Friday, April 03, 2026

Commemorating 50 Years of the 1976 Copyright Act, Stanford Law School

The Copyright Act at 50: Evolution and Impact

Shira Perlmutter

Copyright Act took a long time, with input from lots of interest groups and attention to detail—hundreds of contending and overlapping interests were involved. Hard to imagine this process today. Desire to avoid need for constant amendment/future-proofing. But did they do enough? Didn’t create a general right to exploit the work publicly, which would have obviated the need for continued parsing the scope of each right, like public performance.

Some changes over time, most prominently the DMCA. More than codifying common law principles; tech-specific obligations. Less durable as business models evolved; might have unexpected consequences in Cox. [Hunh? Cox is not a DMCA case.] 1201: some provisions are highly detailed and technical, and outmoded. But the rulemaking process is flexible and fair-use based and has produced new exceptions. Allows © owners to rely more securely on TPMs, enabling the celestial jukebox. Fair use has also played a critical role as a flexible judicial tool. The bones are solid, even with AI.

Q: registration requirement is tough on creators. Can’t get protection [statutory damages] before infringement.

A: You can register—the issue is remedies.

Chris Sprigman: why do you think that it was ill-considered to add to fair use that unpublished status isn’t dispositive?

A: b/c courts had already walked back their overreading of unpublished status. Worried about accretion of more specific language in a statute that’s supposed to deal with rapid change. [Seems like a levels of generality issue; unpublished seems general enough to be robust.]

Sprigman: it’s always good when Congress talks back to the Supreme Court.

Laura Heymann: say more about moral rights?

A: A patchwork in the US; would love to see Dastar reversed and some additional protections provided.

Q: how to design AI training licensing framework?

A: Doesn’t have proposal but thinks it would be possible; easier in areas w/high value works. Small low value works w/authors who aren’t organized are harder. At some point there may be a statutory solution building on experience in the private sector with making a licensing system work.

Tyler Ochoa: Cox v. Sony?

A: Personal views! Shocked at how short the decision was and how little thought there seemed to be about the implications. Threw out decades of © law quickly w/o analysis. Repercussions well beyond the facts. Congress clearly intended to continue the separate treatment of © contributory liability from patent and aiding and abetting liability. [Don’t you know that only Supreme Court cases count? My line on this: “This is easy and you are all stupid” is a poor way to think in drafting most Supreme Court decisions.]

Do We Need a New One? William Fisher

Statute has grown by accretion, not revision, and only when there can be agreement by major stakeholders. Hypothesis: useful to start fresh. Draft from Oren Bracha, William Fisher, Ruth Okediji, and Talha Syed. A couple of points: Limit scope of adaptation right. Reproduction right/substantial similarity is almost overlapping with it, but matters when there’s no reproduction. Independent of exclusive rights of © owner, wants to have rights attached to, at least initially, authors rather than owners—right to attribution, generously defined, and to integrity, narrowly defined. Shorter duration. Compulsory licenses not just for music covers but for educational uses.

Sprigman: Why is remuneration for authors the first principle? The Court has said that’s a means to an end. Why not “vibrant creative environment”?

A: order isn’t meant to connote hierarchy, but worth thinking about. Utilitarianism isn’t the only goal; fair treatment of artists is also a goal.

Q: like the use of lessons from laws around the world. Was that a reason to delete statutory damages, which aren’t available in many places around the world?

A: there are well-known specific defects in the US system of statutory damages. The substantial range for willful infringement per work becomes bizarre & punitive. There are workable models that would function more like liquidated damages in contracts. The functions of augmented damages, including incentives to bring suit, could be adequately performed by enhanced damages for abusive positions (doubling) and attorneys’ fees. Fees should be more likely for small creators and less likely for deep pocketed plaintiffs.

About Face: Deepfakes and the Misuse of Copyright Madhavi Sunder

Denmark is granting © in a person’s face to combat deepfakes. Incentives/progress/access aren’t just buzzwords but the raison d’etre of our law. But roughly a decade ago, things began changing, not just b/c of AI: using © as a tool to redress noneconomic social harm: safety, protection, dignity, reputation.

