在不限制创新的前提下减少数字版权侵权

IF 4.9 1区 社会学 Q1 Social Sciences
Mark A. Lemley, R. A. Reese
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In this paper, we suggest at least two possible alternatives that might provide ways out of the digital copyright morass. Both alternatives stem from the basic economics of copyright enforcement. It is not currently cost-effective for copyright owners to sue individual infringers, because there are tens of millions of them, because lawsuits are expensive, and because each infringer would be liable only for minimal damages. They are happy to sue facilitators instead, because there are fewer of them and both damages and the benefits of injunctive relief are substantial. Copyright owners have no incentive to permit optimal innovation by facilitators, because they do not benefit from that innovation except indirectly. Individual infringers in turn have no incentive to change their behavior or to subscribe to fee-based services, because they suffer none of the costs of infringement. One solution is to change the incentives of individuals. Because individual users of peer-to-peer (p2p) networks know that it is extremely unlikely they will be sued, economic theory suggests that the only way to effectively deter infringement is to increase the effective sanction substantially for those who are caught. Were the government to begin criminally prosecuting selected users of peer-to-peer services - or were the RIAA to sue end users in earnest - it could have a substantial deterrent effect on many illegal users. Selective prosecution has other advantages as well - the government could target the relatively few keystone providers of illegal files on p2p sites, and those are precisely the users who are least likely to be engaged in fair use. While particular prosecutions won't stop illegal file trading altogether, copyright owners have never been able to prevent all piracy. All they need to do is reduce piracy enough that they can make a return on their investment.Another solution is to change the incentives of copyright owners to sue individual infringers by reducing the cost of such a suit. One such approach would be a levy system. Levies on equipment or services have the virtue of permitting automatic collection of royalties, reducing the enforcement cost dramatically, but at the cost of taxing legal as well as illegal uses. A levy solves the enforcement problem at the front end, but it is similar in many ways to the current approach of suing facilitators. The main difference is that under a levy system the copyright owner is protected by a compulsory license rather than a property rule. An alternative proposal to reduce the cost of enforcement is to create some sort of quick, cheap arbitration system that enables copyright owners to get some limited relief against abusers of p2p systems. The existing domain name trademark arbitration system is a model in some respects - its speed and low cost - but a cautionary tale in others - its lack of process protections. Such a system would permit low-cost enforcement of copyright infringement against direct infringers, reducing the need for content owners to sue facilitators. Relative to levies, an arbitration system would trade off some increase in cost for accuracy, targeting only those making illegal uses rather than all users of computers or p2p networks. It would be fairer than selective criminal prosecution, because the burden would fall more evenly on each wrongdoer, rather than imposing stark punishment on a few in order to serve society's interest in deterring the rest. The system could also be designed to improve accuracy relative to the binary choice the courts face in indirect infringement cases today. We could design the system so that it is limited to clear cases. 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The fundamental difficulty is that while courts can make decisions about direct infringement on a case-by-case basis, lawsuits based on indirect liability necessarily sweep together both socially beneficial and socially harmful uses of a program or service, either permitting both uses or condemning both. Optimal digital copyright policy would do two things: stop deterring innovators, and permit cost-effective enforcement of copyright in the digital environment. In this paper, we suggest at least two possible alternatives that might provide ways out of the digital copyright morass. Both alternatives stem from the basic economics of copyright enforcement. It is not currently cost-effective for copyright owners to sue individual infringers, because there are tens of millions of them, because lawsuits are