6
Theories of Intellectual Property
The term "intellectual property" refers to a loose cluster of legal doctrines that regulate the uses of different sorts of ideas and insignia. The law of copyright protects various “original forms of expression,” including novels, movies, musical compositions, and computer software programs. Patent law protects inventions and some kinds of discoveries. Trademark law protects words and symbols that identify for consumers the goods and services manufactured or supplied by particular persons or firms. Trade-secret law protects commercially valuable information (soft-drink formulas, confidential marketing strategies, etc.) that companies attempt to conceal from their competitors. The “right of publicity” protects celebrities’ interests in their images and identities.
The economic and cultural importance of this collection of rules is increasing rapidly. The fortunes of many businesses now depend heavily on intellectual-property rights. A growing percentage of the legal profession specializes in intellectual-property disputes. And lawmakers throughout the world are busily revising their intellectual-property laws.[1]
Partly as a result of these trends, scholarly interest in the field has risen dramatically in recent years. In law reviews and in journals of economics and philosophy, articles deploying "theories" of intellectual property have proliferated. This essay canvasses those theories, evaluates them, and considers the roles they do and ought to play in lawmaking.
I. A
Preliminary Survey
Most of the recent
theoretical writing consists of struggles among and within four
approaches. The first and most popular
of the four employs the familiar utilitarian guideline that lawmakers’ beacon
when shaping property rights should be the maximization of net social
welfare. Pursuit of that end in the
context of intellectual property, it is generally thought, requires lawmakers
to strike an optimal balance between, on one hand, the power of exclusive
rights to stimulate the creation of inventions and works of art and, on the
other, the partially offsetting tendency of such rights to curtail widespread
public enjoyment of those creations.
A
good example of scholarship in this vein is William Landes's and Richard
Posner's essay on copyright law. The
distinctive characteristics of most intellectual products, Landes and Posner
argue, are that they are easily replicated and that enjoyment of them by one
person does not prevent enjoyment of them by other persons. Those characteristics in combination create
a danger that the creators of such products will be unable to recoup their
"costs of expression" (the time and effort devoted to writing or
composing and the costs of negotiating with publishers or record companies),
because they will be undercut by copyists who bear only the low "costs of
production" (the costs of manufacturing and distributing books or CDs) and
thus can offer consumers identical products at very low prices. Awareness of that danger will deter creators
from making socially valuable intellectual products in the first instance. We can avoid this economically inefficient
outcome by allocating to the creators (for limited times) the exclusive right
to make copies of their creations. The
creators of works that consumers find valuable – that is, for which there are
not, in the opinions of consumers, equally attractive substitutes – will be
empowered thereby to charge prices for access to those works substantially
greater than they could in a competitive market. All of the various alternative ways in which creators might be
empowered to recover their costs, Landes and Posner contend, are, for one
reason or another, more wasteful of social resources. This utilitarian rationale, they argue, should be – and , for the
most part, has been – used to shape specific doctrines within the field. [2]
A
related argument dominates the same authors' study of trademark law. The primary economic benefits of trademarks,
they contend, are (1) the reduction of consumers' "search costs"
(because it's easier to pick a box of "Cheerios" off the grocery
shelf than to read the list of ingredients on each container, and because
consumers can rely upon their prior experiences with various brands of cereal
when deciding which box to buy in the future) and (2) the creation of an
incentive for businesses to produce consistently high-quality goods and
services (because they know that their competitors cannot, by imitating their distinctive
marks, take a free ride on the consumer good will that results from consistent
quality). Trademarks, Landes and Posner
claim, also have an unusual ancillary social benefit: they improve the quality of our language. By increasing our stock of nouns and by
“creating words or phrases that people value for their intrinsic pleasingness
as well as their information value,” they simultaneously economize on
communication costs and make conversation more pleasurable. To be sure, trademarks can sometimes be
socially harmful – for example, by enabling the first entrant into a market to
discourage competition by appropriating for itself an especially attractive or
informative brand name. Awareness of
these benefits and harms should (and usually does), Landes and Posner claim,
guide legislators and judges when tuning trademark law; marks should be (and
usually are) protected when they are socially beneficial and not when they are,
on balance, deleterious. [3]
The
second of the four approaches that currently dominate the theoretical
literature springs from the propositions that a person who labors upon
resources that are either unowned or “held in common” has a natural property
right to the fruits of his or her efforts – and that the state has a duty to
respect and enforce that natural right.
These ideas, originating in the writings of John Locke, are widely
thought to be especially applicable to the field of intellectual property,
where the pertinent raw materials (facts and concepts) do seem in some sense to
be “held in common” and where labor seems to contribute so importantly to the
value of finished products.[4]
A
good illustration of this perspective is Robert Nozick's brief but influential
discussion of patent law in Anarchy,
State, and Utopia. [5] After associating himself with Locke's
argument, Nozick turns his attention to Locke's famously ambiguous
"proviso" – the proposition that a person may legitimately acquire
property rights by mixing his labor with resources held "in common"
only if, after the acquisition, "there is enough and as good left in
common for others."[6] Nozick contends that the correct
interpretation of this limitation ("correct" in the senses (a) that
it probably corresponds to Locke's original intent and (b) that, in any event,
it is entailed by "an adequate theory of justice") is that the
acquisition of property through labor is legitimate if and only if other
persons do not suffer thereby any net harm.
"Net harm" for these purposes includes such injuries as being
left poorer than they would have been under a regime that did not permit the
acquisition of property through labor or a constriction of the set of resources
available for their use – but does
not include a diminution in their opportunities to acquire property rights in unowned resources by being the first
to labor upon them. Construed in this
fashion, the Lockean proviso is not violated, Nozick argues, by the assignment
of a patent right to an inventor because, although other persons' access to the
invention is undoubtedly limited by the issuance of the patent, the invention
would not have existed at all without the efforts of the inventor. In other words, consumers are helped, not
hurt, by the grant of the patent.
Nozick contends, however, that fidelity to Locke's theory would mandate
two limitations on the inventor's entitlements. First, persons who subsequently invented the same device
independently must be permitted to make and sell it. Otherwise the assignment of the patent to the first inventor
would leave them worse off. Second, for
the same reason, patents should not last longer than, on average, it would have
taken someone else to invent the same device had knowledge of the invention not
disabled them from inventing it independently.
Although Nozick may not have been aware of it, implementation of the
first of these limitations would require a substantial reform of current patent
law – which, unlike copyright law, does not contain a safe harbor for persons
who dream up the same idea on their own.
