This
story appeared on Network World Fusion at
http://www.nwfusion.com/columnists/2000/0207bradner.html
'Net
Insider:
Of Copies and
Rights
By Scott
Bradner
Network World, 02/07/00
The
field of intellectual property rights has not been made any easier by the
advent of the Internet and of a world in which intellectual property (a
different kind of IP than what I usually talk about) is increasingly digital in
nature.
Intellectual property rules and concepts developed through
hundreds of years of experience, with physical objects becoming increasingly
out of sync with the possibilities and characteristics of the digital world. It
may be time to rethink the rules.
The National Research Council (NRC),
part of the National Academies in Washington D.C., assembles groups of people,
usually with quite diverse points of view, to study problems deemed important
by various parts of the U.S. government and others. The NRC has just published
a report called "The Digital Dilemma: Intellectual Property in the
Information Age" (ISBN 0-309-06499-6 and on the Web at www.cstb.org) from
one of these study committees. I may be just a bit biased, since I was a member
of the committee that produced this new report, but I think it's a good document.
The
18-member committee, working over a period of almost two years, looked at every
aspect of IP we could think of. We found divergent, passionate, yet reasoned
views on just about every aspect of the subject - both from those the committee
asked to address us, or to review the draft of the report, and within the
committee itself. I cannot hope to summarize the 337-page report in the less
than 500 words that I'm allowed in this column, so instead I will focus on
three points.
Historically, the IP community's response to new
technology has been to try to fit the technology into existing IP paradigms and
apply existing rules to the new technologies. Where the existing rules cannot
be made to cover the new technologies, the reaction has been to establish new
rules, using the old logic, to cover the particular new technology. One of the
committee's major conclusions was that there should be no rush to try to create
new IP-related laws before we understand the implications of the technology.
Another
conclusion was that IP rights holders should not automatically assume the best
way to ensure that they get their rightful return from their IP is to install
content protection systems, as the DVD community has. The IP rights holders
should investigate other options to see if new business models may do as
effective a job at a lower cost.
A third point is really more of a
question: Is "copy" still the right fundamental concept? Computer and
network systems make many temporary copies of data in their normal processes.
Might it be a good time to rethink just what it is that constitutes IP rights?
For example, the concept could be that the IP rights holder deserves returns
when someone views the IP.
Disclaimer: Although Harvard is good at
rethinking others' fundamental concepts, the above book report is my own.
All
contents copyright 1995-2002 Network World, Inc. http://www.nwfusion.com