Orphan Works, 3739-3743 [05-1434]
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Federal Register / Vol. 70, No. 16 / Wednesday, January 26, 2005 / Notices
of the General Counsel/CARP, U.S.
Copyright Office, James Madison
Memorial Building, Room LM–401, 101
Independence Avenue, SE, Washington,
DC 20559–6000 between 8:30 a.m. and
5p.m. If delivered by a commercial
carrier, an original and five copies of a
comment must be delivered to the
Congressional Courier Acceptance Site
located at 2nd and D Street, NE,
between 8:30 a.m. and 4 p.m. The
envelope should be addressed as
follows: Office of the General Counsel/
CARP, Room 403, James Madison
Memorial Building, 101 Independence
Avenue, SE, Washington, DC. If sent by
mail (including overnight delivery using
U.S. Postal Service Express Mail), an
original and five copies of a comment
should be addressed to: Copyright
Arbitration Royalty Panel (CARP), P.O.
Box 70977, Southwest Station,
Washington, DC 20024–0977.
Comments may not be delivered by
means of overnight delivery services
such as Federal Express, United Parcel
Service, etc., due to delays in processing
receipt of such deliveries.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
David O. Carson, General Counsel, or
Tanya M. Sandros, Associate General
Counsel, Copyright Arbitration Royalty
Panel (CARP), P.O. Box 70977,
Southwest Station, Washington, DC
20024–0977. Telephone: (202) 707–
8380. Telefax: (202) 252–3423.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: Section
111 of title 17 of the United States Code
creates a statutory license for cable
systems that retransmit to their
subscribers over–the–air broadcast
signals. Royalty fees for this license are
calculated as percentages of a cable
system’s gross receipts received from
subscribers for receipt of broadcast
signals. A cable system’s individual
gross receipts determine the applicable
percentages. These percentages, and the
gross receipts limitations, are published
in 37 CFR part 256 and are subject to
adjustment at five–year intervals. 17
U.S.C. 801(b)(2)(A) & (D) (2000). This is
a window year for such an adjustment.
On January 10, 2005, the Copyright
Office received a joint petition from
representatives of copyright owners of
sports programming (‘‘Joint Sports
Claimants’’) and motion pictures and
syndicated television series (‘‘Program
Suppliers’’) requesting commencement
of a cable rate adjustment proceeding.
See https://www.copyright.gov/carp/
cable–rate–petition.pdf. As part of the
joint petition, Joint Sports Claimants
and Program Suppliers request that their
‘‘petition and any resulting proceeding
be handled pursuant to existing CARP
procedures, rather than under the new
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provisions established by the Copyright
Royalty and Distribution Reform Act of
2004 (‘CRDRA’).’’ Joint petition at 2.
They assert that their request is
consistent with the CRDRA, Pub. L.
108–419, which does not take effect
until May 30, 2005, and note that the
CRDRA does not contain a provision for
a termination of proceedings that
addresses petitions filed between
November 30, 2004, and May 30, 2005.
Furthermore, Joint Sports Claimants and
Program Suppliers submit that a CARP
proceeding will resolve the 2005 cable
rate adjustment more expeditiously than
the CRJs which, in their view, could
take more than two years to finalize. Id.
at 3.
The Copyright Office seeks public
comment as to whether it is appropriate
and/or required that the 2005 cable rate
adjustment be resolved through the
CARP process set forward in chapter 8
of the Copyright Act prior to passage of
the CRDRA, or whether the joint
petition filed by the Joint Sports
Claimants and the Program Suppliers
should be terminated and transferred to
the CRJs.
Dated: January 21, 2005
Marybeth Peters,
Register of Copyrights.
[FR Doc. 05–1436 Filed 1–25–05; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 1410–33–S
LIBRARY OF CONGRESS
Copyright Office
Orphan Works
Copyright Office, Library of
Congress.
ACTION: Notice of inquiry.
AGENCY:
SUMMARY: The Copyright Office seeks to
examine the issues raised by ‘‘orphan
works,’’ i.e., copyrighted works whose
owners are difficult or even impossible
to locate. Concerns have been raised
that the uncertainty surrounding
ownership of such works might
needlessly discourage subsequent
creators and users from incorporating
such works in new creative efforts or
making such works available to the
public. This notice requests written
comments from all interested parties.
Specifically, the Office is seeking
comments on whether there are
compelling concerns raised by orphan
works that merit a legislative, regulatory
or other solution, and what type of
solution could effectively address these
concerns without conflicting with the
legitimate interests of authors and right
holders.
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Written comments must be
received in the Copyright Office on or
before 5 p.m. EST on March 25, 2005.
Interested parties may submit written
reply comments in direct response to
the written comments on or before 5
p.m. on May 9, 2005.
ADDRESSES: All submissions should be
addressed to Jule L. Sigall, Associate
Register for Policy & International
Affairs. Comments may be sent by
regular mail or delivered by hand, or
sent by electronic mail to the e-mail
address ‘‘orphanworks@loc.gov’’ (see
file formats and information
requirements under supplemental
information below). Those sent by
regular mail should be addressed to the
U.S. Copyright Office, Copyright GC/
I&R, P.O. Box 70400, Southwest Station,
Washington, DC 20024. Submissions
delivered by hand should be brought to
the Public Information Office, U.S.
Copyright Office, James Madison
Memorial Building, Room LM–401, 101
Independence Avenue, SE.,
Washington, DC 20540.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Mary Rasenberger, Policy Advisor for
Special Programs, Copyright GC/I&R,
PO Box 70400, Southwest Station,
Washington, DC 20024–0400.
Telephone (202) 707–8350; telefax (202)
707–8366.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
DATES:
File Formats and Required Information
1. If by electronic mail: Send to
‘‘orphanworks@loc.gov’’ a message
containing the name of the person
making the submission, his or her title
and organization (if the submission is
on behalf of an organization), mailing
address, telephone number, telefax
number (if any) and e-mail address. The
message should also identify the
document clearly as either a comment
or reply comment. The document itself
must be sent as a MIME attachment, and
must be in a single file in either: (1)
Adobe Portable Document File (PDF)
format (preferred); (2) Microsoft Word
2000 or earlier; (3) WordPerfect 8.0 or
earlier; (4) Rich Text File (RTF) format;
or (5) ASCII text file format.
2. If by regular mail or hand delivery:
Send, to the appropriate address listed
above, two copies of the comment, each
on a 3.5-inch write-protected diskette,
labeled with the name of the person
making the submission and, if
applicable, his or her title and
organization. Either the document itself
or a cover letter must also include the
name of the person making the
submission, his or her title and
organization (if the submission is on
behalf of an organization), mailing
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address, telephone number, telefax
number (if any) and e-mail address (if
any). The document itself must be in a
single file in either (1) Adobe Portable
Document File (PDF) format (preferred);
(2) Microsoft Word 2000 or earlier; (3)
WordPerfect Version 8.0 or earlier; (4)
Rich Text File (RTF) format; or (5) ASCII
text file format.
3. If by print only: Anyone who is
unable to submit a comment in
electronic form should submit an
original and two paper copies by hand
or by mail to the appropriate address
listed above. It may not be feasible for
the Copyright Office to place these
comments on the Office’s Web site.
Background
The Copyright Act of 1976 made it
substantially easier for an author to
obtain and maintain copyright in his or
her creative works. Today, copyright
subsists the moment an original work of
authorship is fixed in a tangible form—
it need not be registered with the
Copyright Office or published with
notice to obtain protection. While
registration of claims to copyright with
the Copyright Office is encouraged and
provides important benefits to copyright
holders, it is not required as a condition
to copyright protection. Under the 1909
Act, renewal registration was required
to maintain protection beyond an initial
28-year term. Failure to register the
renewal during the last year of the first
term resulted in complete loss of
protection. The 1976 Act removed the
renewal requirement going forward, but
kept it for works copyrighted before
1978. It was not until 1992 that the
renewal requirement was abolished
altogether. These changes, as well as
other changes in the 1976 Act and in the
Berne Convention Implementation Act
of 1988, were important steps toward
harmonizing U.S. copyright law with
international treaties. Specifically, the
Berne Convention and other treaties
dealing with copyright that have
followed forbid the imposition of
formalities as a condition to copyright,
principally on the grounds that failure
to comply with formalities can serve as
a trap for the unwary, resulting in the
inadvertent loss of copyright.1
1 The Berne Convention article 5(2) ‘‘no
formalities’’ requirement has been incorporated by
reference into both the Agreement on Trade-Related
Aspects of Intellectual Property Rights (‘‘TRIPS’’),
and the WIPO Copyright Treaty (‘‘WCT’’). See
Agreement on Trade-Related Aspects of Intellectual
Property Rights, Apr. 15, 1994, art. 9.1, Marrakesh
Agreement Establishing the World Trade
Organization, Annex 1C, Legal Instruments—
Results of the Uruguay Round vol. 31, 33 I.L.M. 81,
87 (1994); WIPO Copyright Treaty, Apr. 12, 1997,
art. 3, S. Treaty Doc. No. 105–17 (1997), 36 I.L.M.
65, 69 (1997). The WIPO Performances and
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Concerns have been raised, however,
as to whether current copyright law
imposes inappropriate burdens on
users, including subsequent creators, of
works for which the copyright owner
cannot be located (hereinafter referred
to as ‘‘orphan’’ works). The issue is
whether orphan works are being
needlessly removed from public access
and their dissemination inhibited. If no
one claims the copyright in a work, it
appears likely that the public benefit of
having access to the work would
outweigh whatever copyright interest
there might be. Such concerns were
raised in connection with the adoption
of the life plus 50 copyright term with
the 1976 Act and the 20-year term
extension enacted with the Sonny Bono
Copyright Term Extension Act of 1998.
The Copyright Office has long shared
these concerns about orphan works and
has considered the issue to be worthy of
further study. On January 5, Senators
Orrin Hatch and Patrick Leahy of the
Senate Judiciary Committee asked the
Register of Copyrights to study this
issue and to report to the Senate
Judiciary Committee by the end of the
year. Also in January, Reps. Lamar
Smith and Howard Berman, the
chairman and ranking member of the
House Judiciary Committee’s
Subcommittee on Courts, the Internet
and Intellectual Property, sent letters to
the Register supporting this effort. The
Office is gratified that Congress has
shown an interest in this important
issue and is pleased to assist Congress
in its efforts to learn more about the
problem and to consider appropriate
solutions.
Prior to the 1976 Act, the term of
protection was limited to 28 years if the
copyright was not renewed. Under this
system, if the copyright owner was no
longer interested in exploiting the work,
or a corporate owner no longer existed,
or, in the case of individual copyright
owners, there were no interested heirs
to claim the copyright, then the work
entered the public domain. Of course, it
also meant that some copyrights were
unintentionally allowed to enter the
public domain, for instance, where the
claimant was unaware that renewal had
to occur within the one year window at
the end of the first term or that the
copyright was up for renewal. The
legislative history to the 1976 Act
reflects Congress’ recognition of the
concern raised by some that eliminating
renewal requirements would take a large
number of works out of the public
Phonograms Treaty (‘‘WPPT’’) contains an express
‘‘no formalities’’ provision without reference to the
Berne Convention. See WIPO Performances and
Phonograms Treaty, Apr. 12, 1997, art. 20, S. Treaty
Doc. No. 105–17 (1997), 36 I.L.M. 76, 80 (1997).
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domain and that for a number of those
older works it might be difficult or
impossible to identify the copyright
owner in order to obtain permissions.
Congress nevertheless determined that
the renewal system should be discarded,
in part, because of the ‘‘inadvertent and
unjust loss of copyright’’ it in some
cases caused.2 More recently, in the
mid-1990s, Congress heard concerns
that the Copyright Term Extension Act
would exacerbate problems in film
preservation by maintaining copyright
protection for older motion pictures for
which the copyright owner is difficult to
identify.3 Also, in our study on Digital
Distance Education published in 1999,
the Copyright Office identified several
‘‘problems with licensing’’ that
educators asserted in attempting to use
copyrighted materials in digital formats,
including that ‘‘it can be timeconsuming, difficult or even impossible
to locate the copyright owner or
owners.’’ 4
A situation often described is one
where a creator seeks to incorporate an
older work into a new work (e.g., old
photos, footage or recordings) and is
willing to seek permission, but is not
able to identify or locate the copyright
owner(s) in order to seek permission.
While in such circumstances the user
might be reasonably confident that the
risk of an infringement claim against
this use is unlikely, under the current
system the copyright in the work is still
valid and enforceable, and the risk
cannot be completely eliminated.
Moreover, even where the user only
copies portions of the work in a manner
that would not likely be deemed
infringing under the doctrine of fair use,
it is asserted by some that the fair use
defense is often too unpredictable as a
general matter to remove the uncertainty
in the user’s mind.
Some have claimed that many
potential users of orphan works, namely
individuals and small entities, may not
have access to legal advice on these
issues and cannot fully assess risk
themselves. Moreover, even if they are
able to determine with some certainty
that there is little or no risk of losing a
lawsuit, they may not be able to afford
any risk of having to bear the cost of
defending themselves in litigation.
2 H.R.
Rep. No. 94–1476, at 134 (1976).
from Larry Urbanski, Chairman, American
Film Heritage Association, to Senator Strom
Thurmond Opposing S. 505 (Mar. 31, 1997),
available at https://homepages.law.asu.edu/
∼dkarjala/Opposing CopyrightExtension/letters/
AFH.html (stating that as much as 75% of motion
pictures from the 1920s are no longer clearly owned
by anyone, and film preservationists as such cannot
obtain the necessary permissions to preserve them).
4 See Register of Copyrights, Report on Copyright
and Digital Distance Education 41–43 (1999).
3 Letter
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Given the high costs of litigation and the
inability of most creators, scholars and
small publishers to bear those costs, the
result is that orphan works often are not
used—even where there is no one who
would object to the use.
This uncertainty created by copyright
in orphan works has the potential to
harm an important public policy behind
copyright: To promote the
dissemination of works by creating
incentives for their creation and
dissemination to the public. First, the
economic incentive to create may be
undermined by the imposition of
additional costs on subsequent creators
wishing to use material from existing
works. Subsequent creators may be
dissuaded from creating new works
incorporating existing works for which
the owner cannot be found because they
cannot afford the risk of potential
liability or even of litigation. Second,
the public interest may be harmed when
works cannot be made available to the
public due to uncertainty over its
copyright ownership and status, even
when there is no longer any living
person or legal entity claiming
ownership of the copyright or the owner
no longer has any objection to such use.
Empirical analysis of data on trends
in copyright registrations and renewals
over the last century suggests that a
large number of works may fall into the
category of orphan works.5 Based on
data of registrations of claims to
copyright and their subsequent renewal
under the 1909 Act, it appears that,
overall, well less than half of all
registered copyrighted works were
renewed under the old copyright
system. Because renewal was required
to maintain protection of a work, this
data suggests that, at least in many
cases, there was insufficient interest a
mere 28 years later to maintain
copyright protection. The empirical data
does not indicate why any particular
works were not renewed, and no doubt,
a certain portion of those works were
not renewed due to inadvertence,
mistake or ignorance on the part of the
5 See William M. Landes and Richard A. Posner,
Indefinitely Renewable Copyright 22–41 (John M.
Olin Law & Economics Working Paper No. 154, 2d
Series, 2002), available at https://www.law.
uchicago.edu/Lawecon/WkngPprs_151–175/
154.wml-rap.copyright.new.pdf; see also H.R. Rep.
No. 94–1476, at 136 (1976) (‘‘A statistical study of
renewal registrations made by the Copyright Office
in 1966 supports the generalization that most
material which is considered to be of continuing or
potential commercial value is renewed. Of the
remainder, a certain proportion is of practically no
value to anyone, but there are a large number of
unrenewed works that have scholarly value to
historians, architects and specialists in a variety of
fields’’).
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owner.6 With respect to many of these
works, however, particularly those
owned by legal entities or other
sophisticated copyright owners, it can
be assumed that the work no longer had
sufficient economic value to the
copyright claimant to merit renewal.
Libraries and scholars have argued that
those works that have so little economic
value that they fail to merit the small
expense and effort of renewal may
nevertheless have scholarly or
educational value and should not be
needlessly barred from such use.
Several alternatives for addressing
these issues have been proposed and at
least one country, Canada, has adopted
legislation that specifically addresses
orphan works. For background
purposes, the Copyright Office describes
some examples in this notice. It is
stressed that the Office does not take a
position as to the viability or
desirability of any specific proposals or
systems at this time, but seeks input as
to the pros and cons of, and issues
raised by, each, as well as proposals for
other solutions and analysis thereof.
An example of a system that enables
the use, in certain circumstances, of
orphan works can be found in Canada’s
copyright law. The copyright law has a
specific provision permitting anyone
who seeks permission to make a
copyright use of a work and cannot
locate the copyright owner to petition
the Canadian Copyright Board for a
license.7 The Copyright Board makes a
determination as to whether sufficient
effort has been made to locate the
owner. If so, the Copyright Board may
grant a license for the proposed use. It
will set terms and fees for the proposed
use of the work in its discretion and will
hold collected fees in a fund from which
the copyright owner, if he or she ever
surfaces and makes a claim, may be
paid. It should be noted that since the
enactment of these provisions in 1990,
the Copyright Board has issued only 125
such licenses. More information about
the Canadian approach can be found on
the Copyright Board Web site at:
https://www.cb-cda.gc.ca/unlocatable/
index-e.html.
The United Kingdom has a provision
that affects a small subset of orphan
works, namely those for which it is
reasonable to assume the copyright has
6 Indeed, one reason why the renewal system was
replaced in recent copyright enactments was
because it at times served to impose an excessive
penalty on the unwary copyright owner. See H.R.
Rep. No. 94–1476, at 134 (1976) (‘‘One of the worst
features of the present copyright law [the 1909
Copyright Act] is the provision for renewal of
copyright * * * In a number of cases it is the cause
of inadvertent and unjust loss of copyright’’).
7 Copyright Act, R.S.C., ch. C–42, § 77 (1985)
(Can.).
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already expired. The law provides that
there is no infringement where the
copyright owner cannot be found by a
reasonable inquiry and where the date
the copyright expired is uncertain but it
is reasonable to assume that the
copyright has expired.8
Specific Questions
Through review of the submissions,
the Copyright Office intends to
determine the scope of the problem,
evaluate appropriate next steps and
create a record from which specific
legislative proposals, if appropriate,
could be considered and developed. To
that end, this notice of inquiry sets forth
several sets of questions, organized by
issue, in an effort to begin gathering
relevant information. Commenters do
not need to respond to all questions, but
are encouraged to respond to those as to
which they have particular knowledge
or information. Commenters may also
frame additional questions or reframe
any of the questions below.
1. Nature of the Problems Faced by
Subsequent Creators and Users
What are the difficulties faced by
creators or other users in obtaining
rights or clearances in pre-existing
works? What types of creators or users
are encountering these difficulties and
for what types of proposed uses? How
often is identifying and locating the
copyright owner a problem? What steps
are usually taken to locate copyright
owners? Are difficulties often
encountered even after the copyright
owner is identified? If so, this is an
issue that the Copyright Office also
invites you to address.
2. Nature of ‘‘Orphan works’’:
Identification and Designation
How should an ‘‘orphan work’’ be
defined? Should ‘‘orphan works’’ be
identified on a case-by-case basis,
looking at the circumstances
surrounding each work that someone
wishes to use and the attempts made to
locate the copyright owner? Should a
more formal system be established? For
instance, it has been suggested that a
register or other filing system be
adopted whereby copyright owners
could indicate continuing claims of
ownership to the copyrights in their
works.
On the other hand, the establishment
of a filing system whereby the potential
user is required to file an intent to use
8 Copyright, Designs and Patents Act, 1988, c. 48,
§ 57 (Eng.); see also Copyright and Related Rights
Act, No. 28, 2000 § 88 (Ir.); Laws of Hong Kong,
Chapter 528: Copyright Ordinance, June 27, 1997
§ 66, available at https://www.justice.gov.hk/
Home.htm.
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an unlocatable work has also been
suggested. Would the Copyright Office
or another organization administer and
publish such filings? For instance,
would the Copyright Office publish lists
of these notices on a regular basis,
similar to the lists of notices of intent to
enforce restored copyrights filed with
the Office? Questions arising from these
different approaches are set forth in the
next sections.
A. Case-by-Case Approach
The ‘‘ad hoc’’ or ‘‘case-by-case’’
approach, like that adopted in Canada,
would set forth parameters for the level
of search that would need to be
undertaken in order to establish that a
particular work is ‘‘orphaned.’’ Ensuing
questions include the nature of those
parameters. Should the focus be on
whether the copyright holder is
locatable? What efforts need be made to
locate a copyright holder before it can
be determined that the owner is not
locatable? Would a search of
registrations with the Copyright Office
(or any other registries as described
below in section B) and an attempt to
reach the copyright owner identified on
the work if any (plus any follow up) be
sufficient? What other resources are
commonly consulted to locate a
copyright owner, and what resources
should be consulted? Do resources like
inheritance records, archives,
directories of authors or artists need to
be searched? Should there be an
obligation to place an advertisement
seeking the owner? Should factors such
as the age of the work (which is
discussed below), how obscure the work
is or how long it has been since a
publication occurred be taken into
consideration?
B. Formal Approach
Another approach, like that used in
the 1909 Act, would require registration
or some sort of filing by copyright
owners to maintain their copyrights past
a certain age and to assist in locating
copyright owners.9 Would such a new
registry or registries be created separate
from the existing system of copyright
registration (akin to the designated agent
registry under section 512 of the
Copyright Act) where copyright owners
could identify themselves so that users
could more easily find them? Should
such a registry(ies) be privately owned
or administered by a government agency
like the U.S. Copyright Office? What
would such a registry look like? What
kind of information should be required
from such a filing? Should the
identification of a person to whom
9 See
also H.R. 2601, 108th Cong. § 3 (2003).
