Google Books is a good thing, but …

Given the way information tends to distort at lighting speed these days—particularly through the filter of tech v copyright referenced in my last post—I’m not surprised to read articles like this one by Ellen Duffer writing for Forbes on a thesis proposing reasons why Google Books is “good for publishers.” And it’s not that everything she says is incorrect so much as irrelevant, if the article is purposely meant to comment on the recent 2nd Circuit Court ruling in favor of Google in its ongoing litigation with The Authors Guild.

Not only does this  lawsuit have nothing to do with publishers, the timing of Duffer’s article, essentially making an argument for the worthiness of Google Books, might lead readers to think this lengthy litigation has been all about stopping the project from moving forward. It hasn’t.  There is no need for Duffer or anyone else to extoll the virtues of Google Books when the litigant authors generally agree that the search tool is a tremendously valuable resource with great social benefit. Hence, The Authors Guild has never filed for injunctive relief asking the court to order Google to stop what it’s doing. What the authors do want is compensation from Google for digitizing their books. As stated by Authors Guild President Roxana Robinson, “We aren’t challenging the concept of a search engine, just the seizure of copyrighted material. If Google is willing to compensate an author for using her work, they’re welcome to offer searches in it as much as they like.”

In order to create the Books search tool, Google has digitized over 20 million complete works.  Many of these are in the public domain; many are still in print and are still under copyrights owned by publishers; and many are works (in print or out) for which the copyrights are owned by the individual authors or their estates.  The public domain works are obviously fair game; but regarding the books still under copyright, Google has a negotiated contract with the publishers but no deal to compensate any of the authors.

The full story behind this division is a ten-year saga of attempted deals and lawsuits going back to the days when this project began as a partnership between Google and publishers, and then the libraries got involved; but the individual authors who own their own copyrights have never been paid, which makes them wholly involuntary contributors to this potentially profitable venture for Google.  (Please tell me nobody believes at this point that Google is doing this, or anything else, solely for the greater good. Can you say $400 billion market cap?)

Google has claimed that securing rights for individual works is too cumbersome, to which The Authors Guild’s Executive Director Mary Rasenberger responds, “Google has made much of how hard it is to clear authors’ rights. Our sister organization, the Authors Registry, can assure them it is not difficult. We can show them how it’s done, and with far less money than Google has at hand.”

To be sure, complaining about the scope of work required to clear these rights sounds a little fishy coming from the company that processes 20 petabytes of data every day, the organizer of the world’s information, the unrivaled leader in all things search and index, and the company that flaunts its ability to innovate at “Google scale.” It seems to me if you’ve got both the resources and the chutzpah to want to be the first company to digitize every book on the planet, that securing even a large number of rights should be a relatively minor function of the overall project.

Instead, it appears that if Google fought this hard and spent what must be millions in legal fees just to not pay the authors, their rationale is probably not about the money; and it’s not credibly because the process is too daunting for them.  Surely, Google hoped to prevail on a fair use defense—as it has to date—and to break new legal ground in its ongoing effort to reshape the fair use exception until it is so over-broad as to be almost meaningless.

Having said that, legal experts will disagree about the extent to which this most recent  ruling really sets new and clear precedent, rather than introducing a new vagueness to the doctrine that will only be clarified through future litigation.  Either way, Google’s agenda seems transparent; and as much as we may like Google Books itself, the general public should not be too quick to assume that broadening fair use doctrine is automatically more democratic or will foster more innovation, particularly when the doctrinal change is being pushed so hard by such a powerful corporate entity. After all, Google has a pretty consistent track record for consolidating market share and for pushing boundaries in this country and abroad with regard to the rights and interests of individuals and small entities.

Whether Google pursues cases that weaken IP protections or privacy rights; or it exerts the power of its monopsony position on platforms like YouTube, I think people have figured out that Google is just a business and should not be assumed to represent all that is good about the idealistic underpinnings of the Internet itself.  The company’s empower the individual rhetoric is just PR, and with the recent dropping of its founding motto “Don’t be evil,” we are reminded that this is all just business; and no business gets to nearly a half-trillion-dollar market cap without being at least a little evil to somebody.  Google Books sort of makes this point; it’s a good service supported by somewhat evil means in that it disenfranchises the most vulnerable individuals involved, when this is unnecessary in order to fulfill its otherwise worthy goals.

I also think the Books case serves to highlight a pattern consistent with Google’s game of steadily eroding the legal rights and/or bargaining power of individuals while trading on the illusion that it serves as an engine of individual rights and individual voices.  We’ve seen how the independent musical artists on YouTube have had the gateway drug of Content ID pulled from them if they choose not to sign the newly exploitative MusicKey contract. And with plans to launch the video subscription service YouTube Red, Google appears ready to employ similar hard-ball tactics with its most lucrative video content partners, offering them the choice of a lesser revenue-share deal or outright removal from the platform. (Lest anyone forget, it’s really TheirTube.)

If we combine the kind of pressure Google exerts on independent creators through its policy agendas with the company-store type terms it can dictate to individual creators, it’s easy to think of this strategy as the digital-age equivalent of union-busting during the late 19th and early 20th centuries.  Strip labor (in this case content creators) of both their rights and their negotiating power while consolidating market share in a technological paradigm that fosters natural monopolies. It may be the future, but it’s actually a very old story being written in ones and zeroes instead of coal and steel.

