29 September 2011
Exemption to Prohibition on Circumvention of Copyright Protection
Systems
[Federal Register Volume 76, Number 189 (Thursday, September 29, 2011)]
[Proposed Rules]
[Pages 60398-60405]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2011-25106]
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LIBRARY OF CONGRESS
Copyright Office
37 CFR Part 201
[Docket No. RM 2011-7]
Exemption to Prohibition on Circumvention of Copyright Protection
Systems for Access Control Technologies
AGENCY: Copyright Office, Library of Congress.
ACTION: Notice of inquiry and request for comments.
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SUMMARY: The United States Copyright Office is preparing to conduct
proceedings in accordance with provisions added by the Digital
Millennium Copyright Act which provide that the Librarian of Congress,
upon the recommendation of the Register of Copyrights, may exempt
certain classes of works from the prohibition against circumvention of
technological measures that control access to copyrighted works. The
purpose of this rulemaking proceeding is to determine whether there are
particular classes of works as to which users are, or are likely to be,
adversely affected in their ability to make noninfringing uses due to
the prohibition on circumvention. This notice requests written comments
from all interested parties, including representatives of copyright
owners, educational institutions, libraries and archives, scholars,
researchers and members of the public, in order to elicit evidence on
whether noninfringing uses of certain classes of works are, or are
likely to be, adversely affected by this prohibition on the
circumvention of measures that control access to copyrighted works.
DATES: Written comments must be received no later than December 1,
2011. A notice of proposed rulemaking will be published in December
2011 that will identify proposed classes of works and solicit comments
on those proposed classes, which will be no later than February 15,
2012.
ADDRESSES: The Copyright Office strongly prefers that comments be
submitted electronically. A comment
[[Page 60399]]
page containing a comment form will be posted on the Copyright Office
Web site at http://www.copyright.gov/1201/comment-forms. The online
form contains fields for required information including the name and
organization of the commenter, as applicable, and the ability to upload
comments as an attachment. To meet accessibility standards, all
comments must be uploaded in a single file in either the Adobe Portable
Document File (PDF) format that contains searchable, accessible text
(not an image); Microsoft Word; WordPerfect; Rich Text Format (RTF); or
ASCII text file format (not a scanned document). The maximum file size
is 6 megabytes (MB). The name of the submitter and organization should
appear on both the form and the face of the comments. All comments will
be posted publicly on the Copyright Office Web site exactly as they are
received, along with names and organizations. If electronic submission
of comments is not feasible, please contact the Copyright Office at
202-707-8380 for special instructions. See SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION
section for information about requirements and formats of submissions.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: David O. Carson, General Counsel,
Copyright GC/I&R, PO Box 70400, Washington, DC 20024-0400. Telephone:
(202) 707-8380; telefax: (202) 707-8366.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The United States Copyright Office announces
the initiation of a rulemaking to determine whether there are any
classes of copyrighted works for which noninfringing uses are, or in
the next three years are likely to be, adversely affected by the
prohibition on circumvention of technological measures that control
access to copyrighted works. See 17 U.S.C. 1201(a)(1)(C).
1. Mandate for Rulemaking Proceeding
The Digital Millennium Copyright Act, Public Law 105-304 (1998),
amended title 17 of the United States Code to add Chapter 12, which
among other things prohibits circumvention of access control
technologies employed by or on behalf of copyright owners to protect
their works. Specifically, subsection 1201(a)(1)(A) provides, inter
alia, that ``No person shall circumvent a technological measure that
effectively controls access to a work protected under this title.''
Subparagraph (B) limits this prohibition. It provides that
prohibition against circumvention ``shall not apply to persons who are
users of a copyrighted work which is in a particular class of works, if
such persons are, or are likely to be in the succeeding 3-year period,
adversely affected by virtue of such prohibition in their ability to
make noninfringing uses of that particular class of works under this
title'' as determined in this rulemaking.
Subparagraph (C) provides that every three years, the Librarian of
Congress, upon the recommendation of the Register of Copyrights (who is
to consult with the Assistant Secretary for Communications and
Information of the Department of Commerce) must ``make the
determination in a rulemaking proceeding for purposes of subparagraph
(B) of whether persons who are users of a copyrighted work are, or are
likely to be in the succeeding 3-year period, adversely affected by the
prohibition under subparagraph (A) in their ability to make
noninfringing uses under this title of a particular class of
copyrighted works.'' The Librarian, on the recommendation of the
Register, has thus far made four such determinations. This notice
announces the commencement of the fifth rulemaking proceeding under
section 1201(a)(1)(C).
