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-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Wendy Clark
Sent: Tuesday, June 03, 2003 7:41 AM
To: Syscon-Tx (E-mail)
Subject: FW: [ALA-WO:828] Supreme Court Issues Intellectual Property Law
Decision


FYI
-----Original Message-----
From: ALAWASH E-MAIL [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Monday, June 02, 2003 2:48 PM
To: ALA Washington Office Newsline
Subject: [ALA-WO:828] Supreme Court Issues Intellectual Property Law
Decision


ALAWON: American Library Association Washington Office Newsline
Volume 12, Number 48
June 2, 2003

In This Issue: Supreme Court issues intellectual property law decision

The U.S. Supreme Court on June 2 issued its opinion in Dastar Corp. v.
Twentieth Century Fox Film Corp., a case in which ALA participated as a
"friend of the court" in support of Dastar Corporation.  The Court has
ruled unanimously 8-0 (Justice Breyer did not participate in the case)
in favor of Dastar, ruling that the company did not act illegally when
it repackaged and distributed a television documentary which had entered
the public domain.  The reasoning of the court is extremely helpful to
supporters of balanced intellectual property laws.  
 
The case involves Section 43(a) of the Lanham Act, a federal law which
mostly has to do with trademark but was being used in this instance to
apply to an alleged use and re-use of materials in the public domain. 
In the 1950's Twentieth Century Fox Film (Fox) had produced a television
documentary on World War II.  Fox did not renew the copyright and the
film entered into the public domain.  Dastar copied large chunks of the
documentary, added some of its own footage, and distributed it as its
own without attributing the source of some of the footage.  Fox sued and
won in the appeals court, a ruling that the Supreme Court overturned
today in a decision that is significant for database protection
specifically and for preserving the public domain in general.  

Jonathan Band, ALA's outside counsel who wrote the amicus brief,
explained that in its ruling in favor of Dastar, the Supreme Court
focused on the meaning of the word "origin" in Section 43(a) of the
Lanham Act, and concluded that the goods in question here -- the
videotapes -- originated with Dastar, not Fox.   The Court said that to
treat the origin of communication products as the entity that created
the underlying intellectual property "would create a species of mutant
copyright law" that would impinge upon the "public's 'federal right to
"copy and to use"' expired copyrights."  Thus, Band stated, "The opinion
sharply limits the ability of copyright holders to use Section 43(a) as
a super-copyright law."
 
The Supreme Court also stated that if Congress wanted to create an
addition to the copyright law, it would have to do so explicitly.  Those
who have been seeking database protection legislation in Congress might
interpret this statement as authorizing it to enact database
legislation.  However, Band cautioned, the Court in its decision also
noted the limits on Congress's intellectual property power -- it may not
create perpetual patent or copyright protection. 

Joining ALA as signatories to an amici curiae (friends of the court)
brief in February 2003 were the American Association of Law Libraries,
Association of Research Libraries, Medical Library Association, and
Special Libraries Association.



******
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ALA Washington Office, 1301 Pennsylvania Ave., N.W., Suite 403,
Washington, D.C. 20004-1701; phone: 202.628.8410 or 800.941.8478
toll-free; fax: 202.628.8419; e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]; Web site:
http://www.ala.org/washoff.  Executive Director: Emily Sheketoff.
Office of Government Relations: Lynne Bradley, Director; Camille Bowman,
Mary Costabile, Don Essex, Patrice McDermott and Miriam Nisbet. Office
for Information Technology Policy: Rick Weingarten, Director; Jennifer
Hendrix, Carrie Russell, Claudette Tennant. ALAWON Editor: Bernadette
Murphy.



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