The Herald (South Africa)

SA must resist US pressure to extend copyright terms

- PAUL HEALD

The current term of copyright in SA is life-of-the-author plus 50 years. But the US is pressuring SA to extend the term to life-plus-70.

Since the US is a net exporter of copyrighte­d media, like songs, books, and movies, US copyrights earn billions in revenue yearly.

The US wants to prolong this trade imbalance as long as possible and deny foreigners free access to older US works.

Research I have done shows that caving in to this demand would be bad for South African consumers.

This is because copyright term extensions prevent works from entering the public domain and being republishe­d for the public benefit.

The negative effect on the availabili­ty of titles is palpable and dramatic.

Just as important, keeping books under copyright imposes a direct cost on the public in terms of higher prices.

SA is poised to adopt a Copyright Amendment Bill that aims to modernise its 1978 Copyright Act and ensure protection of creative industries.

But the proposed amendments are fiercely contested and the US has been adding to the pressure.

A change to extend the terms of copyright would benefit the US, which exports far more copyrighte­d works to SA than it imports.

I conclude from my analysis that fewer books will be available to South Africans and the books remaining under copyright will be more expensive if the country gives in to US pressure to extend its copyright term.

On the other hand, data from the US, Canada and the UK suggest that limiting the ability of South African authors to transfer their copyrights for longer than 25 years may have significan­tly positive effects on the availabili­ty of works.

So-called “author-reversion” statutes don’t shorten the term of copyright, but rather switch ownership back to the author after a set term of years (the term in the US is 35 years).

In a recent issue of the South African Intellectu­al Property Journal, I summarised data collected on the effect of the 20-year copyright term extension in the US.

The data show that the decision imposed a significan­t welfare loss to the US public.

My study showed that when books fell into the public domain, they were more likely to be in print as new editions on online retailer Amazon.

A random sample of more than 2,000 Amazon books showed fewer than 30 new editions originally published in the 1980s were in print, but over 150 new editions from 100 years earlier — the 1880s — were on offer.

A yet-to-be published study of Canadian book markets showed a similar pattern.

Canada has the same copyright term as SA. A sample of Canadian book titles from the 1880s, 1890s and 1900s were in print at about an 85% rate, while a sample of titles from the 1960s-1980s were in print at a rate under 30%.

Yet-to-be published UK data confirm the gains in availabili­ty associated with public domain status.

In SA, my study of bound volumes for sale showed the copyrighte­d volumes selling for an average of $17.74, against $14.44 for public domain titles.

The higher price for bound volumes approximat­es the size of the royalty the publisher of a copyrighte­d book usually pays to an author. But the need to pay a royalty to the author of a copyrighte­d book cannot explain the price difference found in e-book markets.

E-book prices of books eligible for download in SA from Random House Canada, which has the same copyright term, were also collected, and the findings are dramatic.

A sample of titles showed the average price of copyrighte­d e-books to be $12.53 and the average for the public domain titles, in the same Vintage Classics collection, cost on average $6.76.

A broader sample of 432 non-Vintage Classic Canadian titles showed an even greater ebook pricing discrepanc­y: C$1.89 for public domain books and more than C$11 for copyrighte­d titles.

In SA, the heirs of an author regain control over all the author’s copyrights in year 25 after their death.

Famously, this reversion provision was successful­ly used by the heirs of SA composer Solomon Linda in their suit against Walt Disney when they regained the copyright in his compositio­n, M’Bube (The Lion Sleeps Tonight).

Disney had failed to realise that the last 25 years of the copyright in the song were owned by Linda’s daughters and not the music publishing company they contracted with.

The US has long had a more author-friendly rule. This allows authors or their heirs to terminate the transfer of a copyright 35 years after the transfer.

Data from US book markets suggests that beneficiar­ies of the terminatio­n right (authors or their heirs) use it to bring older books back into print with independen­t presses.

A study of more than 1,900

US titles found that as many as 20% of in-print titles were available because of the US terminatio­n right.

Canada and the UK have provisions similar to the current South African law.

They also show an uptick in book availabili­ty associated with their reversion schemes.

Strengthen­ing authors’ rights is not a universal panacea to alleviate the huge public cost associated with copyright term extension. But it would appear to be a step in the right direction.

The Canadian parliament is also now considerin­g a 25-year reversion or terminatio­n.

If it passes, SA should find it easier to fend off US complaints about the similar South African proposal.

● Heald is a professor at the University of Illinois.

● This article first appeared on The Conversati­on website.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa