"Excuse me, those facts are ours"

Written by Eric Olsen
Published January 22, 2004

A bill passed out of committee would grant copyright protection to databases:

    By a 16-7 vote, the House Judiciary committee approved an intellectual property bill that had been opposed by Amazon.com, AT&T, Comcast, Google, Yahoo and some Internet service provider associations.

    The proposal, backed by big database companies such as Reed Elsevier and Thomson, would extend to databases the same kind of protection that copyrighted works such as music, literature and movies currently enjoy. Its supporters say that such protection is necessary to stop rivals from extracting information from proprietary databases like Reed Elsevier's LexisNexis service instead of going through the far more expensive process of compiling it themselves.

    ....One of the most vocal opponents of the bill has been the venerable U.S. Chamber of Commerce, which argued that database owners already have the ability to protect their property through contracts and terms-of-service agreements. In its own letter to Congress, the Chamber predicted that a financial analyst with access to Dun & Bradstreet databases could violate the law by including that information in a report prepared for a client, as could a research chemist who wishes to reproduce information on the effectiveness of new pharmaceuticals.

    The Database and Collections of Information Misappropriation Act of 2003 does not include criminal penalties. Rather, it allows the database owner to sue in civil court "any person who makes available in commerce to others a quantitatively substantial part of the information in a database." There are limited exemptions for educational and research organizations and for journalists.

    The bill, backed by Rep. Howard Coble, R-N.C., also is controversial because, critics say, it would sidestep a U.S. Supreme Court decision that said facts could not be copyrighted. [ZDNet]

How can you copyright facts? Aren't facts facts? Don't they exist apart from their compilation? There are already ample remedies and protections against database theft - further broadening of copyright is exactly the wrong direction. Next, air will be proprietary.

Career media professional Eric Olsen is honored to be the founder and publisher of Blogcritics.org, which, quite frankly, rules - as do his wife and four children.
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"Excuse me, those facts are ours"
Published: January 22, 2004
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Section: Politics
Writer: Eric Olsen
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Comments

#1 — January 22, 2004 @ 12:30PM — jadester [URL]

this sounds rather stupid, but without knowing the full details i can't make a proper comment.
However, it *sounds* like the way around this is, if you need to reproduce any copyrighted databased material for legitimate means, simply reformat the storage and presentation of that data. If the database is even just reasonably-well designed, it shouldn't be too arduous a task (and you can say it's your own work)

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