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permission requests can be sent be
required? What other information
should be included? Also, how would
the registry identify the ‘‘works’’ at
issue, especially in light of the current
multimedia age where works can take
on many forms and spawn multiple
derivative works? And, even more
importantly, how could fraud and abuse
of such a registry be avoided—i.e., what
is to prevent someone from fraudulently
claiming works as his own?
Such a registration system could be
optional as well as mandatory. Where,
under a mandatory system, copyright
owners could be required to make a
filing in order to preserve their rights
and/or prevent their works from being
deemed ‘‘orphan,’’ under an optional
registry, registration might provide
additional benefits. Alternatively, under
an optional system failure to register
could carry certain penalties or limit
remedies available to the right holder. If
registration were mandatory, on the
other hand, would failure to register
create a rebuttable presumption that the
work is ‘‘orphaned,’’ or would it
conclusively be deemed ‘‘orphaned’?
(Questions as to the effect of a
designation as an ‘‘orphan work’’ are set
forth below in section 5). If optional, the
registry might serve as just one factor in
determining whether the copyright
owner was locatable. How helpful
would such a registration system be in
determining whether a work was in fact
‘‘orphaned’? Would the registry then
qualify as just another place that a
potential user should look to find the
owner? If so, how practicable would
such a system be? What incentives
would a copyright owner have to use
such a system? Should the owner be
permitted to acquire any additional
benefits from registering, such as
additional damages or a penalty for
willful use of a work? Does this tread
too closely to the copyright registration
system? What would the effect be on the
user? For instance, if a user did not
check the registry, would it prevent the
user from claiming that the work was
orphaned? Would there be sufficient
incentive for copyright owners to
register in a permissive system?
3. Nature of ‘‘Orphan Works’’: Age
Should a certain amount of time have
elapsed since first publication or
creation in order for a work to be
eligible for ‘‘orphaned’’ status? If so,
how much time? It might be helpful, in
determining what an appropriate time
period would be, to note some of the
different benchmarks for term
requirements that history and
international conventions suggest. For
example, under the 1909 Act, a work
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was to be renewed in the 28th year after
publication. Current copyright law
provides a presumption after the shorter
of 95 years from publication or 120
years from creation that the work is in
the public domain unless the Copyright
Office’s records indicate otherwise (and
the Copyright Office issues a certified
report to that effect).10 Current
copyright law provides another
benchmark in the right to terminate
grants of transfers or licenses after 35
(and up to 40) years after the grant or
publication date.11 Under existing
international treaties, the term of
protection for works measured other
than by the life plus fifty term is
generally fifty years from publication.
The Copyright Term Extension Act of
1998 extended terms in the U.S. by 20
years, but at the same time recognized
that certain uses should still be
allowable in those last twenty years,
namely uses by libraries and archives of
certain works that are neither available
at a reasonable price nor subject to
normal commercial exploitation.12
Would the last twenty years of the
copyright term, or any of the other
benchmarks or time periods noted
above, be an appropriate measure for
eligibility as an ‘‘orphan work’? Should
it be the same for all categories of works,
or different depending on the nature of
the work? What if the term for a
particular work is unknown or
uncertain? If the copyright owner is not
known or cannot be found, there will
certainly be instances where the date of
creation or death of the author will be
unknown. Can it be presumed at a
certain point that a work has entered
into the period in which it can be
recognized as an orphan work?13
4. Nature of ‘‘Orphan Works’’:
Publication Status
Should the status of ‘‘orphan works’’
only apply to published works, or are
there reasons for applying it to
10 17
U.S.C. § 302(e) (2003).
11 § 203.
12 § 108(h). Specifically, this provision provides
that in the last twenty years of the term of any
published work, a library or archive, including a
nonprofit educational institution that functions as
such, may make any copyright use of the work
(other than create derivative works) for purposes of
preservation, scholarship or research, if it has
determined on the basis of reasonable investigation,
that (i) the work is not subject to normal
commercial exploitation, (ii) a copy cannot be
obtained at a reasonable price, and (iii) the
copyright owner or its agent has not provided
notice with the Copyright Office that neither (i) or
(ii) applies to the work.
13 For instance, the U.K. law cited above provides
a complete defense against liability if the owner
cannot be found after reasonable inquiry and the
date of expiration is uncertain but it’s reasonable to
presume that the copyright has expired. See supra
note 8.
E:\FR\FM\26JAN1.SGM
26JAN1
Federal Register / Vol. 70, No. 16 / Wednesday, January 26, 2005 / Notices
unpublished works as well? In Canada,
for example, the system for unlocatable
copyright owners only applies to
published works. What are the reasons
for applying it to unpublished works? If
‘‘orphan work’’ status would apply to
unpublished works, how would such a
system preserve the important right of
first publication recognized by the
Supreme Court in Harper & Row?14
What are the negative consequences of
applying such a system to unpublished
works?
5. Effect of a Work Being Designated
‘‘Orphaned’
However a work is identified and
designated as ‘‘orphaned,’’ what would
be the effects of such designation?
Under systems for a mandatory, formal
registry of maintained works, like the
1909 Act, the right to assert one’s
`
exclusive rights vis a vis others could
similarly be lost, in whole or in part, if
the work was not contained on the
registry. Should this loss of rights apply
only to the particular work at the time
of use, or only to the particular use or
user, or would it affect a permanent loss
of rights as against all uses and users?
Other possibilities include imposing a
limitation on remedies for owners
whose works are ‘‘orphaned’’—without
affecting the copyright itself. For
instance, under the Canadian approach,
the Copyright Board sets the license fees
and other terms for the use and collects
the payments on behalf of the copyright
owner should one ever be identified.
Under that approach, users could be
confident that their use of the work
would not subject them to the full range
of remedies under the Copyright Act,
but only an amount akin to a fee for use.
At the same time, copyright owners
would not be concerned about the
inadvertent loss of rights from failure to
pay the fee or take other requisite
action. Domestically, the Copyright
Clearance Initiative of the GlushkoSamuelson Intellectual Property Law
Clinic of American University’s
Washington College of Law is currently
developing a proposal that would limit
the liability for users of orphan works
and not result in any loss of copyright
per se on the part of the copyright
owner.15 Under that proposal, only a
14 See generally Harper & Row, Publishers, Inc. v.
Nation Enters., 471 U.S. 539, 550–555 (1985).
15 Pursuant to that proposal, copyright law would
be amended to limit liability for the use of works
where the user has been unable to locate the
copyright holder after making good faith efforts.
Liability could be limited to a ‘‘reasonable royalty’’
or the like, or could be akin to the limitation of U.S.
Federal Government liability to ‘‘reasonable and
entire compensation as damages * * *, including
minimum statutory damages.’’ 28 U.S.C. § 1498(b)
(2003). Complex issues raised by that proposal
VerDate jul<14>2003
19:33 Jan 25, 2005
Jkt 205001
recovery of a reasonable royalty would
be allowed in infringement actions with
respect to orphan works where good
faith efforts have been made to locate
the copyright owner. Are there other
approaches that might be used? If a
reasonable royalty approach is used,
how should it be determined in any
given case? To settle disputes as to the
appropriate fee, is traditional Federal
court litigation the right dispute
resolution mechanism, or should an
administrative agency be charged with
resolving such disputes or should
another alternative dispute resolution
mechanism be adopted?
Are there other measures that could
be applied in cases of orphan works?
How would these, or any of the others
described above, affect the incentives
for authors of such works, particularly
small copyright owners or individuals
who might bear a greater burden than
copyright owners with more resources?
