Difference between revisions of "Internal:Public Policy/Orphan works"

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* Requiring payment to use an orphan work, e.g, a self-defense fee in escrow would likely prevent ("be prohibitive for") most uses on Wikimedia, as the Wikimedia Foundation and many of our volunteers have limited financial resources.
 
* Requiring payment to use an orphan work, e.g, a self-defense fee in escrow would likely prevent ("be prohibitive for") most uses on Wikimedia, as the Wikimedia Foundation and many of our volunteers have limited financial resources.
 
* We have partnerships with GLAM organizations in which they digitize their own holdings but post them on Wikimedia Commons intead of their own website; any reform should not impose any new burdens on this.
 
* We have partnerships with GLAM organizations in which they digitize their own holdings but post them on Wikimedia Commons intead of their own website; any reform should not impose any new burdens on this.
 
==Sources==
 
* [http://copyright.gov/orphan/ The Copyright Office's Mar 10-11 2014 workshop page]
 
* '''[http://www.copyright.gov/orphan/orphan-report-full.pdf Report on Orphan Works]''' by the US Copyright Office, 2006. Read the executive summary of this even if you read nothing else. ([[/Notes#2006_Report_on_Orphan_Works|Notes on 2006 report]])
 
* [http://www.copyright.gov/docs/massdigitization/USCOMassDigitization_October2011.pdf Legal Issues in Mass Digitization: A Preliminary Analysis and Discussion Document]. U.S. Copyright Office. Oct 2011. Especially see pp. 25ff and Appendix D: Foreign Treatment of Orphan Works.
 
* [https://www.wikimedia.de/images/4/43/120810_WMDE_Statement_On_Orphan_Works.pdf WMDE Statement on Orphan Works], Berlin, August 10, 2012 ; ([[/Notes#Wikimedia Deutschland statement on orphan works|Notes on Wikimedia Deutschland statement on orphan works]])
 
* [http://www.archivists.org/standards/OWBP-V4.pdf Orphan Works: Statement of Best Practices] by Society of American Archivists, 2009 -- gives clear advice on how to do a relatively diligent search for the copyright holder, including lists of databases and web sites (16 pages)
 
* [http://www.copyright.gov/fedreg/2014/79fr7706.pdf The ''Federal Register'' notice] says we have till April 14 to submit a statement
 
* [http://www.ala.org/offices/sites/ala.org.offices/files/content/wo/reference/colresolutions/PDFs/012407-CD20.1.pdf Resolution in support of "orphan works" legislation] adopted by American Library Association Council, Jan 27, 2007 (one page ; entirely agreeable but lacks tight specifics)
 
* [http://www.ala.org/advocacy/copyright/orphan Copyright: Orphan Works] at American Library Association web site
 
* [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Village_pump_(miscellaneous)/Archive_45#Input_wanted:_orphan_works Discussion at Wikipedia Village Pump] (now archived)
 
* [[w:Orphan works|Wikipedia article: Orphan works]]
 
* [[w:Orphan works in the United States|Wikipedia article: Orphan works in the United States]]
 
* Roberta Morris. 2005 [http://www.copyright.gov/orphan/comments/OW0652-Morris.pdf comments on Orphan Works to Copyright Office] -- quotes: "(Const., Art. I, sec. 8, cl. 8: "The Congress shall have Power *** [8] To promote the Progress of Science and useful Arts, by securing for limited Times to Authors and Inventors the exclusive Right to their respective Writings and Discoveries.")" Orphan "works that should be given the attention of current scholarship are ignored: works that are orphaned suffer the further indignity of being buried alive."
 
* Assoc of American Publishers comments. 2005. [http://www.copyright.gov/orphan/comments/reply/OWR0085-AAP-AAUP-SIIA.pdf Comments OWR0085-AAP-AUP-SIIA on 2006 Copyright report].
 
* Sumana Harihareswara?!? submitted comment in 2005. She now works for the WMF. [http://www.copyright.gov/orphan/comments/reply/OWR0084-Harihareswara.pdf OWR0084-Harihareswara]. Her complete comment: "Intellectual property rights are a temporary monopoly granted by the government for the good of the public. Please don't skew the balance of these rights in favor of a few property-owners. The rights of the people should have standing too."
 
