Difference between revisions of "Internal:Public Policy/Copyright policy issues"

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{{header workspace|group=Public policy|title=Copyright policy issues}}
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This is an internal working space for Wikimedia-DC members developing and understanding and possible recommendations about '''copyright policy'''.
 
This is an internal working space for Wikimedia-DC members developing and understanding and possible recommendations about '''copyright policy'''.
   

Revision as of 23:34, 25 May 2014

Workspace: Public policy

This is an internal working space for Wikimedia-DC members developing and understanding and possible recommendations about copyright policy.

Upcoming issues

  • Orphan works: The public policy committee has been asked to formulate the chapter's stand on copyright issues for "orphan works" for an upcoming workshop. Document due March 8, 2014. Gerald wrote to the WMF general counsel's office.
From the Copyright Office description of the workshop agenda:
The Copyright Office is reviewing the problem of orphan works under U.S. copyright law in continuation of its previous work on the subject and to advise Congress on possible next steps for the United States. The Office has long shared the concern with many in the copyright community that the uncertainty surrounding the ownership status of orphan works does not serve the objectives of the copyright system. For good faith users, orphan works are a frustration, a liability risk, and a major cause of gridlock in the digital marketplace. . . . [A] number of foreign governments have recently adopted or proposed solutions.
We finished it! It's our first publication. The resulting doc is listed on meta with other advocacy statements by chapters.

History

  • In 2011, SOPA and PIPA were bills motivated partly by the TV, film, and TV industries to incorporate copyright protection into the infrastructure of the Internet. The Wikimedia Foundation and many allied groups stood against bills proposed in the U.S. Congress that would impose burdens on wiki sites (among others) if users created certain copyright-related content there. This chapter stood with the movement on this, supporting WMF's blackout of the Wikipedias. This was framed as advocating for Internet freedom. Here was Wiki DC's statement on SOPA and PIPA. Amazingly the effort was beaten back -- our side won.