The
premise of the third approach – derived loosely from the writings of Kant and
Hegel – is that private property rights are crucial to the satisfaction of some
fundamental human needs; policymakers should thus strive to create and allocate
entitlements to resources in the fashion that best enables people to fulfill
those needs. From this standpoint,
intellectual property rights may be justified either on the ground that they
shield from appropriation or modification artifacts through which authors and
artists have expressed their "wills" (an activity thought central to
“personhood”) or on the ground that they create social and economic conditions
conducive to creative intellectual activity, which in turn is important to
human flourishing.[7]
In
perhaps the most fully developed argument of this sort, Justin Hughes derives
from Hegel's Philosophy of Right the
following guidelines concerning the proper shape of an intellectual-property
system. (a) We should be more willing
to accord legal protection to the fruits of highly expressive intellectual
activities, such as the writing of novels, than to the fruits of less
expressive activities, such as genetic research. (b) Because a person's "persona" – his "public
image, including his physical features, mannerisms, and history" – is an
important "receptacle for personality," it deserves generous legal
protection, despite the fact that ordinarily it does not result from
labor. (c) Authors and inventors should
be permitted to earn respect, honor, admiration, and money from the public by
selling or giving away copies of their works, but should not be permitted to
surrender their right to prevent others from mutilating or misattributing their
works.[8]
The
last of the four approaches is rooted in the proposition that property rights
in general – and intellectual-property rights in particular – can and should be
shaped so as to help foster the achievement of a just and attractive
culture. Theorists who work this vein
typically draw inspiration from an eclectic cluster of political and legal theorists,
including Jefferson, the early Marx, the Legal Realists, and the various
proponents (ancient and modern) of classical republicanism.[9] This approach is similar to utilitarianism
in its teleological orientation, but dissimilar in its willingness to deploy
visions of a desirable society richer than the conceptions of “social welfare”
deployed by utilitarians.
A
provocative example may be found in Neil Netanel's recent essay,
"Copyright and a Democratic Civil Society." Netanel begins by sketching a picture of "a robust,
participatory, and pluralist civil society," teeming with "unions,
churches, political and social movements, civic and neighborhood associations,
schools of thought, and educational institutions." In this world, all persons would enjoy both
some degree of financial independence and considerable responsibility in
shaping their local social and economic environments. A civil society of this sort is vital, Netanel claims, to the
perpetuation of democratic political institutions. It will not, however, emerge spontaneously; it must be nourished
by government. In two ways, copyright
law can help foster it.
The first is a production function. Copyright provides an incentive for creative expression on a wide array of political, social, and aesthetic issues, thus bolstering the discursive foundations for democratic culture and civic association. The second function is structural. Copyright supports a sector of creative and communicative activity that is relatively free from reliance on state subsidy, elite patronage, and cultural hierarchy.
Promotion
of these two objectives does not require that we retain all aspects of the
current copyright system. On the
contrary, Netanel suggests, they would be advanced more effectively by a
copyright regime trimmed along the following lines: The copyright term should be shortened, thereby increasing the
size of the "public domain" available for creative manipulation. Copyright owners' authority to control the
preparation of "derivative works" should be reduced for the same
reason. Finally, compulsory licensing
systems should be employed more frequently to balance the interests of artists
and "consumers" of their works.[10]
Other
writers who have approached intellectual-property law from similar perspectives
include Keith Aoki, Rosemary Coombe, Niva Elkin-Koren, Michael Madow, and
myself.[11] As yet, however, this fourth approach is
less well established and recognized than the other three. It does not even have a commonly accepted
label. To describe a closely analogous
perspective developed in the context of land law, Greg Alexander suggests the
term "Proprietarian" theory.[12] I find more helpful the phrase, “Social
Planning Theory."
II. Explaining the Pattern
Those, then, are (in order
of prominence and influence) the four perspectives that currently dominate
theoretical writing about intellectual property: Utilitarianism; Labor Theory; Personality Theory; and Social
Planning Theory. What accounts for the
influence of these particular approaches?
In large part, their prominence derives from the fact that they grow out
of and draw support from lines of argument that have long figured in the raw
materials of intellectual property law – constitutional provisions, case
reports, preambles to legislation, and so forth.
The
dependence of theorists on ideas formulated and popularized by judges,
legislators, and lawyers is especially obvious in the case of
utilitarianism. References to the role
of intellectual-property rights in stimulating the production of socially
valuable works riddle American law.
Thus, for example, the constitutional provision upon which the copyright
and patent statutes rest indicates that the purpose of those laws is to provide
incentives for creative intellectual efforts that will benefit the society at
large.[13] The United States Supreme Court, when
construing the copyright and patent statutes, has repeatedly insisted that
their primary objective is inducing the production and dissemination of works
of the intellect.[14] A host of lower courts have agreed.[15]
References
to the importance of rewarding authors and inventors for their labor are almost
as common. Proponents of legislative
extensions of copyright or patent protection routinely make arguments like: "Our American society is founded on the
principle that the one who creates something of value is entitled to enjoy the
fruits of his labor."[16] The United States Supreme Court often uses a
similar vocabulary. For example,
Justice Reed ended his opinion in Mazer
v. Stein with the solemn statement: "Sacrificial days devoted to . . .
creative activities deserve rewards commensurate with the services
rendered."[17] Lower court opinions and appellate arguments
frequently take the same tack.[18]
Until
recently, the personality theory had much less currency in American law. By contrast, it has long figured very
prominently in Europe. The French and
German copyright regimes, for example, have been strongly shaped by the
writings of Kant and Hegel. This
influence is especially evident in the generous protection those countries
provide for "moral rights" – authors’ and artists' rights to control
the public disclosure of their works, to withdraw their works from public
circulation, to receive appropriate credit for their creations, and above all
to protect their works against mutilation or destruction. This cluster of entitlements has
traditionally been justified on the ground that a work of art embodies and
helps to realize its creator’s personality or will. In the past two decades, "moral-rights" doctrine – and
the philosophic perspective on which it rests – have found increasing favor
with American lawmakers, as evidenced most clearly by the proliferation of
state art-preservation statutes and the recent adoption of the federal Visual
Artists Rights Act.[19]
Finally,
deliberate efforts to craft or construe rules in order to advance a vision of a
just and attractive culture – the orientation that underlies Social Planning
Theory – can be found in almost all of the provinces of intellectual property
law. Such impulses underlie, for
example, both the harsh response of most courts when applying copyright or
trademark law to scatological humor and the generally favorable treatment they
have accorded criticism, commentary, and education. Social-planning arguments also figure prominently in current
debates concerning the appropriate scope of intellectual-property rights on the
Internet.[20]
To
summarize, one source of the prominence of utilitarian, labor, personality, and
social-planning theories in recent theoretical literature is the strength of
similar themes in judicial opinions, statutes, and appellate briefs. But two circumstances suggest that such
parallelism and resonance cannot fully explain the configuration of
contemporary theories. First, there
exist in the materials of intellectual-property law several important themes
that have not been echoed and amplified by a significant number of
theorists. Many American courts, for
example, strive when construing copyright or trademark law to reflect and
reinforce custom – either customary business practices or customary standards
of "good faith" and "fair dealing."[21] That orientation has deep roots both in the
common law in general and in the early-twentieth-century writings of the
American Legal Realists.[22] Yet few contemporary intellectual-property
theorists pay significant attention to custom.[23] Much the same can be said of concern for
privacy interests. Long a major concern
of legislators and courts,[24]
protection of privacy has been given short shrift by contemporary American
theorists.
