Study on the Right of Making Available; Request for Additional Comments, 41309-41310 [2014-16537]
Download as PDF
Federal Register / Vol. 79, No. 135 / Tuesday, July 15, 2014 / Notices
Dated: July 11, 2014.
Katherine Ward,
Executive Assistant to the Vice President for
Legal Affairs & General Counsel.
[FR Doc. 2014–16758 Filed 7–11–14; 4:15 pm]
BILLING CODE 7050–01–P
LIBRARY OF CONGRESS
U.S. Copyright Office
[Docket No. 2014–2]
Study on the Right of Making
Available; Request for Additional
Comments
U.S. Copyright Office, Library
of Congress.
ACTION: Request for additional
comments.
AGENCY:
The U.S. Copyright Office
seeks further comments on the state of
U.S. law recognizing and protecting
‘‘making available’’ and
‘‘communication to the public’’ rights
for copyright holders. This request
provides an opportunity for interested
parties to address issues raised in prior
written comments and during the public
roundtable held on May 5, 2014, as well
as express their views on recent legal
developments.
DATES: Comments must be received no
later than 5:00 p.m. EDT on August 14,
2014.
ADDRESSES: All comments should be
submitted electronically. To submit
comments, please visit https://
www.copyright.gov/docs/
making_available/. The Web site
interface requires submitters to
complete a form specifying name and
organization, as applicable, and to
upload comments as an attachment via
a browser button. To meet accessibility
standards, commenting parties must
upload comments in a single file not to
exceed six megabytes (‘‘MB’’) in one of
the following formats: A Portable
Document File (‘‘PDF’’) format that
contains searchable, accessible text (not
an image); Microsoft Word;
WordPerfect; Rich Text Format (‘‘RTF’’);
or ASCII text file format (not a scanned
document). The form and face of the
comments must include both the name
of the submitter and organization. The
Office will post all comments publicly
on the Office’s Web site exactly as they
are received, along with names and
organizations. If electronic submission
of comments is not feasible, please
contact the Office at 202–707–1027 for
special instructions.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Maria Strong, Senior Counsel for Policy
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with NOTICES
SUMMARY:
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:46 Jul 14, 2014
Jkt 232001
and International Affairs, by telephone
at 202–707–1027 or by email at
mstrong@loc.gov, or Kevin Amer,
Counsel for Policy and International
Affairs, by telephone at 202–707–1027
or by email at kamer@loc.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. Background
The Copyright Office is undertaking a
study at the request of Congress to
assess the state of U.S. law recognizing
and protecting ‘‘making available’’ and
‘‘communication to the public’’ rights
for copyright holders, particularly in the
digital age. As part of its review, the
Office issued a Notice of Inquiry (the
‘‘Notice’’) on February 25, 2014,1
seeking comments from the public on
the following general issues: (1) How
the existing bundle of exclusive rights
under Title 17 covers the making
available and communication to the
public rights in the context of digital ondemand transmissions such as peer-topeer networks, streaming services, and
music downloads, as well as more
broadly in the digital environment; (2)
how foreign laws have interpreted and
implemented the relevant provisions of
the WIPO Internet Treaties; 2 and (3) the
feasibility and necessity of amending
U.S. law to strengthen or clarify our law
in this area. The Office also posed
additional questions on each of these
topics.
The Office received twenty-seven
written comments from various
interested parties in response to the
Notice. On May 5, 2014, the Office held
a public roundtable in Washington, DC
to hear stakeholder views on these
issues. Commenters and participants in
the roundtable expressed a variety of
views on a broad range of topics. The
Notice, public comments, the agenda for
the public roundtable, and the transcript
of the roundtable proceedings are
posted on the Copyright Office Web
site.3 A video recording of the
roundtable will be posted on the Web
site when it becomes available.
Commenters and roundtable
participants generally agreed that
current U.S. law, properly interpreted,
provides rights that are equivalent to the
making available and communication to
the public rights required by the WIPO
Internet Treaties. There was
disagreement, however, over whether
1 Study on the Right of Making Available;
Comments and Public Roundtable, 79 FR 10571
(Feb. 25, 2014).
2 WIPO Copyright Treaty art. 8, Dec. 20, 1996, 36
I.L.M. 65; WIPO Performances and Phonograms
Treaty arts. 10, 14, Dec. 20, 1996, 36 I.L.M. 76.
3 See Making Available Study, U.S. Copyright
Office, https://www.copyright.gov/docs/
making_available/.