6. International Implications
How would the proposed solutions
comport with existing international
obligations regarding copyright? For
example, Article 5(2) of the Berne
Convention generally prohibits
formalities as a condition to the
‘‘enjoyment and exercise’’ of copyright.
For any proposed solution, it must be
asked whether it runs afoul of this
provision. Would a system involving
limitations on remedies be consistent
with the enforcement provisions of the
Agreement on Trade-Related Aspects of
Intellectual Property (TRIPS) or the
prohibition against conditioning the
enjoyment or exercise of copyright on
compliance with formalities of TRIPS
and other international agreements to
which the U.S. is party? Would such
proposals satisfy the three-step test set
forth in TRIPS, Art. 13, requiring that all
limitations and exceptions to the
exclusive rights be confined to ‘‘certain
special cases that do not conflict with
the normal exploitation of the work and
do not unreasonably prejudice the
legitimate interests of the right holder’?
Are there any other international issues
raised by a proposed solution?
Dated: January 21, 2005.
Marybeth Peters,
Register of Copyrights.
[FR Doc. 05–1434 Filed 1–25–05; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 1410–30–P
include how to determine what constitutes ‘‘good
faith efforts’’ to locate the copyright owner and how
to determine and/ or settle what a reasonable
royalty would be.
PO 00000
Frm 00074
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
3743
NATIONAL SCIENCE FOUNDATION
Agency Information Collection
Activities: Comment Request
National Science Foundation.
Submission for OMB Review;
Comment Request.
AGENCY:
ACTION:
Under the Paperwork Reduction Act
of 1995, Pub. L. 104–13 (44 U.S.C. 3501
et seq.), and as part of its continuing
effort to reduce paperwork and
respondent burden, the National
Science Foundation (NSF) is inviting
the general public and other Federal
agencies to comment on this proposed
continuing information collection. This
is the second notice for public
comment; the first was published in the
Federal Register at 69 FR 64114 and one
comment was received. NSF is
forwarding the proposed submission to
the Office of Management and Budget
(OMB) for clearance simultaneously
with the publication of this second
notice.
Comments regarding these
information collections are best assured
of having their full effect if received by
OMB within 30 days of publication in
the Federal Register.
ADDRESSES: Written comments
regarding (a) whether the collection of
information is necessary for the proper
performance of the functions of NSF,
including whether the information will
have practical utility; (b) the accuracy of
NSF’s estimate of burden including the
validity of the methodology and
assumptions used; (c) ways to enhance
the quality, utility and clarity of the
information to be collected; or (d) ways
to minimize the burden of the collection
of information on those who are to
respond, including through the use of
appropriate automated, electronic,
mechanical, or other technological
collection techniques or other forms of
information technology should be
addressed to: Office of Information and
Regulatory Affairs of OMB, Attention:
Desk Officer for National Science
Foundation, 725—17th Street, NW.
Room 10235, Washington, DC 20503,
and to Suzanne H. Plimpton, Reports
Clearance Officer, National Science
Foundation, 4201 Wilson Boulevard,
Suite 295, Arlington, Virginia 22230 or
send e-mail to splimpto@nsf.gov. Copies
of the submission may be obtained by
calling (703) 292–7556.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Suzanne H. Plimpton, NSF Reports
Clearance Officer at (703) 292–7556 or
send e-mail to splimpto@nsf.gov.
An agency may not conduct or
sponsor a collection of information
DATES:
E:\FR\FM\26JAN1.SGM
26JAN1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 70, Number 16 (Wednesday, January 26, 2005)]
[Notices]
[Pages 3739-3743]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 05-1434]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
LIBRARY OF CONGRESS
Copyright Office
Orphan Works
AGENCY: Copyright Office, Library of Congress.
ACTION: Notice of inquiry.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The Copyright Office seeks to examine the issues raised by
``orphan works,'' i.e., copyrighted works whose owners are difficult or
even impossible to locate. Concerns have been raised that the
uncertainty surrounding ownership of such works might needlessly
discourage subsequent creators and users from incorporating such works
in new creative efforts or making such works available to the public.
This notice requests written comments from all interested parties.
Specifically, the Office is seeking comments on whether there are
compelling concerns raised by orphan works that merit a legislative,
regulatory or other solution, and what type of solution could
effectively address these concerns without conflicting with the
legitimate interests of authors and right holders.
DATES: Written comments must be received in the Copyright Office on or
before 5 p.m. EST on March 25, 2005. Interested parties may submit
written reply comments in direct response to the written comments on or
before 5 p.m. on May 9, 2005.
ADDRESSES: All submissions should be addressed to Jule L. Sigall,
Associate Register for Policy & International Affairs. Comments may be
sent by regular mail or delivered by hand, or sent by electronic mail
to the e-mail address ``orphanworks@loc.gov'' (see file formats and
information requirements under supplemental information below). Those
sent by regular mail should be addressed to the U.S. Copyright Office,
Copyright GC/I&R, P.O. Box 70400, Southwest Station, Washington, DC
20024. Submissions delivered by hand should be brought to the Public
Information Office, U.S. Copyright Office, James Madison Memorial
Building, Room LM-401, 101 Independence Avenue, SE., Washington, DC
20540.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Mary Rasenberger, Policy Advisor for
Special Programs, Copyright GC/I&R, PO Box 70400, Southwest Station,
Washington, DC 20024-0400. Telephone (202) 707-8350; telefax (202) 707-
8366.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
File Formats and Required Information
1. If by electronic mail: Send to ``orphanworks@loc.gov'' a message
containing the name of the person making the submission, his or her
title and organization (if the submission is on behalf of an
organization), mailing address, telephone number, telefax number (if
any) and e-mail address. The message should also identify the document
clearly as either a comment or reply comment. The document itself must
be sent as a MIME attachment, and must be in a single file in either:
(1) Adobe Portable Document File (PDF) format (preferred); (2)
Microsoft Word 2000 or earlier; (3) WordPerfect 8.0 or earlier; (4)
Rich Text File (RTF) format; or (5) ASCII text file format.
2. If by regular mail or hand delivery: Send, to the appropriate
address listed above, two copies of the comment, each on a 3.5-inch
write-protected diskette, labeled with the name of the person making
the submission and, if applicable, his or her title and organization.
Either the document itself or a cover letter must also include the name
of the person making the submission, his or her title and organization
(if the submission is on behalf of an organization), mailing
[[Page 3740]]
address, telephone number, telefax number (if any) and e-mail address
(if any). The document itself must be in a single file in either (1)
Adobe Portable Document File (PDF) format (preferred); (2) Microsoft
Word 2000 or earlier; (3) WordPerfect Version 8.0 or earlier; (4) Rich
Text File (RTF) format; or (5) ASCII text file format.
3. If by print only: Anyone who is unable to submit a comment in
electronic form should submit an original and two paper copies by hand
or by mail to the appropriate address listed above. It may not be
feasible for the Copyright Office to place these comments on the
Office's Web site.
Background
The Copyright Act of 1976 made it substantially easier for an
author to obtain and maintain copyright in his or her creative works.