The
second circumstance is that, in legislative and judicial materials, arguments
of the various sorts we have been considering typically are blended. Here, for example, is the preamble to
Connecticut's first copyright statute:
Whereas it is perfectly agreeable to the principles of natural equity and justice, that every author should be secured in receiving the profits that may arise from the sale of his works, and such security may encourage men of learning and genius to publish their writings; which may do honor to their country, and service to mankind . . ..[25]
Two hundred years later, in
the Harper & Row case, the
Supreme Court took a similar line:
We agree with the Court of Appeals that copyright is intended to increase and not to impede the harvest of knowledge. But we believe the Second Circuit gave insufficient deference to the scheme established by the Copyright Act for fostering the original works that provide the seed and substance of this harvest. The rights conferred by copyright are designed to assure contributors to the store of knowledge a fair return for their labors. [26]
Fairness, incentives, culture-shaping – in these and countless other passages, they swirl together. In contemporary theoretical writing, by contrast, such themes are typically disentangled and juxtaposed.
How
can we account for these two respects in which intellectual-property theory
deviates from extant legal materials?
The answer seems to be that the theorists are seeing the law through
glasses supplied by political philosophy.
In contemporary philosophic debates, natural law, utilitarianism, and
theories of the good are generally seen as incompatible perspectives.[27] It is not surprising that legal theorists,
familiar with those debates, should separate ideas about intellectual property
into similar piles.
One
additional circumstance also likely plays a part: Many contemporary intellectual-property
theorists also participate in similar arguments about the appropriate shape of
property law in general. In that arena,
there is now a well-established canon of rival perspectives, again drawn in
large part from Anglo-American political philosophy. Labor theory, utilitarianism, and personality theory are the
primary contenders.[28] We should not be surprised to see them
replicated in the context of intellectual property.
III. Gaps, Conflicts, and Ambiguities
Lawmakers are confronted
these days with many difficult questions involving rights to control
information. Should the creators of
electronic databases be able to demand compensation from users or
copyists? What degree of similarity
between two plots or two fictional characters should be necessary to trigger a
finding that one infringes the other?
Should computer software be governed by copyright law, patent law, or a sui generis legal regime? Should we expand or contract
intellectual-property protection for the configurations of consumer
products? Should time-sensitive
information (e.g., sports scores, news, financial data) gathered by one party
be shielded from copying by others?
Many other, similar problems demand attention.
The
proponents of all four of the leading theories of intellectual property purport
to provide lawmakers with answers to questions of these sorts. In other words, they understand their
arguments to be, not merely systematic accounts of the impulses that have
shaped extant legal doctrines, but guides that legislators and judges can use
in modifying or extending those doctrines in response to new technologies and
circumstances. Unfortunately, all four
theories prove in practice to be less helpful in this regard than their
proponents claim. Ambiguities, internal
inconsistencies, and the lack of crucial empirical information severely limit
their prescriptive power. Subsections
III.A.–III.D., below, explore those limitations. Section IV contends that the theories nevertheless have
considerable value.
A.
The first task in developing
a utilitarian theory of intellectual property is translating the Benthamite
ideal of the "greatest good of the greatest number" into a more
precise and administrable standard.
Most contemporary writers select for this purpose either the
"wealth-maximization" criterion, which counsels lawmakers to select
the system of rules that maximizes aggregate welfare measured by consumers'
ability and willingness to pay for goods, services, and conditions,[29]
or the "Kaldor-Hicks" criterion, under which one state of affairs is
preferred to a second state of affairs if, by moving from the second to the
first, the "gainer" from the move can, by a lump-sum
transfer, compensate the "loser" for his loss of utility and still be
better off.[30]
This
preliminary analytical maneuver is vulnerable to various objections. First, the wealth-maximization and
Kaldor-Hicks criteria, though similar, are not identical, and much may turn on
the choice between them. Next, skeptics
commonly object to both criteria on the grounds that they ignore the
incommensurability of utility functions and bias analysis in favor of the
desires of the rich, who, on average, value each dollar less than the
poor. Finally, some economists and
political theorists who draw inspiration from the rich tradition of
utilitarianism contend that both criteria (but especially the first) define
social welfare too narrowly and would prefer a more encompassing analytical
net. But because these objections are
by no means limited to the field of intellectual property and because they have
been well aired elsewhere, I will not pause to explore them here.[31]
Assume
that we are comfortable with at least one of these criteria as our beacon. How might it be applied to
intellectual-property law? What system
of rules, in other words, will most improve social welfare? It turns out that there are at least three
general ways in which we might try to answer that question:[32]
1. Incentive Theory. The first and most common of the three approaches is well illustrated by William Nordhaus’ classic treatment of patent law.[33] Norhaus was primarily concerned with determining the optimal duration of a patent, but his analysis can be applied more generally. Each increase in the duration or strength of patents, he observed, stimulates an increase in inventive activity. The resultant gains to social welfare include the discounted present value of the consumer surplus and producer surplus associated with the distribution of the intellectual products whose creation is thereby induced. At the same time, however, social welfare is reduced by such things as larger administrative costs and larger deadweight losses associated with the higher prices of intellectual products that would have been created even in the absence of the enhanced incentive. Ideally, patent duration or strength should be increased up to the point where the marginal benefits equal the marginal costs.[34]
2. Optimizing Patterns of Productivity. Many years ago, Harold Demsetz argued that the copyright and patent systems play the important roles of letting potential producers of intellectual products know what consumers want and thus channelling productive efforts in directions most likely to enhance consumer welfare.[35] In the past decade, a growing group of theorists has argued that recognition of this function justifies expanding the copyright and patent systems. In Paul Goldstein's words:
The logic of property rights dictates their extension into every corner in which people derive enjoyment and value from literary and artistic works. To stop short of these ends would deprive producers of the signals of consumer preference that trigger and direct their investments.[36]