The exemptions promulgated by the Librarian in the first rulemaking
were in effect for the 3-year period from October 28, 2000, through
October 28, 2003. See Exemption to Prohibition on Circumvention of
Copyright Protection Systems for Access Control Technologies, 65 FR
64556, 64564, published in the Federal Register October 27, 2000
(hereinafter Final Reg. 2000). On October 28, 2003, the Librarian of
Congress published the second determination as to classes of works to
be exempted from the prohibition. Exemption to Prohibition on
Circumvention of Copyright Protection Systems for Access Control
Technologies, 68 FR 62011, 62013, published in the Federal Register
October 31, 2003 (hereinafter Final Reg. 2003). The four exemptions
created in the second anticircumvention rulemaking remained in effect
for a 3-year period. On November 27, 2006, the Librarian of Congress
published the third determination. Exemption to Prohibition on
Circumvention of Copyright Protection Systems for Access Control
Technologies, 71 FR 68472, 68480, published in the Federal Register
November 27, 2006 (hereinafter Final Reg. 2006). The six exemptions
established in the third anticircumvention rulemaking remained in
effect until August 6, 2010. On August 6, 2010, the Librarian of
Congress published the fourth determination, which will remain in
effect until the conclusion of the next rulemaking. Exemption to
Prohibition on Circumvention of Copyright Protection Systems for Access
Control Technologies, 75 FR 47464, published in the Federal Register
August 6, 2010 (hereinafter Final Reg. 2010). All four of the previous
determinations by the Librarian of Congress were made upon the
recommendation of the Register of Copyrights following extensive
rulemaking proceedings.
2. Background
Title I of the Digital Millennium Copyright Act was, inter alia,
the congressional fulfillment of obligations of the United States under
the WIPO Copyright Treaty and the WIPO Performances and Phonograms
Treaty. For additional information on the historical background and the
legislative history of Title I, see Exemption to Prohibition on
Circumvention of Copyright Protection Systems for Access Control
Technologies, 64 FR 66139, 66140 (1999) [http://www.loc.gov/copyright/fedreg/1999/64fr66139.html].
Section 1201 of title 17 of the United States Code prohibits two
general types of activity: (1) The conduct of ``circumvention'' of
technological protection measures that control access to copyrighted
works and (2) trafficking in any technology, product, service, device,
component, or part thereof that protects either ``access'' to a
copyrighted work or that protects the ``rights of the copyright
owner,'' if that device or service meets one of three conditions. The
first type of activity, the conduct of circumvention, is prohibited in
section 1201(a)(1). The latter activities, trafficking in devices or
services that circumvent ``access'' or ``the rights of the copyright
owner,'' are contained in sections 1201(a)(2) and 1201(b) respectively.
In addition to these prohibitions, section 1201 also includes a series
of section-specific limitations and exemptions to the prohibitions of
section 1201.
A. The Anticircumvention Provision at Issue
Subsection 1201(a)(1) applies when a person who is not authorized
by the copyright owner to gain access to a work does so by
circumventing a technological measure put in place with the authority
of the copyright owner to control access to the work. See Report of the
House Committee on Commerce on the Digital Millennium Copyright Act of
1998, H.R. Rep. No. 105-551, pt. 2, at 36 (1998) (hereinafter Commerce
Comm. Report).
That section provides that ``No person shall circumvent a
technological
[[Page 60400]]
measure that effectively controls access to a work protected under this
title.'' 17 U.S.C. 1201(a)(1)(A) (1998).
The relevant terms are defined:
(3) As used in this subsection--
(A) to ``circumvent a technological measure'' means to descramble a
scrambled work, to decrypt an encrypted work, or otherwise to avoid,
bypass, remove, deactivate, or impair a technological measure, without
the authority of the copyright owner; and
(B) a technological measure ``effectively controls access to a
work'' if the measure, in the ordinary course of its operation,
requires the application of information, or a process or a treatment,
with the authority of the copyright owner, to gain access to the work.
17 U.S.C. 1201(a)(3).
B. Scope of the Rulemaking
The statutory focus of this rulemaking is limited to one subsection
of section 1201: the prohibition on the conduct of circumvention of
technological measures that control access to copyrighted works. 17
U.S.C. 1201(a)(1)(C) [http://www.copyright.gov/title17/92chap12.html#1201]. The Librarian of Congress has no authority to
limit either of the anti-trafficking provisions contained in
subsections 1201(a)(2) or 1201(b). 17 U.S.C. 1201(a)(1)(E). Moreover,
for a proposed exemption to be considered in this rulemaking, there
must be a causal connection between the prohibition in 1201(a)(1) and
the adverse effect on noninfringing uses.
