For exam
- 30 multi-choice questions;
- Know the names and intent of provisions; know case names.
Important cases
- Flood v. Times Newspapers Ltd. (2011) -- Supreme Court
- Upholds and restates the Reynolds Defence.
- Article allegations that a British security company with wealthy Russian clients paid for sensitive information about extraditions
- Subject to a libel complaint from police officer named. Flood was exonerated, so was pressing for libel.
- Judges came down on side of the Times; argued it was in the public interest for story to be published.
- "Story told was high public interest" -- argued if Flood were not named, other members of the extradition unit would come under public scrutiny.
Copyright Law
- Purpose
- Designed to ensure those who create copyright works — photographs, film footage, books, etc. — are rewarded for their labours.
- Incentivizes creative work.
- Tangible form
- No copyright in ideas — has to be created before it gets copyright.
- No copyright in facts
- Hughie Green v. NZ Broadcasting (1989) — elements of original programming in a knockoff in New Zealand. "Nobody owns the rights to a talent contest."
- Norowozian v. Arks (1999) — A Guinness advert using a technique ("jump cutting") and dance style was similar to that used in the plaintiff's film. Court ruled nobody owns a dance style or film technique.
- Physical ownership v copyright
- Approached as a property right (Specifically intellectual property)
- If you receive a letter, copyright rests with the letter writer — not the receiver.
- Copyrights in a news report
- No need for a registration
- You don't have to register work to have a copyright on something. No "copyright register". Work automatically gains protection, even without the ©
- Breach — substantial use
- "What is worth copying is worth protecting" — principle
Who owns it?
- Author -- if you're independent, then you own the copyright.
- Employees -- if you're employed by someone, then it's your employer who owns the copyright.
- Freelancers -- you generally own the copyright; newspapers now generally have a provision allowing reproduction of a piece bought from a freelancer online, etc.
- Robin Ray v. Classic FM (1998) -- asked to create an internal system for classifying music work. Radio station then tried to sell system to others; court ruled Classic FM wasn't allowed to sell Ray's work without permission.
- Assignment -- Who owns the copyright?
- License -- What is the breadth of the license? Single use, only on TV, on the Internet, both? For a time length or Into perpetuity? Where is this usage allowed?
Length of copyright
- Creative works: 70 years from end of year author died
- If author unknown, 70 years from end of year of publication
- Sound recordings / broadcast: 50 years from end of year of first publication
- If it involves, say, a song with lyrics, the lyrics will be copyrighted as per the above (I.e., 70 years).
Legal events
- §30 CopyrighT Designs and Patents Act 1988
- "Fair dealing" provision places reporting current events about the interest of a copyright owner.
- "Fair dealing with a work other than a photograph for the purpose of reporting events does not infringe any copyright in the work, so long as it is accompanied by a sufficient acknowledgment."
- What is fair?
- Simply lifting content isn't fair; not giving a credit isn't fair.
- Using material as wallpaper isn't fair.
- Time Warner Co V. Channel Four Television (1994)
- Over 80% of Clockwork Orange was shown in a programme on Channel 4; court ruled in favour of Channel 4 despite lack of permission.
- Pro Seiben v. Carlton UK TV (1999)
- Carlton UK TV was doing programme on chequebook journalism and used clip from Pro Seiben exclusive; ruled on side of Carlton.
- Exclusivity
- Less likely to be fair is just used to "yank rug out" from under a competitor.
- Motive
- Informational
- Restrictions
- Credit
- Does not apply to stills.
- Fair dealing for criticism, review
- Public interest defence?
- Paddy Ashdown v. Telegraph — Telegraph had published snippet from plaintiff's unpublished autobiography; court ruled there was a public interest due to it soon coming out.
- Damages — market rate/aggravated
- Paid in terms of market rate; more in aggravated circumstances (photo stolen)
- Release forms — important; allows you to use their footage forevermore.
- Sports footage — if showing footage, normally able to use 60 seconds with credit. If a series of matches (I.e., World Cup or something), increases to 90 seconds.
- Internet — copyright applies as much as anywhere else. If using someone else's photo, you have to seek permission.
- § 58 Copyright and Design Act
- If someone giving a speech, you're generally allowed to report it without permission.