3D Printing Jurassic Park: Copyright Law, Cultural Institutions, and Makerspaces

Matthew Rimmer
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引用次数: 2

Abstract

3D printing is a field of technology, which enabled the manufacturing of physical objects from three-dimensional digital models.The discipline of copyright law has been challenged and disrupted by the emergence of 3D printing and additive manufacturing. 3D Printing poses questions about the subject matter protected under copyright law. Copyright law provides for exclusive economic and moral rights in respect of cultural works – such as literary works, artistic works, musical works, dramatic works, as well as other subject matter like radio and television broadcasts, sound recordings, and published editions. Copyright law demands a threshold requirement of originality. There have been sometimes issues about the interaction between copyright law and designs law in respect of works of artistic craftsmanship. In addition, 3D printing has raised larger questions about copyright infringement. There has been significant debate over the scope of copyright exceptions – such as the defence of fair dealing, and exceptions for cultural institutions. Moreover, there has been debate over the operation of digital copyright measures in respect of 3D printing. The takedown and notice system has affected services and sites, which enable the sharing of 3D printing designs. Technological protection measures – digital locks – have also raised challenges for 3D printing. The long duration of copyright protection in Australia and the United States has also raised issues in respect of 3D printing.There has been great public policy interest into how copyright law will address and accommodate the disruptive technologies of 3D Printing. As a public policy expert at Public Knowledge, and as a lawyer working for Shapeways, Michael Weinberg has written a number of public policy papers on intellectual property and 3D Printing. Associate Professor Dinusha Mendis and her colleagues have undertaken legal and empirical research on intellectual property and 3D printing. In 2015, Professor Mark Lemley from Stanford Law School wrote about intellectual property and 3D printing in the context of work on the economics of abundance. As a practising lawyer, John Hornick has examined the topic of intellectual property and 3D printing. Comparative legal scholar Dr Angela Daly has written on the socio-legal aspects of 3D printing in 2016. The World Intellectual Property Organization in 2015 highlighted 3D printing.3D printing has provided new opportunities for cultural institutions to redefine their activities and purposes, and engage with a variety of new constituencies. 3D printing has also highlighted deficiencies in copyright law in respect of cultural institutions. Culturally and technologically specific exceptions for libraries, archives, and cultural institutions have proven to be ill-adapted for an age of 3D printing and makerspaces. The Australian Law Reform Commission has highlighted the need to modernise Australia’s copyright laws for the digital age. Likewise, the Productivity Commission has considered the question of copyright exceptions in its study of intellectual property arrangements in 2016. The Turnbull Government has contemplated somewhat more modest copyright reforms, with the draft legislation in the Copyright Amendment (Disability Access and Other Measures) Bill 2016 (Cth). Libraries, galleries, museums, and archives would all benefit from flexible copyright exceptions for cultural institutions to take full advantage of the possibilities of digitisation and 3D printing.
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3D打印侏罗纪公园:版权法,文化机构和创客空间
3D打印是一个技术领域,它使从三维数字模型制造物理对象成为可能。由于3D打印和增材制造的出现,版权法受到了挑战和破坏。3D打印提出了关于受版权法保护的主题的问题。著作权法规定了文学作品、艺术作品、音乐作品、戏剧作品等文化作品以及广播、电视广播、录音制品、出版物等其他客体的专有经济权利和精神权利。版权法对原创性提出了门槛要求。就工艺美术作品而言,著作权法与外观设计法之间的相互作用有时会出现问题。此外,3D打印还引发了更大的版权侵权问题。关于版权例外的范围——例如对公平交易的辩护,以及对文化机构的例外——一直存在重大争论。此外,关于3D打印的数字版权措施的操作一直存在争议。删除和通知系统影响了服务和网站,这些服务和网站可以共享3D打印设计。技术保护措施——数字锁——也给3D打印带来了挑战。澳大利亚和美国长期的版权保护也引发了3D打印方面的问题。版权法将如何处理和适应3D打印的颠覆性技术,已经引起了公共政策的极大兴趣。作为公共知识的公共政策专家和Shapeways的律师,Michael Weinberg撰写了许多关于知识产权和3D打印的公共政策论文。Dinusha Mendis副教授和她的同事对知识产权和3D打印进行了法律和实证研究。2015年,斯坦福大学法学院的马克·莱姆利(Mark Lemley)教授在研究富足经济学的背景下撰写了一篇关于知识产权和3D打印的文章。作为一名执业律师,约翰·霍尼克研究了知识产权和3D打印的主题。比较法律学者安吉拉·戴利博士在2016年就3D打印的社会法律方面写了一篇文章。世界知识产权组织在2015年强调了3D打印。3D打印为文化机构重新定义其活动和目的提供了新的机会,并与各种新的支持者接触。在文化机构方面,3D打印也凸显了著作权法的不足。图书馆、档案馆和文化机构在文化和技术上的特殊例外已被证明不适应3D打印和创客空间的时代。澳大利亚法律改革委员会强调了数字化时代对澳大利亚版权法进行现代化改革的必要性。同样,生产力促进委员会在2016年的知识产权安排研究中考虑了版权例外的问题。特恩布尔政府已经考虑了一些更温和的版权改革,在2016年版权修正案(残疾人访问和其他措施)法案(Cth)中立法草案。图书馆、画廊、博物馆和档案馆都将受益于文化机构灵活的版权例外,以充分利用数字化和3D打印的可能性。
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