|
|
Subscribe / Log in / New account

Copyright, copyleft, and culture

Please consider subscribing to LWN

Subscriptions are the lifeblood of LWN.net. If you appreciate this content and would like to see more of it, your subscription will help to ensure that LWN continues to thrive. Please visit this page to join up and keep LWN on the net.

By Jake Edge
July 13, 2011

Nina Paley has certainly stirred things up with her recent "rantifesto" on free culture and free software. It has spawned numerous responses on various blogs, both from supporters and those who disagree with her contention that the Free Software Foundation (FSF) is being hypocritical in its licensing of its web pages and other non-software works. For some people it is a bit galling to see an organization that is set up to ensure the right to create and distribute derivative works (subject to some conditions, of course) of software, be so steadfast in its refusal to apply those same freedoms to text and other works.

Paley's main example is quite cogent. In her essay, she restates the famous "four freedoms" from the FSF's free software definition and applies them to free culture. In doing so, she has arguably created a derivative work of the FSF's definition, which is not compatible with the "verbatim copying license" that governs text on the GNU web site. Though the FSF web site (unlike the GNU web site) is covered by the Creative Commons Attribution-NoDerivs (CC BY-ND) license, and Paley confuses the two a bit, either of the those two licenses would restrict derivative works. It's a little hard to argue, however, that what Paley has done is not in keeping with the spirit of free software even though it has been applied to text that is specifically licensed to restrict that kind of activity.

In the unlikely event it ever becomes an issue, an argument could certainly be made that Paley exercised her "fair use" rights when creating the four freedoms of free culture. But fair use is a weak and uncertain defense—at best—for anyone wishing to make use of a restrictively-licensed work. Fair use is jurisdiction-dependent and, even in places like the US where it is an established precedent, judges can interpret it in wildly different ways. There is also the small matter of the cost to defend against a claim of copyright violation even if it seems to be fair use. In some ways, it's reminiscent of the uphill battle faced by a software company accused of a patent violation for a patent with "obvious" prior art—it's extremely costly to defend against the suit without any real assurance of getting a sensible ruling. A license that explicitly allows derivative works provides much more certainty.

The argument that Paley is making is not that all works should be licensed freely—though, of course, that is the argument that the FSF makes for software—but that the champion of the copyleft movement should more liberally license its non-software works. The FSF has already run afoul of other free software advocates (e.g. Debian) for documentation licensed under its GNU Free Documentation License—at least for documentation that has "invariant" sections which are required to be carried along with any derivative work. Cynical observers have pointed out that the main reason that the invariant sections exist is so that the GNU Manifesto can be more widely spread. It is difficult to argue that the invariant sections make the documentation more free, however, and they certainly make it difficult to create derivative works in the same spirit as is done with software.

As Paley points out, the creator of a work (be it software, text, photographs, video, fine art, etc.) cannot know the kinds of things that a downstream user might create with a suitably licensed work. This is an argument the free software community should be very familiar with, and would seem to be at the heart of what free software is. All Paley is trying to do is to broaden that freedom to other works in a free culture movement that seeks to remove the restrictions on at least some of the cultural works that are created by our society. Much like the FSF takes projects and other organizations to task over their "anti-freedom" moves with respect to software, Paley is essentially doing the same to the FSF. She is asking the FSF (and the much larger FOSS community) to join forces in helping to foster free culture.

Make no mistake, free culture is clearly under serious attack from the large "content" industries. Fair use is well-nigh impossible to actually exercise with organizations like the RIAA and MPAA along with media giants like Disney trying to maximize copyright in all dimensions. Without a major sea change, nothing that is under copyright today will ever come out from under it and fall into the public domain. Legislators will keep extending copyright terms so that Disney—whose success has largely been based on remixing public domain works—never loses the copyright on its iconic mouse. Without armies of expensive lawyers and lobbyists, the copyright situation is unlikely to change, but individuals certainly can participate in free culture to create a separate commons that is available to all.

Are there differences between software and other works? Of course there are, but they aren't such huge differences that the same principles cannot apply to all. In fact, a perfect example is copyright itself, which applies "equally" to a wide variety of different forms of expression. Another example is Paley's restatement of the four freedoms—it could be adopted by the FSF for software without any real loss. There is no huge chasm between technical and cultural works as some have claimed, and both kinds of works embody the opinion of their creator in one form or another.

