Computer Ethics, Spring 2011
Corboy 301 (moved from soc 013)
Week 3
Readings
Read all of chapter 1 and the first three sections of chapter 4, especially:
What is ethics? 1.4.1
What is intellectual property?: §4.1.1
Eisner (below)
Michael Eisner's June 2000 statement to Congress (edited, from
Halbert & Ingulli 2004).
Here are some other ethical responses to copyright infringement:
http://www.crews.org/curriculum/ex/compsci/articles/ethics.htm:
We are
taught from a young age that plagiarism (copying other's
work) is wrong. One might say, it is like cheating on a test when
you burn a
CD copy of someone else's music or game. However, most people don't
associate copying of songs, games, videos, etc. as being wrong. Just
because it is easy and hard to get caught does not make it right. The
rights of the creator must be protected if we are going to be a society
that is creative and inventive.
Does copyright violation have anything to do with plagiarism?
For more cluelessness about file sharing v plagiarism, see http://www.guidetoonlineschools.com/tips-and-tools/textbook-piracy#2.
http://guweb2.gonzaga.edu/faculty/alfino/dossier/Papers/COPYRIGH.htm:
good essay distinguishing copyright from property (see ¶ 2). Also see:
The legal principle at stake in the
[1774] Donaldson case [establishing that copyright is term-limited] has significant
ethical
implications. If copyright is a form of limited monopoly granted through
statute, based on policy considerations, and not an absolute common law
right, the ethical burden of proof shifts to copyright holders to show
that their property interests are more important than the public good of
having access to information. The ethical issue takes a
metaphysical turn
when we ask, as we shall in section II, just what it is that constitutes
the intellectual property protected by copyright. Again, if the
"substance"
of intellectual property is constituted by statutory fiat, then the limitations
of the right are not analogous to limitations of natural rights.
http://beadwork.about.com/od/rsourcesforprofessionals/a/EthicsCopyright.htm:
you might not think home craftwork would be fraught with such copyright
issues. But there are. However, is the issue described in the following
(spliced) paragraph really one of copyright?
[Copyright] does not cover ideas, techniques, or facts. There are some
ethical considerations to take into account though. Is
this an original technique developed by your teacher that hasn't been
published yet? Are you taking potential customers away from your
teacher?
Does it matter? Don't students have a right to surpass their teachers? Or compete with their teachers?
Is copyright just a matter of "obeying the law"? Or do we have some
deeper obligation to musicians and authors?
For-profit infringement (or textbook piracy)
Let's search for the database textbook I'm using, Elmasri &
Navathe, on google. Notice what most of the first hits are: places selling
.pdf copies. These originate either with a leaked .pdf copy, a cracked
e-book copy, or (still most often) someone's buying a book and feeding
it page by page into a scanner.
Before that, some oversees publishers would republish "international
editions" of expensive textbooks, typically in paperback/newsprint
form, and typically entirely without the permission of the original
publisher.
There is also some free textbook file-sharing out there. Look at http://www.textbooktorrents.com. Is this about book-file-sharing? Or book-file profit? (Actually, they're sort of our of business, at least in terms of distributing torrents.)
Legally, when the copies are being sold, there are more legal tools. You can follow the money. First of all, there is
money. Typically, even if the website is offshore, legal pressure can
be brought against visa/mastercard/paypal to refuse to process payments
for new books. Then, the site's bank account can be frozen or seized.
Still, all this has the textbook world very worried.
Why would people buy CDs? Some answers from ~2002:
- consistent quality
- "an official, completed object. It's
satisfying"
- concrete
- album notes, photos
- light
& portable
Is there ANY way nowadays in which a CD is better than the download? (Of
course, now you can buy from iTunes instead.)
What happens to the notion that there was some equilibrium
reached between file-sharing and CD sales based on CD's still having an
advantage? Did Eisner start this
by agreeing that, as free music became more prevalent, it was
appropriate to cut prices on for-sale music?
John Rawls & justice / ethics
Imagine that you have not yet been born,
and you do not yet know to what station in life you will be
born. How does this affect your ideas about music pricing?