 
; Statements opposing orphan works legislation
 
* Lawrence Lessig. [http://www.nytimes.com/2008/05/20/opinion/20lessig.html?_r=2&oref=slogin& Little Orphan Artworks]. Op-Ed, ''New York Times'', May 20, 2008. -- Lessig opposed the Copyright Office's 2008 proposal (not exactly the same as the 2006 proposal) saying a "diligent search" is not clearly defined, except that it involves expensive copyright specialists, that the new freedom for users would interfere with the expectations of copyright holders and creators; and that he had a better design which was that for U.S. works copyright should be automatic for 14 years or so then require registration. Econterms's view: While one hesitates to disagree with Lessig, the 2006 proposal would be at least be better for Wikimedia users than the present situation, and his proposal which would also be an improvement for Wikimedia users is not apparently being broadly considered (although we might think it through as an alternative in the future).
 
* [https://nppa.org/news/1397 NPPA Cannot Support Orphan Works Legislation]. National Press Photographers Association. May 7, 2008. -- They oppose it, describing the proposal darkly and non-neutrally as a kind of threat. They focused on commercial use of their works without licensing. Not convincing, and they do not address the purposes of educational nonprofits. They say the 2008 version is better than the 2006 version, which suggests that from our point of view it was worse, although I didn't see specifics.
 
* [http://www.librarycopyrightalliance.org/submissions/domestic/orphan.shtml Orphan Works statements by Library Copyright Alliance]. Key observation: In their latest statement, the LCA supports expanded fair-use, not the 2006 recommendations. We prefer the 2006 recommendations. Their latest statement says that the widespread support of the 2006 proposals has shattered, and they give examples ; if true this is unfortunate.
 
   
 
==See also==
 
==See also==

Revision as of 00:51, 28 March 2014

Status: Draft

Shortcut:
I:PP/OW
This is a draft of the Public Policy Committee's statement for the U. S. Copyright Office workshop on Orphan Works and Mass Digitization. We participated in the roundtable on March 10–11, 2014; the then-current guidance we prepared for our panelist is here.

Guidance

  • The draft below is organized, as requested by the Copyright office, along the lines of the topics addressed by the panels, per the original inquiry. Please consult with User:Antony-22 before reorganizing sections.
  • They asked us to respond to what others said in our written statement, not just reiterate our spoken comments at the panel.
  • Should probably aim for about 5 pages
  • Want to get this done in advance of WMDC board meeting on March 29
  • Comments/differences on matters of substance before then are especially of interest.

Draft

Introduction

Wikimedia District of Columbia respectfully submits these comments in response to the Copyright Office’s Notice of Inquiry dated February 10, 2014. We are grateful for the opportunity to participate in these roundtables and give the unique viewpoint of the Wikimedia movement, which we do believe has not yet been reflected in previous comments to the Copyright Office.

The Wikimedia community of volunteers worldwide is dedicated to creating "a world in which every single human being can freely share in the sum of all knowledge" through its educational projects, such as Wikipedia, Wikimedia Commons, and Wikisource. Wikipedia is the fifth-most-visited website on the Internet and the largest reference work ever assembled, with 20 million articles across 285 language editions. Wikimedia Commons is a media file repository of public-domain and freely-licensed educational media content containing over 20 million images, sound clips, and video clips. Wikisource is an online digital library of free-content texts, 300,000 of which are in English. All the content in these Wikimedia projects is freely available to be seen and used legally by anyone in the world because of a free-content license. Wikimedia content is created and maintained not by paid archivists, but by volunteers from around the world and from all walks of life who contribute by editing and uploading files to Wikimedia-supported wikis on the Internet.