Another part of Paley's argument should seem rather familiar to our community as well. She bemoans the dilution—perhaps distortion—of the "free culture" term by including things that are licensed in ways that aren't truly free. We have struggled with the same basic problem, most recently in the "open source" vs. "open core" debates, but, more generally, in trying to agree on what constitutes "free" (or "open") in the context of software.

The proliferation of the non-commercial (NC) versions of CC licenses on supposedly free culture works is one of the problems that Paley highlights. As she rightly points out, these are essentially "field of use" restrictions that wouldn't be accepted for free software or open source licenses. In addition, though Paley doesn't specifically mention it, NC restrictions are a murky quagmire that just make it difficult for potential users to know what's acceptable and what isn't. Can you use an NC-licensed photo on your blog if you also run Google ads to try to offset the hosting costs? Or on a commercial blog service that runs its own ads? Those are questions for lawyers, which is reason enough make folks leery of NC whether they are inclined toward free culture or not—it's simpler to just use regular copyright and decide on a case-by-case basis whether the use is suitably non-commercial.

The no-derivatives (ND) variants of CC licenses have their own set of problems as well. A strict interpretation would not allow a photo to be cropped, resized, or have text placed on it, for example. An ND text couldn't have typos fixed or an introduction added either, which seriously reduces the ability to use it in any reasonable way. NC and/or ND restrictions may be just what the creator intends, but they don't really contribute to free culture in any sensible way.

In the end, there are going to be plenty of non-free works, both software and otherwise. Whoever creates a work gets to choose the license it's available under, and no one has argued otherwise. Paley is just trying to make a fairly reasonable argument that free software and free culture should be allies, and that it's disappointing to see the FSF make fairly arbitrary distinctions between types of expression. The free culture movement is still in its infancy, more or less where free software was 20 years ago or so. If free culture can make similar inroads against the content behemoths that free software has made in the software world, we will all be better off for it. And that, in a nutshell, is what Paley is advocating.



(Log in to post comments)

Copyright, copyleft, and culture

Posted Jul 13, 2011 19:40 UTC (Wed) by dlang (guest, #313) [Link]

I think it's an especially good point that the 'free culture definition' could be a derived work of the 'free software definition', and therefore illegal copyright violation.

this is a perfect example of a case where derivative work makes sense and should be allowed. The fact that the FSF explicitly disallows such use clearly is a problem here.

Copyright, copyleft, and culture

Posted Jul 13, 2011 19:58 UTC (Wed) by davide.del.vento (guest, #59196) [Link]

Very good article, Jake, thanks for posting it. It clarifies the discussion to its fullest!

Copyright, copyleft, and culture

Posted Jul 13, 2011 20:54 UTC (Wed) by nix (subscriber, #2304) [Link]

Cynical observers have pointed out that the main reason that the invariant sections exist is so that the GNU Manifesto can be more widely spread.
Quite. The irony is, this use is by now wholly obsolete: anyone who wants to see the GNU Manifesto can do it in a second or two with a quick web search, and are far more likely to find it that way than they are to kick up an info browser and find it in a GNU manual. (These days, the only people who even know that info browsers exist are geeks who know perfectly well what the GNU Manifesto is: most other users probably google for the manuals and read them off the GNU website.)

So as far as I can see, the invariant sections in the GNU manuals serve no purpose at all even to the FSF: all they do is divide the community (and annoy GNU maintainers who want to transfer material between manuals and software, as each such transfer requires specific signoff from RMS and/or FSF lawyers for the relicensing, which takes approximately forever.)

Copyright, copyleft, and culture

Posted Jul 15, 2011 20:26 UTC (Fri) by Kluge (subscriber, #2881) [Link]

While it's true that one can see the GNU Manifesto with little trouble, only those familiar with it or the work of the FSF would *want* to do so. I think what the FSF is trying to achieve is to introduce the principles of Free Software to those who know nothing about them. It may be that most people using GNU documention will never come across the Manifesto (I've never done so by accident), but there is a point to what the FSF is doing.

This is especially true given the FSF's unhappiness with the way "open source" has triumphed as a brand over "Free Software." There are many people using GNU software who know nothing of the ideals which lead to its creation.