Your perspective might be very different if you knew you were going
to be a songwriter, versus (just) an ordinary listener. However, you
might also argue that (a) you like music, and therefore (b) you want
musicians to be able to earn a living, because otherwise there won't be much music.
Once upon a time, the music industry was against the idea of ripping tracks from your CDs. That might still violate the "license" terms that come with your CD, though nobody cares.
In 1998 the RIAA sued Diamond Multimedia over their Rio MP3 player. The
RIAA lost, mostly on the basis of the Sony v Universal Supreme Court
case (below).
If respect for musicians is an issue, why are we so comfortable taking the sound files off CDs? After all, there is still the possibility that the music industry can sell us the digital tracks in addition.
This is an easy one to dismiss: if we buy a CD and have ripped the
tracks, we've still paid for the music. Still, it's not difficult to
imagine a world in which Diamond Multimedia lost their lawsuit about
the legitimacy of their Rio MP3 player. Then where would we stand on
this?
Per-track pricing at iTunes: how does this change the musician's market model?
- "filler tracks" are irrelevant. It no longer works to have one or two good songs, and pad out the rest of your CD with these.
- more people may buy your best tracks; the commitment in buying one track is minor compared to one CD
Fundamental conflict: evolution of technology v rights of creators
How do you feel about the idea that technological evolution might make
some of our rights irrelevant? It's hard to give personal examples that
apply to average people.
Is going back to the old way an option?
Ethical arguments about copying
Baase p 228
- I can't afford CDs
- Because I can't afford CDs and so would never buy them, Big Music
loses nothing when I download instead.
- I'm only downloading isolated tracks, not entire CDs
- It's ok to take from large, wealthy corporations. (Baase dismisses
this. Is there any underlying justification?)
- I wouldn't be buying it regardless
- I have a right to give gifts (of tracks) to my friends
- personal file-sharing is so small as to be inconsequential.
- Everyone does it.
- I'd be happy to get permission to use zzzz, but don't know where.
This is the Eyes on the Prize
problem: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eyes_on_the_Prize.
- I'm posting as a public service
- I'm posting to address some important social goal, not for sharing per se. (Legally,
this is called transformative
use)
- This is Fair Use.
What do you think of these?
Ethics of copyright: is it all about respecting the creator's right to
sell their product, that is, is it dependent on the creator's business
model?? Isn't this extremely utilitarian?
Bottom line: if we want the old rules to continue, we need to find ways
to ensure return on investment for creators of music, movies, and
books.
If.
And such ways to ensure ROI (Return On Investment, a standard B-school
acronym) can be legal, technical (eg DRM), or social.
Again, how did we get into a situation where our ethical decision making
involved analysis of ROI?
Fair Use
Legal basis for fair use
One of the rights accorded to the owner of copyright is the right
to reproduce or to authorize others to reproduce the work in copies or
phonorecords. This right is subject to certain limitations found in
sections 107 through 118 of the copyright act (title 17, U.S. Code).
One of the more important limitations is the doctrine of "fair use."
Although fair use was not mentioned in the previous copyright law, the
doctrine has developed through a substantial number of court decisions
over the years. This doctrine has been codified in section 107 of the
copyright law.
Section 107 contains a list of the various purposes for
which the reproduction of a particular work may be considered "fair,"
such as criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching, scholarship, and
research. Section 107 also sets out four factors to be considered in
determining whether or not a particular use is fair:
- the purpose and character of the use, including whether such use
is of commercial nature or is for nonprofit educational purposes;
- the nature of the copyrighted work;
- amount and substantiality of the portion used in relation to
the
copyrighted work as a whole; and
- the effect of the use upon the potential market for or value
of
the copyrighted work.
Factor 1 relates to how you are using
the work, and is not exclusively tied to the commercial/nonprofit
issue. It may help, for example, if your use is transformative:
transforming the original work into something new and at least
partially unrelated. Factor 2 relates to the work itself: is it
fiction? Nonfiction? Text? Video? Music? A performance?
Question: does the First Amendment imply some sort of fair-use right
to quote other works?
More often, Fair Use is seen as following from the "to promote useful
knowledge"
social-contract justification under the Copyright Clause of the
Constitution.
