Posts tagged Copyright

EU Advocate General: You Can’t Copyright a Programming Language

European Court of Justice (150 sq).jpgIn an opinion which, if affirmed by judges, would have dramatic impact on the definition of software and standards – at least in Europe if not eventually worldwide – the Advocate General in a European Court of Justice case involving U.S.-based business analytics firm SAS, has argued that the language in which computer programs are written may be exempt from copyright.

At issue: If you make a programming language that works like an existing one, have you violated copyright if you use a copyrighted manual as your guide? Have you violated copyright if you produce a manual that explains your language using terms that are similar to those in the manual you used as your guide? And finally, the big one: Is a work-alike programming language a violation of copyright in and of itself? You can just imagine the Oracle executives listening intently in the gallery.

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The case in question involves SAS’s business process language, which a classical-style procedural language that financial and manufacturing institutions consider the modern-day successor to COBOL and PL/I. A London, U.K.-based company called World Programming Ltd. (WPL) built a work-alike language it calls WPS, apparently not through reverse-engineering but simply using existing SAS manuals as guides. SAS argued that this was a violation of copyright, both of the manuals and of the ABAP language itself, and besides, that WPL violated its license agreement to use SAS software.

A high court ruling in July 2010 reached only a partial conclusion: WPL probably did not violate copyright by creating the WPS language using the SAS manual, but probably did violate copyright by creating a WPS manual to teach it. The judge referred the case up the chain (as the European system permits judges to do) to the Court of Justice. There yesterday, an Advocate General (a person retained by the court to issue opinions that may guide judges in their final decisions) issued a non-binding opinion stating that a programming language should be like any other language: a means of expression that cannot, in and of itself, be claimed as intellectual property.

A statement from the Advocate General’s office in Brussels this morning reads as follows:

In the first place, with regard to the functionality of a computer program, the Advocate General defines it as the set of possibilities offered by a computer system – in other words, the service which the user expects from it.

Starting from that premise, the Advocate General considers that the functionalities of a computer program are not eligible, as such, for copyright protection. The functionalities of a computer program are in fact dictated by a specific and limited purpose. In this, they are similar to ideas. That is why there may be a number of computer programs offering the same functionalities. Thus, if it were accepted that a functionality of a computer program can be protected as such, that would amount to making it possible to monopolize ideas, to the detriment of technological progress and industrial development.

By contrast, the means for achieving the concrete expression of the functionalities of a program may be protected by copyright. Creativity, skill and inventiveness are expressed in the way in which the program is drawn up, in its writing. Thus, the way in which formulae and algorithms are arranged – like the style in which the computer program is written – will be likely to reflect the author’s own intellectual creation and therefore be eligible for protection.

In 2007, the U.S. Supreme Court reached a similar conclusion with very broad effects, in its AT&T v. Microsoft decision in favor of Microsoft: “Abstract software code is an idea without physical embodiment, and as such, it does not match [the] categorization ‘components’ amenable to ‘combination.’” That ruling indicated that the permutation of a machine plus the program used to run the machine, to do a specific set of functions, was not in and of itself subject to patent. While a function may be patentable, the way you perform that function cannot. So far, European law has coincided for the most part.

The difference in the SAS v. WPL case abroad has to do with whether the programming language constitutes the function, the expression of that function, or the means by which an expression is… expressed. These are three different things, only one of which is subject to legal protection that we know of, though perhaps two. If the judges of the Court of Justice affirm the Advocate General’s opinion, a new precedent may be set whereupon the concept of any programming language is thus, by definition, public property.

That might have a serious impact on Oracle’s case against Google, which hinges on Sun Microsystems’ acquiescence to Google’s creation of a Java work-alike virtual machine for Android. Sun’s having permitted and even publicly blessed Google’s work, were never expressed in formal, legal documents; so when Oracle acquired Sun, Oracle made the case that Google violated the patents that Oracle acquired from Sun. Granted, patents and copyrights are not to be confused with one another; patents protect a concept, while copyrights protect an expression. Still, if the expression of a concept cannot be copyrighted, it certainly is unlikely to become patented. The SAS case speaks to the problem of means of expression as worthy of legal exclusivity, and if WPL wins in London, Oracle’s case against Google may not carry much weight in Europe.

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Analysis: Anti-piracy Law, and the Whole Copyright vs. Freedom Thing

Dancing with the Stars mirror ball (150 px).jpgWe do this dance at least twice a year now, and we’re starting to get the steps so well memorized that once we hear the familiar tune, we start stepping to the beat without a moment’s thought. It’s the Anti-piracy Shuffle, and one defining element of its choreography is that we always end up right where we started.