expensive, and because each infringer would be liable only for minimal damages. They are happy to sue facilitators instead, because there are fewer of them and both damages and the benefits of injunctive relief are substantial. Copyright owners have no incentive to permit optimal innovation by facilitators, because they do not benefit from that innovation except indirectly. Individual infringers in turn have no incentive to change their behavior or to subscribe to fee-based services, because they suffer none of the costs of infringement. One solution is to change the incentives of individuals. Because individual users of peer-to-peer (p2p) networks know that it is extremely unlikely they will be sued, economic theory suggests that the only way to effectively deter infringement is to increase the effective sanction substantially for those who are caught. Were the government to begin criminally prosecuting selected users of peer-to-peer services - or were the RIAA to sue end users in earnest - it could have a substantial deterrent effect on many illegal users. Selective prosecution has other advantages as well - the government could target the relatively few keystone providers of illegal files on p2p sites, and those are precisely the users who are least likely to be engaged in fair use. While particular prosecutions won't stop illegal file trading altogether, copyright owners have never been able to prevent all piracy. All they need to do is reduce piracy enough that they can make a return on their investment.Another solution is to change the incentives of copyright owners to sue individual infringers by reducing the cost of such a suit. One such approach would be a levy system. Levies on equipment or services have the virtue of permitting automatic collection of royalties, reducing the enforcement cost dramatically, but at the cost of taxing legal as well as illegal uses. A levy solves the enforcement problem at the front end, but it is similar in many ways to the current approach of suing facilitators. 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引用次数: 102

摘要

起诉实际侵权人在版权法中是过时的。在数字环境中,真正的利害关系在于起诉那些为他人侵权提供便利的人。当然,版权所有者提起此类诉讼是有充分理由的。他们认为自己正面临着大量廉价、容易复制的产品以及能够复制这些产品的人数急剧增加的威胁。大量的非法使用,以及起诉任何个人的低回报,使得尽可能瞄准链条的上游更划算。从电影行业的角度来看,关闭Napster比起诉在Napster上非法交易文件的数百万人更容易、更有效。到目前为止,法院一直愿意配合,关闭了数字音乐领域的一些创新服务。在这篇文章中,我们认为任何人以任何方式参与版权侵权的无限制责任都是一个坏主意。间接责任是一个连续体,其中与侵权最密切相关且肯定利益最少的行为最容易受到谴责。因为技术的用途而追逐技术制造者,可能会扼杀创新。最根本的困难在于,虽然法院可以在个案基础上对直接侵权作出裁决,但基于间接责任的诉讼必然会将项目或服务对社会有益和有害的用途综合起来,要么允许两种用途,要么谴责两种用途。最优的数字版权政策将做两件事:停止阻止创新者,并允许在数字环境中具有成本效益的版权执行。在本文中,我们提出了至少两种可能的替代方案,它们可能提供摆脱数字版权困境的方法。这两种选择都源于版权执法的基本经济学。目前,版权所有者起诉侵权者个人并不符合成本效益,因为侵权者有数千万人,因为诉讼费用昂贵,而且每个侵权者只需承担最低限度的损害赔偿。他们很乐意起诉调解人,因为调解人的数量较少,而且损害赔偿和禁令救济的好处都是可观的。版权所有者没有动力允许促进者进行最优创新,因为他们只能间接地从创新中获益。反过来,个人侵权者也没有动力改变自己的行为或订阅收费服务,因为他们不承担侵权的成本。解决办法之一是改变个人的激励机制。因为点对点(p2p)网络的个人用户知道他们被起诉的可能性极低,经济学理论认为,有效阻止侵权的唯一方法是大幅增加对那些被抓到的人的有效制裁。如果政府开始对特定的点对点服务用户提起刑事诉讼,或者美国唱片工业协会认真起诉终端用户,这将对许多非法用户产生实质性的威慑作用。选择性起诉还有其他好处——政府可以针对p2p网站上相对较少的非法文件的主要提供者,而这些用户恰恰是最不可能参与合理使用的用户。虽然特定的起诉不会完全阻止非法文件交易,但版权所有者从未能够阻止所有盗版行为。他们所需要做的就是减少盗版,这样他们的投资就能得到回报。另一个解决方案是通过降低诉讼成本来改变版权所有者起诉个人侵权者的动机。其中一种方法就是征税制度。对设备或服务征税的优点是允许自动收取特许权使用费,大大降低了执行成本,但代价是对合法和非法使用征税。征税解决了前端的执法问题,但它在许多方面与目前起诉调解人的方法相似。两者的主要区别在于,在征税制度下,版权所有者受到强制许可而不是财产规则的保护。降低执行成本的另一种建议是建立某种快速、廉价的仲裁系统,使版权所有者能够从p2p系统的滥用者那里得到有限的救济。现有的域名商标仲裁制度在某些方面(速度快、成本低)是一个典范,但在其他方面(缺乏程序保护)则是一个警示。这样一个系统将允许对直接侵权者进行低成本的版权侵权执法,减少内容所有者起诉协助者的需要。相对于征税而言,仲裁制度将在一定程度上牺牲成本,以提高准确性,只针对那些非法使用电脑的人,而不是针对所有电脑或p2p网络的用户。 这将比选择性刑事起诉更公平,因为负担将更平均地落在每个违法者身上,而不是为了服务于社会利益而对少数人施加严厉的惩罚,以威慑其他人。相对于目前法院在间接侵权案件中面临的二元选择,该系统也可以被设计成提高准确性。我们可以设计这个系统,使其仅限于明确的情况。我们也可以为有争议的合理使用建立一个辩护,这样一个用户可以证明他们是他们已经拥有的空间移动cd就有了辩护。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Reducing Digital Copyright Infringement Without Restricting Innovation
Suing actual infringers is passe in copyright law. In the digital environment, the real stakes lie in suing those who facilitate infringement by others. There is of course a good reason copyright owners are filing such suits. They see themselves as under threat from a flood of cheap, easy copies and a dramatic increase in the number of people who can make those copies. The high volume of illegal uses, and the low return to suing any individual, make it more cost-effective to aim as far up the chain as possible. From the perspective of the movie industry, it's easier and more effective to shut down Napster than to sue the millions of people who traded files illegally on Napster. So far, the courts have been willing to go along, shutting down a number of innovative services in the digital music realm.In this article, we argue that unrestricted liability for anyone who is in any