I don't think this tactic adds enough value to be worth licensing headaches for documentation, or the restrictions on derivative works, but it's not as if it's a senseless goal.

Copyright, copyleft, and culture

Posted Jul 15, 2011 22:06 UTC (Fri) by viro (subscriber, #7872) [Link]

You know what they call those who insist on forcibly shoving their message down others' throats?

Copyright, copyleft, and culture

Posted Jul 22, 2011 12:52 UTC (Fri) by kevinm (guest, #69913) [Link]

Artists?

Copyright, copyleft, and culture

Posted Jul 24, 2011 16:38 UTC (Sun) by hozelda (guest, #19341) [Link]

>> I think what the FSF is trying to achieve is to introduce the principles of Free Software to those who know nothing about them.

What Nina and others might point out is that reputation is something that can't be erased or hidden that easily. Society/community tends to get behind those with interesting contributions, so it's a matter of time until the person likely comes across the FSF and their principles. http://blog.ninapaley.com/2011/06/27/credit-is-due/

On the other hand, what might be the costs of using ND out of worry? Well, we clearly recognize such costs when it comes to software.

An angle not mentioned by Nina is that the GPL deals with source code. This is particularly important for software. Nina has not yet made free source a major point with her works (she uses Adobe or similar tools). My point is that the protections envisioned by the FSF were not aimed at culture but at freedom to control your computer and the many things a computing device accesses.

I agree basically with Nina while recognizing that the FSF had a different set of goals than what Nina has. I think the FSF can learn from Nina and others who, by sharing numerous authored works of many flavors, have certainly seen their reputation grow rather than diminish and get covered up.

As an example of a fail: We might have some interesting iterations today and much further spreading of the software patent film the FSF? commissioned if the license had allowed derivative works. I asked about that in comments on two different places I think but did not get a reply then (and haven't checked back). You see, many people out there can add an interesting interpretation of that film. Even if the message is changed some, we would get important parts of the message to filter to audiences that otherwise would not find the orig film relevant or who would not come across it because others would not be excited about their remix. CC-by-sa has the "by" part so all of the remixes would point to the orig.

Copyright, copyleft, and culture

Posted Jul 19, 2011 17:58 UTC (Tue) by bkoz (guest, #4027) [Link]

I think "takes approximately forever" should be amended to "never." FSF == without a clue WRT docs

Copyright, copyleft, and culture

Posted Jul 14, 2011 2:48 UTC (Thu) by Baylink (guest, #755) [Link]

Do want to make one clarifying point: Copyright protects *expression*, not *ideas*: FSF could not use copyright law to attack Paley for *describing* the Four Freedoms, unless she used their words: simply redescribing an idea in your own words does not inherently make your work a derivative of someone else's.

Copyright, copyleft, and culture

Posted Jul 14, 2011 4:35 UTC (Thu) by shmget (guest, #58347) [Link]

you wanna bet they can get a 'process' patent for it ? :-)

Copyright, copyleft, and culture

Posted Jul 14, 2011 5:09 UTC (Thu) by dlang (guest, #313) [Link]

look at the original article, it seems pretty clear to me that the 'free culture' freedoms are a modified version of the 'free software' freedoms, especially the way they are presented.

If this isn't a case of being a derivative work, it's hard to see what would be.

Point of order: this ain't copyright, per-se.

Posted Jul 14, 2011 13:41 UTC (Thu) by kena (guest, #2735) [Link]

Those laws are well codified by Congress, et. al. This is a license ("copyleft," or what-have-you) between the user and the FSF. Applying copyright interpretations to it is probably not doctrine that RMS and company would agree with.

Point of order: this ain't copyright, per-se.

Posted Jul 14, 2011 23:52 UTC (Thu) by giraffedata (guest, #1954) [Link]

Do want to make one clarifying point: Copyright protects *expression*, not *ideas*: FSF could not use copyright law to attack Paley for *describing* the Four Freedoms, unless she used their words: simply redescribing an idea in your own words does not inherently make your work a derivative of someone else's.
Those laws are well codified by Congress, et. al. This is a license ("copyleft," or what-have-you) between the user and the FSF. Applying copyright interpretations to it is probably not doctrine that RMS and company would agree with.

