07-30-2010, 11:30 AM | #46 | |
Wizard
Posts: 1,462
Karma: 6061516
Join Date: May 2008
Location: Cascais, Portugal
Device: Kindle PW, Samsung Galaxy Note Pro 12.2", OnePlus 6
|
Quote:
|
|
07-30-2010, 12:58 PM | #47 | |
fruminous edugeek
Posts: 6,745
Karma: 551260
Join Date: Oct 2006
Location: Northeast US
Device: iPad, eBw 1150
|
Quote:
|
|
Advert | |
|
08-09-2010, 08:09 PM | #48 |
Groupie
Posts: 185
Karma: 1110435
Join Date: Jul 2010
Location: Shanghai, China
Device: Sibrary G5
|
Hey - Over.
I was just reading through this thread when I suddenly noticed a bug crawling down my screen. I had actually raised my hand to swat my screen when the thing scurried up and disappeared behind my browser window, prompting a closer investigation. Turned out to be your e-signature. If I crack my screen, can I send you the bill |
08-09-2010, 08:57 PM | #49 | |
Groupie
Posts: 185
Karma: 1110435
Join Date: Jul 2010
Location: Shanghai, China
Device: Sibrary G5
|
Quote:
First, all the rights consumers have with respect to pbooks derive from the fact that you have purchased a physical item. For purposes of this discussion, a pbook actually consists of two parts -- the physical book, and the content. When you buy a book you are not purchasing the content (ownership of which remains with the copyright holder), you are only purchasing the physical book. The problem is, in the case of a pbook the content is physically inseparable from the medium, necessitating the complex web of copyright laws in the US designed to balance the rights of the book's "co-owners". On the one hand, because you own the physical part of the book, US law has developed the first sale doctrine (most countries have similar laws), which entitle the purchaser to do as he will with the physical book, and the copyrighted content goes along for the ride. This by no means means the purchaser owns the content, however, which is why there are things you are not allowed to do with the pbook you own -- such as photocopy its pages. Now, keeping in mind the fact that your rights WRT a pbook derive from the physicality of the book and do not extend to the content (save for things such as the first sale doctrine), let's take a look at ebooks. Digital technology has made possible what wasn't before. Since it is now possible to distribute intellectual property directly, divorced from any physical medium, all those rights we had WRT the physical book, such as first-sale, do not apply. Arguments such as "but I can give a pbook as a gift" miss this critical distinction. It is first-sale doctrine which entitles you to gift pbooks. Look up the history of the first-sale doctrine and you'll see that publishers and copyright owners fought it tooth and nail before it became law. This is why ebooks are licensed, not sold. Because an ebook is pure intellectual property without a physical medium, content producers fear "selling" an ebook could be legally construed as a transfer of ownership of the IP itself. Now, Amazon, B&N, Fictionwise, Apple, et alia, are trying to work out with copyright owners ways of getting intellectual content into your hands that don't imply legal transfer of ownership of the IP. Unlike computer software, in which a EULA is agreed to during installation, not purchase, there is at present no way to force the recipient of a gifted ebook to "sign" a legal agreement. So imagine if Amazon allowed you to gift an ebook. Since the gift recipient did not enter into any legal agreement, he would presumably be legally free to do whatever he wants with the thing -- torrent it, send out copies to all his friends, whatever. Suddenly there's this legally unencumbered copy of someone's IP floating around the digital ether, with no way for the content owners to stuff the genie back in the bottle. Allowing people to send ebooks as gifts would create a huge loophole in the wall of legal protection content producers are trying to build around the content they own. Yeah, I don't much like it either, which is why I don't buy DRM-encumbered ebooks. But I understand. Last edited by Nathanael; 08-09-2010 at 09:08 PM. |
|
08-09-2010, 09:45 PM | #50 |
Groupie
Posts: 185
Karma: 1110435
Join Date: Jul 2010
Location: Shanghai, China
Device: Sibrary G5
|
Personally, I detest gift certificates, but that may just be my upbringing. I was taught that the biggest part of a gift was the time and effort and thought that went into it. Tossing money at someone in lieu of an actual gift was, in my family, the cheap-n-easy, the metaphorical equivalent of saying, "Yeah, it's your birthday, but I couldn't be bothered, so here's cash instead."