Wikimedia District of Columbia is the regional Wikimedia chapter serving Maryland, Virginia, Delaware, West Virginia, and the District of Columbia. We are a nonprofit charitable organization dedicated to the advancement of general knowledge and the collection, development, and availability of educational content under a free license or in the public domain. As an official Wikimedia chapter, we support the goals of the Wikimedia Foundation, including the work of volunteers on Wikipedia and other free knowledge initiatives. We hold events, including training sessions and edit-a-thons, where experienced Wikipedians and newcomers alike have the opportunity to network and learn from each other. We work with museums, libraries, and other specialized institutions to share their knowledge with the rest of the world through Wikipedia, the world's most widely visited not-for-profit website. We are an all-volunteer organization.

Wikimedia's educational mission would benefit from orphan works legislation that is designed to minimize the burden on its volunteer contributors. First, the law should provide simple and clear guidelines on what satisfies the requirement of a diligent search, to avoid the chilling effect of uncertainty among users as to when orphan works can freely be uploaded. Furthermore, the law should not require users to register or to pay an escrow fee, which would unduly discourage users and make it difficult or impossible for Wikimedia projects to host orphan works. Most important, the law should reasonably limit liability for non-profit users of orphan works, and it should exempt educational institutions such as the Wikimedia Foundation from liability, for the same public-goods reasons that libraries, archives, and museums are exempt.

  • (refers to Google Books project and associated legal cases) We believe that a legislative solution is still necessary, as recent technological and legal developments are not useful for the types of works and uses that Wikimedia projects seek to make use of. For Wikimedia purposes, the 2006 orphan works proposals in the Copyright Office report would help us in our public mission.
  • We want any reform to minimize burdens on people who contribute to Wikimedia projects. The volunteers include high school students, preeminent scientists, and people from developing countries. The amount of burden in any reform will affect how we are able to use orphan works in the pursuit of our educational mission. Any reform that imposes large burdens such as an escrow fee, or that does not limit or remove monetary remedies for non-profit educational use, would likely prevent us from using them.

On the need for legislation

Wikimedia projects have long used public-domain and freely-licensed works to support Wikimedia's educational mission. These projects include using textual and visual media as part of encyclopedia articles and making them available for reuse by others. However, very few works first published after 1922 are in the public domain, and these very few are due to technicalities that are often hard to verify (partually due to lack of copyright records modernization). Wikimedia projects also use user-provided content granted under a free license, such as those of Creative Commons or the GFDL (GNU Free Documentation License), but these are almost all of very recent publication. Most media created from 1923 to the last ~10 years are therefore unavailable for use in Wikimedia projects.

  • Thousands of our volunteers, across the globe, have confronted these issues. They arise frequently. Some volunteers have built up a lot of expertise about it and documented procedures and recommendations online. We could quantify some of this effort if it would serve reformers to have evidence on the costs of the current system.
  • These works are also unlikely to be unorphaned using improved search tools or databases/registries of owner information, regardless of how much these are improved.
  • Since our goal is provide material that is freely available, the Wikimedia projects make very limited use of fair use. In fact, our internal criteria for non-free content are purposely much stricter than the law would allow for (see Wikipedia:Non-free content policy). We only use works under fair use if no freely licensed equivalent could possibly be created. For example, we generally do not host non-free photographs of living persons or of existing buildings, because a free equivalent could be created by a volunteer taking a new photograph. Thus an expansion of fair use, alone, does not enable readers of Wikimedia to benefit from most orphan works.

On defining "reasonably diligent search"

Upload to wp1.png
Upload to wp2.png
  • We want the procedure to be simple enough that our contributors can follow it easily by following a checklist on a web form (see examples at right). This includes a spectrum of Internet users of all ages and English fluency. The guidelines need to be acessible to individuals, not just to sophisticated players with specialized skills and/or teams of professionals supporting them. Wikimedians are systematically careful about copyright, and to do that the systems have to be easy for volunteers to learn and use, and for software to verify.
  • The law should provide simple and clear guidelines on what satisfies the requirement of a diligent search, to avoid the chilling effect of uncertainty among users as to when orphan works can freely be uploaded. These guidelines could be provided through either legislation or Copyright Office regulations. It is reasonable to have different guidelines for different classes of works.
  • Author groups at the roundtable expressed the concern that their works could be stripped of metadata and posted to the internet on sites like Twitter, thus becoming "instant orphans" exploitable by downstream users. Wikipedia's policies are careful about copyright; we require source and author information and actively delete uploads that to not provide this metadata. (w:WP:IUP#Copyright and licensing and w:WP:GID#Addressing suspected copyright infringement) In addition, the pages on which users can upload to the English Wikipedia require users to choose one of the three options that it is demonstrably a free work, it meets Wikipedia's criteria for fair use (which are much more stringent than what is legally allowable), or "I found this file somewhere, but I don't really know who made it or who owns it." Selecting the last of these brings up a message sternly warning the user not to upload it!
  • There is the possibility that we can internally verify orphan work status, either automatically or through some process involving other volunteers. This would be subject to internal comunity discussion.
  • Should comment on 2008 bill