The standard example of fair use is quotes used in a book
review. Such quotes are essential to provide an example of the author's
style, which may
be a central issue in the review. However, asking permission clearly
sacrifices the critic's impartiality.
Factor 1 is traditionally used to justify all photocopying by schools,
but this is clearly overbroad.
PARODIES are also often considered as an Item 1 fair-use exemption,
although you should be parodying the work in question and not just
using the work in a parody of something else. (Maybe not; see 1964 MAD
case below)
Here are a few parodies:
- South Park (almost any episode)
- Weird Al
- www.xkcd.com/c78.html
- Bored of the Rings
- 2 Live Crew and the Campbell
case
Generally the creator of a parody does NOT need permission of the
original author.
Factor
2 refers to whether the work is nonfiction or fiction, etc. Fundamental
news facts (and even sometimes images, eg individual frames from the
Zapruder film of the Kennedy assassination) have been ruled "fair use".
(The film itself is still under copyright, held now by the Sixth Floor
Museum.)
Sports scores are still debatable, though copyright claims for these appear to have waned.
Factor 3: "one chapter" is probably way over the fair-use boundary.
Quoting 400 words from Gerald Ford's biography was ruled not fair use.
(However, the 400 words in question were those where Ford explained his
pardon of Nixon.)
Music sampling, in the sense of 1-2 second
snips used in another work, might
be fair use. 10-20 seconds is a
lot longer.
Factor 4: This is the big one. See Sony v Universal. A tricky problem
with Factor 4, however, is that while there might not be a market now
for the use in question, such a market could potentially develop. That
is, a market for music sampling rights might develop (has developed!)
if sampling were not claimed as fair use. A market for prerecorded
television shows has definitely developed. Later we'll consider a case
in which the plaintiff claimed that they were considering marketing
thumbnail images, and thus images.google.com's "republication" of thumbnail images was not Fair Use.
Sony v Universal City Studios, 1984
SCOTUS decision: http://www.law.cornell.edu/copyright/cases/464_US_417.htm,
by Justice Stevens.
This is the "Betamax" case, to at least some degree about fair use.
Universal Studios sued Sony for selling the betamax VCR, on the theory
that Sony was thus abetting copyright violation, and profiting from it.
District court found for Sony
Appellate court (9th circuit) found for Universal Studios
Supreme court, 5-4 decision, found for Sony
Paragraph 12 of the Supreme Court decision (emphasis added), addressing
the Four Factors of Fairness:
The District Court concluded that
noncommercial home use recording of material broadcast over the public
airwaves was a fair use
of copyrighted works and did not constitute copyright infringement. It
emphasized the fact that the material was broadcast free to the public
at large, the noncommercial character of the use, and the private
character of the activity conducted entirely within the home. Moreover,
the court found that the purpose of this use served the public interest
in increasing access to television programming, an interest that "is
consistent with the First Amendment policy of providing the fullest
possible access to information through the public airwaves. Even when
an entire copyrighted work was recorded, the District Court regarded
the copying as fair use "because there is no accompanying reduction in
the market for ‘plaintiff’s original work.‘"
Is that part about "broadcast free to the public" and the "private
character" explicit in the Four Factors? What about the part about
"serving the public interest"? Note the consideration of the effect on
the market. Note also that in 1984 there was no market for recordings
of TV shows; there is now.
The Supreme Court decision then went on to introduce the doctrine of Substantial Non-Infringing Uses,
still with us today and sometimes abbreviated SNIUs.
This case apparently legalized taping of TV programs for later viewing
(but NOT archiving). Universal did not show how it was damaged, which
didn't help their case any (presumably they thought it was obvious?).
Under the doctrine of SNIU, Substantial Non-Infringing Uses, a
distributor cannot be held liable for users' infringement (that is, for
contributory infringement) so long as the tool is capable of
substantial noninfringing uses. The precise role of "Fair Use" in the
court's reasoning is not as clear as it might be, but this certainly
DID play a role. It was actually the District Court that made that case.
SCOTUS does NOT really spell out "Fair Use" four-factor analysis,
though they hint at it in the section "Unauthorized Time-Shifting"
(paragraph 46). It was the District Court that came to the Fair Use
conclusion.
