copyright-versus-community.html (53658B)
1 <!--#include virtual="/server/header.html" --> 2 <!-- Parent-Version: 1.96 --> 3 <!-- This page is derived from /server/standards/boilerplate.html --> 4 <!--#set var="TAGS" value="speeches" --> 5 <!--#set var="DISABLE_TOP_ADDENDUM" value="yes" --> 6 <title>Copyright versus Community in the Age of Computer Networks 7 - GNU Project - Free Software Foundation</title> 8 <!--#include virtual="/philosophy/po/copyright-versus-community.translist" --> 9 <!--#include virtual="/server/banner.html" --> 10 <!--#include virtual="/philosophy/ph-breadcrumb.html" --> 11 <!--GNUN: OUT-OF-DATE NOTICE--> 12 <!--#include virtual="/server/top-addendum.html" --> 13 <div class="article reduced-width"> 14 <h2>Copyright versus Community in the Age of Computer Networks</h2> 15 <address class="byline">by Richard Stallman</address> 16 17 <div class="infobox"> 18 <p>Keynote speech at LIANZA conference, Christchurch Convention Centre, 12 19 October 2009.<br /> 20 There is an <a href="/philosophy/copyright-versus-community-2000.html">older 21 version</a> of this talk, from 2000.</p> 22 </div> 23 <hr class="thin" /> 24 25 <p><b>BC: </b> 26 Tena koutou, tena koutou, tena koutou katoa. Today I have the 27 privilege of introducing Richard Stallman, whose keynote speech is 28 being sponsored by the School of Information Management at Victoria 29 University of Wellington.</p> 30 31 <p>Richard has been working to promote software freedom for over 25 32 years. In 1983 he started the GNU project to develop a free operating 33 system [the GNU system], and in 1985 he set up the Free Software 34 Foundation. Every time you read or send a message to nz-libs, you use 35 the Mailman software which is part of the GNU project. So whether you 36 realize it or not, Richard's work has touched all of your lives.</p> 37 38 <p>I like to describe him as the most influential person most people 39 have never heard of, although he tells me that that cannot possibly be 40 true because it cannot be tested.</p> 41 42 <p><b>RMS: </b> 43 We can't tell.</p> 44 45 <p><b>BC: </b> 46 I said that—I still like it. His ideas about software 47 freedom and free access to information were used by Tim Berners-Lee 48 when he created the world's first web server, and in 1999 his musings 49 about a free online encyclopedia inspired Jimmy Wales to set up what 50 is now Wikipedia.</p> 51 52 <p>Today Richard will be talking to us about copyright vs community in 53 the age of computer networks, and their implications for libraries. 54 Richard.</p> 55 56 <div class="announcement comment" role="complementary"> 57 <hr class="no-display" /> 58 <p> 59 <a href="https://www.defectivebydesign.org/ebooks.html">Join our mailing list 60 about the dangers of e-books</a>. 61 </p> 62 <hr class="no-display" /> 63 </div> 64 65 <p><b>RMS: </b> 66 I've been in New Zealand for a couple of weeks, and in the 67 North Island it was raining most of the time. Now I know why they 68 call gumboots “Wellingtons.” And then I saw somebody who 69 was making chairs and tables out of ponga wood, and he called it 70 fern-iture. Then we took the ferry to get here, and as soon as we got 71 off, people started mocking and insulting us; but there were no hard 72 feelings, they just wanted to make us really feel Picton.</p> 73 74 <p>The reason people usually invite me to give speeches is because of 75 my work on free software. This is not a talk about free software; 76 this talk answers the question whether the ideas of free software 77 extend to other kinds of works. But in order for that to make sense, 78 I'd better tell you briefly what free software means.</p> 79 80 <p>Free software is a matter of freedom, not price, so think of 81 “free speech,” not “free beer.” Free software 82 is software that respects the user's freedom, and there are four 83 specific freedoms that the user deserves always to have.</p> 84 85 <ul> 86 <li>Freedom 0 is the freedom to run the program as you wish.</li> 87 88 <li>Freedom 1 is the freedom to study the source code of the program 89 and change it to make the program do what you wish.</li> 90 91 <li>Freedom 2 is the freedom to help your neighbour; that is, the 92 freedom to redistribute copies of the program, exact copies when you 93 wish.</li> 94 95 <li>And Freedom 3 is the freedom to contribute to your community. 96 That's the freedom to publish your modified versions when you 97 wish.</li> 98 </ul> 99 100 <p>If the program gives you these four freedoms then it's free 101 software, which means the social system of its distribution and use is 102 an ethical system, one which respects the user's freedom and the 103 social solidarity of the user's community. But if one of these 104 freedoms is missing or insufficient, then it's proprietary software, 105 nonfree software, user-subjugating software. It's unethical. It's 106 not a contribution to society, it's a power grab. This unethical 107 practice should not exist; the goal of the free software movement is 108 to put an end to it. All software should be free, so that all users 109 can be free.</p> 110 111 <p>Proprietary software keeps the users divided and helpless: divided, 112 because they're forbidden to share it, and helpless, because they 113 don't have the source code so they can't change it. They can't even 114 study it to verify what it's really doing to them, and many 115 proprietary programs have malicious features which spy on the user, 116 restrict the user, even back doors to attack the user.</p> 117 118 <p>For instance, Microsoft Windows has a back door with which 119 Microsoft can forcibly install software changes, without getting 120 permission from the supposed owner of the computer. You may think 121 it's your computer, but if you've made the mistake of having Windows 122 running in it, then really Microsoft has owned your computer. 123 Computers need to be defenestrated, which means either throw Windows 124 out of the computer, or throw the computer out the window.</p> 125 126 <p>But any proprietary software gives the developers unjust power over 127 the users. Some of the developers abuse this power more, and some 128 abuse it less, but none of them ought to have it. You deserve to have 129 control of your computing, and not be forcibly dependent on a 130 particular company. So you deserve free software.</p> 131 132 <p>At the end of speeches about free software, people sometimes ask 133 whether these same freedoms and ideas apply to other things. If you 134 have a copy of a published work on your computer, it makes sense to 135 ask whether you should have the same four freedoms—whether it's 136 ethically essential that you have them or not. And that's the 137 question that I'm going to address today.</p> 138 139 <p>If you have a copy of something that's not software, for the most 140 part, the only thing that might deny you any of these freedoms is 141 copyright law. With software that's not so. The main ways of making 142 software nonfree are contracts and withholding the source code from 143 the users. Copyright is a sort of secondary, back up method. For 144 other things there's no such distinction as between source code and 145 executable code.