On the role of registries

  • Mandatory registration of uses of orphan works would be a burden on us, but if the details are properly thought out this could potenitally be overcome. It would be especially nice if registration could be automated through our own upload form. Optional registration would be fine.
  • We recognize the interest of copyright holders in avoiding a situation where works could labeled as orphans then their uses could not be found again or tracked. Unlike other categories of reuse, any orphan work hosted on Wikimedia projects is widely available on the Internet and easily findable by a creator wishing to reclaim their rights. Each work classified as an orphan and stored in the Wikimedia servers could be found by searching categories of licenses. Such searches can be conducted quickly and easily for free from regular Web browsers anywhere without any need to log in. We can illustrate our mechanisms for such searches if it is of interest to orphan-works reformers. (Two such mechanisms are: search by category; and what-links-here from license templates). Wikimedia could therefore constitute a "registry" for orphan works it stores, and would certainly it easy for other registries to incorporate lists of the orphan works stored there.

On types of works, including photographs

  • Photographs should not be excluded from orphan works reform; in fact, these are the works we probably want the most!
  • The European orphan works reform directive (details here) did not cover photographs to the extent we need. It would not allow commercial use, and therefore orphan works could not be freely licensed in the way usable in Wikimedia projects.
  • The types of works we are interested are mainly historical photos and works such as those found in archives and libraries. These may be either attached to larger works like books, or be stand-alone items. We think that the body of works that the author groups are concerned about are different from the ones we want, and perhaps some line can be drawn to separate these (such as providing evidence that the work is at least 20 or 30 years old).
  • Orphan work status does not override privacy concerns and we already have guidelines about privacy
  • Our contributors are both individuals and partner organizations such as galleries, libraries, archives, and museums.
  • It can be unclear whether a copyright exists on a work, if for example its creation date is unclear (notably if it might be before or after 1923), the country in which it was created is unclear, or if it is unclear whether its creator was a U.S. federal employee on duty, or off duty, or a government contractor. It would be helpful for our mission to allow such cases to be searched, documented, and treated as orphan works and allow some use of them.
Examples

Wikimedia projects currently can use orphan works only when they would qualify for "fair use." One of the constraints on works used in a fair-use context is that they are available only for English-language projects. Where possible we use images and other works that are in the public domain globally; this helps serve readers of languages with less Web content. Some of those readers are Americans. (is it correct to say that "fair use" does not apply to native american languages? peter to check with Kristin)

Here we list examples where reform would help serve our mission.