This rulemaking addresses only the prohibition on the conduct of
circumventing measures that control ``access'' to copyrighted works,
e.g., decryption or hacking of access controls such as passwords or
serial numbers. The structure of section 1201 is such that there exists
no comparable prohibition on the conduct of circumventing technological
measures that protect the ``rights of the copyright owner,'' e.g., the
section 106 rights to reproduce, adapt, distribute, publicly perform,
or publicly display a work. Circumventing a technological measure that
protects these section 106 rights of the copyright owner is governed
not by section 1201, but rather by the traditional copyright rights and
the applicable limitations in the Copyright Act. For example, if a
person having lawful access to a work circumvents a measure that
prohibits printing or saving an electronic copy of an article, there is
no provision in section 1201 that precludes this activity. Instead, it
would be actionable as copyright infringement of the section 106 right
of reproduction unless an applicable limitation applied, e.g., fair
use. The trafficking in, inter alia, any device or service that enabled
others to circumvent such a technological protection measure may,
however, be actionable under section 1201(b).
On the other hand, because there is a prohibition on the act of
circumventing a technological measure that controls access to a work,
and since traditional Copyright Act limitations are not defenses to the
act of circumventing a technological measure that controls access,
Congress chose to create the current rulemaking proceeding as a ``fail-
safe mechanism'' to monitor the effect of the anticircumvention
provision in section 1201(a)(1)(A). Commerce Comm. Report, at 36. This
anticircumvention rulemaking is authorized to monitor the effect of the
prohibition against ``access'' circumvention on noninfringing uses of
copyrighted works. In this triennial rulemaking proceeding, effects on
noninfringing uses that are unrelated to section 1201(a)(1)(A) may not
be considered. 17 U.S.C. 1201(a)(1)(C).
C. Burden of Proof
In the first rulemaking, the Register concluded from the language
of the statute and the legislative history that a determination to
exempt a class of works from the prohibition on circumvention must be
based on a showing that the prohibition has or is likely to have a
substantial adverse effect on noninfringing uses of a particular class
of works. (The meaning of the phrase ``class of works'' is described in
section E of this Notice of Inquiry.) It was determined that proponents
of an exemption bear the burden of proof that an exemption is warranted
for a particular class of works and that the prohibition is presumed to
apply to all classes of works unless an adverse impact has been shown.
See Commerce Comm. Report, at 37 and see also, Final Reg. 2000, 65 FR
at 64558.
The ``substantial'' adverse effect requirement has also been
described as a requirement that the proponent of an exemption must
demonstrate ``distinct, verifiable, and measurable impacts,'' and more
than ``de minimis impacts.'' See Final Reg. 2003, 68 FR at 62013.
Whatever label one uses, proponents of an exemption bear the burden of
providing sufficient evidence under this standard to support an
exemption. How much evidence is sufficient will vary with the factual
context of the alleged harm. Further, proof of harm is never the only
consideration in the rulemaking process, and therefore the sufficiency
of the evidence of harm will always be relative to other
considerations, such as, the availability of the affected works for
use, the availability of the works for nonprofit archival,
preservation, and educational purposes, the impact that the prohibition
has on criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching, scholarship, or
research, the effect of circumvention on the market for or value of
copyrighted works, and any other relevant factors.
In order to meet the burden of proof, proponents of an exemption
must provide evidence either that actual harm currently exists or that
it is ``likely'' to occur in the ensuing 3-year period. Actual
instances of verifiable problems occurring in the marketplace are
generally necessary in order to prove actual harm. The most compelling
cases of actual harm will be based on first-hand knowledge of such
problems. Circumstantial evidence may also support a claim of present
or likely harm, but such evidence must also reasonably demonstrate that
a measure protecting access was the cause of the harm and that the
adversely affected use was, in fact, noninfringing. ``Likely'' adverse
effects may also support an exemption. This standard of ``likelihood''
requires proof that adverse effects are more likely than not to occur.
Claims based on ``likely'' adverse effects cannot be supported by
speculation alone. See Staff of House Committee on the Judiciary, 105th
Cong., Section-by-Section Analysis of H.R. 2281 as Passed by the United
States House of Representatives on August 4, 1998, (hereinafter House
Manager's Report), at 6, (an exemption based on ``likely'' future
adverse impacts during the applicable period should only be made ``in
extraordinary circumstances in which the evidence of likelihood is
highly specific, strong and persuasive.''). Conjecture alone is
insufficient to support a finding of ``likely'' adverse effect. Final
Reg. 2000, 65 FR at 64559. Although a showing of ``likely'' adverse
impact will necessarily involve prediction, the burden of proving that
the expected adverse effect is more likely than other possible outcomes
rests firmly on the proponent of the exemption.
The identification of existing or likely problems is not, however,
the end of the analysis. In order for an exemption of a particular
class of works to be warranted, a proponent must show that such
problems justify an exemption in light of all of the relevant facts.