</p> 146 147 <p>For instance, if we're talking about a text, if you can see the 148 text to read it, there's nothing in the text that you can't see. So 149 it's not the same kind of issue exactly as software. It's for the 150 most part only copyright that might deny you these freedoms.</p> 151 152 <p>So the question can be restated: “What should copyright law 153 allow you to do with published works? What should copyright law 154 say?”</p> 155 156 <p>Copyright has developed along with copying technology, so it's 157 useful to review the history of copying technology. Copying developed 158 in the ancient world, where you'd use a writing instrument on a 159 writing surface. You'd read one copy and write another.</p> 160 161 <p>This technology was rather inefficient, but another interesting 162 characteristic was that it had no economy of scale. To write ten 163 copies would take ten times as long as to write one copy. It required 164 no special equipment other than the equipment for writing, and it 165 required no special skill other than literacy itself. The result was 166 that copies of any particular book were made in a decentralized 167 manner. Wherever there was a copy, if someone wanted to copy it, he 168 could.</p> 169 170 <p>There was nothing like copyright in the ancient world. If you had 171 a copy and wanted to copy it, nobody was going to tell you you weren't 172 allowed—except if the local prince didn't like what the book 173 said, in which case he might punish you for copying it. But that's 174 not copyright, but rather something closely related, namely 175 censorship. To this day, copyright is often used in attempts to 176 censor people.</p> 177 178 <p>That went on for thousands of years, but then there was a big 179 advance in copying technology, namely the printing press. The 180 printing press made copying more efficient, but not uniformly. [This 181 was] because mass production copying became a lot more efficient, but 182 making one copy at a time didn't benefit from the printing press. In 183 fact, you were better off just writing it by hand; that would be 184 faster than trying to print one copy.</p> 185 186 <p>The printing press has an economy of scale: it takes a lot of work 187 to set the type, but then you can make many copies very fast. Also, 188 the printing press and the type were expensive equipment that most 189 people didn't own; and the ability to use them, most literate people 190 didn't know. Using a press was a different skill from writing. The 191 result was a centralized manner of producing copies: the copies of any 192 given book would be made in a few places, and then they would be 193 transported to wherever someone wanted to buy copies.</p> 194 195 <p>Copyright began in the age of the printing press. Copyright in 196 England began as a system of censorship in the 1500s. I believe it 197 was originally meant to censor Protestants, but it was turned around 198 and used to censor Catholics and presumably lots of others as well. 199 According to this law, in order to publish a book you had to get 200 permission from the Crown, and this permission was granted in the form 201 of a perpetual monopoly to publish it. This was allowed to lapse in 202 the 1680s, I believe [it expired in 1695 according to the Wikipedia 203 entry]. The publishers wanted it back again, but what they got was 204 something somewhat different. The Statute of Anne gave authors a 205 copyright, and only for 14 years, although the author could renew it 206 once.</p> 207 208 <p>This was a totally different idea—a temporary monopoly for 209 the author, instead of a perpetual monopoly for the publisher. The 210 idea developed that copyright was a means of promoting writing.</p> 211 212 <p>When the US constitution was written, some people wanted authors to 213 be entitled to a copyright, but that was rejected. Instead, the US 214 Constitution says that Congress can optionally adopt a copyright law, 215 and if there is a copyright law, its purpose is to promote progress. 216 In other words, the purpose is not benefits for copyright holders or 217 anybody they do business with, but for the general public. Copyright 218 has to last a limited time; publishers keep hoping for us to forget 219 about this.</p> 220 221 <p>Here we have an idea of copyright which is an industrial regulation 222 on publishers, controlled by authors, and designed to provide benefits 223 to the public at large. It functioned this way because it didn't 224 restrict the readers.</p> 225 226 <p>Now in the early centuries of printing, and still I believe in the 227 1790s, lots of readers wrote copies by hand because they couldn't 228 afford printed copies. Nobody ever expected copyright law to be 229 something other than an industrial regulation. It wasn't meant to 230 stop people from writing copies, it was meant to regulate the 231 publishers. Because of this it was easy to enforce, uncontroversial, 232 and arguably beneficial for society.</p> 233 234 <p>It was easy to enforce, because it only had to be enforced against 235 publishers. And it's easy to find the unauthorized publishers of a 236 book—you go to a bookstore and say “where do these copies 237 come from?” You don't have to invade everybody's home and 238 everybody's computer to do that.</p> 239 240 <p>It was uncontroversial because, as the readers were not restricted, 241 they had nothing to complain about. Theoretically they were 242 restricted from publishing, but not being publishers and not having 243 printing presses, they couldn't do that anyway. In what they actually 244 could do, they were not restricted.</p> 245 246 <p>It was arguably beneficial because the general public, according to 247 the concepts of copyright law, traded away a theoretical right they 248 were not in a position to exercise. In exchange, they got the 249 benefits of more writing.</p> 250 251 <p>Now if you trade away something you have no possible use for, and 252 you get something you can use in exchange, it's a positive trade. 253 Whether or not you could have gotten a better deal some other way, 254 that's a different question, but at least it's positive.</p> 255 256 <p>So if this were still in the age of the printing press, I don't 257 think I'd be complaining about copyright law. But the age of the 258 printing press is gradually giving way to the age of the computer 259 networks—another advance in copying technology that makes 260 copying more efficient, and once again not uniformly so.</p> 261 262 <p>Here's what we had in the age of the printing press: mass 263 production very efficient, one at a time copying still just as slow as 264 the ancient world. Digital technology gets us here: they've both 265 benefited, but one-off copying has benefited the most.