Today, copyright subsists the moment an original work of authorship is
fixed in a tangible form--it need not be registered with the Copyright
Office or published with notice to obtain protection. While
registration of claims to copyright with the Copyright Office is
encouraged and provides important benefits to copyright holders, it is
not required as a condition to copyright protection. Under the 1909
Act, renewal registration was required to maintain protection beyond an
initial 28-year term. Failure to register the renewal during the last
year of the first term resulted in complete loss of protection. The
1976 Act removed the renewal requirement going forward, but kept it for
works copyrighted before 1978. It was not until 1992 that the renewal
requirement was abolished altogether. These changes, as well as other
changes in the 1976 Act and in the Berne Convention Implementation Act
of 1988, were important steps toward harmonizing U.S. copyright law
with international treaties. Specifically, the Berne Convention and
other treaties dealing with copyright that have followed forbid the
imposition of formalities as a condition to copyright, principally on
the grounds that failure to comply with formalities can serve as a trap
for the unwary, resulting in the inadvertent loss of copyright.\1\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ The Berne Convention article 5(2) ``no formalities''
requirement has been incorporated by reference into both the
Agreement on Trade-Related Aspects of Intellectual Property Rights
(``TRIPS''), and the WIPO Copyright Treaty (``WCT''). See Agreement
on Trade-Related Aspects of Intellectual Property Rights, Apr. 15,
1994, art. 9.1, Marrakesh Agreement Establishing the World Trade
Organization, Annex 1C, Legal Instruments--Results of the Uruguay
Round vol. 31, 33 I.L.M. 81, 87 (1994); WIPO Copyright Treaty, Apr.
12, 1997, art. 3, S. Treaty Doc. No. 105-17 (1997), 36 I.L.M. 65, 69
(1997). The WIPO Performances and Phonograms Treaty (``WPPT'')
contains an express ``no formalities'' provision without reference
to the Berne Convention. See WIPO Performances and Phonograms
Treaty, Apr. 12, 1997, art. 20, S. Treaty Doc. No. 105-17 (1997), 36
I.L.M. 76, 80 (1997).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Concerns have been raised, however, as to whether current copyright
law imposes inappropriate burdens on users, including subsequent
creators, of works for which the copyright owner cannot be located
(hereinafter referred to as ``orphan'' works). The issue is whether
orphan works are being needlessly removed from public access and their
dissemination inhibited. If no one claims the copyright in a work, it
appears likely that the public benefit of having access to the work
would outweigh whatever copyright interest there might be. Such
concerns were raised in connection with the adoption of the life plus
50 copyright term with the 1976 Act and the 20-year term extension
enacted with the Sonny Bono Copyright Term Extension Act of 1998.
The Copyright Office has long shared these concerns about orphan
works and has considered the issue to be worthy of further study. On
January 5, Senators Orrin Hatch and Patrick Leahy of the Senate
Judiciary Committee asked the Register of Copyrights to study this
issue and to report to the Senate Judiciary Committee by the end of the
year. Also in January, Reps. Lamar Smith and Howard Berman, the
chairman and ranking member of the House Judiciary Committee's
Subcommittee on Courts, the Internet and Intellectual Property, sent
letters to the Register supporting this effort. The Office is gratified
that Congress has shown an interest in this important issue and is
pleased to assist Congress in its efforts to learn more about the
problem and to consider appropriate solutions.
Prior to the 1976 Act, the term of protection was limited to 28
years if the copyright was not renewed. Under this system, if the
copyright owner was no longer interested in exploiting the work, or a
corporate owner no longer existed, or, in the case of individual
copyright owners, there were no interested heirs to claim the
copyright, then the work entered the public domain. Of course, it also
meant that some copyrights were unintentionally allowed to enter the
public domain, for instance, where the claimant was unaware that
renewal had to occur within the one year window at the end of the first
term or that the copyright was up for renewal. The legislative history
to the 1976 Act reflects Congress' recognition of the concern raised by
some that eliminating renewal requirements would take a large number of
works out of the public domain and that for a number of those older
works it might be difficult or impossible to identify the copyright
owner in order to obtain permissions. Congress nevertheless determined
that the renewal system should be discarded, in part, because of the
``inadvertent and unjust loss of copyright'' it in some cases
caused.\2\ More recently, in the mid-1990s, Congress heard concerns
that the Copyright Term Extension Act would exacerbate problems in film
preservation by maintaining copyright protection for older motion
pictures for which the copyright owner is difficult to identify.\3\
Also, in our study on Digital Distance Education published in 1999, the
Copyright Office identified several ``problems with licensing'' that
educators asserted in attempting to use copyrighted materials in
digital formats, including that ``it can be time-consuming, difficult
or even impossible to locate the copyright owner or owners.'' \4\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\2\ H.R. Rep. No. 94-1476, at 134 (1976).
\3\ Letter from Larry Urbanski, Chairman, American Film Heritage
Association, to Senator Strom Thurmond Opposing S. 505 (Mar. 31,
1997), available at https://homepages.law.asu.edu/dkarjala/Opposing
CopyrightExtension/letters/AFH.html (stating that as much as 75% of
motion pictures from the 1920s are no longer clearly owned by
anyone, and film preservationists as such cannot obtain the
necessary permissions to preserve them).
\4\ See Register of Copyrights, Report on Copyright and Digital
Distance Education 41-43 (1999).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
A situation often described is one where a creator seeks to
incorporate an older work into a new work (e.g., old photos, footage or
recordings) and is willing to seek permission, but is not able to
identify or locate the copyright owner(s) in order to seek permission.
While in such circumstances the user might be reasonably confident that
the risk of an infringement claim against this use is unlikely, under
the current system the copyright in the work is still valid and
enforceable, and the risk cannot be completely eliminated. Moreover,
even where the user only copies portions of the work in a manner that
would not likely be deemed infringing under the doctrine of fair use,
it is asserted by some that the fair use defense is often too
unpredictable as a general matter to remove the uncertainty in the
user's mind.
Some have claimed that many potential users of orphan works, namely
individuals and small entities, may not have access to legal advice on
these issues and cannot fully assess risk themselves. Moreover, even if
they are able to determine with some certainty that there is little or
no risk of losing a lawsuit, they may not be able to afford any risk of
having to bear the cost of defending themselves in litigation.
[[Page 3741]]
Given the high costs of litigation and the inability of most creators,
scholars and small publishers to bear those costs, the result is that
orphan works often are not used--even where there is no one who would
object to the use.
This uncertainty created by copyright in orphan works has the
potential to harm an important public policy behind copyright: To
promote the dissemination of works by creating incentives for their
creation and dissemination to the public. First, the economic incentive
to create may be undermined by the imposition of additional costs on
subsequent creators wishing to use material from existing works.
Subsequent creators may be dissuaded from creating new works
incorporating existing works for which the owner cannot be found
because they cannot afford the risk of potential liability or even of
litigation. Second, the public interest may be harmed when works cannot
be made available to the public due to uncertainty over its copyright
ownership and status, even when there is no longer any living person or
legal entity claiming ownership of the copyright or the owner no longer
has any objection to such use.