Jonathan Band Flogs Fair Use

Recently, on the CCIA’s Project DISCO blog, Jonathan Band wrote a post that could make a person spit out the ol’ ball gag, if you know what I mean. He tells readers that the best-selling, S&M trilogy Fifty Shades of Grey, with film adaptation opening this weekend, exists thanks to the principle of fair use, a component of U.S. copyright law.  While one must submit to the truth that Fifty Shades’s started as a work of fan fiction, derived from the source material for Stephanie Meyers’s Twilight series, one must also bristle at the manner in which Band is trying to insert fair use where it doesn’t belong.  Specifically, there cannot be a question of a fair use if there is no use in the first place; and author E.L. James (Erika Mitchell) did not use any works protected under copyrights belonging to Stephanie Meyers. To the contrary, James specifically revised her original fanfic into what became Fifty Shades in order to avoid any content that might infringe, and this stands to reason because publishers aren’t that stupid.  So why is Jonathan Band fetishizing the principle of fair use here?  And is there a safety word one can utter that will get him to stop?

In fact, now that I’ve gone there, perhaps this is the central point of this rebuttal:  fair use is not a safety word. It is not a term one can just incant in order to stop all potential claims of copyright infringement.  Even a use that is allowed by a rights holder does not become “fair” by virtue of that permission.  Fair use doctrine is a very important, but very specific, aspect of copyright law, and it’s worth noting that the United States has the most liberal application of the principle among nations that maintain strong copyrights.

In simple examples, fair use wants to protect the right of one speaker who may use a work in order to criticize, comment upon, or parody that work.  These are not the only applications of fair use, and there are four criteria applied by judges when hearing a fair use claim as a defense against an infringement claim. But absent an actual dispute over infringement, fair use is often patently obvious or utterly irrelevant. And the case of Fifty Shades of Grey, the fact that there is no conflict between Meyers and James has nothing to do with the doctrine. These authors, and authors everywhere, professional or amateur, are free to remix the beauty and the beast theme to their hearts’ content. The elements which can be copyrighted in the individual expressions are easy enough to avoid plagiarizing, which is why James can begin with a derivative fanfic of Twilight and then revise to create an original work that does not infringe.

But fair use is just one concept that the dungeon masters of the tech industry like to dress up and parade around the blogosphere in order to seduce the public to believe that certain popular works only exist in spite of copyright. Interestingly, Band’s omission of the central fact that E.L. James did not use any protected works by Stephanie Meyers means that he isn’t actually writing a defense of fair use doctrine at all. Like so many blogs and articles of its kind, this seems to be another attempt to broaden one of copyright’s exceptions into some all-purpose answer to all manner of uses where the doctrine may not apply. This can be effective based on the safe assumption that most of us are not attorneys and don’t really know how the law functions.  Hence, as a PR move, Band’s editorial aligns with the tech industry’s interest in selling the idea that all fanfic should ultimately be defined as fair use so that the activity can more easily be monetized without permission of any original authors.

To be clear, this reply to Band’s assertion about fair use is in no way an indictment of fan fiction itself. Many authors welcome the trend and even personally curate sites hosting fan fiction.  It can be a great way to interact with avid readers and fans, particularly of popular series that contain many characters and complex plots and subplots.  But fanfic enthusiasts should not be enslaved to the tech industry’s interests.  Fanfic can and does coexist with copyright law without rewriting the meaning of core doctrine.

There are plenty of great examples of fair use doctrine available, and readers should be at least a bit skeptical when the tech industry picks a particularly weak example like this one to highlight. But I get it. This story wears stiletto heels, has a whip in one hand, and a multimillion-dollar franchise in the other. It’s flashy and alluring.  But editorials like Band’s continue to overuse this false role play in which creativity is blindfolded, bound, and gagged by copyrights.  Quite the contrary.  In fact, copyright is a bit like S&M in this one regard:  if the person being “used” doesn’t grant permission and can’t set limits, it’s called aggravated rape.

ADDENDUM:  I cannot say that I am surprised Twitter lit up a bit because some readers were offended by this final paragraph in which I appear literally to be comparing copyright infringement to rape.  I would never belittle a violent and disturbing crime by equating it with a non-violent one, and I hope readers understand that the S&M theme of this story is what sparked this reference to permission.  I will add that, throughout literature, movies, TV, and journalism, authors have used the word rape metaphorically, including some months ago when Madonna actually said that piracy of her works was “like being raped.” I didn’t even agree with that simile as I thought it was making too direct a comparison.  Take that all for what it’s worth.

Critic Cote on Digital-Age Behavior in Theaters

I had to share this article by New York theater critic David Cote because it really is an indictment of digital-age jitteriness screwing up culture and literacy instead of broadening same as was promised.  It’s not really surprising that a contemporary theater audience doesn’t know that a play is not typically an interactive experience, and yet it is still a little surprising.  Cote’s “What Not to Do at Hugh Jackman’s New Broadway Show” is a funny but stern lecture that not only lays down basic rules for audience behavior, but even implies that people need a refresher course in what exactly theater is.  All of his observations — the use of smartphone cameras, the callouts to Jackman as celebrity, applauding at the wrong moments — all reek of digital-age induced illiteracy and narcissism. From Cote’s article:

So thunderstruck are they to be in a theater with the godlike Jackman, they forget to turn off their phones. Or worse, they snap pictures. At the press night I attended, some woman lacking a filter filled in the final, quiet moments of the play with an audible, “Holy shit!” Nice way to ruin a final tableau.

Here’s the first thing to know about a play:  Although you are there to experience it, it is not actually about you.

Read David Cote’s full article at TimeOut New York here.