Won’t adoption of this strategy impede public dissemination of intellectual products? Not at all, say the proponents of this approach. Sales and licenses will ensure that goods get into the hands of people who want them and are able to pay for them. Only in the rare situations in which transaction costs would prevent such voluntary exchanges should intellectual-property owners be denied absolute control over the uses of their works – either through an outright privilege (such as the fair-use doctrine) or through a compulsory licensing system.[37]
3. Rivalrous Invention. The final
approach is related to but distinguishable from the second. Its objective is to eliminate or reduce the
tendency of intellectual-property rights to foster duplicative or uncoordinated
inventive activity. The foundation for
this approach was laid by a group of economists, led by Yoram Barzel, who over
the last three decades have explored the ways in which competition among firms
complicates the impact of the patent system upon inventive activity.[38] This body of literature has sensitized legal
theorists to three stages in the inventive process at which economic waste can
occur. First, the pot of gold
represented by a patent on a pioneering, commercially valuable invention may
lure an inefficiently large number of persons and organizations into the race
to be the first to reach the invention in question. Second, the race to develop a lucrative improvement on an
existing technology may generate a similar scramble for similar reasons at the
"secondary" level. Finally,
firms may try to "invent around" technologies patented by their
rivals – that is, to develop functionally equivalent but non-infringing
technologies – efforts that, although rational from the standpoint of the
individual firm, represent a waste of social resources. Heightened awareness of these risks has
prompted legal scholars to search for possible reforms of intellectual property
law – or of related doctrines, such as antitrust law – that would mitigate the
dissipation of resources at these various sites. [39]
Serious
difficulties attend efforts to extract from any one of these approaches answers
to concrete doctrinal problems. With
respect to incentive theory, the primary problem is lack of the information
necessary to apply the analytic. To
what extent is the production of specific sorts of intellectual products
dependent upon maintenance of copyright or patent protection? With respect to some fields, some
commentators have answered: very
little. Other monetary or nonmonetary
rewards – such as profits attributable to lead time, inventors’ opportunities
to speculate in markets that will be affected by the revelation of their
inventions, the prestige enjoyed by artistic and scientific innovators,
academic tenure, and the love of art – would be sufficient to sustain current
levels of production even in the absence of intellectual-property protection.[40] Other commentators sharply disagree.[41] The truth is that we don't have enough
information to know who is right.
Empirical work has suggested that patent law has been more important in
stimulating innovation in certain industries (e.g., pharmaceuticals and
chemicals) than in others, but has failed to answer the ultimate question of
whether the stimulus to innovation is worth its costs.[42] With respect to forms of
intellectual-property protection other than patents, we know even less.
Even
if we were able to surmount this enormous hurdle – and concluded that society
would be better off, on balance, by supplying authors and inventors some sort
of special reward – major sources of uncertainty would remain. Is an intellectual-property system the best
way of providing that reward or might it be better, as Steven Shavell and
Tanguy van Ypersele have recently suggested, for a government agency to
estimate the social value of each innovation and pay the innovators that sum
out of tax revenues?[43] If the former, how far should creators'
entitlements extend? Should they
include the right to prepare "derivative works"? To block "experimental uses" of
their technologies? To suppress their
inventions? Some scholars continue to
seek the data necessary to begin to answer questions of this sort. Most have given up the game, despairing of
acquiring the kinds of information one would need.[44] Almost everyone agrees that such information
is not yet at our disposal. Until it
is, lawmakers will gain little guidance from the first variant of the
utilitarian approach.
Theorists
who seek to optimize patterns of productivity confront less severe
informational problems. To be sure,
they are obliged to make difficult judgments – often with thin data – on such
questions as whether the failure of creators to license certain uses of their
works results from the fact that such uses are worth less to consumers than
preventing them is worth to creators (in which case, the absence of licenses is
socially desirable) or from excessively high transaction costs (in which case,
the creators should be compelled to grant licenses – for free or for a
governmentally determined fee). But
inquiries of this sort are not as frighteningly complex as those that confront
incentive theorists. However, scholars
and lawmakers who take this road confront an additional problem: What is the set of productive activities the
incentives for which we are trying to adjust?
For the reasons sketched above, if we confine our attention to
intellectual products, the optimal legal doctrine may be one that confers upon
creators a very generous set of entitlements.
Only thereby will potential producers be provided refined signals
concerning how consumers wish to make use of which sorts of intellectual
products. However, as Glynn Lunney has argued, if we expand our frame of
reference, that solution proves highly problematic.[45] In virtually no field of economic activity
are innovators empowered to collect the full social value of their
innovations. The elementary
schoolteacher who develops a new technique for teaching mathematics, the
civil-rights activist who discovers a way to reduce racial tension, the
physicist who finds a way to integrate our understandings of gravity and
quantum mechanics – all of these confer on society benefits that vastly exceed
the innovators' incomes. Enlarging the
entitlements of intellectual-property owners thus might refine the signals sent
to the creators of different sorts of fiction, movies, and software concerning
consumers' preferences, but would lead to even more serious overinvestment in intellectual products
as opposed to such things as education, community activism, and primary
research. Unfortunately, Lunney's
proposed response to this problem – reducing copyright protection until the
creators of entertainment receive rewards no greater than the returns available
to innovators in other fields – would sacrifice most of the economic benefits
highlighted by Demsetz and Goldstein.
The optimal solution is thus far from clear.
Theorists
bent on avoiding redundant inventive activity have problems of their own. The most serious difficulty arises from the
fact that reducing social waste at one stage of the inventive process commonly
increases it at another. Thus, for
example, in the leading article in this subfield, Edmund Kitch highlighted the
advantages of granting to the developer of a pioneering invention an expansive
set of entitlements, thereby enabling him or her to coordinate research and
development dedicated to improving the invention, thus reducing the dissipation
of rents at the secondary level.[46] However, as Robert Merges argues, granting
generous patents on pioneering inventions will exacerbate rent dissipation at
the primary level. An even greater –
and more socially wasteful – number of persons or firms will now race to be the
first to develop pioneering patents.