|
Advert | |
|
08-09-2010, 09:54 PM | #51 | |
Guru
Posts: 787
Karma: 1575310
Join Date: Jul 2009
Device: Moon+ Pro
|
Quote:
2) Why shouldn't the first sale doctrine apply to ebooks? As far as I can see the only 'legal' reason you have fewer rights with ebooks is because of lobbying/bribery by the publishing industry. And, of course, it's legal because it's lawyers who are accepting the bribes. |
|
08-09-2010, 09:59 PM | #52 | |
Guru
Posts: 787
Karma: 1575310
Join Date: Jul 2009
Device: Moon+ Pro
|
Quote:
|
|
08-09-2010, 10:30 PM | #53 | ||
Groupie
Posts: 185
Karma: 1110435
Join Date: Jul 2010
Location: Shanghai, China
Device: Sibrary G5
|
Are we talking about US law here?
In the US, you are only allowed to make copies of IP under the strictures of Fair Use as set forth in Sections 107 and 108 of US Copyright Law, which is where the well-known four tests come from. Rarely would fair use permit copying of an entire work even for personal use. In addition, you have the copyright notices found in the forematter of nearly any published book. Here are a couple of examples: Quote:
Quote:
First, because first-sale doctrine derives from the physical medium of a pbook. You are entitled to do as you see fit with a pbook only because you own the physical book. The intellectual content (which you don't own) goes along for the ride only because it's inseparable from the physical medium. Second, because you license ebooks, there is no sale, and thus no first-sale doctrine applies. |
||
08-09-2010, 11:21 PM | #54 | |||||
Grand Sorcerer
Posts: 5,185
Karma: 25133758
Join Date: Nov 2008
Location: SF Bay Area, California, USA
Device: Pocketbook Touch HD3 (Past: Kobo Mini, PEZ, PRS-505, Clié)
|
Quote:
1) Purpose/nature of use: A home copy for annotation purposes leans toward fair use. It's not commercial, and is obviously related to review, might be educational (is at least related to intense personal study of the document), might be a preliminary step towards a published review or critique, which are fair uses. The fact that the copy might be significantly changed--a paperback blown up to letter-sized pages, for example, for easier reading, or a coffee-table sized book shrunk to letter sized--also leans toward fair use, as the copy is shifted in a way that's not otherwise available. 2) The nature of the copyrighted work--Published, meaning some level of copying is likely fair use; if the original work is fiction, fair use is less well-indicated. 3) The amount copied: "Whole thing" leans strongly against fair use. However, entire copies for personal use have been approved, in the matter of Sony vs Universal--you can copy a TV show to watch it later. 4) The effect of the use upon the potential market: Nil. A home copy for annotation has *no* affect on the market. Can't even claim it prevented the person from buying another print copy to mark up; part of the reason for copying might've been to include extra margins, or expand the text to large enough to make notes between the words visible. Two measures strongly for fair use, one against, one mixed leaning towards against. But these aren't evaluated as binary yes/no traits with 1 point given to each and judges flipping a coin on ties. They're considered as a whole, and "whole book copied for study/markup purposes" leans very strongly toward fair use, even though it is the entire contents of the original. Quote:
Quote:
There's also the matter of "in print or not"--if the book's out of print, you can't just buy an extra copy to mark up. Quote:
They want to sell ebooks as goods, not as services. They want to not be responsible for how they interact with the buyer's other property, like they would for books--if you buy a heavy book and it breaks your bookshelf, that's your problem; if you buy an ebook and its javascript crashes your computer, ditto. But possibly not, if you didn't buy a book, but a "right to read certain content under certain conditions"--if they're selling licenses-to-use, they're liable for a lot more returns and potential damages, if they didn't make clear what conditions that use could take place in. (Also, if they're selling a license-to-use, they may be required to make that use possible. They may not be able to get away with "only works on Windows computers with IE installed;" if they sold the right-to-read, they may be required to either provide a method for that reading, or a refund.) Quote:
