网络安全港与著作权法的变革

IF 1 3区 社会学 Q2 LAW Notre Dame Law Review Pub Date : 2017-03-10 DOI:10.2139/SSRN.2830184
Matthew J. Sag
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引用次数: 10

摘要

本文展示了版权法的实质性平衡是如何被1998年《数字千年版权法案》(DMCA)中制定的中介安全港制度所掩盖的。网络安全港和通知下架制度从根本上改变了平台、用户和权利人对侵权索赔的动机。这些不同的激励机制相互作用,产生了在线版权的功能平衡,这与传统媒体环境中版权法的经验明显不同。本文还探讨了第二个分歧:DMCA的安全港制度正在被版权所有者和大型商业互联网平台之间的私人协议所取代,这些协议是在这些安全港的阴影下达成的。这些协议与自动版权过滤系统有关,比如YouTube的Content ID,该系统不仅让平台恢复了守门人的角色,还在算法和软件中对这一角色进行了编码。这些发展对规范的影响是有争议的。版权法的合理使用和其他原则在名义上仍然适用于网络;但在实践中,安全港和在这些安全港的阴影下达成的私人协议现在是决定网络行为的更重要因素,而不是这种行为是否在实质上符合版权法。实质性版权法与网络表达相关性的减弱,其收益和成本似乎从根本上不可比较。与线下世界相比,在线平台通常更允许侵权,对新的和意想不到的言论和新形式的文化参与更开放。然而,这些平台上的言论也更容易受到版权所有者过度索赔的影响。没有简单的衡量标准来比较安全港所支持的非侵权表达的价值与因滥用通知-删除制度而受到不合理压制的表达的价值。同样,版权侵权对权利人造成的伤害也不容易计算,也不容易权衡安全港的诸多好处。dmca +协议引起了额外的考虑。自动版权执行系统对平台和版权所有者都有明显的优势;它们还可能使平台对某些类型的用户内容更加友好。然而,自动执行系统也可能对合理使用和其他形式的非侵权言论造成不应有的负担。版权执法机器人的设计编码了平台和版权所有者做出的一系列政策选择,因此,将在线言论和文化参与置于一个新的私人秩序和私人控制层。在未来,决定用户参与采用这些系统的在线平台的条件将是私人利益,而不是公共政策。在一个交流和表达由版权机器人监管的世界里,版权法的实质性内容只有在当权者决定它应该重要的程度上才重要。
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Internet Safe Harbors and the Transformation of Copyright Law
This Article shows how the substantive balance of copyright law has been overshadowed online by the system of intermediary safe harbors enacted as part of the Digital Millennium Copyright Act (“DMCA”) in 1998. The Internet safe harbors and the system of notice-and-takedown fundamentally changed the incentives of platforms, users, and rightsholders in relation to claims of copyright infringement. These different incentives interact to yield a functional balance of copyright online that diverges markedly from the experience of copyright law in traditional media environments. This article also explores a second divergence: the DMCA’s safe harbor system is being superseded by private agreements between rightsholders and large commercial Internet platforms made in the shadow of those safe harbors. These agreements relate to automatic copyright filtering systems, such as YouTube’s Content ID, that not only return platforms to their gatekeeping role, but encode that role in algorithms and software. The normative implications of these developments are contestable. Fair use and other axioms of copyright law still nominally apply online; but in practice, the safe harbors and private agreements made in the shadow of those safe harbors are now far more important determinants of online behavior than whether that conduct is, or is not, substantively in compliance with copyright law. The diminished relevance of substantive copyright law to online expression has benefits and costs that appear fundamentally incommensurable. Compared to the offline world, online platforms are typically more permissive of infringement, and more open to new and unexpected speech and new forms of cultural participation. However, speech on these platforms is also more vulnerable to over-reaching claims by rightsholders. There is no easy metric for comparing the value of non-infringing expression enabled by the safe harbors to that which has been unjustifiably suppressed by misuse of the notice-and-takedown system. Likewise, the harm that copyright infringement does to rightsholders is not easy to calculate, nor is it easy to weigh against the many benefits of the safe harbors. DMCA-plus agreements raise additional considerations. Automatic copyright enforcement systems have obvious advantages for both platforms and rightsholders; they may also allow platforms to be more hospitable to certain types of user content. However, automated enforcement systems may also place an undue burden on fair use and other forms of non-infringing speech. The design of copyright enforcement robots encodes a series of policy choices made by platforms and rightsholders and, as a result, subjects online speech and cultural participation to a new layer of private ordering and private control. In the future, private interests, not public policy will determine the conditions under which users get to participate in online platforms that adopt these systems. In a world where communication and expression is policed by copyright robots, the substantive content of copyright law matters only to the extent that those with power decide that it should matter.
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来源期刊
CiteScore
1.20
自引率
11.10%
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期刊介绍: In 1925, a group of eager and idealistic students founded the Notre Dame Lawyer. Its name was changed in 1982 to the Notre Dame Law Review, but all generations have remained committed to the original founders’ vision of a law review “synonymous with respect for law, and jealous of any unjust attacks upon it.” Today, the Law Review maintains its tradition of excellence, and its membership includes some of the most able and distinguished judges, professors, and practitioners in the country. Entirely student edited, the Law Review offers its members an invaluable occasion for training in precise analysis of legal problems and in clear and cogent presentation of legal issues.
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