The identification of isolated or anecdotal problems will be generally
insufficient to warrant an exemption. Similarly, the mere fact that the
digital format would be more convenient to use for
[[Page 60401]]
noninfringing purposes is generally insufficient factual support for an
exemption. Further, purely theoretical critiques of section 1201 cannot
satisfy the requisite showing. House Manager's Report, at 6. Proponents
of exemptions must show sufficient harm to warrant an exemption from
the default rule established by Congress--the prohibition against
circumvention.
There is a presumption that the section 1201 prohibition will apply
to any and all classes of works, including previously exempted classes,
unless a new showing is made that an exemption is warranted. Final Reg.
2000, 65 FR at 64558. Exemptions are reviewed de novo and prior
exemptions will expire unless sufficient new evidence is presented in
each rulemaking that the prohibition has or is likely to have an
adverse effect on noninfringing uses. The facts and argument that
supported an exemption during any given 3-year period may be
insufficient within the context of the marketplace in a different 3-
year period. Similarly, proposals that were not found to justify an
exemption in any particular rulemaking could find factual support in
the context and on the record of another rulemaking.
Evidence in support or in opposition to an exemption should be
contained in the initial comments or, after publication of the proposed
classes in the Federal Register, in the comments on the proposed
exemptions. The purpose of this rulemaking is to survey interested
parties in the digital environment to discover whether section
1201(a)(1) is adversely affecting noninfringing uses of particular
classes of copyrighted works. The proposals received in the initial
comments will frame the inquiry throughout the rest of the rulemaking
process. The comments submitted in response to this Notice of Inquiry
will be posted on the Copyright Office Web site shortly after
submission, and a Notice of Proposed Rulemaking identifying the classes
of works proposed will be published in the Federal Register shortly
thereafter.\1\ The Notice of Proposed Rulemaking will invite copyright
owners and other interested parties to offer their comments in support
of or opposition to the proposed classes. Comments responsive to the
proposed classes may also propose modest refinements to the proposed
classes and supply additional evidence, but may not propose completely
new classes of works. Since opponents to exemptions have only one
comment period to provide written responses to the exemptions proposed,
opponents should have sufficient notice of the exemptions to be
addressed in the rulemaking. Copyright owners and other interested
parties, however, should be vigilant in monitoring classes proposed in
the initial comment period that may implicate their interests as such
classes may be further refined in the ensuing rulemaking process.
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\1\ See infra for a discussion of proposals raised after the
initial comment period has expired.
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The Office will post all of the comments, hearing transcripts, and
other relevant material in this rulemaking proceeding, as the Office
has done since the inception of this rulemaking proceeding, on the
Copyright Office's Web site at: http://www.copyright.gov/1201.\2\
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\2\ If a comment includes attached material that appears to be
protected by copyright and there is no indication that the material
was attached with permission of the copyright owner, the attached
material will not be placed on the Office's Website. If such a
material is available on the Internet, the comment should identify
where the material may be found.
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The Copyright Office will also conduct a series of hearings on the
proposed exemptions in the Spring, in Washington DC and possibly in
California. These hearings will offer proponents and opponents of
exemptions an opportunity to present arguments and answer questions
from the Register and her staff. These hearings--the time, date and
subject matter of which will be announced early in 2012--will not
provide a forum in which to raise new proposals or to submit wholly new
evidence. Evidence that demonstrates how a technological measure
operates and affects noninfringing uses as well as evidence that is
responsive to earlier disputes raised in the comment process is
welcomed, and is encouraged, at these hearings. However, the hearings
may not be used as a vehicle for surprise or to present untimely
proposals.
The Register is also likely to pose post-hearing questions to
specific parties or witnesses that participated in the rulemaking
proceeding. These questions have historically sought clarification of
legal and factual questions, including specific requests to explain the
operation of a technological measure at issue. Such post-hearing
questions should not be construed as a general public post-hearing
comment phase--there simply will not be sufficient time to consider
another round of general public comments before the announcement of the
newly exempted classes--but rather are invitations addressed to
specific witnesses who have offered testimony on an issue to provide
further clarification in response to specific questions from the
Register. The questions and the responses to the questions will be
posted on the Copyright Office's website after the responses have been
received.
D. Availability of Works in Unprotected Formats
Other statutory considerations must also be balanced with evidence
of adverse effects attributable to the prohibition. In making her
recommendation to the Librarian, the Register is instructed to consider
the availability for use of copyrighted works. 17 U.S.C.
