by Janis
Patterson
I’m
angry. Again. But this time it is something that really affects all of us and
our industry.
The
New York District Appeals Court has ruled against the Author’s Guild about
Google’s scanning of books. Part of the ruling says :
"…the
purpose of copyright law is not to guarantee authors a living, nor is it to
give them exclusive control over who uses their work and how. The purpose of
the law is to provide an incentive for people to create artistic works because
doing this benefits society."
Excuse
me?
We
are supposed to be writing for the benefit of society? I hope someone can explain
why taking away control of our work and the money it should be generating for
us is an incentive for us to ‘create artistic works.’
That kind
of thinking smacks of the old idea of writers as starving in a garret while writing
something just for the purpose of creating something for the ages. Yes, I know
there are some people who call themselves writers who do write for no purpose
other than wanting their deathless prose to be read by the general populace,
but (and I’m getting snarky here) they usually aren’t very good writers, just
wannabes who want to be thought of as a published author no matter what. And
they certainly aren’t professional writers.
Most
writers I know write not only because they love it, but because it is their
job. They expend effort and creativity, and deserve fair recompense. If someone
can just come and take something we have worked to create and give it away to
all and sundry without our permission or profit, why should we do it? To
benefit society? Give me a break. Try that booshwah on a plumber. Or a
carpenter. Or a stock broker. Or just about any other field.
But
you do get paid, someone said. You get an advance (which is very often little
more than pocket change, if that) and you do get royalties. How long do they
think people will buy books so we can get royalties if they discover it is
available for free? There is an ‘entitlement mentality’ in our society today where
there are those who think everything should be free – birth control, cell
phones, college, health care, medicine, whatever. I think in their greed and
lack of self responsibility they haven’t thought it out that nothing is ever
really free – someone somewhere has to pay for it. The writer pays with his
time and imagination and plain hard work, but the court says negating the
writer’s rights is a victory for ‘fair use.’
Fair
to whom? Certainly not to the writer. Google is a $450-billion web giant
copying millions of books, and then using them in part to feed its massive,
money-generating search empire. They say this benefits the author because it
will make his work easier to find. Perhaps – but what difference does it make
if the author cannot retain control of his creation? Pierre Leval, US Circuit
Judge, said “While authors are undoubtedly important intended beneficiaries of
copyright, the ultimate, primary intended beneficiary is the public.”
I do
not write to benefit the public. I write because it is my work, and from it I
earn my income. To remove control of a writer’s work from the writer and make
it free to the public might benefit the public in the short term, but what
happens when the working professionals quit writing because they no longer earn
even part of a living from it? Obviously the gap will be filled with those
writers who do write just so that people can read their words and thoughts
without regard for a career or proper recompense. Some of them might be good,
but I’ll bet that most won’t. And that dissolution of standards will truly not
be to the benefit of the public or even to literature itself.
Today
on some of my writers loops there were attorneys doing apologia for this,
saying that this was nothing new, that ‘fair use’ has been part of the law
since the days of the Constitution. Perhaps it has, but that does not
necessarily make it right. One thing that became evident is that there is no
legal definition of ‘fair use.’ Is it a basic premise? An overarching idea? A
phrase? A catchphrase? What? And even if it has been around from the beginning,
I’m not sure writers are helped or protected by this sad legal situation being
publicized.
This
misbegotten ruling eviscerates the very concept of copyright, is a complete
negation of the principle of copyright. Several someones have suggested that
perhaps we should stop copyrighting our books with the government. At $35 per
registration and with all the books being published now, that could add up to a
fair amount of money. They have suggested that hitting them in the pocketbook
might make the government re-think the proposition. I disagree. Monetary
concerns might work with a private entity, but our government seems to thrive
on overspending and then simply printing great amounts of money to make up for
it. The few hundred thousand such a boycott would generate wouldn’t even be
noticed. Besides, in cases of theft and/or piracy by others than the
government-sanctioned ‘fair use’ crowd, you have a much smaller chance of justice
and fair recompense if your work is not copyrighted through the government. The
writer is going to be screwed either way.
We
created our books and our characters. They are our property, and we should be
in control of how and when and under what circumstances people have access to
them. Writing is work, and the hire should be worthy of the work and the
workman.
24 comments:
Well said, Susan, and I agree completely.
I agree. Well said!
Amen Janis!
Good luck and God's Blessings.
PamT
Excellent summary and argument. I still can't believe the court came to that decision.
Oh, my goodness. I wonder it they'd all be willing to work for nothing?
Unbelievable! Had I read this on April 1, I would have thought it was a joke.
As ever, the authors are at the bottom of the totem pole. Good blog. Gah.
Well said. The judicial system in this country is broken from the bottom to the top. :(
AMEN.
Well said! My ex is a photographer and some customers had no problem with buying the bare minimum package or not buying anything. Some folks had copies made of what they bought or even sent the proofs off to be copied and then bought nothing from us.
Excellent post. Just another injustice from the justice system.
Great post but sad. Money seems to rule the system.
What an astounding decision! I guess it's only a matter of time before our literature all gets stolen and we end up like the music business--screwed big time. I'm SO thankful to everyone who actually buys my work. Those are lovely people.
I wonder if they do it to the big authors or do they just pick on the indies and small presses?
Unbelievable. This is crazy. We work, we need paid, just like all the politicians and lawyers and everyone else..
I must've missed this news about us giving our work away. I agree with you totally. Well thought out and well written and I think you speak for many people.
Oh, yes. Shades of Gray was written to benefit society. Stephen King worked at menial jobs for years just so he could someday have the privilege of benefiting society.
I spent an hour composing a comment that rivals A Modest Proposal in both tone and brilliance--well, no, although what I wrote is brilliant, it is considerably meaner that its model and not at all modest--but then I deleted it. Some people still (maybe) think I'm a nice person, and I don't want them to stumble across this and discover my true nature. But I copied and pasted and saved it on my hard drive, just I case I ever decide to start telling the truth.
PS I told my husband about this, and he asked if you used the term "slave labor." You didn't, but he said you'd be safe in doing so, if you were so inclined.
Great post! The White House is currently developing a strategic plan relating to copyright enforcement. To assist them with this plan, the Copyright Alliance will be sending its comments and recommendations and they need author input.
If you would like to add your two cents, here's the link:http://copyrightalliance.org/WHSurvey
Agree completely, and I'm not apt to be out any myself since I'm not one who Google could make much money on. The world is going crazy!(I'm not really unknown-I'm Norma Huss.)
Koko, I made a protest on that piracy form. I think we should ALL do that.
Amen! I'm also adding my protest to the form.
Ridiculous and absurd ruling. Interesting and cogent post.
Janis, I wish you hadn't had to write this, but I agree with your assessment.
Read this again, and for those who think the advance is enough, what about those of us who don't get an advance?
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