
The Future of the Public Domain
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How and to what extent does the commodification of information affect the free flow of information and the integrity of the public domain? Does the freedom of expression and information, guaranteed inter alia in the European Convention on Human Rights, call for active state intervention to `save the public domain? What means both legal and practical are available or might be conceived to guarantee and foster a robust public domain? These were the main questions that were addressed in a major collaborative research project led by the Institute for Information Law of the University of Amsterdam (IViR) in co-operation with the Tilburg Institute for Law, Technology and Society (TILT) of Tilburg University, and funded by ITeR, the Dutch National Program for Information Technology and Law.
Thirteen contributions from academia worldwide make up the present book, addressing the future of the public domain from a different angle. In addition, all authors were invited to reflect upon the notion and role of the public domain in the context of information law and policy. Should this concept be limited to that of a `negative image of (intellectual) property protection, i.e. all publicly available information not subject to a property right, and therefore freely (i.e. gratis) available, or should a broader approach be taken, e.g. all information available from public sources at affordable cost? Should information policies be aimed at maximizing the public domain or optimizing information flows? To what extent are these aims congruent?
This book takes a broader, `information law oriented approach towards the question of preserving the public domain, in which a wide range of interrelated legal questions converge. Issues treated in this book include:
Economic analysis of the public domain
Fundamental rights analysis of the public domain
Impact of the application of technological protection measures and contractual restrictions on the public domain
The impact of the expansion of copyright, database right and patent rights on the public domain
The impact of the commodification of private data, government information, indigenous knowledge on the public domain
The capacity of the Open Source and Creative Commons Movements to preserve the integrity of the public domain
The Future of the Public Domain is an important work for all those interested or involved in the regulation of the knowledge economy. Legal scholars, academic and research institutions, corporate counsel, lawyers, government policymakers and regulators all these and more will benefit enormously from the thoughtful and incisive discussions presented here.
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Content
- Cover
- Half Title Page
- Editorial Board
- Title Page
- Copyright Page
- Table of Contents
- Chapter I The Future of the Public Domain: An Introduction
- Chapter II Challenges in Mapping the Public Domain
- 1. INTRODUCTION
- 2. CONSIDERING CRITICISMS OF THE PUBLIC DOMAIN MAP
- 3. NORMATIVE REASONS TO MAP THE PUBLIC DOMAIN
- Chapter III Economic Analysis of the Public Domain
- 1. Introduction
- 2. Law and Economics and Intellectual Property
- 3. The Tragedy of the Commons Paradigm and the Positive Analysis of the Public Domain
- 4. The Incentives Paradigm and the Normative Analysis of the Public Domain
- 4.1. The Incentive Paradigm versus the Tragedy of the Commons
- 4.2. Alternatives to Intellectual Property within the Incentive Paradigm and their Effects on the Public Domain
- 5. Some Hidden Assumptions of the Traditional Law and Economics Analysis
- 5.1. Theories of Progress and the Evolution of Science
- 5.2. The State of Technology
- 5.3. The Arena - the Definition of Communities, Individuals and Time
- 6. Property Rights and the Public Domain Revisited
- 7. Conclusion
- Chapter IV More or Better? Shaping the Public Domain
- 1. Introduction
- 2. Speech: More or Better?
- 2.1. Two Paradigms of Threats to Speech
- 2.2. First (Amendment) Principles
- 2.2.1. The Search for the Truth
- 2.2.2. Democracy
- 2.2.3. Participation
- 3. Expression: More or Better?
- 3.1. Author-Based Theories
- 3.2. Instrumental Views of Copyright: The Economic Analysis
- 3.3. Markets
- 3.3.1. Quality
- 3.3.2. Quantity
- 3.4. The Democratic View of Copyright Law
- 4. The Public Domain and the Market
- 4.1. The Market and the Marketplace of Ideas
- 4.2. Democratic Views of Copyright and of Free Speech
- 5. Conclusion
- Chapter V Wrapping Information in Contract: How Does it Affect the Public Domain?
