Judge Posner: Expand copyright to protect newspapers?

A picture from the top of the Geoman Press at ...
Image via Wikipedia

Judge Richard Posner has recently sug­gested that copy­right law might need to be expanded to pro­tect the news indus­try, includ­ing bar­ring link­ing to copy­righted con­tent or para­phras­ing it. I view such pro­tec­tion­ism as effec­tively enabling “rent seek­ing” by the estab­lished news indus­try. Ultimately, such acts harm soci­ety more than they help it. Certainly, at times legal inter­ven­tion is impor­tant to improve mar­kets (ban­ning monop­o­lies, estab­lish­ing and enforc­ing safety stan­dards, reg­u­lat­ing finan­cial insti­tu­tions), but this is one case where I am more in favor of a libertarian/“let me mar­ket decide” approach. Perhaps this is because I am more con­fi­dent that alter­na­tives to tra­di­tional news­pa­pers will emerge to pro­vide new venues for pro­fes­sional jour­nal­ism, even if the exact form that will take is still unclear.

Posner, and many in favor of expand­ing copy­right and intel­lec­tual prop­erty, are gen­er­ally obsessed with the “free rider” prob­lem: peo­ple other than the orig­i­nal cre­ator (or owner) scoop­ing up their labor and prof­it­ing by it., with­out adding any addi­tional value. Free rid­ers under­cut the incen­tive to create.

Jeff Jarvis thinks Posner’s view of free rid­ing in this con­text is backwards:

Schultz and the Marbergers com­plain about what they call the “free-​​riding” of aggre­ga­tors, et al. But they sim­ply don’t under­stand the eco­nom­ics of the inter­net. It’s the news­pa­pers that are free-​​riding, get­ting the ben­e­fit of links.

These news­pa­per peo­ple are the ones try­ing to act as if they own the news and can monop­o­lize it. Those days are over, thank God.

via First, kill the lawyers — before they kill the news.

I think, though, that Posner’s free rider worry is a indeed con­cern to be aware of, just as wor­ry­ing about those who may seek to exploit wel­fare sys­tems are cause for con­cern. But an over-​​obsession with this prob­lem can lead to overly restric­tive poli­cies that sti­fle inno­va­tion and ham­per new ideas, new approaches, and keep soci­ety stuck in place. This is good if you are a “have,” and bad if you are a “have not” — or if you’re an entre­pre­neur with a new idea.

I am not the only this trou­bling. There has been a vig­or­ous reac­tion his idea that expand­ing copy­right laws to pro­tect news­pa­pers “might be nec­es­sary” to avoid a duop­oly on “news and opinion”:

Imagine if the New York Times migrated entirely to the World Wide Web. Could it sup­port, out of adver­tis­ing and sub­scriber rev­enues, as large a news-​​gathering appa­ra­tus as it does today? This seems unlikely, because it is much eas­ier to cre­ate a web site and free ride on other sites than to cre­ate a print news­pa­per and free ride on other print news­pa­pers, in part because of the lag in print pub­li­ca­tion; what is staler than last week’s news. Expanding copy­right law to bar online access to copy­righted mate­ri­als with­out the copy­right holder’s con­sent, or to bar link­ing to or para­phras­ing copy­righted mate­ri­als with­out the copy­right holder’s con­sent, might be nec­es­sary to keep free rid­ing on con­tent financed by online news­pa­pers from so impair­ing the incen­tive to cre­ate costly news-​​gathering oper­a­tions that news ser­vices like Reuters and the Associated Press would become the only pro­fes­sional, non­govern­men­tal sources of news and opinion.

via The Becker-​​Posner Blog: The Future of Newspapers — Posner.

Economist Gary Becker instead argues that, while “the printed news­pa­per busi­ness is doomed,” this does not mean the end of inde­pen­dent and accu­rate news sources:

Although the printed news­pa­per indus­try is doomed, and will be missed by those of us that remem­ber news­pa­pers in their hey­day, they are being replaced by good sub­sti­tutes in the form of blogs, social net­works like Facebook and Twitter, online news gath­er­ing by var­i­ous groups, includ­ing news­pa­pers, and other elec­tronic forms of communication.

via The Becker-​​Posner Blog: The Social Cost of the Decline of Newspapers — Becker.

Mike Masnick at Techdirt responded to Posner’s idea by saying:

Wow. Now Posner has always been a stronger believer in the need for intel­lec­tual prop­erty to “solve” the “free rider prob­lem,” but this is still stun­ning. He’s usu­ally a lot more bal­anced in rec­og­niz­ing the down­sides to greater IP pro­tec­tion­ism. Here, he seems to ignore it com­pletely, while also brush­ing off the abil­ity of other sources of infor­ma­tion to step into the void cre­ated by news­pa­pers. Right before the state­ment above, he oddly assumes that there’s no way to sup­port news pro­duc­tion in an online only sit­u­a­tion. His mis­take, though, is assum­ing that it needs to have the same type of prof­its as monop­oly news­pa­pers used to have. For such an eco­nom­i­cally lit­er­ate per­son, this is a sur­pris­ing statement.

via Judge Posner Recommends Extending Copyright Law to Protect Newspapers | Techdirt.

And Erick Schonfeld of TechCrunch is highly crit­i­cal as well:

Of all the mis­guided schemes put forth lately to save news­pa­pers (micro­pay­ments! blame Google!), the one put forth by Judge Richard Posner has to be the most jaw-​​dropping. He sug­gests that link­ing to copy­righted mate­r­ial should be outlawed.

via How to Save the Newspapers, Vol. XII: Outlaw Linking.

As I sug­gested above, I am not in favor of Posner’s idea, but I do share some of the worry that qual­ity jour­nal­ism might be threat­ened, at least in the short term. I, how­ever, do not blame “link­ing” or “para­phras­ing,” but rather a com­bi­na­tion of a rapidly chang­ing busi­ness land­scape with a cer­tain reluc­tance by news­pa­pers to adapt. Change is not easy, and pro­tec­tion­ism always seems eas­ier to hold on to what one already has. But rad­i­cally chang­ing long-​​establish legal prece­dent around the copy­righta­bil­ity and pro­tec­tion of “facts” is not the best way for­ward in the long term. A sim­i­lar push against change back­fired on American car man­u­fac­tur­ers; I pre­dict a sim­i­lar fate for news­pa­pers even if the law is changed to “pro­tect” them.

Related articles