After the news broke on January 12 that the Supreme Court had asked the Solicitor General for its views as to the CNN v. Cablevision case, which is now under review for certiorari, I overheard two attorneys saying that the case could have a lot to say about the application of copyright law to user-generated content (“UGC”). That struck me as wrong, until I started thinking about it and realized that I had really never bothered to define that term very precisely. Roger Faxon, CEO of EMI Music Publishing, has been quoted as saying that UGC is “taking copyrighted content, whether that is a song or a recording, and the user is, without authorization, turning it into another product.” That is precisely what’s going on in the Cablevision case: users are turning a time-bound television broadcast into a view-on-demand product. Does the lack of “authorship” by the user change anything? Should it?
If somebody uploading a copy of a sound recording onto YouTube gives rise to UGC, why not somebody telling Cablevision to record a movie for them on a digital video recorder (DVR)? Copyright consequences aside, does it matter that the YouTube content is visible to the world and the Cablevision DVR content is accessible only by a single subscriber? What follows is an attempt to think about these fundamental UGC questions without translating them into the language of copyright. To paraphrase Benjamin Kaplan in his 1967 book, An Unhurried View of Copyright, “I shall take you on a stroll over some of the [UGC] terrain and examine various knolls and gullies in a rather desultory, even naïve way; finally we shall climb to the top of a hill and see whether anything can be usefully said about the whole landscape.” More...