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Sunday, March 4, 2012

Interesting Intelectual Property Lawsuits


Searching around on the Internet about some recent legal activity that relates to intellectual property, I came across some interesting cases. The first case was an interesting article about a $21 million lawsuit that Nintendo lost. The case states that Nintendo’s designs for certain Wii, Wavebird and GameCube controllers were imposing on the copyrights that Anascape, Ltd. has on the controllers that they came up with. The argument from Anascape isn’t about the motion sensors in the Wii controllers but rather the design that the GameCube controllers have as well as the classic controller attachment for the Wii. What I like about this case is that it shows that the judicial system can work in favor of the little guy. There are plenty of examples of how the corporate giants get away with infringements like these but on this go around, they lost and had to give the small company their dues.
The second article was a case involving the artist Drake and his ex-girlfriend, Erika Lee. This case is still going on and presents an interesting topic. The case revolves around Drake’s hit song “Marvin’s Room”.  Ms. Lee claims that she and Drake co-wrote the song and that she is entitled to part ownership in the copyright of the song, copyright in the sound recording and payment of songwriter royalties. She is basing her claim from the fact that the first 30 seconds of the song is a recording of a phone call between her and Drake and that the two had initially intended on writing the song together and that her contributions were supposed to be included into the final version. What I find interesting here is Ms. Lee’s assertion that she owns part of the copyright due to her claim that the two had INTENDED to write the song. Where is her proof that the two collaborated? To me this becomes a he said/she said argument. Her voice recording at the beginning is the only real proof she has ownership to anything. I believe she should be compensated in that regard but other then that, she doesn’t have a legitimate claim.
Lastly, the third article is about a class action lawsuit against Google, Inc. over copyright infringement. The claim is that Google illegally scanned millions of books and other publications that contained copyrighted images and allowed them to be viewed by the public without regard to the rights of the works’ creators. The main complaint is over Google’s Library Project. When you look up a book or other publication, the book cover as well as pictures, if there are any, is displayed and this is where the argument is stemming from. When I looked up what the Google Library Project is, they claim that they are “carefully respecting authors’ and publishers’ copyrights”(http://www.google.com/googlebooks/library.html ¶3). If they truly have this in mind, then why aren’t they taking care of these artists? I believe Google not only has a legal obligation but a moral one as well. If they are trying to create such a large project they should have known that they needed to compensate the people who created the work. The only thing I can think of why they didn’t was that they weighed the cost of the possible lawsuit versus how much revenue they would generate. Having to buy so many licenses might have been more monetarily costly then just putting them on the site. However, this cost them face value in the eyes of authors, photographers and other artists they failed to give credit to.

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