PO 00000
Frm 00064
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
41309
and how particular provisions of Title
17 may apply to various activities in the
digital context. For example, several
stakeholders argued that the
unauthorized uploading of a
copyrighted work to a shared network
folder that is accessible to the public
constitutes a violation of the exclusive
right of distribution under 17 U.S.C.
106(3). Others disagreed, arguing that
direct or circumstantial evidence that
another user has downloaded a copy of
that file is necessary to establish an
infringement of the distribution right by
the uploader. The roundtable discussion
and initial written comments also
highlighted issues such as whether a
digital file is a ‘‘material object[]’’ for
purposes of the statutory definitions of
‘‘copies’’ and ‘‘phonorecords’’; 4 the
relevance of legislative history to the
construction of the distribution right;
the role of secondary liability theories in
assessing the United States’
implementation of the relevant treaty
provisions; and the use of evidence
provided by a copyright owner’s
investigator in digital filesharing cases.
Following the Office’s roundtable
discussions, on June 25, 2014, the
Supreme Court decided American
Broadcasting Cos., Inc. v. Aereo, Inc.5
The case involved a service, Aereo, that
used thousands of dime-sized antennas
to allow subscribers to capture and
watch television programs over the
Internet as the programs were being
broadcast over the air. When a
subscriber selected a program to watch
on Aereo’s Web site, the system would
create a subscriber-specific copy of the
program that would then be streamed to
the subscriber’s computer or Internetconnected device. The Court held that
this activity infringed the exclusive
right of the owners of the copyrights in
the programs to perform those works
publicly.6
A critical aspect of the Court’s
decision was its interpretation of Title
17’s ‘‘Transmit Clause.’’ That clause
provides that the public performance
right afforded to copyright owners
under Section 106 includes the
exclusive right ‘‘to transmit or otherwise
communicate a performance . . . of the
work . . . to the public, by means of any
device or process, whether the members
of the public capable of receiving the
performance . . . receive it in the same
place or in separate places and at the
same time or at different times.’’ 7
4 See
17 U.S.C. 101.
U.S. ___, No. 13–461, 2014 U.S. LEXIS 4496
(June 25, 2014).
6 See 17 U.S.C. 106(4).
7 Id. section 101 (definition of ‘‘To perform . . .
a work ‘publicly’ ’’).
5 573
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15JYN1
41310
Federal Register / Vol. 79, No. 135 / Tuesday, July 15, 2014 / Notices
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with NOTICES
Finding Aereo’s activities ‘‘substantially
similar to those of the [cable television]
companies’’ that Congress intended to
reach when it updated the public
performance right in 1976, the Court
held that ‘‘Aereo, and not just its
subscribers, ‘perform[ed]’ (or
‘transmit[ted]’)’’ within the meaning of
the statute.8 The Court further
concluded that Aereo performed
copyrighted works ‘‘publicly,’’
notwithstanding that each transmission
was made to a single subscriber from a
personal copy, holding that ‘‘when an
entity communicates the same
contemporaneously perceptible images
and sounds to multiple people, it
transmits a performance to them
regardless of the number of discrete
communications it makes.’’ 9
Justice Scalia, joined by Justices
Thomas and Alito, dissented,
concluding that Aereo did not
‘‘perform’’ within the meaning of
Section 106(4). The dissenting Justices
reasoned that, because Aereo’s
subscribers, not the company itself,
selected the programs to be streamed,
the resulting performances were not
‘‘the product of Aereo’s volitional
conduct,’’ and therefore Aereo could not
be held directly liable for
infringement.10
II. Request for Comment
The Office invites further written
comments on the issues raised in the
Notice, including from parties who did
not previously address those subjects, or
those who wish to amplify or clarify
their earlier comments or respond to
issues raised during the public
roundtable. In addition, the Office is
interested in commenters’ views
regarding the Supreme Court’s opinion
in Aereo and how that opinion may
affect the scope of the rights of making
available and communication to the
public in the United States. Specifically,
commenters may wish to address the
following questions:
1. To what extent does the Supreme
Court’s construction of the right of
public performance in Aereo affect the
scope of the United States’
implementation of the rights of making
available and communication to the
public?
2. How should courts consider the
requirement of volitional conduct when
assessing direct liability in the context
8 Aereo, 2014 U.S. LEXIS 4496, at *19 (alterations
added). See 17 U.S.C. 101 (‘‘To ‘transmit’ a
performance or display is to communicate it by any
device or process whereby images or sounds are
received beyond the place from which they are
sent.’’).
9 Aereo, 2014 U.S. LEXIS 4496, at *28.
10 Id. at *42 (Scalia, J., dissenting).
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:46 Jul 14, 2014
Jkt 232001
of interactive transmissions of content
over the Internet, especially in the wake
of Aereo?