</p> 266 267 <p>We get to a situation much more like the ancient world, where one 268 at a time copying is not so much worse [i.e., harder] than mass 269 production copying. It's a little bit less efficient, a little bit 270 less good, but it's perfectly cheap enough that hundreds of millions 271 of people do it. Consider how many people write CDs once in a while, 272 even in poor countries. You may not have a CD-writer yourself, so you 273 go to a store where you can do it.</p> 274 275 <p>This means that copyright no longer fits in with the technology as 276 it used to. Even if the words of copyright law had not changed, they 277 wouldn't have the same effect. Instead of an industrial regulation on 278 publishers controlled by authors, with the benefits set up to go to 279 the public, it is now a restriction on the general public, controlled 280 mainly by the publishers, in the name of the authors.</p> 281 282 <p>In other words, it's tyranny. It's intolerable and we can't allow 283 it to continue this way.</p> 284 285 <p>As a result of this change, [copyright] is no longer easy to 286 enforce, no longer uncontroversial, and no longer beneficial.</p> 287 288 <p>It's no longer easy to enforce because now the publishers want to 289 enforce it against each and every person, and to do this requires 290 cruel measures, draconian punishments, invasions of privacy, abolition 291 of our basic ideas of justice. There's almost no limit to how far 292 they will propose to go to prosecute the War on Sharing.</p> 293 294 <p>It's no longer uncontroversial. There are political parties in 295 several countries whose basic platform is “freedom to 296 share.”</p> 297 298 <p>It's no longer beneficial because the freedoms that we conceptually 299 traded away (because we couldn't exercise them), we now can exercise. 300 They're tremendously useful, and we want to exercise them.</p> 301 302 <p>What would a democratic government do in this situation?</p> 303 304 <p>It would reduce copyright power. It would say: “The trade we 305 made on behalf of our citizens, trading away some of their freedom 306 which now they need, is intolerable. We have to change this; we can't 307 trade away the freedom that is important.” We can measure the 308 sickness of democracy by the tendency of governments to do the exact 309 opposite around the world, extending copyright power when they should 310 reduce it.</p> 311 312 <p>One example is in the dimension of time. Around the world we see 313 pressure to make copyright last longer and longer and longer.</p> 314 315 <p>A wave of this started in the US in 1998. Copyright was extended 316 by 20 years on both past and future works. I do not understand how 317 they hope to convince the now dead or senile writers of the 20s and 318 30s to write more back then by extending copyright on their works now. 319 If they have a time machine with which to inform them, they haven't 320 used it. Our history books don't say that there was a burst of vigor 321 in the arts in the 20s when all the artists found out that their 322 copyrights would be extended in 1998.</p> 323 324 <p>It's theoretically conceivable that 20 years more copyright on 325 future works would convince people to make more effort in producing 326 those works. But not anyone rational, because the discounted present 327 value of 20 more years of copyright starting 75 years in the 328 future—if it's a work made for hire—and probably even 329 longer if it's a work with an individual copyright holder, is so small 330 it couldn't persuade any rational person to do anything different. 331 Any business that wants to claim otherwise ought to present its 332 projected balance sheets for 75 years in the future, which of course 333 they can't do because none of them really looks that far ahead.</p> 334 335 <p>The real reason for this law, the desire that prompted various 336 companies to purchase this law in the US Congress, which is how laws 337 are decided on for the most part, was they had lucrative monopolies 338 and they wanted those monopolies to continue.</p> 339 340 <p>For instance, Disney was aware that the first film in which Mickey 341 Mouse appeared would go into the public domain in a few years, and 342 then anybody would be free to draw that same character as part of 343 other works. Disney didn't want that to happen. Disney borrows a lot 344 from the public domain, but is determined never to give the slightest 345 thing back. So Disney paid for this law, which we refer to as the 346 Mickey Mouse Copyright Act.</p> 347 348 <p>The movie companies say they want perpetual copyright, but the US 349 Constitution won't let them get that officially. So they came up with 350 a way to get the same result unofficially: “perpetual copyright 351 on the installment plan.” Every 20 years they extend copyright 352 for 20 more years. So that at any given time, any given work has a 353 date when it will supposedly fall into the public domain. But that 354 date is like tomorrow, it never comes. By the time you get there they 355 will have postponed it, unless we stop them next time.</p> 356 357 <p>That's one dimension, the dimension of duration. But even more 358 important is the dimension of breadth: which uses of the work does 359 copyright cover?</p> 360 361 <p>In the age of the printing press, copyright wasn't supposed to 362 cover all uses of a copyrighted work, because copyright regulated 363 certain uses that were the exceptions in a broader space of 364 unregulated uses. There were certain things you were simply allowed 365 to do with your copy of a book.</p> 366 367 <p>Now the publishers have got the idea that they can turn our 368 computers against us, and use them to seize total power over all use 369 of published works. They want to set up a pay-per-view universe. 370 They're doing it with DRM (Digital Restrictions Management)—the 371 intentional features of software that's designed to restrict the user. 372 And often the computer itself is designed to restrict the user.</p> 373 374 <p>The first way in which the general public saw this was in DVDs. A 375 movie on a DVD was usually encrypted, and the format was secret. The 376 DVD conspiracy kept this secret because they said anyone that wants to 377 make DVD players has to join the conspiracy, promise to keep the 378 format secret, and promise to design the DVD players to restrict the 379 users according to the rules, which say it has to stop the user from 380 doing this, from doing that, from doing that—a precise set of 381 requirements, all of which are malicious towards us.</p> 382 383 <p>It worked for a while, but then some people figured out the secret 384 format, and published free software capable of reading the movie on a 385 DVD and playing it. Then the publishers said “since we can't 386 actually stop them, we have to make it a crime.” And they 387 started that in the US in 1998 with the Digital Millennium Copyright 388 Act, which imposed censorship on software capable of doing such 389 jobs.</p> 390 391 <p>So that particular piece of free software was the subject of a 392 court case. Its distribution in the US is forbidden; the US practices 393 censorship of software.