新的版权交易?:找回失落的文化,让作者获得报酬

Rebecca Giblin
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online.  The information age brought with it the widespread ability to copy and distribute many kinds of work—globally, virtually instantaneously, for close to zero marginal cost—making the deadweight loss caused by too-long copyrights precipitously larger.4 \n \nCopyright law would no doubt look very different if we were to design it from scratch today, unconstrained by existing ways of doing things, vested interests, and the international treaty framework.5  Kimberlee Weatherall and I recently led a project to explore what such a reimagined copyright could look like.  The core lessons that emerged?  That any copyright system we were to create today would be much better targeted towards protecting authors’ interests; would not leave availability and access so much to chance; and would impose reasonable reciprocal obligations along with rights.6 \nThat thought experiment was a useful exercise for understanding what current approaches cause us to lose, but as we explained in our conclusions, any wholesale reimagining would be impossible to implement in practice.7  Leaving aside the powerful lobbying power of the biggest beneficiaries of existing approaches, crucial reform pathways are permanently blocked by the Berne Convention for the Protection of Literary and Artistic Works, supported (and made enforceable in the World Trade Organisation) by the Agreement on Trade-Related Aspects of Intellectual Property Rights (“TRIPS”).  While Berne was intended to be revised regularly to keep up with changing circumstances, it has now been almost half a century since Berne has seen any substantive change.8  Regulators and scholars have sometimes assumed Berne can be modified, albeit with difficulty,9 but that’s simply not feasible given 170+ veto-wielding member nations with their wide range of often competing interests.  As Sam Ricketson writes in this volume, “you’re dreaming!” if you imagine likely any revisions to Berne.10  Walking away isn’t an option either, since that would mean loss of reciprocal global protection and ejection from the WTO.11 (providing that the instruments in Annex 1, of which TRIPS is one, are integral parts and binding on all members).  Note also that withdrawal from Berne will not re-enliven the Universal Copyright Convention, because of that treaty’s special clauses applying to former Berne states.  See Universal Copyright Convention, as revised at Paris on July 24, 1971, with Appendix Declaration relating to Article XVII and Resolution concerning Article XI 1971, Appendix Declaration relating to Article XVII, July 24, 1971, 25 U.S.T. 1341, 943 U.N.T.S. 178 (1971), https://perma.cc/NUD6-UC8V.]  Even new parallel international arrangements are impossible (barred by Article 20 to the extent of inconsistency), and TRIPS is proving virtually unamendable too.12  There are other international agreements that limit discretion over copyright, including the Internet treaties and various “free trade” agreements, but they are much easier to amend or withdraw from.  By contrast, Berne and TRIPS effectively define copyright’s hard limits.  If we want copyright to better achieve its aims, we must work within their boundaries. \nWhile Berne and TRIPS do preclude many options for reform, there are nonetheless opportunities to navigate their gaps and flexibilities in order to secure a different bargain—one better capable of responding to the challenges of this age.  The key, as I develop below, lies in disentangling copyright’s incentives and rewards motivations and updating its core assumptions.  The treaties do indeed present certain “immovable obstacles,”13but that doesn’t necessarily require us to take precisely the same approaches that we have in the past.  This paper seeks to provoke new thinking about the possibilities for doing things differently, to better achieve our aims, within the existing treaty structure. \nThe analysis proceeds in five parts.  Part I highlights the failures of current approaches by evaluating them against copyright’s fundamental aims.  Part II develops the failed assumptions on which those approaches are constructed, and proposes updated alternatives with which they might be replaced.  Informed by those failures and lessons, Part III then sketches an alternative bargain which seeks to better secure to authors rewards from their copyrights whilst simultaneously reclaiming much of the culture lost under current approaches.  Part IV briefly addresses possibilities for undermining (and expanding) that proposed alternative, before Part V concludes. \nThe paper’s aim is not to evangelise for the adoption of this model—significant empirical work is necessary before any responsible advocacy can occur.  Rather, it is to provoke new thought about the possibilities for achieving meaningful reform, in ways that reflect current social and technological realities, without requiring impossible textual change.","PeriodicalId":222420,"journal":{"name":"Columbia Journal of Law and 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difficulty,9 but that’s simply not feasible given 170+ veto-wielding member nations with their wide range of often competing interests.  As Sam Ricketson writes in this volume, “you’re dreaming!” if you imagine likely any revisions to Berne.10  Walking away isn’t an option either, since that would mean loss of reciprocal global protection and ejection from the WTO.11 (providing that the instruments in Annex 1, of which TRIPS is one, are integral parts and binding on all members).  Note also that withdrawal from Berne will not re-enliven the Universal Copyright Convention, because of that treaty’s special clauses applying to former Berne states.  See Universal Copyright Convention, as revised at Paris on July 24, 1971, with Appendix Declaration relating to Article XVII and Resolution concerning Article XI 1971, Appendix Declaration relating to Article XVII, July 24, 1971, 25 U.S.T. 1341, 943 U.N.T.S. 178 (1971), https://perma.cc/NUD6-UC8V.]  Even new parallel international arrangements 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引用次数: 3

