Josh Hawley Introduces Laughably Stupid Copyright Term Reduction Bill

from the it's-a-curse dept

Apparently, I never should have wished on that old monkey’s paw for copyright term reduction. One of the very reasons why Techdirt exists in the first place, and why it was started nearly 25 years ago, was to fight back against over expansive copyright laws, and, as such, we’ve spent many years and many posts arguing about the problems of excessive copyright terms. Indeed, there are few things I’ve hoped for more in these two and a half decades than for Congress to realize the dangers of excessive copyright and to move to shorten copyright terms back towards their actual constitutional underpinnings.

Almost exactly ten years ago, Republicans in Congress actually seemed to recognize that copyright terms were too long, and published a paper arguing, in a principled way, for shorter copyright terms. Of course, within 24 hours, the screaming responses from Hollywood caused the paper to be pulled, and for the author of the paper to be fired.

So… now, we’re actually seeing a bill to reduce copyright terms, coming as promised from Senator Josh Hawley, one of the most performative, least principled elected officials around. Hawley has now officially released his Copyright Clause Restoration Act and made it abundantly clear that he’s doing so to punish Disney for that company’s political speech.

Everything about this bill is ridiculous and almost certainly unconstitutional. And I say that as someone who was arguing for shorter copyrights that were more closely aligned with the Constitution since Josh Hawley was in a private boys prep school (which is funny since he so wants to present himself as a man of the common people).

So, let’s go through the bill, and discuss what actually makes sense, but also why Hawley’s attempt here is so ridiculously bound to fail. It starts out by returning copyright term to what Hawley (incorrectly) refers to as the “original term.”

(1) ORIGINAL TERM.—Notwithstanding any provision of title 17, United States Code, or any other provision of law, copyright in any work shall endure for 28 years from the date it was originally secured.

(2) EXTENSION.—The holder of a copyright under paragraph (1) shall be entitled to a renewal and extension of the copyright in the applicable work for a further term of 28 years if the holder applies for that renewal and extension during the 1-year period before the expiration of the original term of the copyright under that paragraph.

So, first off, if we’re going back to the “original term” that would be 14 years with a 14 year renewable extension possible. The US didn’t shift to a 28 year/28 year extension copyright term until the Copyright Act of 1831. Also, I mean, if we’re going back to “original” copyright thinking, the law only applied to maps, charts, and books. Hell, sound recordings weren’t even covered by federal copyright law until 1972.

Anyway, there are actually strong public policy reasons to consider returning the US to a 28 year/28 year extension copyright system. Evidence has shown a massive cost to the public of our over extended copyright law — and the constitutional underpinnings of copyright law are that it must benefit the public (not, necessarily, the copyright holder). On top of that, back when we did have a 28/28 copyright system (which we had until 1978), the vast, vast majority of copyright holders did not renew their copyrights at the 28 year mark. The one exception, by the way, was movies (which, hold that thought…).

So, there are perfectly good, principled policy reasons to push for shorter copyright. Indeed, there are economic studies that have suggested the ideal copyright term for public benefit is somewhere around 15 to 38 years. And, it seems that a perfectly reasonable way to set this up is to have extremely short copyright terms, with frequent renewal periods that grow increasingly expensive. If it’s not worth it for someone to renew, let the work go into the public domain where the public can make use of it.

Of course, there are a few problems with jumping into this approach, with a big one being that in order to do this, the US would have to immediately violate a decently large number of international treaties. However, that’s long been the excuse of those looking to extend copyrights ever longer, or pushing ever more draconian copyright laws on the rest of us. They go running to international trade negotiations and slip in something awful, and then run back to Congress, demanding that we make copyright worse to meet our “international obligations.” After all, the architect of the DMCA, Bruce Lehman, has publicly admitted that this is how he got the DMCA into law. After Congress refused to pass it, he ran to Geneva, and got an international treaty passed, then went back to Congress insisting it had to enact the DMCA to comply with our “international obligations.”

That said, the reality is that Congress is not bound by any international treaties, and can pass legislation that violates them. That doesn’t mean it won’t create some international messes, though, and that could lead to retaliation in a variety of forms.