</p> 394 395 <p>The movie companies are well aware that they can't really make that 396 program disappear—it's easy enough to find it. So they designed 397 another encryption system, which they hoped would be harder to break, 398 and it's called AACS, or the axe.</p> 399 400 <p>The AACS conspiracy makes precise rules about all players. For 401 instance, in 2011 it's going to be forbidden to make analog video 402 outputs. So all video outputs will have to be digital, and they will 403 carry the signal encrypted into a monitor specially designed to keep 404 secrets from the user. That is malicious hardware. They say that the 405 purpose of this is to “close the analog hole.” I'll show 406 you a couple of analog holes (Stallman takes off his glasses): here's 407 one and here's another, that they'd like to poke out permanently.<a href="#footnote1">[1]</a></p> 408 409 <p>How do I know about these conspiracies? The reason is they're not 410 secret—they have websites. The AACS website proudly describes 411 the contracts that manufacturers have to sign, which is how I know 412 about this requirement. It proudly states the names of the companies 413 that have established this conspiracy, which include Microsoft and 414 Apple, and Intel, and Sony, and Disney, and IBM.</p> 415 416 <p>A conspiracy of companies designed to restrict the public's access 417 to technology ought to be prosecuted as a serious crime, like a 418 conspiracy to fix prices, except it's worse, so the prison sentences 419 for this should be longer. But these companies are quite confident 420 that our governments are on their side against us. They have no fear 421 against being prosecuted for these conspiracies, which is why they 422 don't bother to hide them.</p> 423 424 <p>In general DRM is set up by a conspiracy of companies. Once in a 425 while a single company can do it, but generally it requires a 426 conspiracy between technology companies and publishers, so [it's] 427 almost always a conspiracy.</p> 428 429 <p>They thought that nobody would ever be able to break the AACS, but 430 about three and a half years ago someone released a free program 431 capable of decrypting that format. However, it was totally useless, 432 because in order to run it you need to know the key.</p> 433 434 <p>And then, six months later, I saw a photo of two adorable puppies, 435 with 32 hex digits above them, and I wondered: “Why put those 436 two things together? I wonder if those numbers are some important 437 key, and someone could have put the numbers together with the puppies, 438 figuring people would copy the photo of the puppies because they were 439 so cute. This would protect the key from being wiped out.”</p> 440 441 <p>And that's what it was—that was the key to break the axe. 442 People posted it, and editors deleted it, because laws in many 443 countries now conscript them to censor this information. It was 444 posted again, they deleted it; eventually they gave up, and in two 445 weeks this number was posted in over 700,000 web sites.</p> 446 447 <p>That's a big outpouring of public disgust with DRM. But it didn't 448 win the war, because the publishers changed the key. Not only that: 449 with HD DVD, this was adequate to break the DRM, but not with Blu-ray. 450 Blu-ray has an additional level of DRM and so far there is no free 451 software that can break it, which means that you must regard Blu-ray 452 disks as something incompatible with your own freedom. They are an 453 enemy with which no accommodation is possible, at least not with our 454 present level of knowledge.</p> 455 456 <p>Never accept any product designed to attack your freedom. If you 457 don't have the free software to play a DVD, you mustn't buy or rent 458 any DVDs, or accept them even as gifts, except for the rare 459 non-encrypted DVDs, which there are a few of. I actually have a few 460 [of these]—I don't have any encrypted DVDs, I won't take 461 them.</p> 462 463 <p>So this is how things stand in video, but we've also seen DRM in 464 music.</p> 465 466 <p>For instance, about ten years ago we started to see things that 467 looked like compact disks, but they weren't written quite like compact 468 disks. They didn't follow the standard. We called them 'corrupt 469 disks', and the idea of them was that they would play in an audio 470 player, but it was impossible to read them on a computer. These 471 different methods had various problems.</p> 472 473 <p>Eventually Sony came up with a clever idea. They put a program on 474 the disk, so that if you stuck the disk into a computer, the disk 475 would install the program. This program was designed like a virus to 476 take control of the system. It's called a 'root kit', meaning that it 477 has things in it to break the security of the system so that it can 478 install the software deep inside the system, and modify various parts 479 of the system.</p> 480 481 <p>For instance, it modified the command you could use to examine the 482 system to see if the software was present, so as to disguise itself. 483 It modified the command you could use to delete some of these files, 484 so that it wouldn't really delete them. Now all of this is a serious 485 crime, but it's not the only one Sony committed, because the software 486 also included free software code—code that had been released 487 under the GNU General Public License.</p> 488 489 <p>Now the GNU GPL is a copyleft license, and that means it says 490 “Yes, you're free to put this code into other things, but when 491 you do, the entire program that you put things into you must release 492 as free software under the same license. And you must make the source 493 code available to users, and to inform them of their rights you must 494 give them a copy of this license when they get the 495 software.”</p> 496 497 <p>Sony didn't comply with all that. That's commercial copyright 498 infringement, which is a felony. They're both felonies, but Sony 499 wasn't prosecuted because the government understands that the purpose 500 of the government and the law is to maintain the power of those 501 companies over us, not to help defend our freedom in any way.</p> 502 503 <p>People got angry and they sued Sony. However, they made a mistake. 504 They focused their condemnation not on the evil purpose of this 505 scheme, but only on the secondary evils of the various methods that 506 Sony used. So Sony settled the lawsuits and promised that in the 507 future, when it attacks our freedom, it will not do those other 508 things.</p> 509 510 <p>Actually, that particular corrupt disk scheme was not so bad, 511 because if you were not using Windows it would not affect you at all. 512 Even if you were using Windows, there's a key on the keyboard—if 513 you remembered every time to hold it down, then the disk wouldn't 514 install the software. But of course it's hard to remember that every 515 time; you're going to slip up some day. This shows the kind of thing 516 we've had to deal with.</p> 517 518 <p>Fortunately music DRM is receding. Even the main record companies 519 sell downloads without DRM. But we see a renewed effort to impose DRM 520 on books.