I don't think I follow you. This is very much about copyright.

Copyright law is what allows the FSF to stop someone from making a derivative work of FSF's expression of the Four Freedoms. The license you're talking about is a copyright license: with it, the FSF waives some of the other rights copyright law gives FSF, but does not waive the right to prevent derivative works.

A copyright license can't stop someone from doing anything. So if Paley's Four Freedoms are not a derivative work of FSF's Four Freedoms — as defined by copyright law, then it makes no difference what kind of copyright license FSF offers; Paley is free to write and distribute Paley's words.

Copyright, copyleft, and culture

Posted Jul 14, 2011 9:09 UTC (Thu) by SimonO (guest, #56318) [Link]

This is an interesting topic!

I think most of the (ND) restricted licences for non-software expressions are based on the fear that someone is able to put out an expression that looks a lot like your own, but has been modified to say something else.

If the original work can always be verified to be from the original author and any derivative cannot, that would make it easier to let go of that restriction.

As for non-commercial, I think it has its uses when the work in question is not just some expression, but a full work which is being exploited by the original author for its commercial value. It would feel quite sour when someone writes a book, puts it up for sale (say an e-book, 1€ a download) and someone else comes along and modifies it (fixes the typos, adds a few lines to some parts) and puts it up on a different site, for the same or even a higher price.

These licenses are always the default licenses, so if you want to use the work in an incompatible way with the /default/ license, you can still contact the author to ask for a different license.

Cheers

Simon

Copyright, copyleft, and culture

Posted Jul 21, 2011 14:21 UTC (Thu) by zotz (guest, #26117) [Link]

"It would feel quite sour when someone writes a book, puts it up for sale (say an e-book, 1€ a download) and someone else comes along and modifies it (fixes the typos, adds a few lines to some parts) and puts it up on a different site, for the same or even a higher price."

Why?

Just take their improved version and put it up on three sites.

1. at the same price.

2. at a lower price.

3. at a higher price.

Wait... and:

4. at a much higher price signed by the original author.

Also see:

The Creator-Endorsed Mark for an idea on another way to combat this situation.

Copyright, copyleft, and culture

Posted Jul 22, 2011 1:01 UTC (Fri) by TerryHancock (guest, #77204) [Link]

"As for non-commercial [...] It would feel quite sour when someone writes a book, puts it up for sale (say an e-book, 1€ a download) and someone else comes along and modifies it (fixes the typos, adds a few lines to some parts) and puts it up on a different site, for the same or even a higher price."

Notice: in order to work, this exploit requires not only that the work be used "commercially" but also that it is licensed asymmetrically!

Otherwise, the original author is free to copy the improvements and undersell the "exploiter", which tends to ruin any market advantage he might have hoped to gain. This, combined with the "first mover advantage", means that there is almost no commercial incentive to "exploit" a work in this way if it is covered by a copyleft (or "sharealike") license.

As far as I have been able to determine, this is generally true of almost any situation in which an NC license is used to "protect against exploitation".

Given similar outcomes for the author, since there is an enormous public value difference between sharealike works and non-commercial works, it is obviously much more socially responsible to use the sharealike strategy.

It does have one fault, which is that it tends to drive the market cost down to the marginal cost of production -- plus the value of the first mover advantage, which turns out to be more than most people seem to fear [see "What’s stopping you?" by Nina Paley]).

Also... this can be mitigated to some degree by using a tool such as QuestionCopyright's "Creator Endorsed" trademark to identify sales which benefit the "genuine/original" source of the work. This relies on fan goodwill and the desire to have a "genuine" or "legitimate" copy to further enhance the value proposition of buying from the author.

Given that enforcement against copyright infringements is extraordinarily expensive and difficult for online works, it is very likely that the net value of these positive incentives is much higher than the net value of the legal attack strategy (i.e. recouped revenue minus the cost of enforcement), and therefore probably represents a better deal for most, if not all, artists.

Open licences need a "no passing off" clause

Posted Jul 14, 2011 9:12 UTC (Thu) by ayeomans (guest, #1848) [Link]

I've added a related comment to the LWN article "VLC and unwelcome redistributors". I suggest follow-ups use that thread, but to save a click, here's the comment text:-

Most current open source licences don't appear to have any direct way of protecting their name and reputation. Trademark law is used instead as this can be enforced through the offence of "Passing Off".