Mark Grady and Jay Alexander have developed an ingenious theory for
determining which of these dangers is more salient in particular cases.[47] Primary inventions that have only modest
social value but that "signal" a large potential for improvement are
likely to draw potential improvers like flies.
To cut down on the swarms, the developer of the primary invention should
be granted a broad patent of the sort commended by Kitch. Primary inventions with large social value
but minimal "signalling" power should, instead, be given only narrow
patents – to reduce the risk of duplicative activity at the primary level. Finally, and most surprisingly, socially
valuable inventions so well conceived they cannot be improved upon should be
given no patents whatsoever, thereby discouraging rent dissipation at both
levels. This typology, though
intriguing, has many defects, both practical and theoretical. To begin with, it is difficult to determine
in advance which inventions “signal” possibilities for improvement. Next, what are we to do with cases in which
the invention at issue is of a type that both is highly socially valuable (thus
creating a danger of waste at the primary level) and signals a large number of
improvements (thus creating a danger of waste at the secondary level)? Finally, Robert Merges and Richard Nelson
point out that efforts, through broad patent grants, to mitigate rent
dissipation at the secondary level may have serious economic side effects. Instead of enabling the original inventor to
coordinate efficiently the exploitation of the technology, it may lead to
"satisficing" behavior[48]
and an inefficiently narrow focus on improvements related to the primary
inventor's principal line of business.[49] In short, a combination of limited
information and theoretical tensions render this third approach just as
indeterminate in practice as the other two.[50]
Even
if the difficulties specific to each of the three economic approaches could be
resolved, an even more formidable problem would remain: there exists no general theory that
integrates the three lines of inquiry.
How should the law be adjusted in order simultaneously (i) to balance
optimally incentives for creativity and concomitant efficiency losses, (ii) to
send potential producers of all kinds of goods accurate signals concerning what
consumers want, and (iii) to minimize rent dissipation? To date, no theorist has even attempted to
answer this overarching question. Until
that challenge is successfully met, the power of the utilitarian approach to
provide guidance to lawmakers will be sharply limited.[51]
B.
Similar difficulties afflict
efforts to apply labor theory to intellectual property. The problems begin at the threshold. As was true of utilitarianism, it is not
altogether clear that the labor theory supports any sort of intellectual-property law. The source of the difficulty is ambiguity in Locke's original
rationale for property rights – from which this entire theory springs. Why exactly should labor upon a resource
held "in common" entitle the laborer to a property right in the
resource itself? Scattered in Chapter 5
of the Second Treatise can be found
six related but distinguishable answers to that question.
(1) “Natural reason" tells us that men have "a right to their Preservation," and the only practicable way in which they can sustain themselves is by individually "appropriating" materials necessary to provide them food and shelter.[52]
(2) Religious obligation reinforces the foregoing proposition. God did not merely give the Earth to man in common, but "commanded" him to "subdue" it – that is, "improve it for the benefit of Life" – which man can do only by both laboring upon it and appropriating the fruits of that labor.[53]
(3) Intuitions regarding self-ownership point in the same direction. Each person plainly has "a Property in his own Person," including the "Labour of his Body, and the Work of his Hands." It seems only natural that whatever he mixes that Labour with should belong to him as well.[54]
(4) The moral value of work reinforces the foregoing insight. God gave the World to "the Industrious and Rational, … not to the Fancy or Covetousness of the Quarrelsom and Contentious." It is thus fitting that the former acquire, through their labour, title to that which they labor upon.[55]
(5) A sense of proportionality and fairness also figures in the inquiry. Most of the value of things useful to men derives not from the value of the raw materials from which they are made, but from the labour expended on them. It is thus not "so Strange" that, when determining whether ownership should be assigned to the worker or the community, the individual "Property of labour should be able to over-balance the Community of Land."[56]
(6) Finally, Locke relies throughout the chapter on an imagery of productive transformation. By labouring upon unclaimed land or other resources, the worker changes them from wild to domestic, from raw to cultivated, from chaotic to ordered, from pointless to purposeful. The self-evident desirability of that transformation supports a reward for the worker.[57]
Whether
Locke's theory provides support for intellectual
property depends upon which of these various rationales one regards as
primary. If, for example, one sees
arguments 4 and 5 as the crux of the matter, then the Second Treatise would seem to provide strong support for most sorts
of intellectual property. After all,
most authors and inventors work hard, and their intellectual labor typically is
a far more important contributor to the total value of their creations than the
raw materials they have employed. On
the other hand, if arguments 1 and 2 are stressed, the case for
intellectual-property rights is far weaker.
As Seana Shiffrin shows, crucial to these two arguments is the
proposition that certain articles essential to life, such as food, cannot be
enjoyed in common; "their use must, of necessity, be exclusive."[58] Yet, intellectual products plainly are not
like that. Not only is access to them
typically not necessary for survival, but they can be used by an infinite
number of persons, simultaneously or in sequence, without being used up.
Whether
Locke's theory provides support for any
intellectual-property rights is thus uncertain. It depends on which aspects of Locke's original theory are
dominant. Locke did not say, and no
interpreter of his work has yet provided us a convincing way of ascertaining
his original intent.[59] Assume, however, that we somehow surmount
the barricade identified by Shiffrin and conclude that intellectual labor does
give rise to a natural entitlement to its fruits – an entitlement that the
state must recognize and enforce. Other
difficulties await us.
Perhaps
the most formidable is the question:
What, for these purposes, counts as "intellectual labor"? There are at least four plausible
candidates: (1) time and effort (hours
spent in front of the computer or in the lab); (2) activity in which one would
rather not engage (hours spent in the studio when one would rather be sailing);
(3) activity that results in social benefits (work on socially valuable
inventions); (4) creative activity (the production of new ideas). The first of the four may be closest to
Locke's original intent, but he was not focusing on intellectual labor. Justin
Hughes has shown that serious arguments can be made in support of the both the
second and the third. And Lawrence
Becker reminds us how important the fourth is to our images of deserving
authors and inventors.[60] No grounds on which we might select one or
another are readily apparent.
Unfortunately,
our choice among these four options will often make a big difference. The third, for instance, suggests that we should
insist, before issuing a patent or other intellectual-property right, that the
discovery in question satisfy a meaningful "utility" requirement; the
other three would not. The second would
counsel against conferring legal rights on artists who love their work; the
other three point in the opposite direction.