</p> 521 522 <p>You see, the publishers want to take away the traditional freedoms 523 of book readers—freedom to do things such as borrow a book from 524 the public library, or lend it to a friend; to sell a book to a used 525 book store, or buy it anonymously paying cash (which is the only way I 526 buy books—we've got to resist the temptations to let Big Brother 527 know everything that we're doing.)</p> 528 529 <p>Even the freedom to keep the book as long as you wish, and read it 530 as many times as you wish, they plan to get rid of.</p> 531 532 <p>The way they do it is with DRM. They knew that so many people read 533 books and would get angry if these freedoms were taken away that they 534 didn't believe they could buy a law specifically to abolish these 535 freedoms—there would be too much opposition. Democracy is sick, 536 but once in a while people manage to demand something. So they came 537 up with a two-stage plan.</p> 538 539 <p>First, take away these freedoms from e-books, and second, convince 540 people to switch from paper books to e-books. They've succeeded with 541 stage 1.</p> 542 543 <p>In the US they did it with the Digital Millennium Copyright Act, 544 and in New Zealand, that was part of the year-ago Copyright Act; 545 censorship on software that can break DRM was part of that law. 546 That's an unjust provision; it's got to be repealed.</p> 547 548 <p>The second stage is convince people to switch from printed books to 549 ebooks; that didn't go so well.</p> 550 551 <p>One publisher in 2001 had the idea they would make their line of 552 ebooks really popular if they started it with my biography. So they 553 found an author and the author asked me if I'd cooperate, and I said 554 “Only if this e-book is published without encryption, without 555 DRM.” The publisher wouldn't go along with that, and I just 556 stuck to it—I said no. Eventually we found another publisher 557 who was willing to do this—in fact willing to publish the book 558 under a free license giving you the four freedoms—so the book 559 was then published, and sold a lot of copies on paper.</p> 560 561 <p>But in any case, e-books failed at the beginning of this decade. 562 People just didn't want to read them very much. And I said, 563 “they will try again.” We saw an amazing number of news 564 articles about electronic ink (or is it electronic paper, I can never 565 remember which), and it occurred to me probably the reason there's so 566 many is the publishers want us to think about this. They want us to 567 be eager for the next generation of e-book readers.</p> 568 569 <p>Now they're upon us. Things like the Sony Shreader (its official 570 name is the Sony Reader, but if you put on 'sh' it explains what it's 571 designed to do to your books), and the <a 572 href="/philosophy/why-call-it-the-swindle.html">Amazon Swindle</a>, 573 designed to 574 swindle you out of your traditional freedoms without your noticing. 575 Of course, they call it the Kindle which is what it's going to do to 576 your books.</p> 577 578 <p>The Kindle is an extremely malicious product, almost as malicious 579 as Microsoft Windows. They both have spy features, they both have 580 Digital Restrictions Management, and they both have back doors.</p> 581 582 <p>In the case of the Kindle, the only way you can buy a book is to 583 buy it from Amazon<a href="#footnote4">[4]</a>, and Amazon requires 584 you to identify yourself, so they know everything that you've 585 bought.</p> 586 587 <p>Then there is Digital Restrictions Management, so you can't lend 588 the book or sell it to a used bookstore, and the library can't lend it 589 either.</p> 590 591 <p>And then there's the back door, which we found out about about 592 three months ago, because Amazon used it. Amazon sent a command to 593 all the Kindles to erase a particular book, namely 1984 by George 594 Orwell. Yes, they couldn't have picked a more ironic book to erase. 595 So that's how we know that Amazon has a back door with which it can 596 erase books remotely.</p> 597 598 <p>What else it can do, who knows? Maybe it's like Microsoft Windows. 599 Maybe Amazon can remotely upgrade the software, which means that 600 whatever malicious things are not in it now, they could put them in it 601 tomorrow.</p> 602 603 <p>This is intolerable—any one of these restrictions is 604 intolerable. They want to create a world where nobody lends books to 605 anybody anymore.</p> 606 607 <p>Imagine that you visit a friend and there are no books on the 608 shelf. It's not that your friend doesn't read, but his books are all 609 inside a device, and of course he can't lend you those books. The 610 only way he could lend you any one of those books is to lend you his 611 whole library, which is obviously a ridiculous thing to ask anybody to 612 do. So there goes friendship for people who love books.</p> 613 614 <p>Make sure that you inform people what this device implies. It 615 means other readers will no longer be your friends, because you will 616 be acting like a jerk toward them. Spread the word preemptively. 617 This device is your enemy. It's the enemy of everyone who reads. The 618 people who don't recognize that are the people who are thinking so 619 short-term that they don't see it. It's our job to help them see 620 beyond the momentary convenience to the implications of this 621 device.</p> 622 623 <p>I have nothing against distributing books in digital form, if they 624 are not designed to take away our freedom. Strictly speaking, it is 625 possible to have an e-book reader:</p> 626 627 <ul> 628 <li>that is not designed to attack you,</li> 629 630 <li>which runs free software and not proprietary software,</li> 631 632 <li>which doesn't have DRM,</li> 633 634 <li>which doesn't make people identify yourself to get a book,</li> 635 636 <li>which doesn't have a back door, [and]</li> 637 638 <li>which doesn't restrict what you can do with the files on your 639 machine.</li> 640 </ul> 641 642 <p>It's possible, but the big companies really pushing e-books are 643 doing it to attack our freedom, and we mustn't stand for that. This 644 is what governments are doing in cahoots with big business to attack 645 our freedom, by making copyright harsher and nastier, more restrictive 646 than ever before.</p> 647 648 <p>But what should they do? Governments should make copyright power 649 less. Here are my specific proposals.</p> 650 651 <p>First of all, there is the dimension of time. I propose copyright 652 should last ten years, starting from the date of publication of a 653 work.</p> 654 655 <p>Why from the date of publication? Because before that, we don't 656 have copies. It doesn't matter to us whether we would have been 657 allowed to copy our copies that we don't have, so I figure we might as 658 well let the authors have as much time as it takes to arrange 659 publication, and then start the clock.