
No
Mail Getting Through: The Registration of Copyrights for Adult
Content Material in the Post 9-11 World
By
J. D. Obenberger, Attorney at Law
© MMII J. D. Obenberger, All Rights Reserved
Written
for and Published on the World Wide Web by YNOT News, January,
2002
Link
to the US Copyright Act online
Link to the US Copyright
Office, Library of Congress
The
Comments of Marybeth Peters, US Register of Copyrights
The day after I returned to Chicago from Internext, I attended
a continuing legal education seminar on the topic of Copyright
held under the auspices of the Patent, Copyright, and Trademark
Committee of the Chicago Bar Association.
We who attended the seminar were fortunate to have Ms. Marybeth
Peters, the Register of Copyrights of the United States Copyright
Office, Library of Congress, give us a presentation on recent
updates to Copyright Law and copyright registration practice
in her office; I was especially fortunate to have the opportunity
to speak with her briefly, after her presentation, on the
registration of adult content materials. Ms. Peters has served
as the Register since 1994, and before that was Chief of the
Examinations Division in the Copyright office, which processes
the applications for registration and grants or denies registration.
She is the author of The General Guide to the Copyright Act
of 1976. She has a long list of academic distinctions, including
as an adjunct law professor at both the University of Miami
School of Law and The Georgetown University Law Center. She
is a member of the Board of Directors of the Computer Law
Association.
Copyright and the registration of copyright are two very different
things; Copyright now arises and vests in the author at the
time a work is created simply by its creation. However, it
is not until the copyrighted work is registered that the author
may bring an action for infringement of his copyright. Also,
the registration of a work within ninety days of its first
publication provides powerful economic advantages to the author
that may make the difference between having a practical ability
to enforce it and being able to do nothing effective against
infringers.
Ms. Peters' job places her in charge of the process of copyright
registration. Image content providers, designers, illustrators
and text authors in the adult internet should know that registration
of copyrightable material such as images, code, illustrations,
and text within three months of its first publication vests
the author with invaluable rights that are lost forever without
timely registration; The author who registers his copyrightable
material in the US Copyright Office within three months of
its first publication becomes thereby entitled to recover
his reasonable attorney's fees from the infringer as part
of his judgment when he or she is successful in an infringement
lawsuit; The general rule that the extraordinary remedies
of attorney's fees and statutory damages are available only
if the work was registered before the infringement does carry
a special proviso, however, that any registration within the
first three months publication will be sufficient to vest
the author with rights to those remedies, even if the infringement
preceded the timely registration. Absent timely US registration,
he or she must bear his or her own attorney's fees, a factor
that may make it impractical to bring suit against an infringer
in the first place. Moreover, timely registration also permits
the Court to enter presumed statutory damages for infringement
without the need to present often expensive expert testimony
as to the economic value of the infringement. Failure to register
in a timely manner often makes it impractical to bring an
action for infringement and, in my view, contributes to the
prevalent atmosphere of intellectual property piracy that
is pervasive in the adult internet.
I spoke to Ms. Peters in particular about the registration
of adult content materials. She related that large amounts
of explicit materials are received in the Copyright Office
on a regular basis. The Copyright Office does not view itself
as a censor of morality or obscenity in the registration process,
and while there exists some judicial precedent for the proposition
that no copyright can properly vest in materials that are
obscene, her office simply does not get involved in issues
of obscenity: Neither Ms. Peters, nor the Examination Section,
nor the Copyright Office will deny registration on the grounds
of obscenity; Not only do they simply not perceive themselves
as censors, but there would be a thorny problem in trying
to ascertain just whose "community standards" should
apply in the Copyright Office, lest the standards of Washington,
D.C. become imposed as those of the nation for the purposes
of copyright law.
Adult content materials received for deposit in the Copyright
Office are the subjects of special security measures because
of historical problems with their disappearance. (Must be
the janitors or members of the public. Surely not the staff!)
Should materials be received that contain what is obviously
and unambiguously child pornography, it will be turned over
to the Justice Department for investigation and prosecution
in its discretion, as provided for by regulation.
Since October 17, 2001, the Copyright Office has received
no mail at all from the Postal Service, a result of the receipt
of toxic, disease-causing anthrax spores in mail delivered
on Capitol Hill to government offices in the time preceding
that date. All of the mail addressed to the Copyright office
now sits in trailers, awaiting the start of screening for
anthrax spores, to be conducted at a remote location in Maryland.
Since that irradiation facility is not yet equipped nor in
operation, new mail sent now will join the material in the
trucks and wait for eventual processing. Parcels brought in
by even commercial messengers are being directed to its loading
dock for remote storage and ultimate screening at the same
facility when it opens, though late word is that Fedex and
UPS applications are being received and processed. Otherwise,
the only materials getting though for current registration
are those that are brought in person to the Office by a non-messenger,
by the prospective registrant, by an attorney, or by a clerk.