way involved with copyright infringement is a bad idea. Indirect liability is a continuum, in which acts most closely related to infringement and with the fewest affirmative benefits are the easiest to condemn. Going after makers of technology for the uses to which their technologies may be put threatens to stifle innovation. The fundamental difficulty is that while courts can make decisions about direct infringement on a case-by-case basis, lawsuits based on indirect liability necessarily sweep together both socially beneficial and socially harmful uses of a program or service, either permitting both uses or condemning both. Optimal digital copyright policy would do two things: stop deterring innovators, and permit cost-effective enforcement of copyright in the digital environment. In this paper, we suggest at least two possible alternatives that might provide ways out of the digital copyright morass. Both alternatives stem from the basic economics of copyright enforcement. It is not currently cost-effective for copyright owners to sue individual infringers, because there are tens of millions of them, because lawsuits are expensive, and because each infringer would be liable only for minimal damages. They are happy to sue facilitators instead, because there are fewer of them and both damages and the benefits of injunctive relief are substantial. Copyright owners have no incentive to permit optimal innovation by facilitators, because they do not benefit from that innovation except indirectly. Individual infringers in turn have no incentive to change their behavior or to subscribe to fee-based services, because they suffer none of the costs of infringement. One solution is to change the incentives of individuals. Because individual users of peer-to-peer (p2p) networks know that it is extremely unlikely they will be sued, economic theory suggests that the only way to effectively deter infringement is to increase the effective sanction substantially for those who are caught. Were the government to begin criminally prosecuting selected users of peer-to-peer services - or were the RIAA to sue end users in earnest - it could have a substantial deterrent effect on many illegal users. Selective prosecution has other advantages as well - the government could target the relatively few keystone providers of illegal files on p2p sites, and those are precisely the users who are least likely to be engaged in fair use. While particular prosecutions won't stop illegal file trading altogether, copyright owners have never been able to prevent all piracy. All they need to do is reduce piracy enough that they can make a return on their investment.Another solution is to change the incentives of copyright owners to sue individual infringers by reducing the cost of such a suit. One such approach would be a levy system. Levies on equipment or services have the virtue of permitting automatic collection of royalties, reducing the enforcement cost dramatically, but at the cost of taxing legal as well as illegal uses. A levy solves the enforcement problem at the front end, but it is similar in many ways to the current approach of suing facilitators. The main difference is that under a levy system the copyright owner is protected by a compulsory license rather than a property rule. An alternative proposal to reduce the cost of enforcement is to create some sort of quick, cheap arbitration system that enables copyright owners to get some limited relief against abusers of p2p systems. The existing domain name trademark arbitration system is a model in some respects - its speed and low cost - but a cautionary tale in others - its lack of process protections. Such a system would permit low-cost enforcement of copyright infringement against direct infringers, reducing the need for content owners to sue facilitators. Relative to levies, an arbitration system would trade off some increase in cost for accuracy, targeting only those making illegal uses rather than all users of computers or p2p networks. It would be fairer than selective criminal prosecution, because the burden would fall more evenly on each wrongdoer, rather than imposing stark punishment on a few in order to serve society's interest in deterring the rest. The system could also be designed to improve accuracy relative to the binary choice the courts face in indirect infringement cases today. We could design the system so that it is limited to clear cases. We could also build in a defense for arguable fair uses, so that a user who could prove they were space-shifting CDs they already own would have a defense.
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