</p> 660 661 <p>But why ten years? I don't know about in this country, but in the 662 US, the publication cycle has got shorter and shorter. Nowadays 663 almost all books are remaindered within two years and out-of-print 664 within three. So ten years is more than three times the usual 665 publication cycle—that should be plenty comfortable.</p> 666 667 <p>But not everybody agrees. I once proposed this in a panel 668 discussion with fiction writers, and the award-winning fantasy writer 669 next to me said “Ten years? No way. Anything more than five 670 years is intolerable.” You see, he had a legal dispute with his 671 publisher. His books seemed to be out of print, but the publisher 672 wouldn't admit it. The publisher was using the copyright on his own 673 book to stop him from distributing copies himself, which he wanted to 674 do so people could read it.</p> 675 676 <p>This is what every artist starts out wanting—wanting to 677 distribute her work so it will get read and appreciated. Very few 678 make a lot of money. That tiny fraction face the danger of being 679 morally corrupted, like J.K. Rowling.</p> 680 681 <p>J.K. Rowling, in Canada, got an injunction against people who had 682 bought her book in a bookstore, ordering them not to read it. So in 683 response I call for a boycott of Harry Potter books. But I don't say 684 you shouldn't read them; I leave that to the author and the publisher. 685 I just say you shouldn't buy them.</p> 686 687 <p>It's few authors that make enough money that they can be corrupted 688 in this way. Most of them don't get anywhere near that, and continue 689 wanting the same thing they wanted at the outset: they want their work 690 to be appreciated.</p> 691 692 <p>He wanted to distribute his own book, and copyright was stopping 693 him. He realized that more than five years of copyright was unlikely 694 to ever do him any good.</p> 695 696 <p>If people would rather have copyright last five years, I won't be 697 against it. I propose ten as a first stab at the problem. Let's 698 reduce it to ten years and then take stock for a while, and we could 699 adjust it after that. I don't say I think ten years is the exact 700 right number—I don't know.</p> 701 702 <p id="details">What about the dimension of breadth? Which activities should 703 copyright cover? I distinguish three broad categories of works.</p> 704 705 <p>First of all, there are the functional works that you use to do a 706 practical job in your life. This includes software, recipes, 707 educational works, reference works, text fonts, and other things you 708 can think of. These works should be free.</p> 709 710 <p>If you use the work to do a job in your life, then if you can't 711 change the work to suit you, you don't control your life. Once you 712 have changed the work to suit you, then you've got to be free to 713 publish it—publish your version—because there will be 714 others who will want the changes you've made.</p> 715 716 <p>This leads quickly to the conclusion that users have to have the 717 same four freedoms [for all functional works], not just for software. 718 And you'll notice that for recipes, practically speaking, cooks are 719 always sharing and changing recipes just as if the recipes were free. 720 Imagine how people would react if the government tried to stamp out 721 so-called “recipe piracy.”</p> 722 723 <p>The term “pirate” is pure propaganda. When people ask 724 me what I think of music piracy, I say “As far as I know, when 725 pirates attack they don't do it by playing instruments badly, they do 726 it with arms. So it's not music “piracy,” because piracy 727 is attacking ships, and sharing is as far as you get from being the 728 moral equivalent of attacking ships.” Attacking ships is bad, 729 sharing with other people is good, so we should firmly denounce that 730 propaganda term “piracy” whenever we hear it.</p> 731 732 <p>People might have objected twenty years ago: “If we don't 733 give up our freedom, if we don't let the publishers of these works 734 control us, the works won't get made and that will be a horrible 735 disaster.” Now, looking at the free software community, and all 736 the recipes that circulate, and reference works like 737 Wikipedia—we are even starting to see free textbooks being 738 published—we know that that fear is misguided.</p> 739 740 <p>There is no need to despair and give up our freedom thinking that 741 otherwise the works won't get made. There are lots of ways to 742 encourage them to get made if we want more—lots of ways that are 743 consistent with and respect our freedom. In this category, they 744 should all be free.</p> 745 746 <p>But what about the second category, of works that say what certain 747 people thought, like memoirs, essays of opinion, scientific papers, 748 and various other things?<a href="#footnote2">[2]</a> To publish a modified version of somebody 749 else's statement of what he thought is misrepresenting [that] 750 somebody. That's not particularly a contribution to society.</p> 751 752 <p>Therefore it is workable and acceptable to have a somewhat reduced 753 copyright system where all commercial use is covered by copyright, all 754 modification is covered by copyright, but everyone is free to 755 non-commercially redistribute exact copies.</p> 756 757 <p>[2015 note: publishing scientific papers under the CC Attribution 758 license (CC-BY) is widely done, in accessible journals and arXiv.org, 759 and it seems that permitting publication of modified versions does not 760 cause any problem. So that license is what I now recommend for 761 scholarly publications.]</p> 762 763 <p>That freedom is the minimum freedom we must establish for all 764 published works, because the denial of that freedom is what creates 765 the War on Sharing—what creates the vicious propaganda that 766 sharing is theft, that sharing is like being a pirate and attacking 767 ships. Absurdities, but absurdities backed by a lot of money that has 768 corrupted our governments. We need to end the War on Sharing; we need 769 to legalize sharing exact copies of any published work.</p> 770 771 <p>In the second category of works, that's all we need; we don't need 772 to make them free. Therefore I think it's OK to have a reduced 773 copyright system which covers commercial use and all modifications. 774 And this will provide a revenue stream to the authors in more or less 775 the same (usually inadequate) way as the present system. You've got 776 to keep in mind [that] the present system, except for superstars, is 777 usually totally inadequate.</p> 778 779 <p>What about works of art and entertainment? Here it took me a while 780 to decide what to think about modifications.</p> 781 782 <p>You see, on one hand, a work of art can have an artistic integrity 783 and modifying it could destroy that. Of course, copyright doesn't 784 necessarily stop works from being butchered that way. Hollywood does 785 it all the time. On the other hand, modifying the work can be a 786 contribution to art. It makes possible the folk process which leads 787 to things which are beautiful and rich.