3. To what extent do, or should,
secondary theories of copyright liability
affect the scope of the United States’
implementation of the rights of making
available and communication to the
public?
4. How does, or should, the language
on ‘‘material objects’’ in the Section 101
definitions of ‘‘copy’’ and
‘‘phonorecord’’ interact with the
exclusive right of distribution, and/or
making available and communication to
the public, in the online environment?
5. What evidentiary showing should
be required to prove a copyright
infringement claim against an
individual user or third-party service
engaged in unauthorized filesharing?
Should evidence that the defendant has
placed a copyrighted work in a publicly
accessible shared folder be sufficient to
prove liability, or should courts require
evidence that another party has
downloaded a copy of the work? Can
the latter showing be made through
circumstantial evidence, or evidence
that an investigator acting on the
plaintiff’s behalf has downloaded a copy
of the work?
6. Please provide any additional
comments or suggestions regarding
recommendations or proposals the
Copyright Office might wish to consider
as it concludes its study.
A party choosing to respond to this
request need not address all of these
topics, but the Office requests that
responding parties clearly identify and
separately address those subjects for
which a response is submitted.
Commenters also may address any other
issues pertinent to the Office’s review.
Dated: July 10, 2014.
Karyn A. Temple Claggett,
Associate Register of Copyrights.
[FR Doc. 2014–16537 Filed 7–14–14; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 1410–30–P
NATIONAL AERONAUTICS AND
SPACE ADMINISTRATION
[Notice 14–071]
NASA Advisory Council; Institutional
Committee; Meeting
National Aeronautics and
Space Administration.
ACTION: Notice of Meeting.
AGENCY:
In accordance with the
Federal Advisory Committee Act, Public
Law 92–463, as amended, the National
Aeronautics and Space Administration
announces a meeting of the NASA
SUMMARY:
PO 00000
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Advisory Council (NAC) Institutional
Committee. This committee reports to
the NAC.
DATES: Tuesday, July 29, 2014, 8:00
a.m.–3:00 p.m., Local Time
ADDRESSES: NASA Langley Research
Center, 5 Langley Boulevard, Building
2101, Room 205B, Hampton, VA 23681
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Mr.
Todd Mullins, NAC Institutional
Committee Executive Secretary, NASA
Headquarters, Washington, DC 20546,
202–358–3831.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The
meeting will be open to the public up
to the seating capacity of the room. This
meeting is also available telephonically
and by WebEx. You must use a touch
tone phone to participate in this
meeting. Any interested person may dial
the toll free access number 844–467–
6272 or toll access number 720–259–
6462, and then the numeric participant
passcode: 415447 followed by the #
sign. To join via WebEx, the link is
https://nasa.webex.com/, the meeting
number is 397 119 933, and the
password is IC–072914; (Password is
case sensitive.) Note: If dialing in,
please ‘‘mute’’ your telephone. The
agenda for the meeting will include the
following:
—Mission Support Overview
—NASA IT Overview
—Acquisition, Contracts, and Grants
Processing Overview
Attendees will be requested to sign a
register and to comply with NASA
Langley Research Center (LaRC) security
requirements, including the
presentation of a valid picture ID before
receiving access to NASA Langley
Research Center. Foreign nationals
attending this meeting will be required
to provide a copy of their passport and
visa in addition to providing the
following information no less than 10
working days prior to the meeting: Full
name; gender; date/place of birth;
citizenship; visa/green card information
(number, type, expiration date);
passport information (number, country,
telephone); employer/affiliation
information (name of institution,
address, country, telephone); title/
position of attendee. To expedite
admittance, attendees with U.S.
citizenship and Permanent Residents
(green card holders) can provide
identifying information 3 working days
in advance by contacting Ms. Cheryl
Cleghorn, via email at
cheryl.w.cleghorn@nasa.gov or by
telephone at 757–864–2497. It is
imperative that the meeting be held on
this date to accommodate the
E:\FR\FM\15JYN1.SGM
15JYN1
Agencies
- Library of Congress
- U.S. Copyright Office
[Federal Register Volume 79, Number 135 (Tuesday, July 15, 2014)]
[Notices]
[Pages 41309-41310]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2014-16537]
=======================================================================
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
LIBRARY OF CONGRESS
U.S. Copyright Office
[Docket No. 2014-2]
Study on the Right of Making Available; Request for Additional
Comments
AGENCY: U.S. Copyright Office, Library of Congress.
