Yet Another Court Says Yes You Can Publish The Law

from the big-win dept

We’ve talked about this case – American Society for Testing and Materials et al v. PublicResource.org – a few times before. It was one of two cases brought against Carl Malamud’s Public Resource organization for posting the Code of Federal Regulations on its website, and including with the CFR language the standards promulgated by various standards development organizations (like ASTM) that had been incorporated by reference into the CFR as part of that operative law. The standards development organizations claimed that their standards were copyrighted and that publishing them amounted to infringement, whereas Public Resource argued that since those codes had the force of law, it could not be infringement to publish what the law is.

Originally the district court disagreed with Public Resource and found publishing the incorporated standards to be infringing. But the DC Circuit reversed that decision and sent it back down to the district court to consider more closely whether what Public Resource was doing in posting the incorporated standards amounted to fair use, which it did. Meanwhile, the companion case settled and went away. Also, while we were waiting for the DC Circuit to revisit this case (the standards development organization appealed the district court’s finding of fair use) the Supreme Court also issued two important decisions that bore on this one: Georgia v. Public Resource, another case where Public Resource had posted operative law, which the Supreme Court found to be non-infringing. And the Warhol case, where the Supreme Court also addressed fair use head-on, but with less protective results.

All of which led up to this new ruling by the DC Circuit, affirming the district court’s finding that what Public Resource had done in publishing the standards that are part of what the law requires is fair use.

Many private organizations develop and copyright suggested technical standards for an industry, product, or problem. Federal and state governments often incorporate such standards into law. This case presents the question whether third parties may make the incorporated standards available for free online. We hold that the non-commercial dissemination of such standards, as incorporated by reference into law, constitutes fair use and thus cannot support liability for copyright infringement.

In its decision, the court found that the first three factors favored Public Resource. On the first factor, the “purpose and character of a use, including whether such use is of a commercial nature or is for nonprofit educational purpose,” the court found in favor of Public Resource, partly because it was engaged in nonprofit, rather than commercial use, and partly because the use was transformative.

Second, Public Resource’s use is transformative because it serves a different purpose than the plaintiffs’ works. […] The plaintiffs seek to advance science and industry by producing standards reflecting industry or engineering best practices. For example, ASHRAE says its mission is to “advance the arts and sciences of heating, ventilation, air conditioning and refrigeration to serve humanity and promote a sustainable world.” Public Resource’s mission in republishing the standards is very different—to provide the public with a free and comprehensive repository of the law. This distinction is fundamental: Public Resource publishes only what the law is, not what industry groups may regard as current best practices.

The court also found in favor of Public Resource on the second factor, the nature of the copyrighted work.

Application of this factor often depends on whether the work is factual or fictional, for “the law generally recognizes a greater need to disseminate factual works than works of fiction or fantasy.” Harper & Row, 471 U.S. at 563. [Here t]his factor strongly supports a finding of fair use. As we explained in ASTM II, standards “fall at the factual end of the fact-fiction spectrum, which counsels in favor of finding fair use.” 896 F.3d at 451. Moreover, legal text “falls plainly outside the realm of copyright protection.” Id. And because incorporated standards have legal force, they too fall, “at best, at the outer edge of copyright’s protective purposes.” Id.

The third factor is “the amount and substantiality of the portion used in relation to the copyrighted work as a whole.” 17 U.S.C. § 107(3). This factor “turns on whether the extent of the copying is “reasonable in relation to the purpose of the copying” and here the court found that it did.

This factor strongly supports fair use because the standards at issue have been incorporated and thus have the force of law. Public Resource posts standards that government agencies have incorporated into law—no more and no less. If an agency has given legal effect to an entire standard, then its entire reproduction is reasonable in relation to the purpose of the copying, which is to provide the public with a free and comprehensive repository of the law.

Finally, on the fourth factor, “the effect of the use upon the potential market for or value of the copyrighted work,” the court says that it doesn’t tip in favor of one side or another, but at the same time it expresses skepticism that there is a true harm incurred by the standards development organizations.