Empirical analysis of data on trends in copyright registrations and
renewals over the last century suggests that a large number of works
may fall into the category of orphan works.\5\ Based on data of
registrations of claims to copyright and their subsequent renewal under
the 1909 Act, it appears that, overall, well less than half of all
registered copyrighted works were renewed under the old copyright
system. Because renewal was required to maintain protection of a work,
this data suggests that, at least in many cases, there was insufficient
interest a mere 28 years later to maintain copyright protection. The
empirical data does not indicate why any particular works were not
renewed, and no doubt, a certain portion of those works were not
renewed due to inadvertence, mistake or ignorance on the part of the
owner.\6\ With respect to many of these works, however, particularly
those owned by legal entities or other sophisticated copyright owners,
it can be assumed that the work no longer had sufficient economic value
to the copyright claimant to merit renewal. Libraries and scholars have
argued that those works that have so little economic value that they
fail to merit the small expense and effort of renewal may nevertheless
have scholarly or educational value and should not be needlessly barred
from such use.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\5\ See William M. Landes and Richard A. Posner, Indefinitely
Renewable Copyright 22-41 (John M. Olin Law & Economics Working
Paper No. 154, 2d Series, 2002), available at https://www.law.
uchicago.edu/Lawecon/WkngPprs_151-175/154.wml-
rap.copyright.new.pdf; see also H.R. Rep. No. 94-1476, at 136 (1976)
(``A statistical study of renewal registrations made by the
Copyright Office in 1966 supports the generalization that most
material which is considered to be of continuing or potential
commercial value is renewed. Of the remainder, a certain proportion
is of practically no value to anyone, but there are a large number
of unrenewed works that have scholarly value to historians,
architects and specialists in a variety of fields'').
\6\ Indeed, one reason why the renewal system was replaced in
recent copyright enactments was because it at times served to impose
an excessive penalty on the unwary copyright owner. See H.R. Rep.
No. 94-1476, at 134 (1976) (``One of the worst features of the
present copyright law [the 1909 Copyright Act] is the provision for
renewal of copyright * * * In a number of cases it is the cause of
inadvertent and unjust loss of copyright'').
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Several alternatives for addressing these issues have been proposed
and at least one country, Canada, has adopted legislation that
specifically addresses orphan works. For background purposes, the
Copyright Office describes some examples in this notice. It is stressed
that the Office does not take a position as to the viability or
desirability of any specific proposals or systems at this time, but
seeks input as to the pros and cons of, and issues raised by, each, as
well as proposals for other solutions and analysis thereof.
An example of a system that enables the use, in certain
circumstances, of orphan works can be found in Canada's copyright law.
The copyright law has a specific provision permitting anyone who seeks
permission to make a copyright use of a work and cannot locate the
copyright owner to petition the Canadian Copyright Board for a
license.\7\ The Copyright Board makes a determination as to whether
sufficient effort has been made to locate the owner. If so, the
Copyright Board may grant a license for the proposed use. It will set
terms and fees for the proposed use of the work in its discretion and
will hold collected fees in a fund from which the copyright owner, if
he or she ever surfaces and makes a claim, may be paid. It should be
noted that since the enactment of these provisions in 1990, the
Copyright Board has issued only 125 such licenses. More information
about the Canadian approach can be found on the Copyright Board Web
site at: https://www.cb-cda.gc.ca/unlocatable/index-e.html.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\7\ Copyright Act, R.S.C., ch. C-42, Sec. 77 (1985) (Can.).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The United Kingdom has a provision that affects a small subset of
orphan works, namely those for which it is reasonable to assume the
copyright has already expired. The law provides that there is no
infringement where the copyright owner cannot be found by a reasonable
inquiry and where the date the copyright expired is uncertain but it is
reasonable to assume that the copyright has expired.\8\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\8\ Copyright, Designs and Patents Act, 1988, c. 48, Sec. 57
(Eng.); see also Copyright and Related Rights Act, No. 28, 2000
Sec. 88 (Ir.); Laws of Hong Kong, Chapter 528: Copyright Ordinance,
June 27, 1997 Sec. 66, available at https://www.justice.gov.hk/
Home.htm.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Specific Questions
Through review of the submissions, the Copyright Office intends to
determine the scope of the problem, evaluate appropriate next steps and
create a record from which specific legislative proposals, if
appropriate, could be considered and developed. To that end, this
notice of inquiry sets forth several sets of questions, organized by
issue, in an effort to begin gathering relevant information. Commenters
do not need to respond to all questions, but are encouraged to respond
to those as to which they have particular knowledge or information.
Commenters may also frame additional questions or reframe any of the
questions below.
1. Nature of the Problems Faced by Subsequent Creators and Users
What are the difficulties faced by creators or other users in
obtaining rights or clearances in pre-existing works? What types of
creators or users are encountering these difficulties and for what
types of proposed uses? How often is identifying and locating the
copyright owner a problem? What steps are usually taken to locate
copyright owners? Are difficulties often encountered even after the
copyright owner is identified? If so, this is an issue that the
Copyright Office also invites you to address.
2. Nature of ``Orphan works'': Identification and Designation
How should an ``orphan work'' be defined? Should ``orphan works''
be identified on a case-by-case basis, looking at the circumstances
surrounding each work that someone wishes to use and the attempts made
to locate the copyright owner? Should a more formal system be
established? For instance, it has been suggested that a register or
other filing system be adopted whereby copyright owners could indicate
continuing claims of ownership to the copyrights in their works.
On the other hand, the establishment of a filing system whereby the
potential user is required to file an intent to use
[[Page 3742]]
an unlocatable work has also been suggested. Would the Copyright Office
or another organization administer and publish such filings? For
instance, would the Copyright Office publish lists of these notices on
a regular basis, similar to the lists of notices of intent to enforce
restored copyrights filed with the Office? Questions arising from these
different approaches are set forth in the next sections.
A. Case-by-Case Approach
The ``ad hoc'' or ``case-by-case'' approach, like that adopted in
Canada, would set forth parameters for the level of search that would
need to be undertaken in order to establish that a particular work is
``orphaned.'' Ensuing questions include the nature of those parameters.
Should the focus be on whether the copyright holder is locatable? What
efforts need be made to locate a copyright holder before it can be
determined that the owner is not locatable? Would a search of
registrations with the Copyright Office (or any other registries as
described below in section B) and an attempt to reach the copyright
owner identified on the work if any (plus any follow up) be sufficient?
What other resources are commonly consulted to locate a copyright
owner, and what resources should be consulted? Do resources like
inheritance records, archives, directories of authors or artists need
to be searched? Should there be an obligation to place an advertisement
seeking the owner? Should factors such as the age of the work (which is
discussed below), how obscure the work is or how long it has been since
a publication occurred be taken into consideration?
B. Formal Approach
Another approach, like that used in the 1909 Act, would require
registration or some sort of filing by copyright owners to maintain
their copyrights past a certain age and to assist in locating copyright
owners.\9\ Would such a new registry or registries be created separate
from the existing system of copyright registration (akin to the
designated agent registry under section 512 of the Copyright Act) where
copyright owners could identify themselves so that users could more
easily find them? Should such a registry(ies) be privately owned or
administered by a government agency like the U.S. Copyright Office?
What would such a registry look like? What kind of information should
be required from such a filing? Should the identification of a person
to whom permission requests can be sent be required? What other
information should be included? Also, how would the registry identify
the ``works'' at issue, especially in light of the current multimedia
age where works can take on many forms and spawn multiple derivative
works? And, even more importantly, how could fraud and abuse of such a
registry be avoided--i.e., what is to prevent someone from fraudulently
claiming works as his own?
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\9\ See also H.R. 2601, 108th Cong. Sec. 3 (2003).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Such a registration system could be optional as well as mandatory.