ACTION: Request for additional comments.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The U.S. Copyright Office seeks further comments on the state
of U.S. law recognizing and protecting ``making available'' and
``communication to the public'' rights for copyright holders. This
request provides an opportunity for interested parties to address
issues raised in prior written comments and during the public
roundtable held on May 5, 2014, as well as express their views on
recent legal developments.
DATES: Comments must be received no later than 5:00 p.m. EDT on August
14, 2014.
ADDRESSES: All comments should be submitted electronically. To submit
comments, please visit https://www.copyright.gov/docs/making_available/. The Web site interface requires submitters to complete a
form specifying name and organization, as applicable, and to upload
comments as an attachment via a browser button. To meet accessibility
standards, commenting parties must upload comments in a single file not
to exceed six megabytes (``MB'') in one of the following formats: A
Portable Document File (``PDF'') format that contains searchable,
accessible text (not an image); Microsoft Word; WordPerfect; Rich Text
Format (``RTF''); or ASCII text file format (not a scanned document).
The form and face of the comments must include both the name of the
submitter and organization. The Office will post all comments publicly
on the Office's Web site exactly as they are received, along with names
and organizations. If electronic submission of comments is not
feasible, please contact the Office at 202-707-1027 for special
instructions.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Maria Strong, Senior Counsel for
Policy and International Affairs, by telephone at 202-707-1027 or by
email at mstrong@loc.gov, or Kevin Amer, Counsel for Policy and
International Affairs, by telephone at 202-707-1027 or by email at
kamer@loc.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. Background
The Copyright Office is undertaking a study at the request of
Congress to assess the state of U.S. law recognizing and protecting
``making available'' and ``communication to the public'' rights for
copyright holders, particularly in the digital age. As part of its
review, the Office issued a Notice of Inquiry (the ``Notice'') on
February 25, 2014,\1\ seeking comments from the public on the following
general issues: (1) How the existing bundle of exclusive rights under
Title 17 covers the making available and communication to the public
rights in the context of digital on-demand transmissions such as peer-
to-peer networks, streaming services, and music downloads, as well as
more broadly in the digital environment; (2) how foreign laws have
interpreted and implemented the relevant provisions of the WIPO
Internet Treaties; \2\ and (3) the feasibility and necessity of
amending U.S. law to strengthen or clarify our law in this area. The
Office also posed additional questions on each of these topics.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ Study on the Right of Making Available; Comments and Public
Roundtable, 79 FR 10571 (Feb. 25, 2014).
\2\ WIPO Copyright Treaty art. 8, Dec. 20, 1996, 36 I.L.M. 65;
WIPO Performances and Phonograms Treaty arts. 10, 14, Dec. 20, 1996,
36 I.L.M. 76.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Office received twenty-seven written comments from various
interested parties in response to the Notice. On May 5, 2014, the
Office held a public roundtable in Washington, DC to hear stakeholder
views on these issues. Commenters and participants in the roundtable
expressed a variety of views on a broad range of topics. The Notice,
public comments, the agenda for the public roundtable, and the
transcript of the roundtable proceedings are posted on the Copyright
Office Web site.\3\ A video recording of the roundtable will be posted
on the Web site when it becomes available.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\3\ See Making Available Study, U.S. Copyright Office, https://www.copyright.gov/docs/making_available/.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Commenters and roundtable participants generally agreed that
current U.S. law, properly interpreted, provides rights that are
equivalent to the making available and communication to the public
rights required by the WIPO Internet Treaties. There was disagreement,
however, over whether and how particular provisions of Title 17 may
apply to various activities in the digital context. For example,
several stakeholders argued that the unauthorized uploading of a
copyrighted work to a shared network folder that is accessible to the
public constitutes a violation of the exclusive right of distribution
under 17 U.S.C. 106(3). Others disagreed, arguing that direct or
circumstantial evidence that another user has downloaded a copy of that
file is necessary to establish an infringement of the distribution
right by the uploader. The roundtable discussion and initial written
comments also highlighted issues such as whether a digital file is a
``material object[]'' for purposes of the statutory definitions of
``copies'' and ``phonorecords''; \4\ the relevance of legislative
history to the construction of the distribution right; the role of
secondary liability theories in assessing the United States'
implementation of the relevant treaty provisions; and the use of
evidence provided by a copyright owner's investigator in digital
filesharing cases.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\4\ See 17 U.S.C. 101.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Following the Office's roundtable discussions, on June 25, 2014,
the Supreme Court decided American Broadcasting Cos., Inc. v. Aereo,
Inc.\5\ The case involved a service, Aereo, that used thousands of
dime-sized antennas to allow subscribers to capture and watch
television programs over the Internet as the programs were being
broadcast over the air. When a subscriber selected a program to watch
on Aereo's Web site, the system would create a subscriber-specific copy
of the program that would then be streamed to the subscriber's computer
or Internet-connected device. The Court held that this activity
infringed the exclusive right of the owners of the copyrights in the
programs to perform those works publicly.\6\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\5\ 573 U.S. ------, No. 13-461, 2014 U.S. LEXIS 4496 (June 25,
2014).
