Jan
11Supreme Court Declines Orphan Works Case
If libraries are to get relief regarding the orphan works on their
shelves, it looks like it won't come from the courts. This week the
U.S. Supreme Court declined to hear the appeal of Kahle v. Ashcroft,
brought by Internet Archive and Open Content Alliance founders Brewster
Kahle and Rick Prelinger in 2003, which challenged the
constitutionality of the current copyright regime. Although not
unexpected, the Supreme Court's refusal comes after a recent ruling by the 10th Circuit Court of Appeals raised hopes of a review, and lets stand the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals' rejection, effectively ending the case.
The Kahle suit was launched in the wake of the unsuccessful 2003 Eldred v. Ashcroft case, which challenged Congess' extension of copyright terms. In that ruling,
the Supreme Court held that changes by Congress to the "traditional
contours" of copyright law warranted a First Amendment review. Kahle v. Ashcroft
contended that Congress's sweeping changes to copyright law in 1976
were enough of a change in the "contours of copyright" to require
review.
Until 1976, copyright law required creators to register their works.
Changes to the law, however, removed the necessity to register works
and extended the basic copyright term from 28 years to "life plus 70
years." The combination of those changes has thrown many works without
clear copyright owners into legal limbo, creating the so-called orphan
works problem.
The Tenth Circuit, in Fall, 2007, bolstered hopes of a Supreme Court review for Kahle, with its ruling in Golan v. Gonzales, which held that a provision of the Uruguay Round Agreements Act (URAA)
that "restored" copyrights to some works already in the public domain
was enough of a change to copyright traditions as to require review. In
that ruling, Kahle's lawyers hoped the Supreme Court would see a legal
point of reference and would agree that changing copyright from an
opt-in system with a short protection period to an opt-out system with
a lengthy protection period was also significant enough to warrant
review. [source: LJ's Academic Newswire, Jan. 10, 2008]

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