The goal is the promotion of the progress of science and the arts--not to enrich copyright holders.
The Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA) has been taking a lot
of people to court--basically, harassing folks in an attempt to curb
file-sharing. The $220,000 verdict against Jammy Thomas got a lot of news (and
probably worried a lot of folks). However, on appeal (i.e., after a new court
not cherry-picked by the RIAA to try the case looked things over), the RIAA
lost… again. ZDnet covered the
verdict.
At its heart, the verdict reaffirms that simply making a copyrighted work
available is not the same as actually distributing the work. In other words,
copyright holders actually have to show harm before they can sue the pants off
of people. More importantly, it lends yet more weight to the notion that our
copyright laws are woefully out of date and that the RIAA has systematically
overstepped the legal bounds of its authority under existing copyright law.
Fundamentally, there will need to be a reassessment of copyright and a
rebalancing of the rights of copyright holders and the benefits of copyright to
the general public. As Article I, Section 8 of the United States Constitution
clearly states:
"The Congress shall have power to...promote the progress of science
and useful arts, by securing for limited times to authors and inventors the
exclusive right to their respective writings and discoveries."
The goal is the promotion of the progress of science and the arts--not to
enrich copyright holders. Clearly, we've strayed from that core mission and
Congress should reaffirm its commitment to the original function of copyright.
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