</p> 788 789 <p>Even if we look at named authors only: consider Shakespeare, who 790 borrowed stories from other works only a few decades old, and did them 791 in different ways, and made important works of literature. If today's 792 copyright law had existed then, that would have been forbidden and 793 those plays wouldn't have been written.</p> 794 795 <p>But eventually I realized that modifying a work of art can be a 796 contribution to art, but it's not desperately urgent in most cases. 797 If you had to wait ten years for the copyright to expire, you could 798 wait that long. Not like the present-day copyright that makes you 799 wait maybe 75 years, or 95 years. In Mexico you might have to wait 800 almost 200 years in some cases, because copyright in Mexico expires a 801 hundred years after the author dies. This is insane, but ten years, 802 as I've proposed copyright should last, that people can wait.</p> 803 804 <p>So I propose the same partly reduced copyright that covers 805 commercial use and modification, but everyone's got to be free to 806 non-commercially redistribute exact copies. After ten years it goes 807 into the public domain, and people can contribute to art by publishing 808 their modified versions.</p> 809 810 <p>One other thing: if you're going to take little pieces out of a 811 bunch of works and rearrange them into something totally different, 812 that should just be legal, because the purpose of copyright is to 813 promote art, not to obstruct art. It's stupid to apply copyright to 814 using snippets like that—it's self-defeating. It's a kind of 815 distortion that you'd only get when the government is under the 816 control of the publishers of the existing successful works, and has 817 totally lost sight of its intended purpose.</p> 818 819 <p>That's what I propose, and in particular, this means that sharing 820 copies on the Internet must be legal. Sharing is good. Sharing 821 builds the bonds of society. To attack sharing is to attack 822 society.</p> 823 824 <p>So any time the government proposes some new means to attack people 825 who share, to stop them from sharing, we have to recognize that this 826 is evil, not just because the means proposed almost invariably offend 827 basic ideas of justice (but that's not a coincidence). The reason is 828 because the purpose is evil. Sharing is good and the government 829 should encourage sharing.</p> 830 831 <p>But copyright did after all have a useful purpose. Copyright as a 832 means to carry out that purpose has a problem now, because it doesn't 833 fit in with the technology we use. It interferes with all the vital 834 freedoms for all the readers, listeners, viewers, and whatever, but 835 the goal of promoting the arts is still desirable. So in addition to 836 the partly reduced copyright system, which would continue to be a 837 copyright system, I propose two other methods.</p> 838 839 <p><a id="tax-money-for-artists">One [works via] 840 taxes</a>—distribute tax money directly to artists. This 841 could be a special tax, perhaps on Internet connectivity, or it could 842 come from general revenue, because it won't be that much money in 843 total, not if it's distributed in an efficient way. To distribute it 844 efficiently to promote the arts means not in linear proportion to 845 popularity. It should be based on popularity, because we don't want 846 bureaucrats to have the discretion to decide which artists to support 847 and which to ignore, but based on popularity does not imply linear 848 proportion.</p> 849 850 <p>What I propose is measure the popularity of the various artists, 851 which you could do through polling (samples) in which nobody is 852 required to participate, and then take the cube root. The cube root 853 looks like this: it means basically that [the payment] tapers off 854 after a while.</p> 855 856 <p>If superstar A is a thousand times as popular as successful artist 857 B, with this system A would get ten times as much money as B, not a 858 thousand times.</p> 859 860 <p>Linearly would give A a thousand times as much as B, which means 861 that if we wanted B to get enough to live on we're going to have to 862 make A tremendously rich. This is wasteful use of the tax 863 money—it shouldn't be done.</p> 864 865 <p>But if we make it taper off, then yes, each superstar will get 866 handsomely more than an ordinary successful artist, but the total of 867 all the superstars will be a small fraction of the [total] money. 868 Most of the money will go to support a large number of fairly 869 successful artists, fairly appreciated artists, fairly popular 870 artists. Thus the system will use money a lot more efficiently than 871 the existing system.</p> 872 873 <p>The existing system is regressive. It actually gives far, far more 874 per record, for instance, to a superstar than to anybody else. The 875 money is extremely badly used. The result is we'd actually be paying 876 a lot less this way. I hope that's enough to mollify some of these 877 people who have a knee-jerk hostile reaction to taxes—one that I 878 don't share, because I believe in a welfare state.</p> 879 880 <p>I have another suggestion which is voluntary payments. Suppose 881 every player had a button you could push to send a dollar to the 882 artist who made the work you're currently playing or the last one you 883 played. This money would be delivered anonymously to those artists. 884 I think a lot of people would push that button fairly often.</p> 885 886 <p>For instance, all of us could afford to push that button once every 887 day, and we wouldn't miss that much money. It's not that much money 888 for us, I'm pretty sure. Of course, there are poor people who 889 couldn't afford to push it ever, and it's OK if they don't. We don't 890 need to squeeze money out of poor people to support the artists. 891 There are enough people who are not poor to do the job just fine. I'm 892 sure you're aware that a lot of people really love certain art and are 893 really happy to support the artists.</p> 894 895 <p>An idea just came to me. The player could also give you a 896 certificate of having supported so-and-so, and it could even count up 897 how many times you had done it and give you a certificate that says 898 “I sent so much to these artists.” There are various ways 899 we could encourage people who want to do it.</p> 900 901 <p>For instance, we could have a PR campaign which is friendly and 902 kind: “Have you sent a dollar to some artists today? Why not? 903 It's only a dollar—you'll never miss it and don't you love what 904 they're doing? Push the button!” It will make people feel good, 905 and they'll think “Yeah, I love what I just watched. I'll send 906 a dollar.”