摘要

第二部分阐述了构建这些方法所依据的失败假设,并提出了可以取代这些方法的更新替代方案。在这些失败和教训的基础上,第三部分提出了另一种方案,旨在更好地确保作者从版权中获得回报,同时恢复在当前方法下失去的大部分文化。在第五部分结束之前,第四部分简要论述了破坏(和扩大)提议的替代方案的可能性。这篇论文的目的并不是为了推广这种模式——在任何负责任的倡导出现之前,重要的实证工作是必要的。相反,它是为了激发人们对以反映当前社会和技术现实的方式实现有意义改革的可能性的新思考,而不需要不可能的案文改变。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
A New Copyright Bargain?: Reclaiming Lost Culture and Getting Authors Paid
Copyright’s fundamental structure is based on outdated assumptions, including that marginal costs of copying and distribution are high, and registration systems necessarily onerous and expensive.1  International treaties embedded these assumptions into domestic laws worldwide, and for good reasons:  when the Berne Convention prohibited formalities in 1908, it was a necessary response to compulsory registration systems that unfairly burdened authors.2  And, when those high marginal costs meant only the most popular works could be made enduringly available anyway, there was little downside in granting long terms that could outlast their owners’ interest:  those less popular works were going to be lost regardless.3 These assumptions no longer hold good (at least for those with digital access).  Registrations can occur cheaply and almost instantaneously online.  The information age brought with it the widespread ability to copy and distribute many kinds of work—globally, virtually instantaneously, for close to zero marginal cost—making the deadweight loss caused by too-long copyrights precipitously larger.4 Copyright law would no doubt look very different if we were to design it from scratch today, unconstrained by existing ways of doing things, vested interests, and the international treaty framework.5  Kimberlee Weatherall and I recently led a project to explore what such a reimagined copyright could look like.  The core lessons that emerged?  That any copyright system we were to create today would be much better targeted towards protecting authors’ interests; would not leave availability and access so much to chance; and would impose reasonable reciprocal obligations along with rights.6 That thought experiment was a useful exercise for understanding what current approaches cause us to lose, but as we explained in our conclusions, any wholesale reimagining would be impossible to implement in practice.7  Leaving aside the powerful lobbying power of the biggest beneficiaries of existing approaches, crucial reform pathways are permanently blocked by the Berne Convention for the Protection of Literary and Artistic Works, supported (and made enforceable in the World Trade Organisation) by the Agreement on Trade-Related Aspects of Intellectual Property Rights (“TRIPS”).  While Berne was intended to be revised regularly to keep up with changing circumstances, it has now been almost half a century since Berne has seen any substantive change.8  Regulators and scholars have sometimes assumed Berne can be modified, albeit with difficulty,9 but that’s simply not feasible given 170+ veto-wielding member nations with their wide range of often competing interests.  As Sam Ricketson writes in this volume, “you’re dreaming!” if you imagine likely any revisions to Berne.10  Walking away isn’t an option either, since that would mean loss of reciprocal global protection and ejection from the WTO.11 (providing that the instruments in Annex 1, of which TRIPS is one, are integral parts and binding on all members).  Note also that withdrawal from Berne will not re-enliven the Universal Copyright Convention, because of that treaty’s special clauses applying to former Berne states.  See Universal Copyright Convention, as revised at Paris on July 24, 1971, with Appendix Declaration relating to Article XVII and Resolution concerning Article XI 1971, Appendix Declaration relating to Article XVII, July 24, 1971, 25 U.S.T. 1341, 943 U.N.T.S. 178 (1971), https://perma.cc/NUD6-UC8V.]  Even new parallel international arrangements are impossible (barred by Article 20 to the extent of inconsistency), and TRIPS is proving virtually unamendable too.12  There are other international agreements that limit discretion over copyright, including the Internet treaties and various “free trade” agreements, but they are much easier to amend or withdraw from.  By contrast, Berne and TRIPS effectively define copyright’s hard limits.  If we want copyright to better achieve its aims, we must work within their boundaries. While Berne and TRIPS do preclude many options for reform, there are nonetheless opportunities to navigate their gaps and flexibilities in order to secure a different bargain—one better capable of responding to the challenges of this age.  The key, as I develop below, lies in disentangling copyright’s incentives and rewards motivations and updating its core assumptions.  The treaties do indeed present certain “immovable obstacles,”13but that doesn’t necessarily require us to take precisely the same approaches that we have in the past.  This paper seeks to provoke new thinking about the possibilities for doing things differently, to better achieve our aims, within the existing treaty structure. The analysis proceeds in five parts.  Part I highlights the failures of current approaches by evaluating them against copyright’s fundamental aims.  Part II develops the failed assumptions on which those approaches are constructed, and proposes updated alternatives with which they might be replaced.  Informed by those failures and lessons, Part III then sketches an alternative bargain which seeks to better secure to authors rewards from their copyrights whilst simultaneously reclaiming much of the culture lost under current approaches.  Part IV briefly addresses possibilities for undermining (and expanding) that proposed alternative, before Part V concludes. The paper’s aim is not to evangelise for the adoption of this model—significant empirical work is necessary before any responsible advocacy can occur.  Rather, it is to provoke new thought about the possibilities for achieving meaningful reform, in ways that reflect current social and technological realities, without requiring impossible textual change.
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