1201(a)(1)(C)(i). This inquiry demands that the Register consider
whether ``works'' protected by technological measures that control
access are also available in the marketplace in formats that are
unprotected. The fact that a ``work'' (in contrast to a particular
``copy'' of a work) is available in a format without technological
protection measures may be significant because the unprotected formats
might allow the public to make noninfringing uses of the work even
though other formats of the work would not. For example, in the first
rulemaking, many users claimed that the technological measures on
motion pictures contained on Digital Versatile Disks (DVDs) restricted
noninfringing uses of the motion pictures. A balancing consideration
was that the record revealed at that time that the vast majority of
these works were also available in analog format on VHS tapes. Final
Reg. 2000, 65 FR at 64568. Thus, the full range of availability of a
work for use is necessary to consider in assessing the need for an
exemption to the prohibition on circumvention.
Another consideration relating to the availability for use of
copyrighted works is whether the measure supports a distribution model
that benefits the public generally. For example, while a measure may
limit the length of time that a work may be accessed (time-limited) or
may limit the scope of access (scope-limited), e.g., access to only a
portion of work, those limitations may benefit the public by providing
``use-facilitating'' models that allow users to obtain access to works
at a lower cost than they would otherwise be charged were such
restrictions not in place. If there is sufficient evidence that
particular classes of works would not be offered at all without the
protection afforded by technological protection measures that control
access, this evidence must be considered. House Manager's Report, at 6.
Accord, Final Reg. 2000, 65 FR at 64559. Thus, the Register's inquiry
must assess any benefits to the public resulting from the
[[Page 60402]]
prohibition as well as the adverse effects that may be established.
E. The Scope of the Term ``Class of Works''
Section 1201 does not define a critical term for the rulemaking
process: a ``class of works.'' With respect to this issue and others,
commenters should familiarize themselves with the Register's
recommendation and the Librarian's determination in the first
rulemaking and in the subsequent three rulemakings, since many of the
issues which were unsettled at the start of the first rulemaking have
been addressed and developed in the four determinations. While the
approach taken in resolving the issues raised in these rulemakings may
continue to develop in this and subsequent proceedings, interested
parties should assume that the standards developed thus far will
continue to apply in the current proceeding. Of course, commenters may
argue for adoption of alternative approaches,\3\ but a persuasive case
will have to be made to warrant reconsideration of previous decisions
regarding interpretation of section 1201.
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\3\ Proponents of an exemption may do so in their comments
proposing exemptions. Opponents of an exemption should do so in
their comments filed in response to the forthcoming Notice of
Proposed Rulemaking.
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In the first rulemaking, the Register elicited views on the scope
and meaning of the term ``class of works.'' After review of the
statutory language, the legislative history and the extensive record in
the proceeding [see Final Reg., 65 FR at 64557 for a description of the
record in the last rulemaking proceeding], the Register reached certain
conclusions on the scope of this term. [For a more detailed discussion,
see Final Reg., 65 FR at 64559.]
The Register found that the statutory language required that the
Librarian identify a ``class of works'' primarily based upon attributes
of the works themselves, and not by reference to some external criteria
such as the intended use or the users of the works. The phrase ``class
of works'' connotes that the shared, common attributes of the ``class''
relate to the nature of authorship in the ``works.'' Thus a ``class of
works'' was intended to be a ``narrow and focused subset of the broad
categories of works of authorship * * * identified in section 102.''
Commerce Comm. Report, at 38. The starting point for a proposed
exemption of a particular class of works must be the section 102
categories of authorship: literary works; musical works; dramatic
works; pantomimes and choreographic works; pictorial, graphic and
sculptural works; motion pictures and other audiovisual works; sound
recordings; and architectural works.
This determination is supported by the House Manager's Report which
discussed the importance of appropriately defining the proper scope of
the exemption. House Manager's Report, at 7. The legislative history
stated that it would be highly unlikely for all literary works to be
adversely affected by the prohibition and therefore, determining an
appropriate subcategory of the works in this category would be the goal
of the rulemaking. Id.
Therefore, the Register concluded that the starting point for
identifying a particular ``class of works'' to be exempted must be one
of the section 102 categories. Final Reg., 65 FR at 64559-64561. From
that starting point, it is likely that the scope or boundaries of a
particular class would need to be further limited to remedy the
particular harm to noninfringing uses identified in the rulemaking.
In the first anticircumvention rulemaking, the Register recommended
and the Librarian agreed that two classes of works should be exempted:
(1) Compilations consisting of lists of websites blocked by
filtering software applications; and
(2) Literary works, including computer programs and databases,
protected by access control mechanisms that fail to permit access
because of malfunction, damage or obsoleteness.
While the first class exempted fits comfortably within the approach
to classification discussed above, the second class includes the entire
category of literary works, but narrows the exemption by reference to
attributes of the technological measures that controls access to the
works.