But most projects don't want the extra burdens of applying for a trademark, but would rather work under the automatic benefits of copyright law. So I'm suggesting that open source licences for software and text would benefit from having a "no passing off" clause in the licence grant.

As an example, a project I worked on wished to produce a document that encouraged re-use, but did not want any derivative works to pretend to be official. I could not find a suitable standard licence. We ended up with a CC-No Derivative more restrictive licence, then added

You are free to copy, distribute, display, and perform the work, subject to appropriate attribution ..., except that in addition you may make derivative works, providing such works do not claim to be endorsed by ...
Such a clause would benefit cases such as VLC in that derivative works could not be called "VLC" (without separate permission, of course).

Open licences need a "no passing off" clause

Posted Jul 14, 2011 10:49 UTC (Thu) by christoph_d (guest, #62481) [Link]

You mean something like the paragraph in zlib's license:
  2. Altered source versions must be plainly marked as such, and must not be
     misrepresented as being the original software.
Just maybe strip off the word source?

Open licences need a "no passing off" clause

Posted Jul 15, 2011 12:23 UTC (Fri) by juliank (guest, #45896) [Link]

> Just maybe strip off the word source?
If you strip of the word source, it becomes incompatible with GPL-2, but may still be compatible with GPL-3. In any case, that's what seems to be meant here.

Link to Definition of Free Cultural Works

Posted Jul 14, 2011 14:48 UTC (Thu) by tajyrink (subscriber, #2750) [Link]

Since the article was missing it, great work has already been made by Benjamin Mako Hill & co. at http://freedomdefined.org/

Copyright, copyleft, and culture

Posted Jul 16, 2011 5:35 UTC (Sat) by smoogen (subscriber, #97) [Link]

NC and/or ND restrictions may be just what the creator intends, but they don't really contribute to free culture in any sensible way.

-----

Sometimes a person doesn't want to contribute to Free Culture, which having a ND/NC allows them to.

In other cases, they are looking for a bedrock to build something on. Freedom is a loaded and nebulous term and I don't think you can get any 3 people to agree on what their version of a Free Culture really is. It makes it a sand, and some people like to have some sort of bedrock to build on. Whether or not that is a working model than one build on "sand" is not something people will be able to tell for at least 40 years from now.

Copyright, copyleft, and culture

Posted Jul 21, 2011 14:12 UTC (Thu) by zotz (guest, #26117) [Link]

"In the end, there are going to be plenty of non-free works, both software and otherwise. Whoever creates a work gets to choose the license it's available under, and no one has argued otherwise."

Actually, some do argue otherwise (practically speaking):

Cultural Liberty

Copyright, copyleft, and culture

Posted Jul 21, 2011 22:19 UTC (Thu) by kfogel (subscriber, #20531) [Link]

Nina Paley's central complaint is certainly about hypocrisy: that if one is going to advocate for free software on ideological grounds, then it's strange to claim the same freedoms are not important for all works. They're just as important for documentation, and for paintings, and for songs, as they are for software.

But regarding this part of Jake's piece:

"Whoever creates a work gets to choose the license it's available under, and no one has argued otherwise."

Actually, many people (including Nina) *do* point out that there's a problem with this reasoning, because it actually results in less choice -- or, another way to put it, in less freedom. If I "choose" to release a book under a restrictive license, then I take away everyone else's choices to share and make derivative works. Why is one choice good and the other bad? After all, if you don't want people to do things with your work, you can always not release it.

The question of whether other people should have these choices taken away from them is not a trivial one. One can't say the magic word "choice" and have everything be settled; the fact is, some choices conflict with other choices, and it's an open question which ones should win.

The argument against copyright restrictions is simply the argument that maximum freedom should win: that giving any one person a monopoly, a right to restrict others' choices about what to do with their own copies of things, is a bad bargain for everyone else.

Note you can be pro-freedom and still anti-fraud. I'm not arguing that people should have the right to strip the author's name from a particular copy, substitute their own, and distribute the result to give the fraudulent impression that they are the author [1]. That's simply plagiarism, a form of lying. It has nothing to do with copyright. Yes, taking away people's freedom to lie is still taking away a freedom, I suppose, but there are persuasive reasons (IMHO) why it's more important to prevent the harm than to allow this particular freedom.