If the terms are, you hand me money, I hand you content, and we never speak again... I don't get to say how you can use the content, and you can resell it when you're done with it. |
|||||
08-10-2010, 12:27 AM | #55 | |
Just a kid from Bklyn
Posts: 135
Karma: 4448
Join Date: Aug 2010
Location: NYC
Device: Kindle 3 Wi-Fi; Samsung Galaxy Tab 7
|
The headline now (2010-08-10 03:26:23 UTC) reads:
Quote:
|
|
08-10-2010, 11:59 AM | #56 | ||||||||
Groupie
Posts: 185
Karma: 1110435
Join Date: Jul 2010
Location: Shanghai, China
Device: Sibrary G5
|
Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
All you've done is argue that there are circumstances under which wholesale copying of a copyrighted work could be permitted under fair use. But I was not arguing that wholesale copying could never be permitted. I was replying to calvin-c's blanket statement (see post #51) that "you're allowed to photocopy a pbook if you want to." What you're arguing is quite different. Quote:
They don't want to sell them at all. They want to license them. Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
I hate to sound like a broken record, but case law, please. Otherwise, all I can say is good luck with that. |
||||||||
08-10-2010, 12:45 PM | #57 | ||||||
Grand Sorcerer
Posts: 5,185
Karma: 25133758
Join Date: Nov 2008
Location: SF Bay Area, California, USA
Device: Pocketbook Touch HD3 (Past: Kobo Mini, PEZ, PRS-505, Clié)
|
Quote:
Why would it be more legal to copy one's CDs to MP3 than to copy one's books into a 3-ring binder? Saying "but that hasn't been found legal in court" is ridiculous--we don't have an "it's illegal until a court says otherwise" system. (I'm looking for early copyright cases about early Xerox/mimeo machines; since all that was cleared up before the internet existed, there's not much info online.) Quote:
Quote:
... reproduction in copies or phonorecords or by any other means specified by that section, for purposes such as criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching (including multiple copies for classroom use), scholarship, or research, is not an infringement of copyright. ---- Directly states that fair use includes copying for research, comment, and scholarship, and strongly implies that fair use is not limited to the listed purposes. Quote:
Of course not. Just because their contract says something doesn't mean they can legally insist on those terms. Quote:
Quote:
|
||||||
08-10-2010, 02:15 PM | #58 |
Wizard
Posts: 4,293
Karma: 529619
Join Date: May 2007
Device: iRex iLiad, DR800SG
|
|
08-10-2010, 02:18 PM | #59 | |
Wizard
Posts: 4,293
Karma: 529619
Join Date: May 2007
Device: iRex iLiad, DR800SG
|
Quote:
The reason you can't is because the industry has artificially stripped that right from you with DRM/DMCA. |
|
08-10-2010, 02:23 PM | #60 | ||
Wizard
Posts: 4,293
Karma: 529619
Join Date: May 2007
Device: iRex iLiad, DR800SG
|
Yes. These issues have already been well established in US law. Format shifting, for example, is legal.
Quote:
Quote:
Last edited by Shaggy; 08-10-2010 at 02:32 PM. |
||
|
Similar Threads | ||||
Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
Kindle free book: Give Me Fever | greencat | Deals and Resources (No Self-Promotion or Affiliate Links) | 5 | 05-04-2010 11:10 AM |
Fiction Book Designer not give me all options? | jhempel24 | Sony Reader | 0 | 04-13-2010 04:17 AM |
Kindle users give 1 star rating to book with delayed ebook release | anurag | News | 203 | 01-29-2010 08:33 PM |
If you could give only ONE book to an alien .... | cklammer | Reading Recommendations | 78 | 12-21-2009 09:06 PM |
New Sony Reader Ads: "Why give Mom one book...?" | Alexander Turcic | Sony Reader | 9 | 05-09-2007 04:32 PM |