The plaintiffs press heavily on what seems to be a common-sense inference: If users can download an identical copy of an incorporated standard for free, few will pay to buy the standard. Despite its intuitive appeal, this argument overlooks the fact that the plaintiffs regularly update their standards—including all 185 standards at issue in this appeal. And regulators apparently are much less nimble in updating the incorporations. So, many of the builders, engineers, and other regular consumers of the plaintiffs’ standards may simply purchase up-to-date versions as a matter of course. Moreover, some evidence casts doubt on the plaintiffs’ claims of significant market injury. Public Resource has been posting incorporated standards for fifteen years. Yet the plaintiffs have been unable to produce any economic analysis showing that Public Resource’s activity has harmed any relevant market for their standards. To the contrary, ASTM’s sales have increased over that time; NFPA’s sales have decreased in recent years but are cyclical with publications; and ASHRAE has not pointed to any evidence of its harm.

Furthermore, even if there were a measurable harm, it would need to be balanced against the public interest.

[O]ur analysis of market effects must balance any monetary losses to the copyright holders against any “public benefits” of the copying. Oracle, 141 S. Ct. at 1206. Thus, even if Public Resource’s postings were likely to lower demand for the plaintiffs’ standards, we would also have to consider the substantial public benefits of free and easy access to the law. As the Supreme Court recently confirmed: “Every citizen is presumed to know the law, and it needs no argument to show that all should have free access” to it. Georgia v. Public.Resource.Org., Inc., 140 S. Ct. 1498, 1507 (2020)

In sum, this is a good decision: solid, readable, and one that advances the public interest in being able to know what the law is because someone has published it in a way that is practically accessible. The decision even comments on how necessary it was for the public that Public Resource published it like it had.

[T]he plaintiffs argue that, because they make standards available for free in online reading rooms, Public Resource’s use cannot be transformative. Yet all but one of these rooms opened after Public Resource began posting incorporated standards. Moreover, the plaintiffs’ reading rooms do not provide equivalent or even convenient access to the incorporated standards. Among other things, text is not searchable, cannot be printed or downloaded, and cannot be magnified without becoming blurry. Often, a reader can view only a portion of each page at a time and, upon zooming in, must scroll from right to left to read a single line of text. Public Resource’s postings suffer from none of these shortcomings.

It does, however, leave for another day whether standards are even material that is eligible for copyright. Or exactly what happens when people do make what should be fair uses and commercially benefit, which also should be protected but in the wake of the Warhol case may not still be. But it is good that at least these sorts of non-commercial, educational fair uses today remain protected by decisions like this one.

Filed Under: , , , , , ,
Companies: astm, public.resource.org

Rate this comment as insightful
Rate this comment as funny
You have rated this comment as insightful
You have rated this comment as funny
Flag this comment as abusive/trolling/spam
You have flagged this comment
The first word has already been claimed
The last word has already been claimed
Insightful Lightbulb icon Funny Laughing icon Abusive/trolling/spam Flag icon Insightful badge Lightbulb icon Funny badge Laughing icon Comments icon

Comments on “Yet Another Court Says Yes You Can Publish The Law”

Subscribe: RSS Leave a comment
49 Comments
Crafty Coyote says:

Copyright would put us in a world where one can commit crimes and break the law for publishing the law. The written law if published contains the knowledge one could use to avoid breaking the law in the first place, but that requires theft, which is a crime. But you didn’t know the law because it wasn’t published, how could you be held guilty?

Franz Kafka couldn’t have designed a worse scenario.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re:

The written law if published contains the knowledge one could use to avoid breaking the law in the first place, but that requires theft, which is a crime.

No, copying is not theft, as has been repeatedly stated on this site.

Anyway, in honor of the ruling, please enjoy the newly-published-on-LibGen 2023 National Electrical Safety Code.

Crafty Coyote says:

Re: Re:

Even if it was not theft, someone would have to suffer some sort of punishment just to give everyone else law-literacy which is important because not all of these laws are obvious (building codes, fire safety laws, etc.) It puts us in a bad situation where individuals have to risk being fined or jailed just so that everyone else can gain information. It happens with art, film, music, and we just barely escaped having the LAW OF THE LAND itself become obscured by private ownership.

WHO IN THEIR RIGHT MIND WOULD WANT A PAYWALL BEHIND KNOWING THE LAW?