The fourth would suggest that we add to copyright law a requirement
analogous to the patent doctrine of "nonobviousness"; the others
would not. In short, a lawmaker's
inability to choose among the four will often be disabling.
Similar troubles
arise when one tries to apply Locke's conception of "the commons" to
the field of intellectual property.
What exactly are the raw materials, owned by the community as a whole,
with which individual workers mix their labor in order to produce intellectual
products? At least seven possibilities
come to mind:
a.
the
universe of “facts”;[61]
b.
languages
– the vocabularies and grammars we use to communicate and from which we fashion
novel intellectual products;
c.
our
cultural heritage – the set of artifacts (novels, paintings, musical
compositions, movies, etc.) that we "share" and that gives our
culture meaning and coherence;
d.
the
set of ideas currently apprehended by at least one person but not owned by
anyone;
e.
the
set of ideas currently apprehended by at least one person;
f.
the
set of all "reachable" ideas – that is, all ideas that lie within the
grasp of people today;
g.
the
set of all "possible ideas" – that is, all ideas that someone might
think of.[62]
When
applying the Lockean argument to intellectual property, it will often make a
difference which of these options one selects.
For example, option (c) is difficult to reconcile with contemporary
copyright and trademark law, under which much of our cultural heritage – Mickey
Mouse, "Gone with the Wind," the shape of a Coke bottle – is owned,
not by the community, but by individual persons or organizations; options (a)
and (b) present no such difficulty.
Patent law is consistent with option (d) but not (e) – insofar as it
permits ownership of many extant "ideas." Copyright law, which (at least formally) does not allow the
ownership of any "ideas" (only distinctive ways of
"expressing" them) meshes comfortably with either (d) or (e). As
Justin Hughes has shown, the Lockean "sufficiency" proviso can be
satisfied fairly easily if one chooses option (f) – on the theory that the
deployment of most ideas enables other people to "reach" an even
larger set of ideas and, thus, enlarges rather than subtracts from the commons. By contrast, if one adopts option (g) – as
both Wendy Gordon and Robert Nozick appear to do – the sufficiency proviso
becomes a good deal more constraining (a topic to which we will return in a
minute). Which is the correct
approach? Who knows?[63]
Suppose
we arbitrarily select one interpretation – say, option (d). Trying to fit it into the Lockean analytic
quickly gives rise to three additional, related problems. First, the act of mixing labor with a piece
of the commons does not, under any of the various extant intellectual-property
regimes, work the way Locke supposed real-property law works. When one mixes one's physical labor with a
plot of virgin land, one should acquire, Locke suggested, a natural right not
merely to the crops one produces but to the land itself. By contrast, when one mixes one's
intellectual labor with an existing idea, one acquires a property right only to
the "original" or "novel" material one has generated, not
to the idea with which one began.
Second, the set of entitlements one acquires does not have the kind of
exclusivity Locke apparently attributed to real-property rights.[64] For example, the issuance of a patent on a
better mousetrap prevents others from making that mousetrap, but not from
reading the patent and using the information contained therein to make an even
better mousetrap. The issuance of a
copyright on a novel prevents others from copying it but not from reading it,
discussing it, parodying it, and so on.
Finally, Locke suggested that the property rights one acquires through
labor upon resources held in common do and should last forever – that is, are
alienable, devisable, and inheritable indefinitely.[65] Most intellectual-property rights, by
contrast, sooner or later expire.
One
might respond that none of these observations indicates that the application of
labor-desert theory to intellectual property is indeterminate. They indicate merely that
intellectual-property law would have to be radically revised to conform to the
Lockean scheme. Perhaps. But the scale of the necessary revision is
daunting. Is it plausible – on Lockean
or any other premises – that by working to express in distinctive form the idea
that infidelity usually corrodes a marriage, one would acquire ownership of the
idea itself? Is it plausible that, by
registering the trademark "Nike," one could prevent others from using
it in any way – including reproducing it in an essay on intellectual
property? If not, then what set of more
limited entitlements would satisfy the obligation of the state to
"determine" and "settle" natural property rights? Locke's argument contains few clues.
We
have not exhausted, unfortunately, the troubles associated with the
"sufficiency" proviso. Some
of the commentators who have sought to harness Locke's argument to intellectual
property have seen little difficulty in the requirement that a laborer leave
"as much and as good" for others.
Justin Hughes, for example, emphasizes the myriad ways in which the
expansion of the set of available ideas stimulated by intellectual property
improves the lot of everyone. Robert
Nozick, as suggested above, sees the sufficiency proviso as somewhat more
constraining, but has identified to his satisfaction a way of structuring
patent law that avoids violating it.
Wendy Gordon, by contrast, construes the proviso as a much more serious
limitation on the scope of intellectual-property rights. Conferring monopoly privileges on the
creators of intellectual products, she claims, can hurt more than help the
public. Take the word "Olympics.” If the term did not exist, we would have
contrived other ways to communicate the notion of periodic amateur
international sports competitions untainted by ideology or warfare. But because the word does exist, we have
become dependent on it. No other word
or collection of words quite captures the idea. Consequently, if we now prohibit "unauthorized" uses of
the word – for example, in connection with the "Gay Olympics" or on a
t-shirt highlighting the hypocritical way in which the ideal has been applied
in recent years – we have left the public worse off than if the word never
existed. Fidelity to the Lockean
proviso (and to a more general "no-harm" principle that runs through
Locke's work), Gordon insists, requires that we withhold property rights in
situations such as these. Once again, a
wide range of interpretations of an important component of Locke's theory is
available, and no one member of the set seems plainly superior to the others.[66]
We
come, finally, to the well-known problem of proportionality. Nozick asks: If I pour my can of tomato juice into the ocean, do I own the
ocean? Analogous questions abound in
the field of intellectual property. If
I invent a drug that prevents impotence, do I deserve to collect for twenty
years the extraordinary amount of money that men throughout the world would pay
for access to the drug? If I write a
novel about a war between two space empires, may I legitimately demand
compensation from people who wish to prepare motion-picture adaptations, write
sequels, manufacture dolls based on my characters, or produce T-shirts
emblazoned with bits of my dialogue?
How far, in short, do my rights go?
Locke gives us little guidance.[67]
C.
Private property rights,
argue contemporary personality theorists, should be recognized when and only
when they would promote human flourishing by protecting or fostering
fundamental human needs or interests.
The first step in the application of this perspective to intellectual
property is identification of the specific needs or interests one wishes to
promote. As Jeremy Waldron has argued,
a wide variety of interests might be deemed fundamental, each of which arguably
could be advanced by a system of property rights. Here are some:
1.