Paragraph 54: "One may search the
Copyright Act in vain for any sign that the elected representatives of
the millions of people who watch television every day have made it
unlawful to copy a program for later viewing at home"
However, there is also the following very interesting line from the
Sony decision, in paragraph 46:
Although every commercial use of copyrighted
material is presumptively an unfair exploitation of the monopoly
privilege that
belongs to the owner of the copyright, ...
This is a remarkably strong statement about commercial use! The Supreme
Court has backed away from this considerably in later decisions.
Fred Rogers testified in favor of Sony
Harry Blackmun, Thurgood Marshall, Lewis Powell, and William
Rehnquist dissented.
Criminal copyright violations
In 1994 David LaMacchia ran a "warez" site as an MIT student; that is,
he created an ftp site for the trading of (bootleg) softwarez.
He did not profit from the software downloads; in this, his site was a
precursor of today's file-sharing systems.
Because of the lack of a profit motive, the government lost its case against him. The
NET act
was passed by congress to address this in future cases. It
criminalizes some forms of noncommercial
copyright infringement, which until then hadn't
apparently been illegal. (Copyright owners like the RIAA, or in
LaMacchia's case Microsoft, could still go after you).
17 U.S.C. § 101
§ 101. Definitions
Add the following between "display" and "fixed":
The term "financial gain" includes receipt, or expectation of
receipt, of anything of value,
including the receipt of other copyrighted works.
Does this cover peer-to-peer filesharing? What if you are just
distributing music you love?
17 U.S.C. §§ 506 & 507
§ 506. Criminal
offenses
(a) Criminal
Infringement.--Any person who infringes a copyright willfully and for
purposes of commercial advantage or private financial gain shall be
punished as provided in
section 2319 of title 18. either--
- for purposes of commercial advantage or private financial
gain, or
- by the reproduction or
distribution, including by electronic means,
during any 180-day period, of 1 or more copies or phonorecords of 1 or
more copyrighted
works, which have a total retail value of more than $1,000,
shall be
punished as provided
under section 2319 of title 18. For
purposes of this subsection, evidence of reproduction or
distribution of a copyrighted work, by itself, shall not be sufficient
to establish willful
infringement.
How does the NET act affect file sharing?
Note that the law includes both reproduction and distribution.
Note the retail $1000 cutoff. Arguably that is 1,000 tracks. So far,
prosecutors have been loathe to apply the NET act to music filesharers.
This is partly due, no doubt, to the added burden of proving "willful"
infringement: the law states that file sharing itself is not sufficient
to establish "willfulness" (infringement "with knowledge of or
'reckless disregard' for the plaintiffs' copyrights" -- arstechnica.com).
In 1994, mp3 file sharing had not yet become significant.
Napster
Napster was started June 1999. Content owners promptly sued, and Napster
lost in federal district court in 2000. The Ninth
Circuit appeals court then agreed to hear the case. They granted an
injunction allowing
Napster to continue operating until the case was decided, because they
took
seriously Napster's arguments that Napster might have "substantial
non-infringing uses" and that Napster was only a kind of search engine
while
the real copyright violators were the users. The Ninth Circuit
eventually found that Napster
did indeed have Substantial Non-Infringing Uses, but they ruled against
Napster by January 2001. After some negotiating, Napster was ordered in
March 2001 to remove infringing content,
which they technologically simply could not do, and so they shut down in
July of that year.
Bottom line: the Betamax videotaping precedent [below] was rejected
because,
although SNIUs existed for Napsster, Napster had actual knowledge of
specific infringing material and failed to act to block or remove it.
Also, Napster did profit from it.
However,
the court refused to issue an injunction for quite a while; it was
clear that the Betamax precedent was being taken very seriously.
Legality in Napster era: napster.com was a clearinghouse for who was
online, and what songs they held. Actual copying was between peers.
Did that make it ok?
Napster figured the RIAA would never bother with individual lawsuits
against users.
Were they right?
Are such suits justified?
What evidence is needed for subpoena?