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re: Re:

And the ASME A17 series will do you little good unless you’re installing or inspecting elevators and escalators, but it’s still interesting to read. For example, it used to be permissible to install emergency exit hatches in the side of an elevator, such that people could exit to an adjacent elevator via a portable bridge. Now, it’s not allowed, but double blind hoistways still don’t require the access holes at every few floors like single blind hoistways do. Perhaps they were worried about people pushing their way across a level bridge all at once, whereas an upward-and-over exit is more of a one-at-a-time thing. The next time you watch the film Speed, you’ll understand the opening scenes a bit better.

NESC just happened to be the latest standard to go on LibGen. If you prefer the National Electrical Code, here you go: NEC 2017. Get it before the publishers sue the place out of existence. As of last week, they’re trying again, though Malamud’s site and archive.org still have copies if you know where to look (public.resource.org never had a search feature, and archive.org’s has been broken since around February). I haven’t found a proper copy of the 2023 version yet; LibGen’s is a scan.

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

” As the Supreme Court recently confirmed: “Every citizen is presumed to know the law, and it needs no argument to show that all should have free access” to it. Georgia v. Public.Resource.Org., Inc., 140 S. Ct. 1498, 1507 (2020)”

So are LEO non-citizens? “I didn’t know what the law said” is only an acceptable excuse if you have a badge it seems.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re:

To play government’s advocate, the argument seems to be “everyone should have access to, and be able to know the law. But where the law may be open to interpretation in the heat of the moment, LEO shouldn’t be open to liability for making snap decisions on what is legal in the heat of the moment.”

Along with this, the org training those officers should be held negligent if the officer’s training was insufficient, AND the officer should be held guilty if they knowingly broke the law.

Of course, that’s all assuming everyone is acting in good faith and won’t lie under oath. We may need to revisit some of that, as the logic currently seems to be “they wouldn’t lie under oath; they swore they wouldn’t!”

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re:

But where the law may be open to interpretation in the heat of the moment, LEO shouldn’t be open to liability for making snap decisions on what is legal in the heat of the moment.

To be exact: But where the law may be open to interpretation, LEO shouldn’t be open to liability for making snap decisions on what is legal.

There is absolutely no expectation that it be made “in the heat of the moment,” and never has been. Any snap decision is equally valid, particularly those made with plenty of time to spare.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re:

NFPA codes are also available for free on their website

Only to view individual pages, and only if you accept a legal agreement. I haven’t reviewed that agreement—and, really, why would you or I want to? People shouldn’t have to give up any rights to view the law. Head over to libgen.rs (search for National Fire Protection as well as NFPA), and you can download about 40 of them. public.resource.org should eventually have more, but the “United States (State)” section is still showing a “451” error with a link to a court docket.

(Occasionally, LibGen has had an NFPA standard that was obviously dumped from the NFPA’s crappy site. They seem to be unsearchable heavily-watermarked image-only PDFs. Someone eventually uploads a proper copy.)

If all else fails, try a public library—or university or trade school library.

Anonymous Coward says:

I’m definitely on PublicResource.org’s side (and have made use of their free services before). But to be fair, ASTM and NFPA standards aren’t the kinds of laws that a member of the public is going to accidentally break. These are technical standards that really only affect people working in highly regulated industries who are aware of the standards and buy them as a cost of doing business.

PublicResource.org is important not because people are getting thrown in jail for inadvertently designing a suspension bridge the wrong way, but because the public has a right to know how industries are regulated (even if they don’t work in them).

Anonymous Coward says:

Re:

But to be fair, ASTM and NFPA standards aren’t the kinds of laws that a member of the public is going to accidentally break.

NPFA 70, also called the (USA’s) National Electrical Code, is exactly the sort of law that members of the public accidentally break all the fucking time. Usually it doesn’t kill anyone, and few violators are ever caught, but talk to an electrician or home inspector sometime—and don’t skimp out on that inspection if you ever buy a home.

(The standard being freely available probably won’t prevent even 10% of these fuckups. Still, it should be distributed as widely as possible.)

mechtheist (profile) says:

Re: Re:

The NEC is basically a document serving the insurance industry, isn’t that correct? As far as I know, a citizen isn’t bound by it, you can’t be thrown in jail for violating it. I’ve had my electric power supply company folks not care if my wiring was a bit south of absolutely to code BUT, you can have an insurance claim denied if you do something hinky and burn your house down.