Peace of Mind. An exclusive right to determine how certain resources shall be
used might be thought essential to avoid moral exhaustion -- the sense of guilt
that arises from awareness that one's actions, one's use of the commons,
disadvantages countless other people.[68]
2.
Privacy. Property rights may be necessary to provide persons
"refuge[s] from the general society of mankind" -- places where they
can either be alone or enjoy intimacy with others.[69]
3.
Self-Reliance. An exclusive right to control certain resources may be thought
necessary to enable persons to become independent, self-directing.[70]
4.
Self-Realization as a Social
Being. The freedom to own and thus trade things may
be necessary to enable persons to help shape their social environments and
establish their places in communities.[71]
5.
Self-Realization as an
Individual. Ownership of property may be necessary to
enable a person to assert his or her will and to be recognized as a free agent
by others.[72]
6.
Security and Leisure. Control over a certain amount of resources may be necessary to free
persons from obsession with obtaining the means of survival, the
"impulsion of desire," and thus to enable them to attend to higher
pursuits.[73]
7.
Responsibility. Virtues like prudence, self-direction, and foresight may be
cultivated by the opportunity and obligation to manage one's own resources.[74]
8.
Identity. Selfhood may be thought to depend upon the ability to project a
continuing life plan into the future, which in turn is fostered by connection
to and responsibility for property.[75]
9.
Citizenship. Ownership of a certain amount of resources might be thought
necessary to put a person in an economic and psychological position to
participate effectively in the polity.[76]
10.
Benevolence. Property rights may be thought essential to enable a person to
express ideas of what is beautiful or to enact benevolent wishes.[77]
Six
of these ten arguments – 1, 3, 4, 6, 7, 9 – provide support for some system of
intellectual-property rights but give us little guidance in deciding which entitlements to recognize. To the extent that intellectual-property
rights have economic value and may be bought and sold, gained and lost, they
may contribute to their owners' abilities to avoid guilt, become autonomous,
engage in independent political action, etc.
But those values could be promoted equally well by providing persons
rights to land or shares in private corporations. Consequently, a lawmaker persuaded by one of these claims would
be inspired to construct some system of private ownership of resources, but
would have little help in determining which resources to privatize and which to
leave to the public.
Personhood-based
guidelines for crafting intellectual-property rights thus must be found, if
anywhere, in some combination of themes 2, 5, 8, and 10: the interests of privacy, individual
self-realization, identity, and benevolence.
But the writers who have sought to extract from those sources answers to
specific questions have come to widely divergent conclusions. Here are some examples:
When an author has revealed her work to the world, does it nevertheless continue to fall within the zone of her "personhood" – so that she may legitimately claim a right to restrict its further communication? Neil Netanel, relying on an exploration of the ideal of "autonomy," thinks yes. Lloyd Weinreb, reasoning that, "once the individual has communicated her expression publicly, it takes on a 'life of its own' and . . . its further communication does not involve her autonomous self," thinks no.[78]
Assume the answer to the previous question is yes. May the author alienate his right to control the copying of his work? Kant, reasoning that "an author's interest in deciding how and when to speak [is] an inalienable part of his personality," thought no. Hegel, reasoning that expressions of mental aptitudes (as opposed to the aptitudes themselves) were "external to the author and therefore freely alienable," thought yes.[79]
Should an artist's investment of his self in a work of visual art – say, a painting or sculpture – prevent others from imitating his creation? Hegel thought not – on the ground that the copy would be "essentially a product of the copyist's own mental and technical ability." Justin Hughes seems to take the opposite position.[80]
Is the protection of trade secrets necessary to protect privacy interests? Edwin Hettinger thinks no – on the ground that most trade secrets are owned by corporations, which do not have the "personal features privacy is intended to protect.” Lynn Sharp Paine disagrees. She argues that the right to privacy includes the freedom to reveal information to a limited circle of friends or associates without fear that it will be exposed to the world – a freedom that trade-secret law shields.[81]
Is a celebrity's persona a sufficiently important repository of selfhood that other persons ought not be permitted to exploit that persona commercially without permission? Justin Hughes suggests yes, reasoning that "[a]s long as an individual identifies with his personal image, he will have a personality stake in that image." Michael Madow, insisting that the "creative (and autonomous) role of the media and the audience in the meaning-making process" are at least as important as the "personality" of the celebrity, sharply disagrees.[82]
Two
related problems underlie these and many other disagreements. First, the conceptions of the self – the
images of "personhood" that, through adjustments of
intellectual-property doctrine, we are trying to nurture or protect – that
underlie most avatars of personality theory are too abstract and thin to
provide answers to many specific questions.
Either a more fully articulated vision of human nature (that would
forthrightly address such grand questions as the importance of creativity to
the soul) or a conception of personhood tied more tightly to a particular
culture and time seems necessary if we are to provide lawmakers guidance on the
kinds of issue that beset them.
Second,
no personality theorist has yet dealt adequately with what Margaret Radin once
called the problem of fetishism.[83] Which of the many tastes exhibited by
current members of American culture should be indulged, and which should
not? The quest for individuality? Nationalism? Nostalgia for a real or imagined ethnic or racial identity? The hope that audiences will treat one's
creations with respect? The hunger for
fifteen minutes (or more) of fame?
Yearnings or orientations of all of these sorts are implicated by
intellectual-property disputes.
Deciding which merit our deference is essential to determining how those
disputes should be resolved.
D.
The limitations of the
guidance provided by general theories of intellectual property is perhaps
easiest to see with respect to the last of the four approaches. Lawmakers who try to harness social-planning
theory must make difficult choices at two levels. The first and most obvious involves formulating a vision of a
just and attractive culture. What sort
of society should we try, through adjustments of copyright, patent, and
trademark law, to promote? The
possibilities are endless.
The
range of options is illustrated by my own effort in a recent essay to bring
social-planning theory to bear on the question of the proper shape of
intellectual-property law on the Internet.
I offered, as the foundation for that analysis, a sketch of an attractive
intellectual culture. A condensed
version of that sketch follows:
Consumer Welfare. Other things being equal, a society whose members are happy is better than one whose members are, by their own lights, less happy. Applied to the field of intellectual property, this guideline urges us to select a combination of rules that will maximize consumer welfare by optimally balancing incentives for creativity with incentives for dissemination and use. That goal must, however, be tempered by other aspirations.