  • Wikimedia DC's upcoming photo hunt in the South. Individually created photos will be under a free license, but buildings that no longer exist or had a different appearance need historical photos. We're seeking to partner with local archives and historical societies, but their photos often have no metadata. Without author and publication data, we have no way to determine if they are in the public domain and thus can't use them. Orphan works reform would however allow us to use these historical works to illustrate articles, and make them available for wider reuse by others.
  • Ezra Pound photo. A photo of the young Ezra Pound from 1898 (or maybe 1897) has no known copyright-holder and its status is unclear, partly because its date of first publication is unclear. Permission does not appear to have been given by any copyright holder. A dozen Wikimedians have worked on its provenance and copyright status. For the extensive and good-hearted and well-educated discussion, see [1], [2], and [3]. Plainly the public interest would be served by clarifying the issue and allowing the photo simply to be used.
    • Original comment from WP:VPM: "A particularly interesting (and still current) case concerns w:File:EzraPound&IsabelPound1898.jpg, a image that has been extremely carefully researched and for which quite a lot is known about its provenance. Its "non-free" categorisation has been raised here, spilling over to commons. Issues have arisen of whether the photographer, his employer, or the subject might have been the original copyright holder. It seems for early US photos, the subject was generally the default copyright holder. Bearing in mind that possibly no one ever knew who the copyright holder was it cannot be determined whether any of its publications over the years have been lawful and so copyright expiry cannot be determined. However, it seems to be accepted that WP's current use of the image (if it is still in copyright) meets WP's non-free use policy, Thincat (talk) 23:31, 8 March 2014 (UTC)"
    • Note that only works published before 1923 are in the public domain. If they were created before then but published after that date, or never published, they are still subject to copyright. See w:User:Antony-22/Drafts#PD table.
  • Family photos. I struggled with the decision about whether to use a photo of economist Bert Hoselitz that came from his family to illustrate the article about him. It wasn't clear what to do and I gave up, to the disappointment of people who had helped me. The original photographer could not be identified. Who held the copyright? How would I label it on Commons? I didn't want to end up in an argument. I'd already had to fight pretty hard to kill off a photo of someone else that was incorrectly labeled as a photo of Hoselitz. The photo was also quite dark--a side issue. To the point: if orphan works were a nicely available permission category on Commons, that would have helped me. -- Econterms (talk)
  • US government works where it is ambiguous whether they might have been produced by federal employees on duty (in which case the work is public domain) or by contractors (in which case the work is under copyright). National labs are a big examples of this. One of our users (Antony–22) found photos of scientists at a conference on the website of Oak Ridge National Laboratory. Luckily, ORNL has specifically clarified that all material on their website is public domain, but if this clarification had not been made the copyright status of these works would be unclear without specific information about the author, and would not have been able to been used.
  • Users avoiding specific topics. One member is often paralyzed with fear regarding materials since 1923, which might be under copyright, and retreats to the safe harbor of post-copyright materials before 1923. This user reports a chilling effect on writing on topics that requires sources written after 1923, due to the complex copyright laws. She would really like to write new articles about topics that are more modern than clipper ships and defunct Tibetan monasteries, and is eagerly awaiting reforms in the law

On types of users and uses

  • The Wikimedia Foundation is a non-profit educational organization, but it is not a traditional gallery, library, archive, or museum. Any legislation that treats these types of organization differently should be worded broadly enough that organizations like the Wikimedia Foundation would be included in that special treatment.
  • We do not consider licenses that ban commercial use to be free licenses; these must instead fall under our strict fair use restrictions to be used. If orphan works reform does not apply to commercial uses, that may affect our ability to use them. Wikimedia community discussion online will determine whether we create a class of restrictions intermediate between fair use and free content.
  • Public access is a core part of our mission and must be allowed by orphan works reform.

On remedies

  • We support low caps on financial remedies (payments to copyright owners) for not-for-profit uses of works judged to be orphans whose copyright owner later surfaces. The 2006 draft legislation identified institutions that have a low cap or zero on how much they would owe for infringement. (correct? peter to recheck) We would like Wikimedia projects to be part of that list. We think the law should include educational nonprofits generally in the legislation and supporting documents not only museums, archives, and galleries.
  • Wikimedia project administrators are committed to removing an orphan work from their repositories if the copyright holder creator requests it, whether there is a new reform or not. It is straightforward for rightsholders to notice and request online that their works be removed from a Wikimedia repository.

On extended collective licensing

  • Requiring payment to use an orphan work, e.g, a self-defense fee in escrow would likely prevent ("be prohibitive for") most uses on Wikimedia, as the Wikimedia Foundation and many of our volunteers have limited financial resources.
  • We have partnerships with GLAM organizations in which they digitize their own holdings but post them on Wikimedia Commons intead of their own website; any reform should not impose any new burdens on this.

See also

  • /Notes for summaries and notes on some of the sources above
  • This page's talk page for discussions and earlier drafts of sections of this page