Here’s how it goes: You can’t run an Internet server that trafficks in illicit content to American clients, from American soil, without violating American law. Makes sense. The magic of the Internet lets someone in America run a server in another country, whose domain may be registered in yet another country, that sends illicit content to American downloaders. It’s impossible to prosecute one downloader without prosecuting all of them, otherwise you run into the selective prosecution defense.

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The government tried to create a way to go after the Internet service providers that direct clients to these illicit addresses. What the Digital Millennium Copyright Act (which some considered evil when it was passed) managed to do was provide ISPs with an iron-clad defense: If they do not know what all their customers are downloading because there are just too many of them, then they cannot be held complicit in copyright violation. It’s the basis of the safe harbor defense, and it gives ISPs good reason not to pry into customers’ online behavior.

From the perspective of a legislator or justice official trying to resolve the piracy issue, safe harbor has become an unexpected obstacle. Suddenly, all the world’s traffic passes through a set of points whose administrators can effectively claim no responsibility for their content. If only ISPs could be provoked to make some effort to look in the general direction of their customers, perhaps that would be just enough to dissolve the safe harbor defense. Then the Justice Dept. might have the leverage it needs to thwart Internet traffic around pirate sites. Otherwise, the DOJ cannot legally force ISPs to do what the DMCA protects them from having to do.

COICA interruptus

Last year’s effort by the Senate to rustle up something enticing for ISPs came in the form of legislation called the Combatting Online Infringement and Counterfeits Act (COICA). Had it become law, this bill would have empowered the DOJ to post a blacklist of suspected illicit content traffickers. It then would have granted immunity from prosecution to ISPs that voluntarily take pre-emptive steps to redirect or otherwise stop access to these traffickers’ addresses.

Cue the music, and the Anti-Piracy Shuffle began. Nothing less than the First Amendment principle of free speech hung in the balance, the Electronic Frontier Foundation told reporters, including myself. Because once an ISP has the incentive to direct Internet traffic however it wants, we were told, it can dictate what you can and cannot see on the Web. Having some overlord look over your shoulder at what you’re reading, recording every button click and hyperlink, is inherently undemocratic.

Was the irony of the online movement against this law being organized on Facebook lost on everyone except myself?

This year’s round of the Shuffle changes the sheet music somewhat but not the tune. In the Senate’s Stop Online Piracy Act (SOPA), the blacklist provision is gone entirely. (Remind me again how anyone thought a legally supported blacklist was good politics.) But the immunity provision remains. Keep in mind that this immunity enticement promises that DOJ will not prosecute ISPs for complicity in acts of trafficking which it cannot prosecute them for anyway.

But cue the music anyway. The EFF’s Intellectual Property Director Corynne McSherry wrote on Wednesday, “Web sites that simply don’t do enough to police infringement (and it is not at all clear what would qualify as ‘enough’) are now under threat, even though the DMCA expressly does not require affirmative policing. It creates new enforcement tools against folks who dare to help users access sites that may have been ‘blacklisted,’ even without any kind of court hearing.”

While McSherry is correct in stating the bill is an effort to circumvent safe harbor, the blacklist from COICA is gone, even though her complaint is not. And the bill’s explicit language against obstructing free speech is called into question as a gimmick, a ruse to hide its implicit intent as a speech squelching mechanism.

Protecting your assets

As Gen. George B. McClellan learned in the Civil War, when you devote all your efforts to defending your frontier, you leave your core assets unprotected.

EFF needs to take a wider-angle view of what’s really going on here. Like an unwilling magnet, it gravitates too easily toward the infringement of speech argument. Which, in turn, triggers all the outbursts you read today about declaring war on the Internet, eating Internet freedoms for breakfast, and endangering the future of humanity. It’s people who hold copyrights versus you, the poor consumer, whose only crime may have been the occasional sampling of a gigabyte or two of some torrent downloads.

Everyone’s still dancing to music that has already stopped. The complaints roll on, even though the language they complain about has been changed or deleted.

  • The blacklist is gone.
  • The part about requiring ISPs to block access without a court order, may be found in a paragraph preceded by the following heading: “After being served with a copy of an order pursuant to this subsection…”
  • The bill would reward ISPs for taking measures on their own, not out of pressure but instead from (as yet unsubstantial) enticement.