The next section of the bill then goes even further, and into murkier legal territory, by trying to claw back copyright terms already granted, making the law retroactive:

(2) RETROACTIVE EFFECT.—

(A) IN GENERAL.—Subject to subparagraph (B), subsection (a) shall apply with respect to a copyright that, on any date on or after May 1, 2022, is owned by a person that—

(i) has a market capitalization of more than $150,000,000,000; and
(ii)(I) is classified under North American Industry Classification System code 5121 or 71; or
(II) engages in substantial activities for which a code described in subclause (I) could be assigned.

Phew. So there’s a lot to break down here. This is Hawley’s weird attempt to make it obvious to everyone that this is, effectively, a bill of attainder, and specifically designed to punish Disney. Hawley, who positions himself as a “constitutional scholar” surely knows that bills of attainder are unconstitutional. I mean, it’s right there in Article I, Section 9, Clause 3:

No Bill of Attainder or ex post facto Law shall be passed.

A bill of attainder is defined as the legislature effectively targeting an individual, group, or company for punishment. And, I mean, Hawley didn’t shy away from making it clear that this was a bill of attainder in his press release, literally headlining it “Hawley Introduces Bill to Strip Disney of Special Copyright Protections.” That press release title is basically “hello, I am introducing a bill of attainder.” Because Disney has no “special” copyright protections. It just has copyright protections. And then literally calling out the company you are trying to punish as the reason for your bill is effectively handing them their brief to sue to stop the law as unconstitutional.

But, to really cement this home, while the bill would restrict all future copyright to a maximum of 56 years, it would strip only a small number of companies of their current copyrights. And from the text above, you can see how narrowly focused the bill is. Basically, everyone who has extremely long copyrights today can keep them unless the copyright is held to a company with a market cap over $150 billion (Disney is currently around $200 billion), and is classified in the NAICs system as being in two specific industries: 5121 for “Motion Picture and Video Industries” and 71 for “Art, Entertainment, and Recreation” which is the code that generally applies to theme park companies.

It will not surprise you to learn, of course, that Disney is in the 5121 classification and its theme park division, Walt Disney Parks and Resorts US is listed in NAICS 71.

Doing a quick search around, it appears that the retroactive nature of the bill may only apply to a very small number of companies which are in those classifications and over $150 billion in market cap. On the Hollywood studio side, you have Disney and Comcast NBCUniversal (though NBCUniversal’s primary NAICS code is listed in 5152 for “pay and specialty TV”), but clause II would likely cover it. Netflix’s primary classification is otherwise, but it would also fit.

I guess it’s possible Amazon could get covered by this as well, as it owns MGM. MGM by itself has a much smaller market cap, but Amazon has a larger one. So if you lumped them together, it could take away all of Amazon’s copyrights and… well, wouldn’t that be interesting? Viacom’s market cap is below the threshold. Arguably, Apple might be covered as well. The new Warner Bros. Discovery market cap is also way below the threshold.

So, end result, no new copyrights can last more than 56 years. Most existing copyrights remain until they were set to go into the public domain, except for the um, “woke” corporations of Disney, NBCUniversal, Netflix, Amazon and Apple. It sure looks like this is directly targeting a very small number of companies — companies that Republicans have been known to criticize heavily.

There is also the takings issue. In the past, I’ve seen (mainly copyright maximalists) argue that reducing copyright would violate “the takings clause” of the 5th Amendment. This is the part that says “nor shall private property be taken for public use, without just compensation.” In general, I have problems with this applying to copyright, because I don’t think it’s appropriate to call copyright “private property.” And, in fact, if it is then it seems that the takings clause should have been violated when we massively extended copyright with the 1976 Copyright Act, and again in 1998 with the Sonny Bono Copyright Term Extension Act. In both cases, works that were slated to reach the public domain were “taken” back and held in copyright for many more years. If that’s not a “taking” under the 5th Amendment, then shortening copyright terms shouldn’t be either.

Still, I would bet that Disney and others would claim otherwise, and they would have to fight their way through the court. And we’ve seen that this particular court (even very recently) takes a very broad understanding of the “takings clause,” to the point that it would probably need to overrule its own ruling from just last year to decide otherwise.

There is one final clause in the bill, a weak attempt to deal with cases where some of the companies listed above have copyrights that would expire under this bill, but which are still in active use being licensed. There, it includes some terms under which the license would expire over a 10 year period, effectively phasing out the copyright over that time.