In the 2006 rulemaking, the Register determined that a further
refinement of the approach to determining a particular class of works
was warranted. Even though a class must begin, as its starting point,
by reference to one of the categories of authorship enumerated in
section 102 of the Copyright Act (or some subset thereof), that class
should be further tailored to address the harm (actual or likely)
alleged. The proper tailoring of a class will depend on the specific
facts, but in some cases, the most appropriate manner of further
tailoring the category or sub-category may be to limit the class in
relation to particular uses or users.
The impetus for this refinement was a proposed exemption for film
and media studies professors. The proponents of the exemption
demonstrated that the reproduction and public performance of short
portions of motion pictures or other audiovisual works in the course of
face-to-face teaching activities of a film or media studies course
would generally constitute a noninfringing use. The proponents further
demonstrated that the digital version of the motion pictures
distributed on DVDs was not merely a preferred format, but that the
digital version of these works was the only version of the work that
met the pedagogical needs of the film and media studies professors. The
proponents of the exemption also demonstrated that their otherwise
noninfringing uses of the digital versions of these motion pictures
were adversely affected by the prohibition on circumvention of
technological measures protecting access to these works, because the
Content Scrambling System (CSS) contained on most commercially released
DVDs was an access control system that prevented the making of a
compilation of film clips for classroom use. Although opponents of the
exemption demonstrated a DVD player that was alleged to meet the
pedagogical needs of educators, the device presented obstacles for
classroom use that were found to be more than a mere inconvenience for
a subset of users--film and media studies professors.
The proponents met their burden of proving that section 1201(a)(1)
was adversely affecting film and media studies educators' ability to
engage in noninfringing uses for the ensuing 3-year period and that no
reasonable substitute for the pedagogically beneficial digital content
was available or likely to become available in the next three years.
The opponents of the proposal expressed concern that if the proposed
class of works--audiovisual works included in the educational library
of a college or university's film or media studies department and that
are protected by technological measures that prevent their educational
use--was based only on attributes of the work itself, the exemption
would necessarily exempt a much broader range of uses than those in
which the film professors wished to engage. Moreover, copyright owners
were concerned that such an exemption would create public confusion
about the circumstances in which circumvention was appropriate. Given
the expanse of such a class of works and the adverse effects that could
occur as a result of confusion about the class, copyright owners argued
that overall harm of such an exemption would outweigh the marginal
benefits to this subset of educators.
[[Page 60403]]
The Register concluded that a further refinement of the scope of a
class of works was the proper balance to the valid concerns of both
educators and copyright owners. By delineating the class in relation to
the relevant noninfringing use proven to be, or likely to be, adversely
affected by the prohibition on circumvention, film and media studies
educators' needs could be met while leaving the statutory prohibition
against circumvention intact for that class with respect to other uses.
In the fourth rulemaking concluded in 2010, similar refinements were
made to certain classes of works. See 37 CFR 201.40(b)(1), (2), (3),
and (4).
In all proposed exemptions, the starting point for a class of works
must be a section 102 category of authorship, or a subset thereof. That
category or subset should then be tailored by other criteria as
appropriate under the particular facts presented. The goal is to
fashion an exemption that is neither too narrow nor too broad to
remedially address the evidence of present and likely harm. An
appropriately fashioned exemption will assist users and copyright
owners alike, by temporarily suspending the prohibition on
circumvention for appropriately tailored adversely affected classes,
while preserving the prohibition in all other classes.
The exemptions published for each three-year period are temporary
and expire when the succeeding determination of the Librarian of
Congress is published. This rulemaking will examine adverse effects
existing in the marketplace or likely to exist in the next three-year
period to determine whether any exemptions to the prohibition on
circumvention of technological protection measures that effectively
control access to copyrighted works are warranted by the evidence
raised during this rulemaking.
F. Considerations To Address Within a Comment
This notice requests written comments from all interested parties
wishing to propose a class of works for exemption from the prohibition
on circumvention. In addition to the necessary showing discussed above,
in order to make a prima facie case for a proposed exemption, certain
critical points should be established. First, a proponent should
identify the technological measure that is the ultimate source of the
alleged problem, and the proponent should explain how the technological
measure effectively controls access to a copyrighted work. Second, a
proponent must specifically explain what noninfringing activity the
prohibition on circumvention is preventing. In addition to describing
the activity, the proponent should provide a factual basis for a
determination that the technological measure has had or is likely to
have a substantial adverse effect on noninfringing uses; demonstrating
only isolated instances of relatively minimal adverse effects is not
likely to meet the proponent's burden. Third, a proponent should
establish that the prevented activity is, in fact, a noninfringing use
under current law. A proponent should also demonstrate why the access-
protected copy of a work is needed for the noninfringing use and why
alternate means of engaging in the noninfringing uses (including use of
available copies of the work in unprotected formats), if they exist,
are an insufficient substitute for accomplishing the noninfringing use.
