Forget SOPA, Hollywood Already Had a Field Day with the Justice System

 
http://pandodaily.com/2012/01/18/how-hollywood-twisted-theft-laws-long-before-sopa/
by Andrew P. Bridges
on January 18, 2012
Copyright justice: Steal a subway ride and pay a $100 fine. Steal a song and 
pay $150,000.

The controversial Stop Online Piracy Act (SOPA) and the PROTECT IP Act (PIPA) 
bills and their backers employ striking language to describe the problem they 
supposedly attack, namely “theft of U.S. property” and “IP theft.”  They use 
that language to argue for sweeping new powers affecting the domain name 
system, Internet search, online advertising, and electronic payments.

It’s a great example of the way Hollywood chooses its words very carefully in 
constructing its propaganda wars.  The old-fashioned and accurate word is 
“infringement,” but that word doesn’t create the visceral responses that 
“theft” does.  So the bills refer almost exclusively to “theft.”

The trigger for this was Hollywood’s frustration several years ago that “file 
sharing” didn’t sound bad.  After all, we learned in kindergarten that 
“sharing” is a good thing.  The motion picture industry’s lead spokesperson, 
Jack Valenti, hated the term.  He liked to compare a chocolate cake to files on 
the Internet:  if you share some of your cake, you’re not supposed to still 
have all your cake, but when you share a file you still have the file.  Thus, 
he argued, it’s not “sharing” at all.  Of course, his inability to distinguish 
between chocolate cake and information — which is what music stored as bits 
really is – resembles Hollywood’s profound misunderstanding of the Internet 
today.  One can indeed share information while keeping it.

Over the last ten years I have watched Hollywood loyalists, undoubtedly 
responding to some coordinated industry messaging directive, start talking 
exclusively about “theft” when they refer to infringement.  One can tell who 
has signed on as a Hollywood partisan in the current debates by seeing who now 
uses the loaded term “theft” instead of the accurate term “infringement.”  The 
facts that the bills overflow with references to “theft,” and that many 
government officials have changed their vocabularies to use the new, 
industrially correct language, reveal a lot about Hollywood’s capture of 
government.

When the big content companies talk about “IP theft” or “copyright theft,” what 
are they really talking about? The essence of theft is deprivation – when 
someone steals your wallet he takes your wallet away and you don’t have it any 
longer.  But if I like your haircut and get one just like it, I haven’t stolen 
your hair.  I have just copied it.  Theft and copying are inherently different 
things.

But let’s stick with the “theft” concept for a while and see where Hollywood’s 
terminology leads us.  What would “copyright theft” mean?  How does one steal a 
copyright, which is just a form of ownership right?  The same way one can steal 
someone’s real estate ownership, by forging a deed (or assignment) or tricking 
someone into signing one.  That’s pretty rare.  Looking at it differently, one 
can steal a copy of a copyrighted work, say by shoplifting a book.  But neither 
stealing copyrights nor stealing books are the types of so-called IP “theft” 
that the pending bills try to stop.  The bills try to attack reproductions 
(copying/downloading), transmissions (streaming), and other traditional forms 
of what has always been called “infringement.”

Under the “theft” conception of copyright law, what, exactly, is the 
deprivation when someone makes illegal copies?  It really boils down to just 
one thing:  money.  Copyright infringement – renamed copyright theft — deprives 
the copyright holder of some of his or her expected profit from exploiting the 
copyright.

What are other, similar kinds of “theft” by depriving someone of expected 
money?  Failure of a tenant to pay the agreed rent to a landlord is one.  
Parking in a parking space without putting money in the meter is another.  
Jumping the turnstile to ride on a subway without paying the fare is a third.  
(And, of course, failure of a studio or record label to pay artists or actors 
the promised contractual royalties for their work on a record or film is a 
fourth.  But something tells me the studios and labels sponsoring the current 
bills won’t go near that topic.  The bills don’t include rogue studios and 
labels in their scope.)

How do the civil damages or penalties for the different types of such “theft” 
compare?  Failure to pay expected money under a contract doesn’t trigger a 
penalty: contract law usually says that a party can recover the money she 
expected but not punitive damages or attorneys fees (unless parties have 
specifically bargained to pay attorneys fees for a breach).  Failure to pay 
rent usually requires payment of rent to cure the default.  Failure to put 
money in the parking meter prompts a ticket for $60.  In New York City, failure 
to pay the $2.50 subway fare results in a maximum fine of $100.

Copyright “theft” is a very different story.  Copyright infringement statutory 
damages in civil litigation can be as high as $150,000 for infringement of a 
single work.  Yes, a single work such as a single song with an iTunes download 
value of $1.  A copyright holder can claim such statutory damages without 
needing to prove a single penny of damage or loss.  Think such sky-high damages 
aren’t realistic?  Think again.  In the RIAA’s case against single mother 
Jammie Thomas, a jury awarded $1,500,000 for the download of 24 songs, with no 
proof that she had transmitted songs to others.  The federal judge thought that 
was ridiculous and reduced the total award to $54,000 – and the RIAA and MPAA 
are now arguing strenuously on appeal that the jury verdict should return to 
the original figure, $62,500 per downloaded song.

If we take copyright law’s maximum-penalty-to-price ratio as applied to an 
illegal download, and apply that same penalty-to-price ratio to the New York 
subway, the maximum penalty for jumping that turnstile and avoiding the $2.50 
fare would be $375,000 instead of $100.  Copyright industries are on to a 
really good thing under current law.  One could say it’s a steal.

And the copyright industries haven’t gotten their fill of penalties and 
enforcement powers.  That’s why they are back in Washington today, enlisting an 
army of Senators and Congress members to give them more power in the PIPA and 
SOPA bills to distort the domain name system (supposedly dropped from secret 
amendments not yet released), to censor search results and online advertising, 
and to turn online payment systems into enforcers.

They say that the legislation targets “foreign rogue sites,” even though 
current copyright law has killed foreign rogues such as Grokster and Kazaa, and 
even though there are express provisions for suing persons within the US, and 
even though the legislation regulates American companies in numerous different 
ways.  On five occasions I have asked the backers to identify any foreign sites 
that they have sued in the US without being able to secure legal relief to 
which they are entitled, and they haven’t yet given me a single example.  They 
say that the legislation doesn’t change copyright law, but it creates new laws 
that distort the principles of current copyright law.

The backers are trying to rush this legislation through without truly open 
hearings with representation of a wide variety of interests, including the 
public interest.  Read up on these bills and call your Senator and member of 
Congress to let them know whether you believe Hollywood needs more power.


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Just because i'm near the punchbowl doesn't mean I'm also drinking from it.

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