</p> 907 908 <p>This is already starting to work to some extent. There's a 909 Canadian singer who used to be called Jane Siberry. She put her music 910 on her website and invited people to download it and pay whatever 911 amount they wished. She reported getting an average of more than a 912 dollar per copy, which is interesting because the major record 913 companies charge just under a dollar per copy. By letting people 914 decide whether and how much to pay, she got more—she got even 915 more per visitor who was actually downloading something. But this 916 might not even count whether there was an effect of bringing more 917 people to come, and [thus] increasing the total number that this 918 average was against.</p> 919 920 <p>So it can work, but it's a pain in the neck under present 921 circumstances. You've got to have a credit card to do it, and that 922 means you can't do it anonymously. And you've got to go find where 923 you're going to pay, and the payment systems for small amounts, 924 they're not very efficient, so the artists are only getting half of 925 it. If we set up a good system for this, it would work far, far 926 better.</p> 927 928 <p>So these are my two suggestions.</p> 929 930 <p>And in mecenatglobal.org, you can find another scheme that combines 931 aspects of the two, which was invented by Francis Muguet and designed 932 to fit in with existing legal systems better to make it easier to 933 enact.</p> 934 935 <p>Be careful of proposals to “compensate the rights 936 holders,” because when they say “compensate,” 937 they're trying to presume that if you have appreciated a work, you now 938 have a specific debt to somebody, and that you have to 939 “compensate” that somebody. When they say “rights 940 holders,” it's supposed to make you think it's supporting 941 artists while in fact it's going to the publishers—the same 942 publishers who basically exploit all the artists (except the few that 943 you've all heard of, who are so popular that they have clout).</p> 944 945 <p>We don't owe a debt; we have nobody that we have to 946 “compensate.” [But] supporting the arts is still a useful 947 thing to do. That was the motivation for copyright back when 948 copyright fit in with the technology of the day. Today copyright is a 949 bad way to do it, but it's still good to do it other ways that respect 950 our freedom.</p> 951 952 <p>Demand that they change the two evil parts of the New Zealand Copyright Act. 953 They shouldn't replace the three strikes punishment<a href="#footnote3">[3]</a>, because sharing is 954 good, and they've got to get rid of the censorship for the software to break 955 DRM. Beware of ACTA—they're trying to negotiate a treaty between various 956 countries, for all of these countries to attack their citizens, and we don't 957 know how because they won't tell us.</p> 958 <div class="column-limit"></div> 959 960 <h3 class="footnote">Footnotes</h3> 961 <ol> 962 <li id="footnote1">In 2010, the encryption system for digital video output was 963 <a href="https://www.pcmag.com/archive/hdcp-master-key-confirmed-blu-ray-content-vulnerable-254650"> 964 definitively cracked</a>.</li> 965 <li id="footnote2">2015: I included scientific papers because I 966 thought that publishing modified versions of someone else's paper 967 would cause harm; however, publishing physics and math papers under 968 the Creative Commons Attribution License 969 on <a href="https://arxiv.org/">arXiv.org</a> and many libre journals seems to 970 have no problems. Thus, I subsequently concluded that scientific 971 papers ought to be free.</li> 972 <li id="footnote3">New Zealand had enacted a system of punishment 973 without trial for Internet users accused of copying; then, facing 974 popular protest, the government did not implement it, and announced a 975 plan to implement a modified unjust punishment system. The point here 976 was that they should not proceed to implement a replacement—rather, 977 they should have no such system. However, the words I used 978 don't say this clearly. 979 <br /> 980 The New Zealand government subsequently implemented the punishment 981 scheme more or less as originally planned.</li> 982 <li id="footnote4">That was true at the time. As of 2018, it is 983 possible to load books from other sources, but the device reports the 984 name of the book being read to Amazon servers; thus, Amazon knows 985 every book that you read on the device, regardless of where you got 986 the book.</li> 987 </ol> 988 </div> 989 990 </div><!-- for id="content", starts in the include above --> 991 <!--#include virtual="/server/footer.html" --> 992 <div id="footer" role="contentinfo"> 993 <div class="unprintable"> 994 995 <p>Please send general FSF & GNU inquiries to 996 <a href="mailto:gnu@gnu.org"><gnu@gnu.org></a>. 997 There are also <a href="/contact/">other ways to contact</a> 998 the FSF. Broken links and other corrections or suggestions can be sent 999 to <a href="mailto:webmasters@gnu.org"><webmasters@gnu.org></a>.</p> 1000 1001 <p><!-- TRANSLATORS: Ignore the original text in this paragraph, 1002 replace it with the translation of these two: 1003 1004 We work hard and do our best to provide accurate, good quality 1005 translations. However, we are not exempt from imperfection. 1006 Please send your comments and general suggestions in this regard 1007 to <a href="mailto:web-translators@gnu.org"> 1008 <web-translators@gnu.org></a>.</p> 1009 1010 <p>For information on coordinating and contributing translations of 1011 our web pages, see <a 1012 href="/server/standards/README.translations.html">Translations 1013 README</a>. --> 1014 Please see the <a 1015 href="/server/standards/README.translations.html">Translations 1016 README</a> for information on coordinating and contributing translations 1017 of this article.</p> 1018 </div> 1019 1020 <!-- Regarding copyright, in general, standalone pages (as opposed to 1021 files generated as part of manuals) on the GNU web server should 1022 be under CC BY-ND 4.0. Please do NOT change or remove this 1023 without talking with the webmasters or licensing team first. 1024 Please make sure the copyright date is consistent with the 1025 document. For web pages, it is ok to list just the latest year the 1026 document was modified, or published. 1027 1028 If you wish to list earlier years, that is ok too. 1029 Either "2001, 2002, 2003" or "2001-2003" are ok for specifying 1030 years, as long as each year in the range is in fact a copyrightable 1031 year, i.e., a year in which the document was published (including 1032 being publicly visible on the web or in a revision control system). 1033 1034 There is more detail about copyright years in the GNU Maintainers 1035 Information document, www.gnu.org/prep/maintain. --> 1036 1037 <p>Copyright © 2009, 2010, 2012, 2015, 2018, 2021 Free Software 1038 Foundation, Inc.</p> 1039 1040 <p>This page is licensed under a <a rel="license" 1041 href="http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nd/4.0/">Creative 1042 Commons Attribution-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License</a>.</p> 1043 1044 <!--#include virtual="/server/bottom-notes.html" --> 1045 1046 <p class="unprintable">Updated: 1047 <!-- timestamp start --> 1048 $Date: 2021/09/05 07:59:44 $ 1049 <!-- timestamp end --> 1050 </p> 1051 </div> 1052 </div><!-- for class="inner", starts in the banner include --> 1053 </body> 1054 </html>