The nature of the Librarian's inquiry is further delineated by the
statutory areas to be examined by the Register of Copyrights:
(i) The availability for use of copyrighted works;
(ii) the availability for use of works for nonprofit archival,
preservation, and educational purposes;
(iii) the impact that the prohibition on the circumvention of
technological measures applied to copyrighted works has on criticism,
comment, news reporting, teaching, scholarship, or research;
(iv) the effect of circumvention of technological measures on the
market for or value of copyrighted works; and
(v) such other factors as the Librarian considers appropriate. 17
U.S.C. 1201(a)(1)(C).
These statutory considerations require examination and careful
balancing. The harm identified by a proponent of an exemption must be
balanced with the harm that would result from an exemption. In some
circumstances, the adverse effect of a proposed exemption in light of
these considerations may be greater than the harm posed by the
prohibition on circumvention of works in the proposed class. Perhaps
the proper balance can be resolved by carefully tailoring the scope of
the class, but ultimately, the determination of the Librarian must take
all of these factors into account.
3. Written Comments
In the first rulemaking, the Register determined that the burden of
proof is on the proponent of an exemption to come forward with evidence
supporting an exemption for a particular class of works. In this fifth
triennial rulemaking, the Register shall continue with the procedure
adopted in the second, third and fourth rulemakings: Comments submitted
in the initial comment period should be confined to proposals for
exempted classes. They should specifically identify particular classes
of works adversely affected by the prohibition and provide evidentiary
support for the need for the proposed exemptions (see section F above).
Proponents should present their entire case in their initial
comments. A proponent of a particular class of works will not be
permitted to submit an additional comment in support of that class in
response to the December notice of proposed rulemaking unless, at least
15 days before the deadline for comments in response to the notice of
proposed rulemaking, the proponent has submitted a written request for
permission to submit an additional comment demonstrating good cause to
permit the submission of the comment, and the Copyright Office has
approved the submission of the comment. The purpose of this requirement
is to provide for the orderly presentation of evidence and arguments,
and to permit both proponents and opponents to present their best
cases.
For each particular class of works that a commenter proposes for
exemption, the commenter should first identify that class, followed by
a summary of the argument in favor of exempting that proposed class.
The commenter should then specify the facts and evidence providing a
basis for this exemption. This factual information should ideally
include the technological measure that controls access and the manner
in which this technological measure operates to control access to a
copyrighted work. Finally, the commenter should state any legal
arguments in support of the exemption, including the activity that is
claimed to be noninfringing, the legal basis for this claim, and why
this noninfringing activity cannot be accomplished in other ways. The
legal argument should include an analysis of the factors set forth in
17 U.S.C. 1201(a)(1)(C), discussed above. This format of class/summary/
facts/argument should be sequentially followed for each class of work
proposed as necessary.
As discussed above, the best evidence in support of an exemption
would consist of concrete examples or specific instances in which the
prohibition on circumvention of technological measures protecting
access has had or is likely to have an adverse effect on noninfringing
uses. It would also be useful for the commenter to quantify the adverse
effects in order to explain the scope of the present or likely problem.
As noted above, demonstrating only
[[Page 60404]]
isolated instances of relatively minimal adverse effects is not likely
to meet the proponent's burden.
Comments subsequently submitted in response to exemptions proposed
in the first round of comments should provide factual information and
legal argument addressing whether or not a proposed exemption should be
adopted. Since the comments in this second round are intended to be
responsive to the initial comments, commenters must identify which
proposal(s) they are responding to, whether in opposition, support,
amplification or correction. As with initial comments, these responsive
comments should first identify the proposed class or classes to which
the comment is responsive, provide a summary of the argument, and then
provide the factual and/or legal support for their argument. This
format of class/summary/facts and/or legal argument should be repeated
for each comment responsive to a particular proposed class of work.
All comments must, at a minimum, contain the legal name of the
submitter and the entity, if any, on whose behalf the comment was
submitted. If persons do not wish to have their address, telephone
number, or email address publicly displayed on the Office's website,
comments should not include such information on the document itself but
should only include the legal name of the commenter. The Office
strongly prefers that all comments be submitted in electronic form and
the electronic form will provide a place to provide the required
information separately from the attached comment submission. However,
anyone who cannot submit comments electronically may contact the
Copyright Office at 202-707-8380 for special instructions. Electronic
comments successfully submitted through the Office's website will
generate a confirmation receipt to the submitter.