(B) LICENSING.—If, as of May 1, 2022, a person is operating under a license with respect to a copyright that is subject to subparagraph (A) and that, because of the application of that subparagraph, would expire during the 10-year period beginning on May 1, 2022, that person shall continue to hold the rights contained in that license (to the exclusion of any person not granted those rights by a license before May 1, 2022) for a period that is the shorter of—

(i) 50 percent of the remaining license term, as of May 1, 2022; or
(ii) 10 years, beginning on May 1, 2022.

And, well, whatever. It’s not like this bill has a snowball’s chance in hell of going anywhere. Because it’s not actually meant to go anywhere. It’s all part of Hawley’s non-stop performative bullshit, playing to a base he believes is so stupid that they’ll lap up whatever culture war nonsense he puts in front of them. And, right now, they want their politicians to “punish” Disney, because Disney execs offered some mild criticism of Florida’s pro-bigotry bill.

Copyright terms should be reduced. Massively. But this isn’t going to do it. Nor is it actually intended to to do it. Copyright term reduction is just a convenient tool for Josh Hawley to do Josh Hawley kinds of things. Anyway, that will teach me never to wish on the old monkey’s paw for copyright term reduction ever again.

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Companies: amazon, apple, disney, nbcuniversal, netflix

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Comments on “Josh Hawley Introduces Laughably Stupid Copyright Term Reduction Bill”

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That One Guy (profile) says:

Dance my little puppets, dance

The kicker of course is that all these blatantly unconstitutional efforts to ‘punish’ Disney are instead giving it the sort of gift the company would usually have to buy off a few politician to get in the form of making it really hard for anyone honest to do anything to or about the company, since the well has absolutely been poisoned and they can now argue convincingly that any efforts that might negatively impact them are politically motivated.

If the politicians pulling stunts like this aren’t being paid by the likes of Disney they are being highly useful tools for free.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re: Re:

But Disney could simply make the transfer preemptively.

May 1st was the deadline. They could do the transfer as soon as possible, and then make the case that the backdated deadline was illegal; but as you said, the law is illegal anyway, so why?

I’m starting to wonder whether Mike’s analysis was correct, though. I checked several animated Disney movies from the last decade, and the credits show Disney Enterprises Inc. as the copyright owner. It’s in the center of this corporate structure image, in the small “Disney Corporate” block (dark yellow). Apparently it was created through some kind of reorganization, so maybe it now owns some old copyrights too. I can’t find its individual market capitalization, but if its parent company (The Walt Disney Company) has a market cap of $200 billion, then given the hundreds of subsidiaries shown, it’s doubtful any of them meet the $150 billion cutoff.

Other recent Disney films (2020 and later) variously show “Marvel”, “20th Century Studios”, “Columbia Pictures Industries, Inc.”, and other companies as copyright holders, so Disney may already be spreading things around. Note also that none of the film companies are particularly close to the theme park companies in the corporate structure diagram.

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Andrew says:

Make note of the date...

On the 11th day of the 5th month in the Year of Our Lord 2022, Mike Masnick declared that a bill to shorten copyright terms is a bad idea.

Pffft…LOL

This is good for so many reasons:
1. It shortens copyright.
2. It encourages copyrights to stay in the hands of “authors and inventors” rather than in the hands of $150 Billion + corporations.
3. It hits the politically involved mega corporations. I don’t care what you claim your politics are, if you are a mega-national corporation, you have no values except greed.

I’ve been following Tech Dirt for many years. I know I annoyed a boss in 2001 with stories about the economics of abundance.

Mike hates copyrights less than he hates alt-right conservatives. I’m still a fan of Mike Masnick and Tech Dirt.

Thank You for decades of great stories!

Andrew

Anonymous Coward says:

The next section of the bill then goes even further, and into murkier legal territory, by trying to claw back copyright terms already granted, making the law retroactive:

It’s a stretch to call that “retroactive” (and, though Hawley does, we’ve already established that it’s a bad idea to take legal advice from Hawley). The true retroactive effect only goes back 10 days, and that ought to be illegal. But affecting the future of existing copyrights is not really retroactive. Congress has the power to change existing deals, not just treaties—e.g., they once changed the terms of all existing Federal debt so that the government would not have to give gold on demand.

To say “all existing copyrights end today, or 28 years after creation, whichever is later” would be surprising, and likely to annoy anyone who was depending on the full term (though in practice that’s almost nobody, as the studies have shown). But it would only affect the legal status of future copying, which means it’s not “ex post facto”.