Denmark goes beyond using © to serve non © ends/do an end run around 230, as past proposals in the US have done (thanks for the shout-out) to expanding the scope of © beyond what it should cover.

Denmark’s amendment covers life of the author+50 years and protects all natural persons against digitally generated images of personal characteristics. Limitations for caricature, satire, parody, criticism of power, social criticism, etc. But this would cover foreign nationals as well. Includes a takedown right. Drafters suggest that the new right is not really copyright but personality right, and the law should be changed to be officially called the “Copyright, etc. Act.” [It’s ©, Jim, but not as we know it!] Attribution and integrity for authors is not the goal; broad dignity harms to individuals, society, and democracy.

EU is considering whether to adopt a similar proposal. US may be heading in a similar direction—Jennifer Rothman identifies convergence between ROP and ©. Digital replica report by Copyright Office suggests new laws are needed.

Faces and voices aren’t authored in the way © has traditionally required; we allow soundalikes. However, some people (Balganesh, Gilden) suggest that © has always had concerns with dignity. Likewise, the Court allowed photographers to own © in depictions of faces. This tension raises charges of unfairness, as in Moore v. University of California. Descendants of enslaved people can’t claim ownership of daguerrotypes of their ancestors; Prince, who decried ownership of his name and music, becomes the subject of a photographer’s © claim at the Supreme Court. Surveillance: your face belongs to us. The issue about face is not whether property, but whose property.

IP and blackface: Jim Crow was a minstrel character—“love and theft” of black dances and bodies—loved and despised, coveted and expropriated. Elvis painstakingly listened to recordings of Black artists on repeat so he could copy them, and Tennessee then called its voice ROP law the ELVIS Act—irony! Digital replicas are the next frontier. Abba has created a concert featuring digital replicas of their younger selves; they sang and danced in motion capture suits with monitors and cameras everywhere. This show will last as long as people will pay to see it.

Sunder’s about-face: She criticized the goal of efficiency in © and argued for considering other interests like semiotic democracy. Is this the same thing? No. © can’t be everything everywhere all at once. Doctrinal coherence matters. Doctrinal collapse b/t © and privacy has structural harms including threats to the rule of law. © is too consequential and long-lasting and easy-to-get to be careless about; statutory damages and notice and takedown are big deals.

© is about authors, whether you’re a high protectionist or low protectionist. In an age where we’re all curated online, we should have a low threshold for protection, but not create mutant copyrights far from the real thing.

Cathy Gellis: Implications for national treatment?

A: will think about it—interested in whether we’re replicating it for ourselves.

Lemley: is the right alienable in Denmark? © as a regime is usually about being able to sell rights.

A: all premised on consent.

Quasi-copyright and the Copyright Act, Rebecca Tushnet

My focus here is on 1201 and 1202. My argument is that their evolution in the courts shows something about the workings of the legal system and the incentives of both plaintiffs and judges.

As most of you know, 1201 prohibited circumvention of access controls and trafficking in technology that circumvented rights controls or access controls, with a variety of statutory exceptions that are essentially too complicated to be used, and a provision for allowing additional temporary exceptions after Copyright Office rulemaking, but only for the direct access control circumvention provisions not for the trafficking provisions, so you have to both have an exemption and somehow get the technical capacity to use the exemption which is illegal for someone to give you.

Tony Reese wrote a great article explaining the benefit to the copyright owner of characterizing a technological protection as an access control rather than a rights control – no individual circumvention is allowed in the absence of an exception– thus in every case, copyright owners plead that a TPM is an access control, and courts have uniformly accepted this characterization—so this supposed four part scheme of access and rights controls, direct circumvention and trafficking, quickly became a two part scheme involving only access controls. Rights controls immediately lapsed into desuetude.

Because of how broad 1201’s access control provision was it initially seemed to offer copyright owners broad new rights. This was especially important for manufacturers of machines that happened to have software in them—providing compatible products, for example, could be reframed as violating access controls. However, in two prominent decisions courts—using interpretive methodologies that would probably not be adopted today—interpreted 1201 to try to prevent its use to control markets that aren’t really based on the value of the copyrighted works; the major cases are perhaps tenuously based in the statutory language but they probably do track what Congress thought it was doing.