Once the irradiation facility is open, UPS and Fedex parcels
will be routed through it for irradiation before being processed
in the Copyright Office, and the only parcels that will get
through directly will be those brought by a non-messenger.
It is the present policy of the Copyright Office to stamp
the application for registration or the recordation of a document
at the time of actual delivery in the office. According to
Ms. Peter's email to me on January 16, 2002, some thought
and attention has been given to dealing with the backlog by
applying the postmark or commercial express acceptance date
on the envelope when the parcel is actually processed, a decision
to do so has not been and may not be reached; The Interim
Regulation mentioned later in this article does not provide
for such a procedure, but instead contemplates that they will
all be stamped with the date of actual receipt in the Copyright
Office. It is a virtual certainty that some materials will
be received months after they were transmitted. This creates
the potential an unjust situation in which valuable "timely
registration" rights would be forever lost due to no
fault of the author nor attributable fault of the Copyright
Office because it is stamped as received, months after mailing.
In order to deal with this potential for injustice and a means
to correct it, the Copyright Office, on December 4, 2001,
issued Interim Regulations, 37 Code of Federal Regulations
201.8, dealing with the disruption of postal service (Federal
Register, Vol.66, No. 233, p. 62932. Comments were closed
January 3, 2002. There is presently only a very limited provision
for electronic copyright registration in very narrow circumstances,
and electronic copyright registration is simply not an option
for registration applicants not already using it; Moreover,
the Copyright Office has a "deposit requirement"
for registration of materials which necessitates sending the
best copy of the work in ordinary cases, e.g. a hard bound
copy of a book or a 35 mm print of a cinema film.
The Interim Regulation should be closely consulted by anyone
now seeking the registration of documents. It is available
online at the Copyright Office's site, and it will be provided
upon request by my office as well to anyone asking for a copy.
The Interim regulations generally provide that, within one
year after an individual receives a certificate of registration
or recordation, he or she may apply for reassignment of the
date of receipt, and thereby the "effective date"
of registration or recordation. The burden will be on the
applicant to provide evidence, detailed in the Interim Regulation,
as to why the materials would have been received in the Copyright
Office on an earlier date but for the disruption in postal
service.
For the registration of Copyrights, the Register requests
that the request not be submitted until after the applicant
receives a certificate; That will be some months from now
at the earliest. For recordation of documents, the requests
may be submitted now.
This will obviously present complication, expense, and the
expenditure of time and attention from those who wish to preserve
their "timely registration" of copyrighted materials
with a certificate of registration that bears a date within
ninety days of first publication. It will be a paperwork nightmare
for everybody concerned, with seemingly interminable delay,
to fix all of these problems though the immense backlog that
grows day by day.
The obvious solution is to have the application for registration
submitted now in person in Washington, D.C. by an attorney
or the attorney's clerk. This will avoid any delay in obtaining
prompt registration of copyrights. My office stands ready,
willing, and able to provide that service through other counsel
associated with my firm and based in the Washington, D.C.
area.
The Copyright Office is struggling to find effective solutions
to the immense problems that all of this will cause to authors,
publishers, photographers and other applicants for copyright
registration.
Register Peters followed up with me by email on January 16,
2002 and advised me that the money for the Library of Congress
and its Copyright Office to participate in the House of Representatives
off site facility has now been appropriated, and the Library
is now in the process of procuring the needed equipment and
working out the details. She believes that, starting sometime
in February, all new mail, including UPS and Fedex, will go
to the offsite Maryland facility where it will be processed
on what she hopes will be a "timely basis", and
she is projecting that after it starts operation, new mailed
submissions to her office will experience a 3 to 5 day delay
while the packages are irradiated. What about the backlog
that has accumulated in trailers since October? She writes:
"With respect to that which is not new but instead has
been held, that mail will slowly be brought to this new facility
to be treated." My guess is that the emphasis here will
be on "slowly"; Do not expect any response for months
with respect to anything submitted by mail since October 17,
2001. In view of her comments, my advice to clients would
be to have submissions made in person at the Copyright Office
until the offsite facility is known to be in good operation
resulting in a timely and relatively accurate date stamp for
receipt of the application.
This
article is written to generally inform the public and does
not provide legal advice nor does it establish an attorney-client
relationship. If you have a legal issue or question, contact
a lawyer. If you are arrested, make no statement, consent
to nothing, but make no resistance, and contact a lawyer immediately.
Joe Obenberger is a Chicago Loop lawyer concentrating
in the law of free expression and liberty under the United
States Constitution, and his firm has represented many owners,
employees, and customers of adult-oriented businesses, both
online and in the real world. He can be reached in the office
at 312 558-6420 or paged in any emergency at 312 250-4118.
His e-mail address is obiwan@xxxlaw.net.
His website URL on the world wide web is http://www.xxxlaw.net.
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