The hypo proposed doesn't appear to clear up the core misunderstanding, as it introduces additional complication.

In that hypo, Scott claims that "Bob's right to make copies of the copyrighted work that he owns does not do him any good in trying overcome this impediment to his copying." However, this is in the context of litigation - Alice is asserting that Bob does not have the right to copy, for whatever reason. Because Bob's right is in question, it does him no good.

Let's clean up the hypo a bit to get some clarity on Scott's position, that a copyright does not grant someone the right to make a copy. (I quickly researched the definition of 'affirmative right' and the courts provide no guidance (I'd be interested in someone else's results). Only a google search turned up the text which Scott posted earlier, about an affirmative right being a right delineated in the Bill of Rights.)

The Hypo: Bob wrote the book "Cryptography For Idiots", applying for and receiving a copyright. Bob wants to make and distribute copies. No one questions that Bob exclusively created and owns the copyright to CFI, and there is no one with rights in the work superior to those of Bob. What is the result when Bob copies? If he can't do this as a matter of right, then someone apparently must exist with a cause of action against Bob. Who is this entity, and what is the cause of action?

Also, someone cited patent law to show that only a negative right exists...could you point me to the statute that contains the cited text? Thank you!!






Peterson, Scott K (HP Legal) wrote:
Your hypothetical is directly on point:
"Bob goes to court and proves that by a transfer of copyright ownership,
he is the copyright owner of _CfI_ and therefore has the right under
Section 106 (a) to reproduce the copyrighted work.  Surely this right is
affirmative?"

That is precisely the right that I am pointing out that I have NOT seen
exercised and for which I am aware of no basis in US law. I do not
believe that a showing by Bob that he is the copyright owner would help
him at all.


For example, Alice may have a copyright in a different book, and Alice
may be asserting that the book that Bob's been distributing infringes
her rights in her book. Bob's acquisition of copyright ownership in the
book that he's distributing does not help him in Alice's case against
him. In other words, Bob's right to make copies of the copyrighted work
that he owns does not do him any good in trying overcome this impediment
to his copying.

If what you mean by "transfer" is that Bob shows that the copyright
ownership that Alice had asserted had really been transferred to Bob,
then, of course Bob is off the hook (court will no longer support
Alice's attempt to impede Bob's copying). But that result is because of
Alice's LOSS of the relevant copyright, not because of Bob's gain. The
same result would obtain even if Bob showed that Alice had transferred
the asserted copyright to someone else (not to Bob).

-- Scott

-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Sent: Monday, February 09, 2004 1:19 PM
To: Peterson, Scott K (HP Legal)
Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: The Copyright Act preempts the GPL



Peterson, Scott K (HP Legal) scripsit:



- rights that are enumerated in the Bill of Rights, such as relating to free speech;


Well, very good.  Let's take "free speech" and plug it into your
explication of affirmative rights:


If, when impeded in some way from undertaking one of the actions
constituting free speech, a speaker could go to
court and use the free speech rights to overcome the impediment -

that


would be an exercise of an affirmative right.


But you cannot go to court and overcome the impediment that prevents you
(to be maximally cliche-ridden) from shouting "Fire" in a crowded
theatre.

So it might be that you call a right "affirmative" if in *some*
circumstances you can get a court to overcome a hindrance from
exercising them.  But then consider this hypo:  Alice gets an T.R.O. (a
"hindrance" par excellence) to prevent Bob from making copies of the
book _Cryptography for Idiots_.  Bob goes to court and proves that by a
transfer of copyright ownership, he is the copyright owner of _CfI_ and
therefore has the right under Section 106 (a) to reproduce the
copyrighted work.  Surely this right is affirmative?



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