[Mikael Pawlo is an associate of the Swedish law firm Advokatfirman Lindahl 
and an open source advocate. --Declan]

---

Date: Tue, 15 Jan 2002 11:22:21 +0100 (CET)
From: Mikael Pawlo <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: Sweden

Here goes:


The case for "lagom" copyright

- - -
Online under:
http://harvard.pawlo.com/newsf02.html
http://www.newsforge.com/article.pl?sid=02/01/12/161213
- - -

One of the big issues of free software during 2001 was whether Richard M 
Stallman was for or against a codified GNU GPL. Hence, did Stallman --the 
father of free software--propagate a law to support his beliefs?

Tim O'Reilly tried to press the issue in a couple of articles and seemed 
convinced that Stallman and his colleague Kuhn was for GNU GPL legislation. 
O'Reilly suggested a system where developers themselves choose the rules 
under which they release software, not very much different from the system 
in effect today. Eric S Raymond wrote a satire to prove how wrong Stallman 
and Kuhn would be to suggest a GNU GPL law. Raymond posed Stallman and Kuhn 
the question whether if they could get a law passed making proprietary 
licenses illegal, would they? Stallman and Kuhn slightly tilted towards the 
legislative point of view, but never gave a straight answer whether they 
were for or against a codified GNU GPL. Stallman and Kuhn wrote: "We 
believe, though, that with time, as more and more users realize that code 
is law, and come to feel that they too deserve freedom, they will see the 
importance of the freedoms we stand for -- just as more and more users have 
come to appreciate the practical value of the free software we have 
developed."

Free software is very simple in its construction. It uses the provisions in 
copyright law stating that the author has an exclusive economic right of 
his work. Computer programs are regarded as literary works in copyright 
law. Thus, the author of a computer program can enter into any agreement 
regarding his work. The GNU GPL is such an agreement. The agreement is 
enforceable both under the principle of freedom of contract between and 
copyright law. As Stallman's legal counsel professor Eben Moglen has told 
us on several occasions, the GNU GPL still have not been successfully 
challenged.

Copyright law is often questioned. In an article in Wired 1994, John Perry 
Barlow wrote that copyright was not designed to protect ideas or bits of 
information but only to protect ideas as expressed in fixed form. Hence, 
according to Barlow copyright is dead in the digital age.

Copyright was made to create an incentive for authors and scientists to 
create and explore and give them a guarantee that they would profit from 
their creations. A copyright system that is too strict in favor of the 
authors will work as a hinder and not an incentive for creativity. In the 
epilogue of his book Copyrights and copywrongs Siva Vaidhynathan states 
that "a looser copyright system would produce more James Bond books, not 
fewer. Some might be excellent. Other might be crappy. Publishers and 
readers could sort out the difference for themselves. The law need not to 
skew the balance as it has."

Computer programs are written incremental. That means that it is important 
to be able to reuse previously written code. Hence, you need to be able to 
write the computer program equivalent of James Bond without the original 
author being present in your project. The aforesaid is a strong argument 
for a codified GNU GPL, while one of the cornerstones of GNU GPL is the 
right to reuse previously written code.

Would not a modern democratic society benefit from a plurality of 
irreconcilable and incompatible doctrines? We need the GNU GPL, but we also 
need proprietary software, open source software, *BSD-licenses, the Apache 
license and so forth. That would make the case for GNU GPL legislation 
void. However, as Lawrence Lessig taught us in his book Code and other laws 
of cyberspace, the code may in itself work against plurality. If we choose 
to believe Lessig we might want to reconsider regarding computer programs 
in the same way as literature.

In The Future of Ideas Lessig suggests a reform of software copyright law 
forcing computer programmers to disclose their source code when the 
copyright expires. Lessig would protect computer programs for a term of 
five years, renewable once. Copyright protection would in Lessig's proposal 
only be granted if the author put a copy of the source code in escrow. The 
source code should be disclosed to each and everyone when the copyright 
expires, perhaps through a server with the U.S. Copyright Office.

That much said, Lessig is very reluctant to make open code a law. In The 
Future of Ideas, Lessig states that the government should "encourage" the 
development of open code. Such "encouragement" should not be coercive. 
According to Lessig there is no reason to ban or punish proprietary 
providers. But this view is hardly consistent with Lessig's view on the 
future of software copyright law. In Lessig's future system proprietary 
providers are severely punished. They loose about 100 years of protection, 
that is life of author plus seventy years compared to five plus five years 
and then full disclosure.

In article published in Stanford Technology Law Review Mathias Strasser 
argues that any move towards more open code would be highly undesirable 
from societal point of view, as it would destroy the market-based incentive 
structure that currently encourages software producers to develop code that 
consumers find attractive. By applying the utilitarian incentive theory and 
the Lockean labor-desert theory, Strasser tries to explain why the current 
copyright system is the best.

Stallman and Moglen has yet to convince me that the GNU GPL and free 
software philosophy is the final answer to intellectual property protection 
of computer programs. However, I am not convinced that neither Strasser nor 
Lessig is right in their view of the software copyright. But I choose to 
believe Lessig when he states that code is law. The code layer in the 
networks may in my opinion affect the freedom of speech at large. I do not 
think that copyright is dead in the sense Barlow told us in 1994. Copyright 
is still around, and even if it�s not effective in the digital age --as 
observed by Barlow-- the courts enforce copyright. Therefore, we need to 
find a new way to deal with copyright protection of computer programs. The 
Digital Millennium Copyright Act and prohibition on reversed engineering is 
not the right way to develop copyright. We need more transparency, but 
still we need to consider the points raised by Mathias Strasser and Tim 
O'Reilly. It is important that the incentives for larger businesses remain 
even if the code is more open through a change in the copyright law. If 
such a change is made, we need to consider the unique characteristics of 
computer programs. We should not continue to compare computer programs to 
literary works. Books are not software.

What we need is balance. In Sweden we have one word that I have not 
encountered outside of Sweden. The word is "lagom" and it defines the space 
between too much and too little. What we need is lagom copyright protection 
for computer programs.



Mikael Pawlo


Related links:

The Economy of ideas by John Perry Barlow:
http://www.wired.com/wired/archive/2.03/economy.ideas.html

Lawrence Lessig homepage:
http://www.lessig.org/

The GNU homepage:
http://www.gnu.org/

Mathias Strasser�s article:
http://stlr.stanford.edu/STLR/Articles/01_STLR_4/index.htm

Tim O�Reilley�s My definition of freedom zero:
http://www.oreillynet.com/cs/weblog/view/wlg/526

Richard M Stallman and Bradley M Kuhn�s Freedom or power:
http://linux.oreillynet.com/pub/a/linux/2001/08/15/free_software.html

Eric S Raymond�s Freedom, Power, or Confusion:
http://linuxtoday.com/news_story.php3?ltsn=2001-08-17-016-20-OP-CY




_________________________________________________________________________

                                           mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
                                           http://www.pawlo.com/




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