An Intersystemic View of Intellectual Property and Free Speech

IF 1.6 3区 社会学 Q1 LAW George Washington Law Review Pub Date : 2011-10-12 DOI:10.2139/SSRN.1943210
M. Bartholomew, John Tehranian
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引用次数: 3

Abstract

Intellectual property regimes operate in the shadow of the First Amendment. By deeming a particular activity as infringing, the law of copyright, trademark, and the right of publicity all limit communication. As a result, judges and lawmakers must delicately balance intellectual property rights with expressive freedoms. Interestingly, each intellectual property regime strikes the balance between ownership rights and free speech in a dramatically different way. Despite a large volume of scholarship on intellectual property rights and free speech considerations, this Article represents the first systematic effort to detail, analyze, and explain the divergent evolution of expression-based defenses in copyright, trademark, and right of publicity jurisprudence. The first part of this Article carefully details the disparate treatment of First Amendment defenses in the three intellectual property regimes. On one side of the spectrum is copyright law. An increasingly broad interpretation of commercial use, a narrow construction of transformative use, and a myopic focus on market harm, combined with a refusal to engage in any sort of independent First Amendment review, have rendered copyright law a feeble protector of free expression. On the other side of the spectrum is recent right of publicity jurisprudence, which routinely invokes the First Amendment and features robust defenses based on “transformativeness” and “newsworthiness.” Somewhere in the middle stands trademark law, offering its own judge-made defenses to immunize expressive conduct but simultaneously closing off those defenses for defendants engaging in commercial or potentially confusing activity. The next part tries to explain why these three regimes accommodate the First Amendment in such different ways. We conclude that the divergence is not the result of careful deliberation, but rather the inadvertent product of different methods and histories of lawmaking. If the divergence does not represent a logical or deliberate choice, reforms are needed. By bringing these different approaches to the First Amendment into relief, we hope to demonstrate how some free speech interests are being shortchanged and we aim to place all three regimes on a stronger theoretical footing.
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知识产权与言论自由的跨系统视角
知识产权制度是在第一修正案的阴影下运作的。版权法、商标法和宣传权法将某一特定行为认定为侵权行为,从而限制了传播。因此,法官和立法者必须微妙地平衡知识产权与表达自由。有趣的是,每种知识产权制度都以截然不同的方式在所有权和言论自由之间取得平衡。尽管在知识产权和言论自由方面有大量的学术研究,但本文首次系统地详细、分析和解释了版权、商标和宣传权法理学中基于表达的抗辩的不同演变。本文的第一部分详细介绍了在三种知识产权制度中对第一修正案辩护的不同处理。一方面是版权法。对商业使用日益宽泛的解释,对变动性使用的狭隘理解,对市场损害的短视关注,再加上拒绝参与任何形式的第一修正案独立审查,使得版权法成为言论自由的软弱保护者。另一方面是最近的公开权判例,它经常援引第一修正案,并以“变革性”和“新闻价值”为基础进行强有力的辩护。介于两者之间的是商标法,它为表达性行为提供了自己的法官辩护,但同时也关闭了被告从事商业或潜在混淆活动的辩护。下一部分试图解释为什么这三种制度以如此不同的方式适应第一修正案。我们的结论是,这种分歧不是深思熟虑的结果,而是不同立法方法和历史的无意产物。如果这种差异不是一种合乎逻辑或深思熟虑的选择,那么就需要改革。通过对宪法第一修正案的不同解读,我们希望展示一些言论自由的利益是如何被剥夺的,我们的目标是将这三种制度置于更坚实的理论基础之上。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
1.80
自引率
0.00%
发文量
2
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