Note that signed and indie musicians fare VERY differently under the
napster model!
Also note the long-term implications for "future fans"
IS napster like radio?
Napsterized business model for musicians: make money giving live concerts, not selling CDs.
IS THIS REALISTIC? IS THIS FAIR? IS THIS JUST LIFE?
Is this a case of "harm" being unequal to "wrong"?
Question: is it ethical to cause harm?
What about economic harm?
RIAA Lawsuits

Part of the Napster business model was that the RIAA wouldn't ever
bother to sue individual music-file-sharers. But when file-sharing
continued after Napster was closed down, the RIAA felt forced to do
just that.
File-sharing software works by sharing your
files too; advertising
your music folder(s) online when you join the service. Investigators
look for these, by participating in online file-sharing networks. They
record your IP address and the listed songs; they also generally
download a few of the songs.
Different software works different
ways. Kazaa shows a "share" folder. bittorrent shows your connection to
a torrent "tracker" site, but there's no notion of "shared files".
Step 1: The RIAA files a "John Doe" lawsuit against your ISP.
They
issue a subpoena to your ISP, asking for your name, and, if relevant,
the MAC address of your computer. These subpoenas are almost always in
a group, asking for multiple customer names.
One legal criticism of RIAA lawsuits has been over joining together
of multiple individuals in one ISP lawsuit. Normally you can't do that
unless you believe the cases are related.
Prior to December 19, 2003, the RIAA didn't need to sue ISPs: it could
subpoena ISP records without
a lawsuit, under a provision of the DMCA. But then a court ruled that
this DMCA provision did not apply to RIAA-type cases. [RIAA v Verizon]
The ISP usually complies, usually without contacting you. However, it
is possible for either the ISP or you (if the ISP contacts you) to file
in court to "quash" the subpoena. You do need a reason for that,
however. It *is* possible to file to quash without giving up your
identity, but you have to hire a lawyer.
Step 2: the RIAA now sends you a settlement letter, offering you a
chance to settle before the lawsuit is filed. The settlement offer is
usually something like $500-1000 per track. The RIAA may or may not
distinguish between tracks that showed up in your directory, and/or
tracks that they actually downloaded.
You can refuse to settle. However, in that case the RIAA will almost
certainly go to Step 3.
Once the possibility of a
lawsuit is raised, destroying evidence becomes both a civil and criminal
offense.
Step 3: The RIAA files a lawsuit. They are likely to ask for a
forensic copy of
your hard drives (they may ask for the hard drives themselves, but
you're under no obligation to give them up). An independent forensic
examiner will copy the drive, and determine whether or not the songs
are there. (The MAC address from Step 1 plays a role here in determining
whether they've got the right computer; so does other identifying
information about KaZaa, etc.)
The cost of settlement typically goes up a little at this point.
Some defenses that have NOT helped:
- the ISP is your school, and releasing school records is illegal.
(releasing names is not
illegal)
- you didn't know it was against the law.
Yes you did. Come on.
But it doesn't matter.
- you already owned the tracks on CD.
See the Gonzalez case; www.eff.org/wp/riaa-v-people-years-later.
Copyright
law allows you to make a backup copy of what you bought; there is no
provision for receiving your backup copy from someone else.
Some possibly valid defenses in court:
The problem with all these is that you don't want to be going to court,
and the RIAA does not have to consider these when settling.
It wasn't your computer.
Typically this is due to the ISP's
misidentification of you. Sometimes it's because someone jacked your
wi-fi. In this case the forensic examination of your computer will probably help.
Your roommate used your computer
Your
problem
here is proving that this is the case. In civil cases, the
burden-of-proof requirement for the plaintiff is much more modest than
in criminal cases.
Your kids used your computer
There is a very limited legal doctrine of parental responsibility.
Originally, the RIAA did sue parents, or made them settlement offers.
More recently, after several losses, the RIAA has been suing the minors
themselves. This is a little tricky; the court must appoint an
attorney, often at the RIAA's expense. Also, in Capitol_v_Foster,
Deborah Foster eventually won $68,000 in legal fees from the RIAA.