These two decisions, Chamberlain and Lexmark, dampened the appetite among many non-copyright-reliant manufacturers to use 1201 to try to control repair and resale. There’s a real case to be made that 1201 has importance for phones and apps, but it’s no longer a big part of copyright litigation.

In addition, the rulemaking process proved so exhausting that the Copyright Office decided to streamline it for existing exemptions. And because the trafficking provisions only cover traffickers, not customers of traffickers, people with exemptions use circumvention software they got from elsewhere and we all just generally ignore the issue in the exemption process. I would suggest that, at least for the time being, we’re no longer in a legal innovation phase with 1201.

Meanwhile, 1202 litigation has exploded. 1202 covers knowing removal of copyright management information that facilitates infringement or provision of false CMI, and although there were always a few cases about it, it has been discovered in the last decade—as causes of action sometimes are because lawyers are innovative—and gained new prominence in cases like the AI training cases. 1202 doesn’t require registration in order to get statutory damages and so questions about what constitutes removal of CMI or the relevant intent are actively being litigated. Pam Samuelson and her coauthors have written a good article about the arguments, but I just want to point out that lawyers have done exactly what they’re good at: pushing the boundaries of the law in order to achieve interests for their clients even when the more obvious claim—like copyright infringement—won’t work for copyright-specific reasons.

Given this increased use, it’s not surprising that we see countervailing theories attempting to limit the growth of 1202 cases. One court even recently dismissed a lawsuit brought under 1202(b)(1) against ChatGPT on Article III standing grounds—under the TransUnion case, 1202 can’t constitutionally authorize a private cause of action for internal CMI removal that goes no further—plaintiffs didn’t allege any actual harm beyond the removal of CMI in the training dataset, so they didn’t have standing to seek damages, and they didn’t plausibly allege that a substantial amount of their creative expression would appear in future results, so they didn’t have standing to seek injunctive relief.

I have some broader thoughts about this incredibly abbreviated account, based on Carol Rose’s classic article, Crystals and Mud in Property Law: Fools and scoundrels are the bane of the law because they make it unpalatable to follow the most natural understanding of a clear rule. Hard edged rules written into law—like the prohibition on circumventing access controls—predictably lead scoundrels to abuse their fellow citizens, as in Lexmark and Chamberlain, and subjects fools to disproportionate liability, especially where statutory damages are involved. Courts then understandably push back, inventing equitable limits and turning a clear rule into something more muddy. But muddy rules are expensive to navigate and create their own set of problems.

In Carol Rose’s story about real property law, legislatures eventually intervene to create a new and different clear rule designed to solve the problems created by existing fools and scoundrels under the previous regime. This works for a while and then the infinite creativity of humans, both good and bad, produces new fools and new scoundrels.

I think Rose’s story has key lessons for copyright. (1) Future proofing is something of a myth. It’s worth trying, because immediate obsolescence when a few facts about the market change is not good—I’m looking at you, vessel boat hull and mask works protection and 512(b)—but the idea that you can set and forget a law ignores the fact that lawyers and judges are human beings—at least for now—and human beings are collectively really good at finding ambiguity or opportunities for arbitrage.

(2) If we face a situation where we don’t trust that the legislature will intervene, or can intervene productively, then things get a lot harder. When that’s combined with a judicial approach to statutes that focuses on the dictionary meaning of specific words rather than an appreciation for the structure of the legislation and the context in which the legislature was operating, scoundrels are likely to prosper and fools are likely to be abandoned to their fates. I don’t have solutions but I am predicting a long roll in the mud.

Lots of interesting comments; I think both the legislative process (actual deliberation) and judicial concepts of the role (neither entirely free to disregard the statute in favor of the common law/equity nor laser focused on individual words in isolation from the structure and purpose of the law as a whole) need change from where they are.

Tony Reese pointed out that the Copyright Office testified in the legislative history that many things were "clear" but didn't need to be in the statute--should we revise to make those things explicit? I think the issue w/that is the fools/scoundrels problem--one reason you might not write out the exact wording is that you can't foresee what will happen when clever lawyers get their hands on it directly and treat a principle as a rule. This is a classic content moderation problem! 

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