It’s true that what’s good for the insurance industry is by and large what’s good for actual human beings living and working in and around the electrical installations covered by the code though I’d bet someon with a lot more knowledge than me could give numerous examples in the code that are not in the best interest of homeowners or workers but are in the interest of insurnce companies covering such installations.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re: Re:

A citizen/homeowner is absolutely bound by the NEC (or whatever electrical code applies where they live, it varies by state), IF they’re doing electrical work.

That being said, in most states you’re not even supposed to be doing electrical work in the first place unless you’re a licensed electrician and have a permit for the work. You won’t go to jail for violating the code (or doing work without a permit) but you sure can get in trouble with your local building department.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re: Re:3

Well, I stand corrected, some places are so anal they do require a permit for something like an outlet replacement. NO ONE WILL DO THIS.

Correct. You have three basic choices: pay an electrician upward of a hundred dollars for 2 minutes of work; buy the part for a dollar or two, and enjoy the thrill of being an outlaw while illegally installing it; or stick with your dangerous broken outlet. Perverse incentives.

Mamba (profile) says:

Re: Re: Re:4

I may be misremembering, but some states allow you to get a homeowners equivalent of a license for basic electrical work. It required passing a test of residential branch wiring code. Was it Iowa? Idaho?

I’m kinda in favor of this because people do some stupid shit. Some is rooted in ignorance and ideally it would help.

That’s said, the new leviton wiring devices with color coded wago style lever termination should help homeowner avoid some of the more dangerous issues when replacing them.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re: Re:2

IF they’re doing electrical work.

Generally, that’s if they’re doing “permanent” electrical work, or temporary work for a construction site. For stuff that wouldn’t be considered “part of” the home, NEC doesn’t apply. So, you can go into a Home Depot, buy a bunch of electrical parts, and make yourself a power strip if you like. I suspect that’s how they get away with selling such parts to the general public, even in areas with very strict rules.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re: Re:

The NEC is basically a document serving the insurance industry, isn’t that correct?

You might be thinking of UL-type standards. NEC has legal force, though probably not the kind that would land you in jail (for unpaid work).

I’ve had my electric power supply company folks not care if my wiring was a bit south of absolutely to code

Well, that’s complicated. It’s actually hard-to-impossible for them to know whether your wiring was done legally, because old work is usually grandfathered in. They might cringe if they seen knob-and-tube wiring, for example, but there’s no NEC requirement for you to upgrade it. You can even add new knob-and-tube wiring if it extends an existing circuit. Similarly, whether any particular circuit or partial circuit requires AFCI protection depends on its history. Some electricians will install it to pass an inspection, then come back to remove it if the homeowner complains of false tripping—knowing that the electrical company or inspector will probably never notice, and if they did, probably couldn’t prove who did what.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re: Re:3

The NFPA (like most industry trade groups) makes its money by selling the standards (which are NOT cheap), and by membership fees (which are ALSO not cheap).

If you work in the field, you’re somewhat expected to become a member, and companies will often pay their employees membership fees as a job perk, so it’s a pretty steady revenue stream.

Mamba (profile) says:

Re: Re: Re:3

In my experience it’s not the insurance companies that are putting undue influence in the code….it’s vendors. A great example was the runaround for a decade plus requiring oversized wires on rooftop runs that was driven by copper wire vendors. They basically declared what had been done for decades with virtually no issue was no longer safe, and everyone needed to dramatically upsize wires run within a foot of rooftops. So it spawned a tit for tat runaround as people figured out workarounds and then code was updated. Until it was finally dropped once everyone realized it was doing fuckall.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re: Re:3

In some areas, it’s perfectly legal for one to install electrical panels in one’s own home, to run wires within it or to outbuildings, and generally do other “electrician” tasks. You might have to get it inspected afterward, and maybe also get a permit ahead of time.

It’s not hard or dangerous if you can read and follow the NEC rules, or a good do-it-yourself book. An inspector will tell you that, evidently, a lot of people can’t. Including some professional electricians.

Anonymous Coward says:

In short, the law is not what we think is not silly, but what the local authorities decree it to be. As TFS says, laws are often written that incorporate by reference some particular privately generated set of standards. And that word private is key to the whole discussion, both here and in the courtroom.

Someone has to write these standards, and it’s not done by the little man behind the curtain, you can be certain of that. It’s a full time job for hundreds of engineers in many fields, people who have been held to be highly knowledgeable of what’s supposed to be safe, and what definitely is not safe. (Here I mean both materials and trade best practices.)