- 1. Introduction
- 2. Contracts relating to public domain information
- 2.1. The Public Domain from a European Perspective
- 2.2. Contracts over Information Not or No Longer Qualifying
- 2.3. Contracts over Privileged Uses
- 3. Impact of contractual practices on the public domain
- 3.1. Legitimacy of Private Ordering
- 3.2. Effectiveness of Private Ordering
- 3.3. Symbolic Meaning
- 4. Conclusion
- Chapter VI The Public Domain Commodified: Technological Measures and Productive Information Use
- 1. Commodification and the Public Domain
- 2. Rhetoric
- 3. Control over Use
- 4. Control over Information
- 5. Economic Valuation
- 6. Regulation
- 7. Freedoms of Expression and Information
- 8. Conclusion
- Chapter VII Copyright, Commodification, and Culture: Locating the Public Domain
- 1. Commodification and the Public Domain: Four Puzzles
- 2. The Construction of the Public Domain: A Brief History of an Idea
- 2.1. From Public Property and Publici Juris to Public Domain
- 2.2. Public Domain, Public Property, and Publici Juris in Nineteenth-Century US Law
- 2.3. The Public Domain in Contemporary Copyright Law
- 2.4. The Four Puzzles Revisited
- 3. The Common in Culture: Toward a Social Theory of Creative Practice
- 3.1. Cultural Mechanics
- 3.2. Cultural Biology
- 3.3. Cultural Anthropology
- 3.4. Notes Toward a Sociology of Creative Practice
- 4. The Public Domain (and Commodification) Reconsidered
- 4.1. From the Public Domain to the Cultural Landscape
- 4.2. Recognizing the Cultural Landscape
- 4.3. The Postcolonialist Critique
- 5. Conclusion
- Chapter VIII Database Protection: The Commodification of Information
- 1. An Overview of the Directive
- 1.1. More than Just Copyright
- 1.2. Case Law relating to the Directive
- 2. The History of the Directive and American Proposals
- 2.1. The Directive
- 2.2. The American Proposals
- 2.2.1. The Current Proposal
- 2.2.2. Why the Differences do not Matter
- 2.2.2. . And Why They do Matter
- 3. Lessons from the EU and American Processes
- 3.1. Eliminating References to 'Qualitative' Investment in and 'Qualitatively' Substantial Parts of Databases
- 3.2. Ensuring Maximum and Uniform Implementation of Exceptions
- 3.3. Copyright Exemption for Downloading Data
- 3.4. Altering the Provisions in Respect of the Duration of Protection to Ensure Data Falls into the Public Domain after 15 Years
- 3.5. Application of Antitrust Generally
- 3.6. Rights Over the Contents of Databases
- 4. Notion and Role of the Public Domain in the Context of Information Law and Policy
- 4.1. Open Warfare
- 4.1.1. Symbolism and the Battle of Ideas
- 4.1.2. Independent Watchdogs
- 5. Conclusion
- Postscript
- Chapter IX Patenting Science: Protecting the Domain of Accessible Knowledge
- 1. The nature of the debate
- 1.1. What Counts as Public?
- 1.2. Does Access Matter?
- 1.3. Is the Domain of Accessible Knowledge Shrinking?
- 1.4. Are there Constraints on Reform?
- 2. Protecting the domain of accessible knowledge
- 3. Mapping the International Domain of Accessible Knowledge
- 4. Conclusion
- Chapter X Property and Privacy: European Perspectives and the Commodification of our Identity
- 1. Introduction
- 2. Background
- 3. Privacy and property: 'ownership' models on the Internet
- 4. Establishing a property right in personal data
- 5. Property rights and human rights
- 5.1. Property, Privacy and Personality
- 5.2. Property, Human Dignity and the Human Body
- 5.3. Contractual Freedom and Human Rights
- 6. Contractual Freedom , Control Rights and the EU Personal Data Directive
- 7. Reflections on Property in Personal Data
- 8. The Costs of a Property Rights Approach
- 9. Commodification of Personal Data, Identities and the Public Domain
- 10. Conclusion
- Chapter XI Towards an Indigenous Public Domain?
- 1. Introduction
- 2. IP protection and Indigenous creations
- 3. Impact of Extending IP Protection to Indigenous creations
- 4. Reconfiguring the public domain in the interest of Indigenous cultures
- Chapter XII The Commercialization of Public Sector Information: Delineating the Issues
- 1. Delineating the Field
- 1.1. Definition of Public Sector
- 1.2. Types of Government Information
- 2. Overview of market-Oriented tendencies
- 2.1. Decentralization
- 2.2. Privatization
- 2.3. Public Private Partnerships
- 3. Policy instruments affecting access
- 3.1. Intellectual Property
- 3.2. Freedom of Information
- 3.3. Information Registers & Publication Schemes
- 3.4. Fair Information Practice Policies
- 3.5. United States OMB Circular A-130
- 3.6. The Netherlands Instructions on Market Activity by Public Sector Bodies
- 3.7. United Kingdom's Information Fair Trader Scheme
- 3.8. Pricing Strategies
- 4. Conclusion
- Chapter XIII Free and open source software: an answer to commodification?
- 1. Introduction
- 2. What is Open Source?
- 3. Is Open Source an answer to commodification?
- 3.1. Open Source, Public Domain and Commodification
- 3.1.1. The Persistence of the GPL
- 3.1.2 The End of Copyright as We Know It?
- 3.1.3. Technical Protection and Open Source
- 3.2. Other Types of Information than Software
- 4. The Role of Government in Open Source
- 5. Conclusion
- Chapter XIV Exploring Creative Commons: A Skeptical View of a Worthy Pursuit
- 1. Introduction
- 2. Ideology and Strategy
- 2.1. What is Wrong with the Current Copyright Regime?
- 2.2. Creative Remedy: A Licensing Platform
- 2.3. Ideological Fuzziness
- 3. Empowering Owners to Govern Their Own Works
- 4. Private Ordering and Public Welfare
- 5. Proliferation of Licenses and Barriers on Access
- 6. Conclusion
- Workshop Discussions
- Introduction
- DAY I
- Plenary session
- Session I
- Session II
- Session III
- DAY II
- Session IV
- Session V
- Session VI
- About the Contributors
- Back Cover
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