\6\ See 17 U.S.C. 106(4).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
A critical aspect of the Court's decision was its interpretation of
Title 17's ``Transmit Clause.'' That clause provides that the public
performance right afforded to copyright owners under Section 106
includes the exclusive right ``to transmit or otherwise communicate a
performance . . . of the work . . . to the public, by means of any
device or process, whether the members of the public capable of
receiving the performance . . . receive it in the same place or in
separate places and at the same time or at different times.'' \7\
[[Page 41310]]
Finding Aereo's activities ``substantially similar to those of the
[cable television] companies'' that Congress intended to reach when it
updated the public performance right in 1976, the Court held that
``Aereo, and not just its subscribers, `perform[ed]' (or
`transmit[ted]')'' within the meaning of the statute.\8\ The Court
further concluded that Aereo performed copyrighted works ``publicly,''
notwithstanding that each transmission was made to a single subscriber
from a personal copy, holding that ``when an entity communicates the
same contemporaneously perceptible images and sounds to multiple
people, it transmits a performance to them regardless of the number of
discrete communications it makes.'' \9\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\7\ Id. section 101 (definition of ``To perform . . . a work
`publicly' '').
\8\ Aereo, 2014 U.S. LEXIS 4496, at *19 (alterations added). See
17 U.S.C. 101 (``To `transmit' a performance or display is to
communicate it by any device or process whereby images or sounds are
received beyond the place from which they are sent.'').
\9\ Aereo, 2014 U.S. LEXIS 4496, at *28.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Justice Scalia, joined by Justices Thomas and Alito, dissented,
concluding that Aereo did not ``perform'' within the meaning of Section
106(4). The dissenting Justices reasoned that, because Aereo's
subscribers, not the company itself, selected the programs to be
streamed, the resulting performances were not ``the product of Aereo's
volitional conduct,'' and therefore Aereo could not be held directly
liable for infringement.\10\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\10\ Id. at *42 (Scalia, J., dissenting).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
II. Request for Comment
The Office invites further written comments on the issues raised in
the Notice, including from parties who did not previously address those
subjects, or those who wish to amplify or clarify their earlier
comments or respond to issues raised during the public roundtable. In
addition, the Office is interested in commenters' views regarding the
Supreme Court's opinion in Aereo and how that opinion may affect the
scope of the rights of making available and communication to the public
in the United States. Specifically, commenters may wish to address the
following questions:
1. To what extent does the Supreme Court's construction of the
right of public performance in Aereo affect the scope of the United
States' implementation of the rights of making available and
communication to the public?
2. How should courts consider the requirement of volitional conduct
when assessing direct liability in the context of interactive
transmissions of content over the Internet, especially in the wake of
Aereo?
3. To what extent do, or should, secondary theories of copyright
liability affect the scope of the United States' implementation of the
rights of making available and communication to the public?
4. How does, or should, the language on ``material objects'' in the
Section 101 definitions of ``copy'' and ``phonorecord'' interact with
the exclusive right of distribution, and/or making available and
communication to the public, in the online environment?
5. What evidentiary showing should be required to prove a copyright
infringement claim against an individual user or third-party service
engaged in unauthorized filesharing? Should evidence that the defendant
has placed a copyrighted work in a publicly accessible shared folder be
sufficient to prove liability, or should courts require evidence that
another party has downloaded a copy of the work? Can the latter showing
be made through circumstantial evidence, or evidence that an
investigator acting on the plaintiff's behalf has downloaded a copy of
the work?
6. Please provide any additional comments or suggestions regarding
recommendations or proposals the Copyright Office might wish to
consider as it concludes its study.
A party choosing to respond to this request need not address all of
these topics, but the Office requests that responding parties clearly
identify and separately address those subjects for which a response is
submitted. Commenters also may address any other issues pertinent to
the Office's review.
Dated: July 10, 2014.
Karyn A. Temple Claggett,
Associate Register of Copyrights.
[FR Doc. 2014-16537 Filed 7-14-14; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 1410-30-P