Article 347QC Members Of Congress: Court Was Wrong To Say That Posting The Law Is Copyright Infringement

Members Of Congress: Court Was Wrong To Say That Posting The Law Is Copyright Infringement

by
Mike Masnick
from Techdirt on (#347QC)
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Back in February, we wrote about a disturbing court decision that said that standards that are "incorporated by reference" into law, could still be copyright infringing if posted to the internet. In that earlier post I go into much more background, but the short version is this: lots of laws point to standards put together by private standards bodies, and say, effectively, "to be legal, you must meet this standard." For example, fire codes may be required to meet certain standards put together by a private standards body. Carl Malamud has spent years trying to make the law more accessible, and he started posting such standards that are "incorporated by reference" into the law publicly. His reasoning: once the government incorporates the standard into the law, the standard must be publicly available. Otherwise, you have a ridiculous situation in which you can't even know what the law is that governs you unless you pay (often a lot) to access it.

Standards bodies weren't happy about this -- as some of them make a large chunk of money from selling access to the standards. But from a straight up "the law should be public" standpoint, the answer should be "too bad." Unfortunately, the district court didn't see it that way, and basically said it's okay to have parts of our laws blocked by copyright. We thought that ruling had some serious problems, and Malamud and his organization Public.Resource.Org appealed. A bunch of amicus briefs have been filed in the case -- which you can see at EFF's case page on the lawsuit. There's a good one from some law professors about how the lower court got it wrong, as well as a ton of library associations (and also other law professors and former gov't officials). Public Citizen also filed a good brief on the importance of having access to the law. It's worth reading them all.

However, I wanted to focus on a different amicus brief, filed by two sitting members of Congress, Reps. Zoe Lofgren and Darrell Issa. The brief was put together by Harvard's Cyberlaw Clinic, with help from lawyer Cathy Gellis (who has represented us from time to time, as well as written some posts for Techdirt). It's certainly not unheard of to have members of Congress file amicus briefs in cases, but it's not particularly common either. The fact that two members of Congress are worried about the due process implications of a court ruling should, hopefully, capture the court's attention.

For the law to govern and protect the people, the people must know what the law is. By offering an electronic platform for the publication of legal codes and standards, Public Resource helps the public by providing access to laws that might otherwise be functionally inaccessible. Without this access, the consequences are significant. First, those who inadvertently violate inaccessible regulations may be blindsided by civil and criminal penalties for violations they did not know to avoid. Second, those whose health and welfare depends on others' compliance with these regulations may suffer damage to their life, liberty, and property, as a result of both others' ignorance of the law and their own inability to access the law in order to pursue enforcement. This Court should not endorse a copyright regime that allows private SDOs to limit access to the legal rules that govern and protect the public.

Also:

As members of Congress, our job is to draft and enact laws that govern the United States. But mere passage of legislation is not enough; due process requires more. The Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments dictate that no person is to be "deprived of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law." U.S. Const. amend. V; U.S. Const. amend. XIV. There can be no due process when people cannot remain informed of the laws by which they are bound. And they cannot remain informed when the law itself is not sufficiently communicated to the people it governs.

Lots of people could make those points -- but having it come from the people who actually make the laws seems to make the point that much more relevant. Hopefully the court agrees.



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