Where, under a mandatory system, copyright owners could be required to
make a filing in order to preserve their rights and/or prevent their
works from being deemed ``orphan,'' under an optional registry,
registration might provide additional benefits. Alternatively, under an
optional system failure to register could carry certain penalties or
limit remedies available to the right holder. If registration were
mandatory, on the other hand, would failure to register create a
rebuttable presumption that the work is ``orphaned,'' or would it
conclusively be deemed ``orphaned'? (Questions as to the effect of a
designation as an ``orphan work'' are set forth below in section 5). If
optional, the registry might serve as just one factor in determining
whether the copyright owner was locatable. How helpful would such a
registration system be in determining whether a work was in fact
``orphaned'? Would the registry then qualify as just another place that
a potential user should look to find the owner? If so, how practicable
would such a system be? What incentives would a copyright owner have to
use such a system? Should the owner be permitted to acquire any
additional benefits from registering, such as additional damages or a
penalty for willful use of a work? Does this tread too closely to the
copyright registration system? What would the effect be on the user?
For instance, if a user did not check the registry, would it prevent
the user from claiming that the work was orphaned? Would there be
sufficient incentive for copyright owners to register in a permissive
system?
3. Nature of ``Orphan Works'': Age
Should a certain amount of time have elapsed since first
publication or creation in order for a work to be eligible for
``orphaned'' status? If so, how much time? It might be helpful, in
determining what an appropriate time period would be, to note some of
the different benchmarks for term requirements that history and
international conventions suggest. For example, under the 1909 Act, a
work was to be renewed in the 28th year after publication. Current
copyright law provides a presumption after the shorter of 95 years from
publication or 120 years from creation that the work is in the public
domain unless the Copyright Office's records indicate otherwise (and
the Copyright Office issues a certified report to that effect).\10\
Current copyright law provides another benchmark in the right to
terminate grants of transfers or licenses after 35 (and up to 40) years
after the grant or publication date.\11\ Under existing international
treaties, the term of protection for works measured other than by the
life plus fifty term is generally fifty years from publication. The
Copyright Term Extension Act of 1998 extended terms in the U.S. by 20
years, but at the same time recognized that certain uses should still
be allowable in those last twenty years, namely uses by libraries and
archives of certain works that are neither available at a reasonable
price nor subject to normal commercial exploitation.\12\ Would the last
twenty years of the copyright term, or any of the other benchmarks or
time periods noted above, be an appropriate measure for eligibility as
an ``orphan work'? Should it be the same for all categories of works,
or different depending on the nature of the work? What if the term for
a particular work is unknown or uncertain? If the copyright owner is
not known or cannot be found, there will certainly be instances where
the date of creation or death of the author will be unknown. Can it be
presumed at a certain point that a work has entered into the period in
which it can be recognized as an orphan work?\13\
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\10\ 17 U.S.C. Sec. 302(e) (2003).
\11\ Sec. 203.
\12\ Sec. 108(h). Specifically, this provision provides that in
the last twenty years of the term of any published work, a library
or archive, including a nonprofit educational institution that
functions as such, may make any copyright use of the work (other
than create derivative works) for purposes of preservation,
scholarship or research, if it has determined on the basis of
reasonable investigation, that (i) the work is not subject to normal
commercial exploitation, (ii) a copy cannot be obtained at a
reasonable price, and (iii) the copyright owner or its agent has not
provided notice with the Copyright Office that neither (i) or (ii)
applies to the work.
\13\ For instance, the U.K. law cited above provides a complete
defense against liability if the owner cannot be found after
reasonable inquiry and the date of expiration is uncertain but it's
reasonable to presume that the copyright has expired. See supra note
8.
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4. Nature of ``Orphan Works'': Publication Status
Should the status of ``orphan works'' only apply to published
works, or are there reasons for applying it to
[[Page 3743]]
unpublished works as well? In Canada, for example, the system for
unlocatable copyright owners only applies to published works. What are
the reasons for applying it to unpublished works? If ``orphan work''
status would apply to unpublished works, how would such a system
preserve the important right of first publication recognized by the
Supreme Court in Harper & Row?\14\ What are the negative consequences
of applying such a system to unpublished works?
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\14\ See generally Harper & Row, Publishers, Inc. v. Nation
Enters., 471 U.S. 539, 550-555 (1985).
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5. Effect of a Work Being Designated ``Orphaned'
However a work is identified and designated as ``orphaned,'' what
would be the effects of such designation? Under systems for a
mandatory, formal registry of maintained works, like the 1909 Act, the
right to assert one's exclusive rights vis [agrave] vis others could
similarly be lost, in whole or in part, if the work was not contained
on the registry. Should this loss of rights apply only to the
particular work at the time of use, or only to the particular use or
user, or would it affect a permanent loss of rights as against all uses
and users?
Other possibilities include imposing a limitation on remedies for
owners whose works are ``orphaned''--without affecting the copyright
itself. For instance, under the Canadian approach, the Copyright Board
sets the license fees and other terms for the use and collects the
payments on behalf of the copyright owner should one ever be
identified. Under that approach, users could be confident that their
use of the work would not subject them to the full range of remedies
under the Copyright Act, but only an amount akin to a fee for use. At
the same time, copyright owners would not be concerned about the
inadvertent loss of rights from failure to pay the fee or take other
requisite action. Domestically, the Copyright Clearance Initiative of
the Glushko-Samuelson Intellectual Property Law Clinic of American
University's Washington College of Law is currently developing a
proposal that would limit the liability for users of orphan works and
not result in any loss of copyright per se on the part of the copyright
owner.\15\ Under that proposal, only a recovery of a reasonable royalty
would be allowed in infringement actions with respect to orphan works
where good faith efforts have been made to locate the copyright owner.
Are there other approaches that might be used? If a reasonable royalty
approach is used, how should it be determined in any given case? To
settle disputes as to the appropriate fee, is traditional Federal court
litigation the right dispute resolution mechanism, or should an
administrative agency be charged with resolving such disputes or should
another alternative dispute resolution mechanism be adopted?
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\15\ Pursuant to that proposal, copyright law would be amended
to limit liability for the use of works where the user has been
unable to locate the copyright holder after making good faith
efforts. Liability could be limited to a ``reasonable royalty'' or
the like, or could be akin to the limitation of U.S. Federal
Government liability to ``reasonable and entire compensation as
damages * * *, including minimum statutory damages.'' 28 U.S.C.
Sec. 1498(b) (2003). Complex issues raised by that proposal include
how to determine what constitutes ``good faith efforts'' to locate
the copyright owner and how to determine and/ or settle what a
reasonable royalty would be.
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Are there other measures that could be applied in cases of orphan
works? How would these, or any of the others described above, affect
the incentives for authors of such works, particularly small copyright
owners or individuals who might bear a greater burden than copyright
owners with more resources?
6. International Implications
How would the proposed solutions comport with existing
international obligations regarding copyright? For example, Article
5(2) of the Berne Convention generally prohibits formalities as a
condition to the ``enjoyment and exercise'' of copyright. For any
proposed solution, it must be asked whether it runs afoul of this
provision. Would a system involving limitations on remedies be
consistent with the enforcement provisions of the Agreement on Trade-
Related Aspects of Intellectual Property (TRIPS) or the prohibition
against conditioning the enjoyment or exercise of copyright on
compliance with formalities of TRIPS and other international agreements
to which the U.S. is party? Would such proposals satisfy the three-step
test set forth in TRIPS, Art. 13, requiring that all limitations and
exceptions to the exclusive rights be confined to ``certain special
cases that do not conflict with the normal exploitation of the work and
do not unreasonably prejudice the legitimate interests of the right
holder'? Are there any other international issues raised by a proposed
solution?
Dated: January 21, 2005.
Marybeth Peters,
Register of Copyrights.
[FR Doc. 05-1434 Filed 1-25-05; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 1410-30-P