We keep doing the same Dance of Doom so eagerly, like chickens in a Pavlovian experiment, that we don’t take stock of what’s really going on here. The opportunity existed, years ago, for the producers of content to build an enticing and engaging system of fair digital distribution, where customers paid a reasonable amount to see, use, or maybe own content. And Apple built it instead. Now that the content industry no longer has the opportunity to build the walls that keep customers in, perhaps it can build the walls to keep pirates out.

We saw how that movie ended already. The anti-piracy controls on Blu-ray are both a tragedy and a joke. Could the industry work with ISPs to build voluntary content management schemes? Obviously not; we saw how the whole net neutrality scenario played out, too. So who’s open to discussion on this, other than… Congress.

Congress! This is the same government body that can’t quite get its heads together on deciding lunch. Folks, if the greatest threat to our civil rights to organize an anti-behavioral-monitoring campaign on Facebook comes from Congress, we’re in better shape than we might think.

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At it Again: Viacom and Google Back in Court Over YouTube Copyright Issues

Sixteen months after a federal judge threw out Viacom’s $1 billion copyright lawsuit against Google, the two companies are back in court. Specifically, Viacom is asking an appeals court to revisit its case against YouTube, which they say is guilty of a whole lot of deliberate copyright infringement.

The original case was thrown out last year when a U.S. District Court judge ruled that YouTube was protected by the “safe harbor” provision of the Digital Millenium Copyright Act (DMCA), which essentially argue that site owners are immune from the legal implications of what the site’s users do, such as uploading copyrighted material.

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That YouTube has hosted copyrighted material is not in dispute here. What’s up for debate is whether Google knew about it and whether it is at fault for only acting against copyright infringers when issues were reported. Viacom’s lawyers are hoping to convince the three-judge panel to open up an appeal of the case so they can make the argument that Google and YouTube were aware of, and thus complicit in, the infringements.

Google’s Anti-Piracy Measures

Google is well aware of the copyright issues raised by sites like YouTube and has gone to great measures to try and alleviate the problem, in the hopes of not only avoiding $1 billion lawsuits, but also partnering up with traditional media companies in the future.

Last month, Google touted a series of accomplishments it’s made in the battle against digital piracy. The company says it responds to all DMCA content take-down requests within 24 hours, often much earlier than that. Google Chairman Eric Schmidt told an audience of TV executives in Scotland that the average take-down request is fulfilled within four hours.

They’ve also developed a set of tools to help copyright owners more easily make claims of infringement. The company’s Content ID technology is used to automatically check audio and video clips against a large database of copyrighted material to determine if it’s in violation of the law. They’ve even blocked certain piracy-related terms from showing up as auto-suggestions in their search query box.

So What’s the Big Deal?

Despite Google’s recent efforts to assuage copyright concerns, Viacom is arguing that from 2005 to 2008, Google deliberately allowed copyright-infringing material – 63,000 video clips in particular – to be uploaded to YouTube and sit there until complaints were made. Google says there isn’t a single copyright-infringing clip that wasn’t taken down upon request. The judge that heard the original case agreed.

Obviously, Viacom’s legal team doesn’t think the first judgement was legally sound and wants it to be overturned. Even though YouTube isn’t known to be routinely hosting any pirated, Viacom-owned clips these days, the company is hoping to establish a new legal precedent, which would serve as a victory for traditional media companies and copyright owners, who often view the Web and companies like Google as a threat to the way copyright law and intellectual property have worked historically.

The panel of judges haven’t decided whether or not to hear the appeal yet. If they do, Viacom will have its work cut out for it as it tries to convince the court to counteract the prevailing legal precedent over DCMA and safe harbor.

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SAP to Settle Copyright Abuse Charges by Oracle

oracle.jpgIt will amount to being publicly shamed, and although Oracle gave SAP an escape hatch, it purposely made that hatch too small to crawl though. In a deal announced yesterday, SAP is likely to plead guilty on behalf of its former customer support unit, TomorrowNow (TN), on charges that it stole Oracle’s intellectual property in an effort to support Oracle customers who were also TN clients.

The fresh set of charges was, according to multiple press sources, filed in U.S. District Court in San Francisco yesterday. (A copy of the filing was not yet available at press time.) The sole defendant in this new set of charges is TomorrowNow, shifting the shame over to the SAP subsidiary, although it will still be SAP that is liable for damages.

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The agreement will probably include a settlement of the civil case against SAP, for which a jury already found SAP liable for a colossal $1.3 billion. Last week, the judge in that case tossed out that award as unjustifiably high, and held out the offer that the award could be pared down to a reasonably huge $272 million if SAP were willing to agree to a settlement – which apparently it did.

