyright stakeholders to the project. Part II lays out the 2020 draft Restatement’s core provisions on copyright originality, the modest evolution of these provisions since the 2017 draft, and some concerns with what these sections, Comments, and Reporters’ Notes say. In broad strokes, the draft Restatement’s take on copyright originality is faithful to the Supreme Court’s 1991 Feist v. Rural Telephone decision, perhaps too much so. Part II.A explores the draft Restatement’s presentation of Feist’s “modicum of creativity” requirement, raising some issues both with what the Reporters have said so far and equally with what the draft Restatement seems unwilling to say about minimal creativity.  Part II.B discusses the draft Restatement’s presentation of Feist’s “independent creation” requirement; here the concern is that the draft may conflate independent creation with minimal creativity in a way that does not contribute to coherence in copyright law.
再论著作权法的独创性要求
2015年,美国法律协会(ALI)发起了一个项目,旨在创建《版权法重述》。对美国版权协会重述项目的关注、反对和分歧并不新鲜,但版权重述项目似乎在依赖版权保护的行业中引起了特别大的争议。起草小组现在已经审阅了一些拟议章节的几个版本;其中一些已经得到了ALI理事会的批准,并准备提交给ALI的普通会员。因此,现在是仔细分析已形成的项目块的好时机。本文回顾了2020年重述草案对美国版权法保护门槛要求的表述:版权只保护“作者原创作品”,以及如何根据最高法院1991年Feist诉Rural Telephone案的判决来理解“原创性”要求。版权的原创性要求是重述的一个具有挑战性的主题,因为毫无疑问,黑体字法律是有限的,公式化的,不透明的。不出所料,《重述》对这一话题的处理与最高法院对这一问题的现代声明的措辞非常接近,有时会损害更丰富、可能更有启发性的讨论。这里的讨论主要基于2020年4月8日发布的重述“第1号暂定草案”3,但讨论也将包括对导致2020年提案的早期“理事会草案”4的考虑。文章的第一部分简要描述了该重述项目的争议性开端,以及截至2021年,版权利益相关者对该项目的持续敌意。第二部分列出了2020年《重述》草案关于版权原创性的核心条款,这些条款自2017年草案以来的适度演变,以及对这些章节、评论和记者注释的一些关注。总的来说,重述草案对版权原创性的看法忠实于最高法院1991年费斯特诉农村电话案的判决,也许过于忠实了。第二部分。A探讨了重述草案对Feist的“少量创造力”要求的表述,提出了一些问题,这些问题既与记者到目前为止所说的有关,也与重述草案似乎不愿说的关于最小创造力的内容有关。第二部分。B讨论了重述草案对Feist“独立创造”要求的表述;这里的担忧是,草案可能会以一种不利于版权法一致性的方式,将独立创作与最低限度的创造力混为一谈。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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