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- Copyright 1992 by S. Kitterman Jr. and the Las Vegas PC Users Group,
- 316 Bridger Avenue, Suite 240; Las Vegas, NV 89101. All rights reserved.
- This file was originally printed in the January/February 1992 issue of
- The Bytes of Las Vegas, a publication of the Las Vegas PC Users Group,
- and may be reprinted only by nonprofit organizations.
- Please give proper credit to the author and The Bytes of Las Vegas.
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------
- Copyrights and Computer Software: Part IV
-
- by Sam Kitterman, Jr., LVPCUG
-
- [The purpose of these articles is to give general
- information regarding copyrights and how they pertain to
- protection of software. It is not intended to constitute
- legal advice nor should it be relief upon to address a
- particular situation since the tone of these articles is
- general in nature.]
-
- In these articles I have reviewed various aspects of the
- Copyright Act, including such matters as what is copyrightable, the
- rights under copyright law, and who is considered the owner of the
- copyright in a particular work.
- Yet, what rights do you have when you purchase an authorized
- copy [hereinafter I'll refer to such as the Copy] of a particular
- work? More specifically, where you purchase certain software, what
- rights do you have to that software. In this article, I'll begin
- a discussion of those rights.
- When discussing the rights of a buyer of the Copy, there
- are certain matters that must be remembered.
- First, remember that several of the rights possessed by
- the owner of the copyright are (1) control copies of the Work and
- (2) control distribution of those copies of the Work.
- Second, remember that ownership of a copyright is
- ownership of a tangible piece of property. Consequently, the
- copyright owner has the right to use that property as he or she
- sees fit, including the right to license others certain rights to
- the copyright or to sell those rights in total to another person.
- For example, if I own the copyright to the music and
- lyrics of a particular song, I have the right to license another
- person/party, such as a band, to record that music/lyrics and sell
- that record to the public. I can also decide to license certain
- other rights, such as the sheetmusic rights, to another
- person/party and by such efforts, increase the "fruits, so to
- speak, that I can get from that one work.
- Since the owner of a copyright has such abilities and
- such is often exercised by way of contracts and agreements, the
- rights a buyer of the Copy will have will be determined by two
- sources: (a) the Copyright Act (the primary source) and (b) the
- contract between the seller and the buyer of the Copy.
- Clearly, the buyer of a Copy has the right to use that
- Copy for its intended purpose. For example, if I purchase a
- commercially produced video tape of a movie, I have the right to
- possess that movie and view that movie. Yet, does that entitle me
- to turn my house into a neighborhood theatre and charge others a
- fee for watching the movie? Or, if I purchase a non-fiction book,
- do I have the right to take excerpts from that book and incorporate
- such into a book I am writing on the same subject?
- Such questions are dealt with by the doctrine of "fair
- use". Found in section 107 of the Copyright Act, "Fair Use"
- entitles a buyer to use the Copy, "use" including the right to make
- copies of the Copy, for various purposes. As further stated
- therein, those rights are tied to
-
- purposes such as critcism, comment, news
- reporting, teaching (including multiple copies
- for classroom use), scholarship, or research....
-
- As explained by one commentator, "fair use" itself is defined as
-
- a privilege in others than the owner of a
- copyright to use the copyrighted material
- in a reasonable manner without his consent,
- notwithstanding the monopoly granted to the
- owner by the copyright.
- H. Ball, The Law of Copyright and Literary Property 260 (1944).
- As also noted by the United States Supreme Court, fair use is "an
- equitable rule of reason". Sony Corp. of Am. v. Universal City
- Studios, Inc., 464 U.S. 417, 448 (1984) (a case dealing with the
- right of owners of VCRs to tape television programs at home).
- Although that section does spells out some allowed purposes,
- there is no list of approved purposes. Rather, the Act sets forth
- certain factors by which one can determine whether the right of
- "fair use" will be applicable to a particular situation. Those
- factors are as follows:
- (1) the purpose and character of the use, including
- whether such use is of a commercial nature or is
- for nonprofit educational purposes;
-
- (2) the nature of the copyrighted work;
-
- (3) the amount and substantiality of the portion used
- in relation to the copyrighted work as a whole; and
-
- (4) the effect of the use upon the potential market for
- or value of the copyrighted work.
-
- Applying these factors to the examples set forth above, what
- is the result:
- My idea of charging admission to view videotapes in my
- house would violate the Copyright Act because:
- (a) the purpose/character of my use is commercial.
- (b) since a movie embodied in a video tape is for
- the express purpose of watching that movie, my use
- interferes with the rights of the copyright owner of
- that movie; and,
- (c) if I allow others to watch that movie in my
- home for a fee, then I am robbing the owner of that
- movie's copyright the ability to gain from that
- particular "market".
- As for my use of excerpts from another's book for my own
- book, that is a far closer call. It will depend upon the nature of
- the excerpts themselves, how much I'm taking from the other's book,
- and the reason(s) I'm using those materials rather than creating my
- own. Indeed, if all I've taken from that book is factual
- materials such as dates or historical information and I rewrite
- that information in my own words, then I'm most likely not only not
- infringing because copyright protection of factual information is
- subject to certain constraints, but also the fact that such would
- fall within the gambit of "fair use".
- What if I purchase software? What are my rights to that
- software? Can I use that software to create my own applications?
- Those questions will be the topic of next month's article.
-
- ----------------------------------
- Copyright 1992--S. Kitterman Jr.
-
- [Sam Kitterman, a member of the Las Vegas PC Users Group is an attorney
- with the firm of Quirk, Tratos & Rothel; he specializes in issues
- related to computer software. This is the fourth of a series
- of articles Sam is writing for The Bytes of Las Vegas.
- It was originally published in the January/February 1992 issue of The Bytes
- of Las Vegas, the official newsletter of the Las Vegas PC Users Group.]
-