Month: February 2011

Betty Boop and the Carefully Crafted Bargain

One of the ornaments that grace our living room coffee table is a small lamp that features Betty Boop playing the ukulele underneath a palm tree.  Because of a case from the Ninth Circuit this week, now I wish I had kept the original box and could tell what company manufactured it.  This case (Fleischer v. A.V.E.L.A, No. 009-56317 (February 23, 2011)) was about copyright and trademark claims in the Betty Boop character.  It has several interesting features, including the use of older copyright law, the concept of copyright in characters, and the interaction of copyright and trademark.

In the 1930s Max Fleischer and Fleischer studios issued cartoons featuring the Betty Boop character and also licensed merchandise with the Betty Boop image.  Fleischer sold both the rights to the cartoon and to the character in 1946.  Rights were subsequently sold and re-sold, and the chain of title had become rather confused.  Fleischer’s family formed a new corporation and tried to re-purchase the rights in the 1970s, and, since then, Betty Boop’s popularity has risen again.  This lawsuit arose between the new Fleischer corporation and another company that has also been licensing Betty Boop merchandise.   At trial the court sided with A.V.E.L.A, holding that the Fleischer had not established a good chain of title in the copyright.  It also held that the plaintiff had not established sufficient evidence of a registered trademark.  The appeals court agreed.

Because all the works at issue had been created before 1978, the 1909 Copyright Act applied in this case.  Characters that are “especially distinctive” have copyright protection apart from the copyright works in which they appear.  At one point in the sale of rights, the rights in the Betty Boop cartoons had been sold separately from the Betty Boop character.  At that point, the chain of title in the cartoons and the character had parted.  Fleischer also made an argument on the basis of the doctrine of indivisibility, which the court disallowed. Although the doctrine is no longer used under the present statutes, it was part of the 1909 copyright law, and so the plaintiffs were allowed to use it in arguments, although they did not ultimately succeed.

In addition, Fleischer brought a trademark claim, which the appeals court also dismissed on the basis of two cases.  One was Job’s Daughters and the idea that the Betty Boop images were “functional aesthetic components of the product, not trademarks.”   The other was Dastar and the idea that when a copyright has passed into the public domain, a trademark action cannot be asserted as a substitute for an action for copyright infringement.  Quoting Dastar, the court said “The rights of a patentee or copyright holder are part of a carefully crafted bargain, under which, once the patent or copyright monopoly has expired, the public may use the invention or work at will and without attribution.”

Multiple Perspectives on Access, Inclusion, and Disability Conference in May

I am looking forward to the Multiple Perspectives on Access, Inclusion, and Disability Conference, which will be held May 4-5, 2011 at Ohio State.  I am doing a presentation on copyright and disability, and I am very glad to be on the program.  All of the sessions look interesting, but for me the highlight will hearing Daniel Goldstein speak on “The Right to Digital Access: Current Issues, Challenges, and Opportunities.” Mr. Goldstein is counsel to the National Federation for the Blind and a very influential figure in disability law.  His address will be free and open to the public.

The registration fees for the conference are very reasonable.  There is a substantial discount for OSU faculty and staff, and the conference is free for students who attend sessions only.

Point of View: Medicines, Treaties and Intellectual Property

As usual, this week brought a variety of points of view and types of news in the world of intellectual property. Two publications show this contrast vividly.

One was the 2010 U.S. Intellectual Property Enforcement Coordinator (IPEC) Annual Report on Intellectual Property Enforcement (a bit of a redundant name).   This Report chronicles the Department’s efforts in the past year to strengthen intellectual property enforcement in order to create jobs, protect American business domestically and internationally, and protect consumers.  One of the ways IPEC is doing this is through various actions to combat the sale of counterfeit drugs, including drugs that either are ineffective or are actually harmful to patients.

The other was a new book from MIT Press, Access to Knowledge in the Age of Intellectual Property, edited by Gaëlle Krikorian and Amy Kapczynski.  Krikorian and Kapczynski provide a collection of essays that chronicles the history of thinking of the Access to Knowledge social movement, which includes activists working to open up intellectual property with regard to drug patents in the developing world, indigenous farmers anxious to preserve access to traditional seeds and plants, students involved with the free culture and open access movements, and many others .

Two essays on drug patents and the developing world caught my attention.  The first, “The Revised Drug Strategy: Access to Essential Medicines, Intellectual Property, and the World Health Organization,” chronicles the process and struggle of developing the Model Lists of Essential Medicines through the World Health Organization.  A place on the list allows a developing country to issue a compulsory license for that drug.    The second, Sangeeta Shashikant’s essay on “The Doha Declaration on TRIPS and Public Health,” points out the problems of “evergreening” to extend the life of patents and concerns about supplies of generic medicine in developing countries since treaty obligations required India to start issuing pharmaceutical patents in 2005.

Although no one wants the sale of medicines that are ineffective and harmful—the IPEC report mentions the sale of a counterfeit medicine that contained an ingredient used to make sheetrock—here are two very different ways of describing the problem and its solution.

In Time for the Super Bowl: Copyright and Two Kinds of Football

This week copyright issues that pertain to football have been in the news.  Both of these sports stories also illustrate the complexities of copyright when creators of content, consumers of that same content, and potential infringers live all over the world.

The first comes from the U.S. where U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement’s (ICE) Homeland Security Investigations (HSI) have seized ten web domains that link to unauthorized streaming video of games from the National Football League, the National Basketball Association, the National Hockey League, World Wrestling Entertainment, and the Ultimate Fighting Championship.  In a news release from ICE HSI,  the U.S.  Attorney for the Southern District of New York stated that this action had been taken down in anticipation of the Super Bowl on February 6:  “With the Super Bowl just days away, the seizures of these infringing websites reaffirm our commitment to working with our law enforcement partners to protect copyrighted material and put the people who steal it out of business.”  The Attorney asks that the domain names of the websites be forfeited.

These actions have been criticized on a number of grounds, including whether the websites had committed direct, criminal copyright infringement and jurisdictional issues with regard to domains located abroad and targeted at people in other countries. 

On the other side of the Atlantic ocean, football and copyright discussion in Europe has centered on pubs in the UK that use decoders to show soccer games from foreign broadcasters.  Pubs use the decoders because foreign broadcasters show popular games more cheaply that the local broadcasters.   In two related cases, the English Premier League sued a pub in Southsea, England that used a decoder, and the League also sued a business that provides the decoders in the UK.  In a non-binding opinion issued by the European Court of Justice, an advocate put forth reasons why “territorial exclusivity agreements relating to the transmission of football matches are contrary to European Union law.”  Viewers should be able to buy television broadcasts from anywhere within the 27-nation European Union.  EU courts are not bound by advocate general opinions, but often follow them.  The Guardian has pointed out that this advice and these court cases may have ramifications for other entertainment rights in Europe as well.