4. Submission of Comments
The Copyright Office's Web site will contain a submission page at:
http://www.copyright.gov/1201/comment-forms. Approximately thirty days
prior to the deadline for submission of comments, the form page will be
activated on the Copyright Office Web site allowing information to be
entered into the required fields, including the name of the person
making the submission, mailing address, telephone number, and email
address. There will also be non-required fields for, e.g., the
commenter's title, the organization that the commenter is representing,
whether the commenter is likely to request to testify at public
hearings and if so, whether the commenter is likely to prefer to
testify in Washington, DC, or at a location in California. Commenters
will also be required to fill in two additional fields: (1) The
proposed class or classes of copyrighted work(s) to be exempted, and
(2) a brief summary of the argument(s).
All comments submitted electronically must be sent as an
attachment, and must be in a single file in either Adobe Portable
Document File (PDF) format (preferred), Microsoft, WordPerfect, Rich
Text Format (RTF), or ASCII text file format. There will be a browse
button on the form that will allow submitters to attach the comment
file to the form and then to submit the completed form to the Office.
The personal information entered into the required fields on the
form page will not be publicly posted on the Copyright Office website,
but the Office intends to post on its website the name of the
proponent, the proposed class and possibly the summary of the argument,
as well as the entire, attached comment document. Only the commenter's
name is required on the comment document itself and a commenter who
does not want other personal information posted on the Office's Web
site should avoid including other personal information on the comment
itself. Except in exceptional circumstances, changes to the submitted
comment will not be allowed and it will become a part of the permanent
public record of this rulemaking.
Comments will be accepted for a period of 30 days, and a form will
be placed on the Copyright Office Web site 30 days prior to the
deadline for submission. Initial comments will be accepted from
November 2, 2011, until December 1, 2011, at 5 p.m. Eastern Standard
Time, at which time the submission form will be removed from the
website. The deadline for the second round of comments will be
announced in the Notice of Proposed Rulemaking to be published in
December, and will probably be early in February 2012.
5. Hearings
As mentioned above, after the conclusion of the comment periods,
the Register intends to hold public hearings in the Spring. The dates
and locations of the hearings in, have not yet been determined,
although at a minimum hearings will be conducted in Washington DC and,
possibly, in California. A separate notice providing details about all
hearings in this rulemaking proceeding will be published at a later
time in the Federal Register and on the Copyright Office's website. In
order to assist the Copyright Office in identifying the number of days
for hearings, the comment form page will contain non-required fields
asking whether the commenter is likely to request to testify and if so,
in which location. Formal requests to testify will be solicited early
in 2012.
As noted above, following the hearings, the Copyright Office may
request additional information from parties who have been involved in
the rulemaking process. Such requests for responses to questions will
take the form of a letter from the Copyright Office and will be
addressed to particular parties involved in an issue in which more
information is sought. These inquiries will include deadlines based on
when the requests for information are sent. After the receipt of all
responses to all inquiries from the Copyright Office, the Office will
post the questions, the parties to whom the questions were sent, and
the responses on the Copyright Office's website.
6. Process for Untimely Submissions Based on Exceptional or Unforeseen
Circumstances
To provide sufficient flexibility in this proceeding in the event
that unforeseen developments occur after the deadlines for the filing
of initial comments, a person wishing to propose an exemption for a
particular class of works after the specified deadline for initial
comments may petition the Register to consider an additional exemption.
A petition, including proposed new classes of works to be exempted,
must be in writing and must set forth the reasons why the information
could not have been made available earlier and why it should be
considered by the Register after the deadline. A petition must also be
accompanied by a comment that meets the requirements for initial
comments set forth in section 3 above. Any person wishing to submit a
petition should contact the Copyright Office at 202-707-8380 for
further information on how to submit the petition. Such petitions will
be granted only when the Office has been satisfied that late submission
is justified due to exceptional or unforeseen circumstances.
Exceptional or unforeseen circumstances generally require that the
proposal be based upon information that did not exist at the time of
the comment periods. A person wishing to file any other untimely
submission (e.g., a comment in response to a proposed class of works)
may also petition the Register to consider such submission, but such
untimely submissions will be disfavored. The Register will make a
determination
[[Page 60405]]
whether to accept a petition based on the stage of the rulemaking
process at which the request is made and the merits of the petition. A
substantively meritorious petition may be denied if the petition comes
so late in the process that adequate notice and comment cannot be
accommodated within the statutory time frame of the rulemaking process.
The mere fact that an interested party was unaware of this proceeding
or of any particular exemptions proposed in this proceeding is not a
valid justification for a late submission. If a petition is accepted,
the Register will publish the proposal in the Federal Register and
announce deadlines for comments. If a petition is denied, the Register
will set forth the reasons for the denial in a letter to the
petitioner. All petitions and responses will become part of the public
record in this rulemaking process.
Dated: September 23, 2011.
Maria A. Pallante,
Register of Copyrights.
[FR Doc. 2011-25106 Filed 9-28-11; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 1410-30-P
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