That Google Books decision: good, but only second best?

While he is always fond of his own opinions, this Kat does take an interest in what others have to say -- particularly when they have earned their right of audience through the quality of their contributions to the various discussions and running debates which continue to preoccupy members of the IP community.  One such person is Katfriend, scholar and fellow blogger Martin Husovec, who has this to say about Judge Denny Chin's recent ruling that the Google Books project was able to benefit from a fair use defence under  US copyright law (on which see Eleonora's excellent summary and analysis here):
Google Books Decision: The Second Best Outcome?

Judge Denny Chin's Google Books ruling sparked a considerable amount of welcome reaction. It is submitted that everybody, not just Google, will now greatly benefit from broader fair use defence, that it is a “huge victory for online innovation” and a “big win for libraries and researchers”. But is the decision really the first best outcome?

Let's recall the context. The heart of the problem behind the Google Books project is not that Google did not want to pay for scanning and storing books, but had often nobody whom to pay to, as lot of the works were “orphans”. The problem is thus one of expensive transactions. Using a fair use to remedy this failure of copyright regulation means not making those transactions cheaper, but making them irrelevant, because what is free does not have to be licensed. Fair use also tries to solve the problem of prohibitively high transaction costs. But if the copyright regulation blocks transactions, our first response should be unblocking them, and only the second should be to remove their need entirely. It is like curing a wound with amputation, when you can stitch it up.

In general, using fair use as a remedy to the mass digitization problem of “orphans” has its obvious anticompetitive shortcomings. The Google Books decision is just a manifestation of this. The factual circumstances of this ruling, to which the decision is confined, leave only a little room for creative business models that can directly help to recoup the investment in digitalization. It appears that, unless you can monetize the digitization in some other market (e.g. improving your search engine), fair use will be only of a little help to you. This is why the decision does not enable lots other companies to replicate what Google did. You would need to be as big or at least as broadly integrated as Google to build-in such a business model that is permissible and free of charge. Anybody else doing “more” (e.g. putting ads above the search results) will face a need to license anyway. This ultimately means that fair use is giving a great competitive advantage mostly to Google itself, which can afford to have only a modest direct commercialization model. Moreover, considering that “orphans” still cannot be licensed in the event that you do “more”, the probability of existence of “digitizing competition” in this segment approaches zero.

Three centuries of copyright debate,
summarised in a single table
To be clear, Google Books is a great innovation with tremendous social benefits. I guess that only few people doubt this today. But isn't judge Chin also collaterally accepting as fair use, and hence free of charge, uses that are less inevitable consequences of mass digitization of “orphans”? Should substantial extraction of snippets from the books be really free of charge? As ironic as it might sound, it was the overprotection of authors that most likely led judge Chin to accept as free also uses from which the authors could normally benefit since the only alternative to fair use available to the judge, namely, to prohibit the Google Books service, would arguably make all concerned only worse off. The first best solution, however, would be stitching up the wound, and not amputating it -- in other words, unblock the transaction for “orphans” (e.g. by extended collective licensing), which would be a more appropriate and pro-competitive response to the problem. If the possibility of unblocking transactions had existed under the US law, I doubt that the systematic snippets preview would constitute a fair use.


The Google Books decision thus at least sends one clear message to the copyright lobbyists who fought against US Orphan Works Act of 2008 or Directive 2012/28/EU in its previous form. Rigid copyright can paradoxically lead to lessening of the scope of the rights they advocate -- at least if you have a flexible fair use to counterbalance “copyright non-sense” that slows down innovation. This is because, if the first best solution is not available, society is still better off accepting at least the second best one.
Says the IPKat, it does seem paradoxical that it is the very existence of a relatively high level of copyright protection that leads to its erosion in this instance through a fair use defence.  Is it not interesting here to contrast Judge Chin's approach with the position of the Court of Justice of the European Union way back in 1995, in Joined Cases C-241/91 P and C-242/91 P Radio Telefis Eireann (RTE) and Independent Television Publications Ltd (ITP) v Commission of the European Communities (the Magill TV Guide case), where that court did not have any ground upon which to invoke a fair use or fair dealing doctrine but had to apply competition law where the existence and indeed the exercise of copyright prevented the growth of a semi-non-competing business.

Second Best here and here
First Best here
That Google Books decision: good, but only second best? That Google Books decision: good, but only second best? Reviewed by Jeremy on Thursday, November 21, 2013 Rating: 5

1 comment:

  1. No.

    The heart of the problem is not that Google had "nobody whom to pay to".

    The heart of the problem is that relying on a narrow prescribed closed list of allowable acts, with clearances or licences required for any other acts, can make various forms of follow-on innovation so expensive, cumbersome or prohibitive that it does not happen -- an outcome which does not maximise societal welfare.

    "Fair use" allows judges to make that assessment of societal welfare, in a way that the European closed list of exclusions does not.

    This is about creating an appropriately unencumbered and positive environment for all sorts of follow-on innovation. It's not just about Google Books, nor just what's possible for other established corporations with pockets as deep as Google's.

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