This is the endgame of an arduous battle whose collateral damage spread throughout the services industry. Although it’s clear that TN staffers (during the time TN was not owned by SAP) hacked into Oracle’s servers to find the information and software they needed to service customers, the lesson here was not, “Don’t steal from your competitor to serve your competitor’s customers.” Instead, it was that companies make customer service scarce for a reason.

In 2005, prior to the acquisition, companies like TN saw the opportunity to develop platforms around customer service – platforms necessitated by the scarcity of support provided by the software’s own manufacturers. PeopleSoft human resources management and J.D. Edwards enterprise resource planning software were both produced by Oracle. If enterprises were willing to pay for customer service, and Oracle was unwilling to tap into that goldmine, why not create a platform that fills that gap and addresses customer needs?

The problem that TN may not have foreseen at the outset was that one of those customer needs was for software patches – updates that Oracle evidently had on hand, but were holding for release on its own schedule. It’s not that Oracle was withholding necessary updates, but that it wanted to release them in a timely fashion. Having someone else breach the firewalls and release them before it does, disrupted that agenda.

And now we know that the agenda a business assembles to release support patches for its own products, is officially just as much intellectual property as the patches themselves. Although probably no one intends to follow TN’s footsteps and break into a competitor’s servers, everyone today is less likely than before to explore legitimate means of establishing customer service platforms that encompass competitors’ products. And that will leave customers as poorly served today as they were in 2005.

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Citing Copyright, Judge Orders Movie Streaming Service Zediva to Shut Down

judge-gavel-photo.jpgZediva, a startup with a unique approach to online movie streaming, was ordered to shut down its service by a U.S. federal judge for running afoul of copyright law.

The site offers inexpensive movie streaming via a Silicon Valley-based data center that houses a number of DVD players and DVDs, which users could effectively rent and use over the Internet. Rather than physically shipping discs to consumers, Zediva would allow them to control their DVD players via their Website. It was this unusual model that, its founders believed, exempted Zediva from the usual streaming licensing rules faced by competitors like Netflix. It also enabled them to charge much lower rates for movie rentals and make those movies available sooner than other video on demand services can.

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U.S. District Judge John Walter did not agree with Zediva’s interpretation of U.S. copyright law, siding with the Motion Picture Association of America, who filed a copyright suit against the company only a few weeks after it launched.

zediva-screenshot.jpg

The ruling is not terribly surprising. When it first launched in March 2011, Zediva was met with some intrique, but also with nearly universal skepticism over whether what it was doing was legal. GigaOm’s NewTeeVee said that “while it’s a compelling idea, Zediva’s business model is legally questionable,” with several other media outlets expressing the same sentiment.

The case should serve as a cautionary tale for startups whose business models hinge too heavily on legal loopholes, especially when they’re going up against organizations with the size and legal might of the MPPA.

For their part, Zediva isn’t going down without a fight. “Zediva intends to appeal, and will keep fighting for consumers’ right to watch a DVD they’ve rented, whether that rental is at the corner store or by mail or over the Internet,” the company said in a statement.

Photo courtesy of Flickr user steakpinball.

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Google vs Copiepresse Copyright Tension Settled

Copiepresse, a copyright management company for Belgian newspapers, has had a long history of tension with Google. Now, after five years of conflict, Copiepresse and Google seem to have laid down their arms.

The Original Case and the “Boycott”

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Belgian Newspapers Claim Retaliation By Google After Copyright Victory

Perhaps the lesson is: be careful what you sue for. The French and German-language Belgian newspaper consortium that successfully sued Google for copyright infringement got more than it bargained for this week. The newspapers’ content has been removed not only from Google News (as desired)…



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Beligian Newspapers Claim Retaliation By Google After Copyright Victory

Perhaps the lesson is: be careful what you sue for. The French and German-language Belgian newspaper consortium that successfully sued Google for copyright infringement got more than it bargained for this week. The newspapers’ content has been removed not only from Google News (as desired)…



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Oracle Copyright Suit Seeks Billions from Google

Oracle, the company that owns JavaScript, has been engaged in an arduous legal wrestling match with Google. While the legal battle has been ongoing since August  2010, Oracle’s recent claims make the true scope apparent: Oracle statements say…

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US Senate Internet Copyright Legislation Deja Vu

Last year there was COICA, this year there is PROTECT IP, legislation in the US Senate wanting to control aspects of the internet that they see violating copyright. Both acts were introduced by Sen. Patrick Leahy and blocked by Sen. Ron Wyden. On …

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