Those people, and their staffs, need to be compensated, they can’t do this in their spare time. And that’s where they justify charging law-making bodies for copies of their standards, those same standards that are being incorporated into legislation.

Going back more than a decade, I’ve been fortunate enough to live in cities where the laws are all published on-line, and that includes any and all standards referenced therein. But I can see where some places might not be doing that, so Public Resource is to be congratulated for their efforts, full stop right there. (Prior to that, I had to rely on public libraries, and paying 10 cents a page to copy something. The internet has brought us into a wondrous future, don’t you agree.)

And yes, insurance companies are part of this equation – they don’t like paying out for claims caused by stupidity, let alone what the law says. But right along with that, they would raise their rates something terrible if there were no standards, and Joe Bleaux could do anything he wants with “his” home. Stupidity again, and all that goes with it. Further, if your mortgage holder finds out you did it wrong and destroyed their collateral, guess what happens next… Right, your full remaining amount is due by close of business tomorrow. Not a good thing.

And finally, there are some things in the codes that are just plain silly, I’ll agree to that. Have I purposefully, or even inadvertently disobeyed code? Yep, sure have. And I have no excuse, because if my laptop is ever confiscated, any examiner will see a copy of all of the local codes stored in there, in plain text.

tl;dr:

Each person’s version of “silly” is sacred unto themselves. It’s up to you to figure out if you can “get away with it”, or not. Just don’t tell them that you read Techdirt!

mechtheist (profile) says:

There’s a lot of kinda scary but hilarious videos on youtube about absurdly bad electrical work. While most of it is pretty easy and like you say just following directions, some things can get a little complex especially stuff like grounding properly which often confuses pros. FYI question–will dropping a hair dryer or any other live electrical piece of equipment in a full sink/bathtub trip the GFCI? Not necessarily, not if you have PVC drain pipes and the sink/tub is otherwise electrically isolated from ground.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re:

While most of it is pretty easy and like you say just following directions, some things can get a little complex especially stuff like grounding properly which often confuses pros.

Do you mean grounding or bonding? 🙂

Anyway, I doubt any do-it-yourselfer would run into the complicated cases, with the notable exception of subpanel wiring (ground and neutral must be connected at one, and only one, point in the system; additionally, a detached building usually needs its own grounding electrode).

They might forget to connect a box’s grounding screw, or to insert a ground bushing where required; but that’s just being bad at following directions.

FYI question–will dropping a hair dryer or any other live electrical piece of equipment in a full sink/bathtub trip the GFCI?

That depends on whether enough current is avoiding the neutral wire (plumbing material being one consideration). In principle, a fatal current could go through your heart and back out the proper wire to satisfy the GFCI. But that’s almost absurdly hypothetical; the much more likely danger is that the GFCI is broken altogether. A study found about 20% of them across the USA wouldn’t trigger on ground faults; 50% in Florida.

That’s why new GFCI equipment is self-testing. If yours isn’t, use the button regularly. In any case, treat it as a last resort rather than a license to use corded electrical appliances in the bathtub.

Mamba (profile) says:

Re: Re:

Watching laymen deal with “grounded wire” the first time makes me realize that clear communication can mean a lot of different things.

For my part, I long ago learned I needed to look up the tap rule anytime I intend to use it…. because I’ll invariably forget some nuance.

As for the Ground Fault, it blew my mind for a hot minute when I learned that you can wire a breaker to a driven ground rod(not bonded to grounding electrode, just on its own), flip it on and it will happily carry 10-15 amps of current indefinitely…

Add Your Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Have a Techdirt Account? Sign in now. Want one? Register here

Comment Options:

Make this the or (get credits or sign in to see balance) what's this?

What's this?

Techdirt community members with Techdirt Credits can spotlight a comment as either the "First Word" or "Last Word" on a particular comment thread. Credits can be purchased at the Techdirt Insider Shop »

Follow Techdirt

Techdirt Daily Newsletter

Ctrl-Alt-Speech

A weekly news podcast from
Mike Masnick & Ben Whitelaw

Subscribe now to Ctrl-Alt-Speech »
Techdirt Deals
Techdirt Insider Discord
The latest chatter on the Techdirt Insider Discord channel...
Loading...