Foster's daughter did the downloading. (The case was brought in 2004;
the RIAA dropped their suit a year later but Foster continued with her
countersuit. The judge eventually ordered the award for legal costs
without a full trial.)
You didn't actually download any songs
What the RIAA has, as
evidence, isn't evidence of downloading. All they
have is evidence that you "offered" songs for downloading. At this
point it might matter a great deal whether the RIAA actually tried
downloading anything from your computer. Jammie Thomas had her case go
to trial (the first RIAA case to reach a jury trial; Tenenbaum's July
2009 trial was the second) and she lost and was ordered to pay
$220,000. But Judge Michael Davis later rethought this issue, rejected
the "offered for distribution" theory, and ordered a new trial. Alas,
the new trial reached a judgement against Thomas of $1.9 million.
Tenenbaum case
Joel Tenenbaum was caught downloading files by the
RIAA, and was offered their past settlement offer, typically about
$5000. He chose to fight. He got Harvard Law professor Charles Nesson to
take his case pro bono; Nesson
also involved his law-school class. They put up a vigorous and spirited
defense before Judge Nancy Gertner.
They lost.
When it came time to assess damages (July 31, 2009), the jury decided
$22,500 per track was fair, for
a total of $675,000. Oops.
Actually, a core part of Tenenbaum's defense, and the central part of
his appeal, is that the damages (and settlement offer) were
disproportionately high, and not tied to actual
damages. Normally, when you sue someone, all you can ask for is actual
damages. Actual retail cost of music tracks is about $1. Tenenbaum got socked with 22,500 times actual damages!
Tenenbaum's case was the second RIAA case to go to trial. Jammie
Thomas-Rasset was first; in her first case the verdict was $222,000.
Thomas-Rasset got a new trial; the second verdict was $1,920,000.
Moral: think hard about settling early.
Tenenbaum's music downloading appeared to be both intentional
and egregious; he had actually been sharing some 800 songs.
However, it was done when he was a student.
An interesting point about the case is how the judge dismissed the
fair-use claim based on the legal theory that fair use could not apply after
Apple opened its iTunes store; that is, once it became possible to buy
individual tracks, file-sharers lost any claim to fair use. That is,
the underlying justification for "fair use" was that mp3 tracks were
otherwise unavailable. Tenenbaum's appeal in part is about the idea
that until iTunes dropped DRM its music tracks were still not really
comparable to downloaded ones.
What do you think of this Fair Use argument?
See http://arstechnica.com/tech-policy/news/2009/07/o-tenenbaum-riaa-wins-675000-or-22500-per-song.ars.
and the links at the end to earlier articles.
It's really hard to generate much sympathy for the RIAA methods.
Consider, though, the theory that file sharing is a violation of their
copyrights, and that such individual lawsuits are the ONLYway to
proceed.
What's unfair about this process? What is fixable, within the
constraints of the US legal system?
Some things to think about:
- statuary damages for infringement
- rules for defendants who
cannot afford an attorney
- rules of evidence
RIAA-2
The RIAA has officially given up on filing lawsuits against infringers,
at least for now; they announced this policy in December 2008, just
after the Tenenbaum case (lawsuits still in the pipeline will
continue). The new policy is to work with ISPs to
- notify users of infringement for the first offense
- cut off
their internet access (perhaps slowing it for a while, first)
See http://www.wired.com/epicenter/2008/12/riaa-says-it-pl.
Why would ISPs want to go along with this plan? Here are a few reasons:
- file-sharers are also huge bandwidth hogs. (Linux users are too,
but there aren't enough of us to matter. (How many times a day do you
rebuild your kernel?)) The
broadband business model basically gives every customer the ability to
download several dozen gigabytes a day, but the hope is that most
customers will actually download somewhere in the range of dozens of
megabytes a day. File-sharers who download movies pretty solidly put
themselves in the heavy-downloaders camp, tying up resources for
everyone.
- The ISP might get sued. The RIAA probably wouldn't
win, but it would be an expensive hassle.
- It's the Right Thing
To Do. Knowingly cooperating with copyright infringement is wrong.
- Eventually,
the RIAA is likely to press for laws requiring
ISPs to cooperate. Better get started now.