But returning to copyright, which is about copying rather than attribution: the question for those who want to permit restrictive licensing is, what is the harm that's *so important* that we should allow one person to decide everyone else's freedom [2] to copy and modify a particular work? It's not like it's theft [3], after all. And the police structures we are setting up to enforce this lack of freedom are getting more and more disturbing [4].

So there really is an argument here. It's okay for people to make choices about their own freedom. It's not as okay when they start making choices about other people's freedoms... and that's what restrictive copyrights do to everyone.

-Karl

[1] http://questioncopyright.org/minute_memes/credit_is_due
[2] http://questioncopyright.org/minute_memes/all_creative_wo...
[3] http://questioncopyright.org/minute_memes/copying_is_not_...
[4] http://questioncopyright.org/minute_memes/copyright_and_s...

Disclaimer: Nina Paley is artist-in-residence at http://questioncopyright.org/, a non-profit I run.

Copyright, copyleft, and culture

Posted Aug 8, 2011 15:21 UTC (Mon) by pboddie (subscriber, #50784) [Link]

Nina Paley's central complaint is certainly about hypocrisy: that if one is going to advocate for free software on ideological grounds, then it's strange to claim the same freedoms are not important for all works. They're just as important for documentation, and for paintings, and for songs, as they are for software.

I can completely see the need for a free content culture, but it borders on the offensive to claim hypocrisy when people advocating Free Software and actually releasing and contributing to Free Software, who may also advocate a related notion of "Free Content", refuse to release content as Free Content. I wrote more about this in a previous post (it's disappointing that LWN fragments such discussions across many articles and doesn't appear to provide a trail between them).

I do think it's somewhat mean-spirited for someone to release an artistic work and then demand that no-one ever change it or transform it, but there are forms of work which people seem reluctant to see reused in various ways. As I wrote before, people should try and understand why this is rather than berating people for being against Free Culture and calling them hypocrites when it isn't clear that there is a complete correspondence between the two movements that would justify such accusations.

Copyright, copyleft, and culture

Posted Jul 22, 2011 4:29 UTC (Fri) by ArneBab (guest, #42896) [Link]

Actually I think the issue of the FSF is that they

  1. Fight a battle: The text serve a purpose first and for all, and
  2. Don’t trust the strength of their writing as much as the strength of their code.

They claim that political action is fundamentally different from the creation of other works. I think that they are wrong with that -- only the GPL needs rigid protection, so it can safeguard the freedom of other works -- but they clearly fear that they would weaken themselves in their missin to bring free software to the world.

As for me: Almost all I write is under the GPL, including songs, stories, political articles and roleplaying material. I want the four freedoms for any kind of cultural expression.

Copyright, copyleft, and culture

Posted Jul 22, 2011 5:06 UTC (Fri) by rahulsundaram (subscriber, #21946) [Link]

CC-BY-SA is a better license for content since it does guarantee the same freedoms and doesn't have requirements doesn't for software like a changelog. I doubt anyone reusing GPL content is going to follow that requirement really.

Copyright, copyleft, and culture

Posted Jul 22, 2011 20:33 UTC (Fri) by Company (guest, #57006) [Link]

There's multiple places where people don't follow the GPL, even for software:

- Often people don't ship changelogs as you pointed out. If we did, we would be shipping a git checkout, not a tarball.

- A lot of stuff isn't shipped in the "preferred form for making modifications"
Same interesting thing as the comment above: The preferred for of making modifications is a git checkout, not a tarball.
Also, a lot of artwork for GPL software ships PNG icons and not the original SVGs they were created from. Luckily Inkscape and the fact that software uses SVG for icons helps a bit there.

But a general problem with CC "culture" is that there is no requirement to ship the sources used to create it. While people are often happy to hand out the sources if you ask them, they're not available by default, and that makes it less likely that I'll look at it. And then I'm less likely to learn how awesome things are created.


Copyright © 2011, Eklektix, Inc.
This article may be redistributed under the terms of the Creative Commons CC BY-SA 4.0 license
Comments and public postings are copyrighted by their creators.
Linux is a registered trademark of Linus Torvalds