I’d go so far as to say we should be passing (non-retaliatory) laws to shorten copyright terms, and I’d be pushing for terms on the order of years, not decades. Why should I have to wait till I’ve been 50 years in the grave to retell the stories from my youth? Walt Disney didn’t have that restriction. To start, we could say that any copyrights for published works will expire in a year if not publically claimed (and possibly registered) before then. That would probably get rid of 99% of them.

James Burkhardt (profile) says:

Re:

The law retroactively applies to copyrights already issued. Under normal legal understanding, the duration of the copyright should be set by the legal framework at the time the copyright is granted. If that legal framework changes and those changes apply to copyrights issued 20 years ago, the law applies retroactively.

The major opposition to copyright term extension was predicated on the same logic – extension of already granted copyright goes back in time and retroactively increases the term of copyright which should be set at the time of the grant of copyright (or in the current legal framework, the creation of the work)

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re:

The law retroactively applies to copyrights already issued. […] If that legal framework changes and those changes apply to copyrights issued 20 years ago, the law applies retroactively.

I understand this point of view, but I don’t agree with it, and I’m not aware of any American case law that really supports the idea of this violating the “ex post facto” clause. For one thing, Calder v. Bull explicitly says it only applies to criminal matters. Or more to your point, the courts decided that copyright extensions weren’t “ex post facto”, so I’m not sure where your idea of “normal legal understanding” comes from.

Quoting the aforementioned case: “In my opinion, the true distinction is between ex post facto laws, and retrospective laws. Every ex post facto law must necessarily be retrospective; but every retrospective law is not an ex post facto law: The former, only, are prohibited. Every law that takes away, or impairs, rights vested, agreeably to existing laws, is retrospective, and is generally unjust, and may be oppressive; and it is a good general rule, that a law should have no retrospect: but there are cases in which laws may justly, and for the benefit of the community, and also of individuals, relate to a time antecedent to their commencement […]” (obviously, the second clause of the second sentence was meant to say “not every retrospective law is an ex post facto law”; as actually written, it contradicts the first clause of the sentence).

Copyright term extensions/reductions would be merely retrospective, not retroactive—and, unfortunately in some cases, a court doesn’t get to strike it down just because it’s not “benefitting the community”.

By the way, I’m not sure it’s correct that “The major opposition to copyright term extension was predicated on the same logic”. That logic was used in a (failed) legal argument trying to invalidate the law, but there was opposition before the law was passed, and as I recall it was more about there being no possibility of public benefit, and that it would harm the public. Once a law’s been passed, people oppposed to it will try to use any legal principle or precedent to strike it down, even if they’re only weakly relevant.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re:

The law retroactively applies to copyrights already issued. Under normal legal understanding, the duration of the copyright should be set by the legal framework at the time the copyright is granted. If that legal framework changes and those changes apply to copyrights issued 20 years ago, the law applies retroactively.

Are you sure? “Retrospective” seems more likely to be the correct word to use in this case. “Retroactive” would be more likely to apply to works not currently under copyright, like when a whole bunch of public domain works had their copyrights retroactively renewed in Europe in the 1990s.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re: Re:

“Retroactive” would be more likely to apply to works not currently under copyright, like when a whole bunch of public domain works had their copyrights retroactively renewed in Europe in the 1990s.

Even that isn’t really retroactive, in that nobody could be sued or charged for copying the works if they were in the public domain when copied. That falls into the category of “generally unjust, and may be oppressive […] but […] not an ex post facto law”.

JMT (profile) says:

Re: Re: Re:

It’s pedantic if you’re looking at this in a simplistic manner, sure. But the copyright aspect of this is story is secondary to the gross abuse of government power. This will have zero actual effect on copyright, but it will create a chilling effect on companies that decide they don’t want to risk to risk their speech attracting the attention of authoritarian politicians.

Anonymous Coward says:

‘ Evidence has shown a massive cost to the public of our over extended copyright law’

considering the last section to be taken into account over copyright is the section that it was started in the first place is the section concerning ‘THE PEOPLE’, there isn’t a hope in hell of even this ridiculousness being taken seriously! and as for who has introduced it, what a halfwit!!

Bilvin Spicklittle says:

Ignoring that this bill will never go up for a vote (or be enacted). Ignoring that it is theatrical for the jackass. Ignoring that it doesn’t go far enough (copyright terms should be for 18 months, no extensions, and no protection for DRMed works).

