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Showing posts with label Lexology. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Lexology. Show all posts

Monday, December 30, 2013

Legal Claims of Copyright Infringement Based on Copying of Scholarly Articles

Effective Use of Copyright?
Lawyers processing applications for patents before the U.S. Patents and Trademark Office (PTO) sometimes copy scientific articles from academic journals to help comply with a duty to disclose "prior art" that bears on the patentability of the claimed inventions.

Makes sense, right? AND, even though the articles in the journals are copyrighted (and, in my opinion, by the wrong people - the academics that performed the research should hold all rights) this kind of use of copyrighted material properly and sanely falls within the 'fair use' doctrine set forth in the U.S. Copyright Act.

BUT --- the publishers of commercial academic journals (of which I am no fan) think NOT  --- AND have taken these patent processors to court for copyright infringement.

Guess who's wining these little publishing dramas?

On second thought, let's NOT guess. Let's find out in this interesting resource article from Lexology in cooperation with ACC (Association of Corporate Counsel) written by Edwin L. Fountain and Jessica D. Bradley:


Can a patent application violate the copyright laws?

Recent decisions from two federal district courts have rebuffed efforts by publishers of scientific journals to claim copyright violations based on the copying of the publishers' articles for purposes of preparing patent applications submitted to the U.S. Patent & Trademark Office ("PTO"). While these decisions confirm that copying and distributing articles in conjunction with preparing patent applications should fall within the "fair use" exception to copyright infringement, the plaintiff publishers have indicated their intentions to seek appellate review of the issue.

Plaintiffs' Allegations

Plaintiffs in the cases are the American Institute of Physics and the publishing houses John Wiley & Sons, Inc. and Blackwell Publishing, Ltd., which produce and distribute scientific journals that contain scholarly articles in several scientific disciplines. (Blackwell Publishing is a subsidiary of John Wiley & Sons.) The defendants are law firms that prosecute patent applications before the PTO as well as foreign patent offices. The law firms downloaded or copied various articles published by the plaintiffs. The firms subsequently submitted copies of those articles to the PTO as evidence of "prior art" in conjunction with applications for patents and distributed copies to their clients, lawyers within the firm working on the applications, and, in some instances, foreign patent attorneys.

In American Institute of Physics and John Wiley & Sons, Inc. v.Schwegman, Lundberg & Woessner, P.A. (D. Minn. Civ. No. 12-528), plaintiffs initially asserted that the law firm engaged in unauthorized copying by submitting copies of the articles to the PTO. The plaintiffs subsequently abandoned that allegation (after the PTO itself intervened in the case on the side of the defendant) and focused their claims on the firm's downloading, storing, internal copying, and distribution of the articles by email. The firms had downloaded 18 articles, most of them from the PTO's own website but others from varied sources. The firm then copied the articles to the firm's document management system, where they were accessible to lawyers in the firm. The publishers asserted that these activities, along with viewing the documents and emailing copies of certain articles to the firm's clients or other attorneys, constituted infringement. On August 30, Judge Richard Kyle of the District of Minnesota entered summary judgment for the defendants, adopting a prior report and recommendation of a magistrate judge.

In two other cases, American Institute of Physics and Blackwell Publishing, Ltd. v. Winstead PC (N.D. Tex. No. 3:12-CV-1230) and John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. and American Institute of Physics v. McDonnell Boehnen Hulbert & Berghoff LLP (N.D. Ill. No. 12 C 1446)—and again, after intervention by the PTO—the plaintiffs similarly amended their complaints to disclaim any allegation of infringement based on submission of copies of copyrighted articles to the PTO, or on retention of file copies of the works submitted to the PTO. Instead, the amended complaints focus on the defendant law firms' unauthorized copying of articles from plaintiffs' journals, including the allegation that the firms charged their clients for the copying and thereby directly profited from its infringement. In Winstead, Judge Barbara Lynn of the Northern District of Texas issued a written decision granting summary judgment for the defendants on December 3. The McDonnell Boehnen case, brought in the Northern District of Illinois, is currently still in the discovery stage.

A fourth case, John Wiley & Sons, Inc. and American Institute of Physics v. Hovey Williams LLP (D. Kan. No. 5:12-cv-4041), was voluntarily dismissed after the defendant took a license from the Copyright Clearance Center.

The Fair Use Defense

The defendants in these cases invoked the fair use doctrine set forth in the U.S. Copyright Act. The Copyright Act provides that copyright infringement occurs when a person copies or distributes a copyrighted work without authorization. The Act also provides, however, that certain uses of copyrighted material are "fair use" and thus do not constitute infringement. The Act lists several examples of fair use, including "criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching[,] or research," and then goes on to set forth four nonexclusive factors for determining whether a particular use of copyrighted material is fair use:
 
1.    The purpose and character of the use, including whether such use is of a commercial nature or is for nonprofit educational purposes;
2.    The nature of the copyrighted work;
3.    The amount and substantiality of the portion used in relation to the copyrighted work as a whole; and
4.    The effect of the use upon the potential market for or value of the copyrighted work.

Because a finding that a use is "fair" depends upon an after-the-fact judicial balancing of these and other factors, the Supreme Court has insisted that a fair-use analysis may not "be simplified with bright-line rules, for the statute, like the doctrine it recognizes, calls for case-by-case analysis." Campbell v. Acuff-Rose Music, Inc., 510 U.S. 569, 577 (1993).

The Defendants' and the PTO's Arguments






Friday, March 23, 2012

Copyright Reinstatement Deemed Legal for Certain Works --- What Happens to Public Domain?

Supreme Court -
 "Right or Wrong, That's
My Ruling!"  
First, the definition of public domain RE literary or artistic works:

Public domain is the status of a literary work or an invention whose copyright or patent has expired or that never had such protection --- In other words, all initially accrued rights to the creator have expired. (I often wondered why they should ever expire ... but, I can see the other side to this, mainly for educational purposes).  


Many professions, researchers and teaching professionals (think libraries) rely on free access to works in the public domain to carry out their missions. So, what happens if a great old masterpiece has its copyright reinstated ? What is the fallout ?
 
You know what I think the supreme court did here ? The thing they always do the best --- create a clusterfuck !
 
Meaghan Hemmings Kent, writing on Lexology.com for Venable LLP has this insight:  
 
On January 18, 2012, the Supreme Court confirmed 6-2 that certain works that had entered the public domain could have their copyright restored. Golan v. Holder, Case No. 10-545. The works affected are estimated to number in the millions and could include films by Alfred Hitchcock, such as The Birds; books by Virginia Woolf, such as Mrs. Dalloway; symphonies by Prokofiev, such as Peter and the Wolf; and paintings by Picasso, such as Guernica.

The decision will not only affect the copyright owners, but also anyone who relies on public domain works, particularly those creating derivative works, reprint publishers, musicians, orchestra conductors, teachers and film archivists.

The case considered the constitutionality of a portion of the Copyright Act, 17 U.S.C. § 104A, that was enacted in 1994 by Congress in order to comply with the international accord, the Berne Convention. Section 104A allows for certain works that had previously entered the public domain to have their copyright reinstated. The types of works are non-U.S. works that were protected in their country of origin, but were not protected in the U.S. for the following three reasons:

1.They were exempt from copyright protection at the time of publication (i.e., Soviet-created works).

2.They were sound recordings fixed before 1972 (the U.S. did not protect sound recordings prior to 1972).

3.The author did not comply with U.S. statutory formalities of copyright under the old 1909 Copyright Act (such as the old requirement of copyright notice).

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