Why am I supposed to not like this?

If he’s suggesting it, even to be an asshole, he’s (deliberately or not) moving the Overton window in a direction favorable to what I want. And if he somehow does go through with it, just to spite Disney… all the better.

Sometimes jackasses do this. They threaten things that they think no one will go through with to get their way, and someone calls their bluff. Sometimes that’s a Charlie Rangel threatening to bring back the draft. And sometimes it’s to make copyright a little less insane.

This comment has been deemed insightful by the community.
Stephen T. Stone (profile) says:

Re:

Why am I supposed to not like this?

The bill targets a company over speech from said company that a government official doesn’t like. No government official should file bills like that⁠—and that holds true regardless of the performative nature of such bills or the political party to which that official belongs.

Plenty of arguments for shortening copyright terms exist. “Fuck Disney for meekly opposing Republicans” isn’t one of them.

This comment has been deemed insightful by the community.
Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re:

Plenty of arguments for shortening copyright terms exist. “Fuck Disney for meekly opposing Republicans” isn’t one of them.

Especially as that attitude soon become fuck anybody who opposes us, followed by the establishment of a totalitarian one party state.

Wyrm (profile) says:

Re:

Why am I supposed to not like this?

“Because it’s unconstitutional” should be enough a reason for anyone to not like this.
Shortening copyright terms is definitely a good idea. Doing it on a whim, expressing it very publicly as retaliation against a company and carving that out explicitly into your bill is the constitutional issue.

It cannot pass (or cannot stand if it miraculously passes) and it’s a petty revenge for a company that did speak out against some republican BS, which they only rarely do. So, it’s a violation of 1st amendment and of an original clause of the Constitution. If you “like this”, you’re just digging the grave for any of your rights.

Anathema Device (profile) says:

I have copiously produced copious copyrighted original material and potential copyright infringing material (fanfiction). Copyright law is of keen interest to me.

If Josh Hawley proposed giving me copyright for eternity on everything I’ve ever written and forcing people to pay me royalties by the letter for even considering using it in any way, I would still rather have all my copyrights destroyed and fed to the pigs than allow him to have the smallest say over anything affecting me.

And that goes for all his fascist chums.

Anonymous Coward says:

And, it seems that a perfectly reasonable way to set this up is to have extremely short copyright terms, with frequent renewal periods that grow increasingly expensive. If it’s not worth it for someone to renew, let the work go into the public domain where the public can make use of it.

This sounds like a solution that might work – Like, I can sort of understand Disney’s position of “Mickey Mouse is ours, he shouldn’t enter the public domain so anyone can use him however they want” – okay so you can have an “indefinite” copyright on it, but you’re going to have to seriously pay to renew it every time. Disney can afford it, so they do it, they’re happy, don’t try to extend everything like crazy.

Anonymous Coward says:

Starting to think Disney might be paying some bills around here...

The gist of this article: “a politician is doing what I said I wanted politicians to do – shorten copyrights – but I disagree with him about other things, so I changed my mind.”

Although the unanimous and unquestioning support for a particular corporation around here the last few months makes one wonder. Perhaps this isn’t about hating Hawley as much as it is defending Disney corporation.

Sure, the corporate asskissing from Techdirt in the last few years (since 2016, looks like) has always been embarrassing, but what is it about Disney Corporation in particular that has the bootlicking grovelers in the comments defend this corporation so vociferously?

Mike Masnick (profile) says:

Re:

The gist of this article: “a politician is doing what I said I wanted politicians to do – shorten copyrights – but I disagree with him about other things, so I changed my mind.”

No. Not even remotely close. The gist of it is that if you pushing legislation for punitive purposes in a manner that is designed to punish their speech, rather than on the basis of sound principles, and doing so by using mechanisms that are unconstitutional, then there’s no way that the law will survive Constitutional scrutiny, making it a waste of time.

If Hawley had pushed a bill that had a legitimate possibility to reduce copyright terms, I would support it.

Sure, the corporate asskissing from Techdirt in the last few years (since 2016, looks like) has always been embarrassing, but what is it about Disney Corporation in particular that has the bootlicking grovelers in the comments defend this corporation so vociferously?

WTF? When have we ever defended Disney?

We have always defended the right to free speech, even when it comes from companies or individuals we disagree with. Meaning that we, unlike you, have principles.

You should try it.

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