A Cornucopia of Information and Ideas. An attractive culture would be one in which citizens had access to a wide array of information, ideas, and forms of entertainment. Variety in this sense helps make life stimulating and enlivening. Access to a broad range of intellectual products is also crucial to widespread attainment of two related conditions central to most conceptions of the good life – namely, self-determination and self-expression – both by providing persons the materials crucial to self-construction, and by fostering a general condition of cultural diversity, which enables and compels individuals to shape themselves.
A Rich Artistic Tradition. The more complex and resonant the shared language of a culture, the more opportunities it affords its members for creativity and subtlety in communication and thought. For reasons best explored by Ronald Dworkin, recognition of that fact points toward governmental polices designed to make available to the public "a rich stock of illustrative and comparative collections of art" and, more generally, to foster "a tradition of [artistic] innovation."
Distributive Justice. To the greatest extent practicable, all persons should have access to the informational and artistic resources described above.
Semiotic Democracy. In an attractive society, all persons would be able to participate in the process of making cultural meaning. Instead of being merely passive consumers of images and artifacts produced by others, they would help shape the world of ideas and symbols in which they live.
Sociability. An attractive society is one rich in "communities of memory." Persons' capacity to construct rewarding lives will be enhanced if they have access to a variety of "constitutive" groups – in “real” space and in “virtual” space.
Respect. Appreciation of the extent to which self-expression is often a form of self-creation should make people respectful of others' work.[84]
The controversial character of a vision of this sort is
immediately apparent. Many of its
components – for example, the criterion of distributive justice – have for
centuries been the subjects of furious debate among political philosophers.[85] It is plainly implausible that theorists of
intellectual-property could resolve controversies of this scale in the course
of analyses of copyright or patent doctrine.
Unfortunately, the choice of a particular social vision
by no means exhausts the difficulties associated with this fourth
approach. Equally serious problems
commonly arise when one tries to apply such a vision to a specific doctrinal
problem. Take the problem of parody,
for example. Intellectual products that
make fun of other intellectual products are becoming increasingly common: "Don't leave home without it" on a
condom container crafted to resemble an American Express card. Comic books depicting Mickey Mouse and
Donald Duck participating in a drug-infested, promiscuous culture. Altered photographs of John Wayne suggesting
that he was homosexual, embellished with the caption, "It's a bitch to be
butch." Trademarks that allude
humorously to other trademarks ("Dom Popignon" popcorn;
"Lardache" bluejeans). Should these be permitted? The particular social vision sketched above
points in inconsistent directions. On
one hand, permitting, even encouraging, parody of this sort would seem to
facilitate semiotic democracy. Parody
erodes the control over the meanings of cultural artifacts exerted by powerful
institutions and expands opportunities for creativity by others. On the other hand, parodies (especially if
effective) may cut seriously into the legitimate personhood interests of the
artists who originally fashioned the parodied artifacts. Which of these two concerns should
predominate must be determined by reflection on the cultural context and
significance of individual cases. The
social vision on its own does not provide us much guidance.
IV. The Value of Theory
The indeterminacy of the
personality and social-planning perspectives has long been recognized. That recognition is reflected, for example,
in the common accusation that those perspectives are "illiberal"
insofar as they seek to regulate persons' behavior on the basis of necessarily
controversial "theories of the good" – the sort of thing that governments
ought not do.[86] A closely related, equally common charge is
that the social-planning and personhood perspectives are
"paternalistic" insofar as they curtail persons' freedom on the basis
of conceptions of what is "good for them" with which they themselves
may not agree.[87] By contrast, the utilitarian and
labor-desert approaches, especially the former, have enjoyed an aura of
neutrality, objectivity, and above all determinacy. That aura helps to explain why courts, when presented with
difficult problems of statutory interpretation, have sought guidance most often
from economic arguments and least often from social-planning arguments. One of the burdens of this essay has been to
disrupt that pattern – to show that the prescriptive powers of all four
arguments are sharply limited.
That conclusion, however, does not imply
that the theories have no practical use.[88] In two respects, I suggest, they retain
considerable value. First, while they
have failed to make good on their promises to provide comprehensive
prescriptions concerning the ideal shape of intellectual-property law, they can
help identify nonobvious attractive resolutions of particular problems. Second, they can foster valuable
conversations among the various participants in the lawmaking process.
A
good example of the first of these uses of theory involves the recent history
of the "right of publicity" – the
entitlement of celebrities to prevent (or demand compensation for)
commercial depictions or imitations of their faces, voices, distinctive turns
of phrase, characteristic poses, and so on.
Until quite recently, this right was widely thought by American courts
and commentators to be "commonsensical." For example, the author of the principal treatise on the subject
describes the right of publicity as "a self-evident legal right, needing
little intellectual rationalization to justify its existence."[89] Sentiments of this sort prompted one state
after another to recognize the entitlement – either through legislation or
through common-law decisionmaking – and then give it generous scope.
In
the mid-1990s, a small group of commentators began drawing explicitly on
theories of intellectual property to criticize the right of publicity. None of the four major perspectives, they
argued, provided support for such an entitlement. (a) From a utilitarian standpoint, the right seems
senseless. It is not necessary to
induce people to cultivate distinctive identities. It encourages people, once they have become celebrities, to coast
on their endorsement incomes rather than continue to provide the public the
services that made them famous. And it
wastes social resources by inducing excessive numbers of adolescents to seek
fame. (b) Nor is the right justified as
a reward for labor. Often, fame results
from luck, fickle public tastes, or the efforts of third parties more than it
does from the efforts of the celebrity.
In any event, celebrities are adequately remunerated in other ways for
their labor. (c) If protecting
personhood were one's goal, the right of celebrity would be a poor way to
achieve it. The right protects the
ability of celebrities to make money from their personae – an ability not
particularly close to the heart of personality development – and does nothing
to prevent disclosure of intimate details concerning celebrities’ lives. (d) Last but not least, the right of
celebrity exacerbates the centralization of semiotic power in the United States
and undermines popular control over "popular culture."[90]
A
few influential courts have begun to take notice. For example, in a recent decision, the Court of Appeals for the
Tenth Circuit relied explicitly on this emerging body of critical commentary to
turn aside a challenge by the Major League Baseball Players to the sale of a
set of baseball cards that parodied the league's stars. The power of theory is especially evident in
the following passage:
Parodies of celebrities are an especially valuable means of expression because of the role celebrities play in modern society. As one commentator explained, celebrities are "common points of reference for millions of individuals who may never interact with one another, but who share, by virtue of their participation in a mediated culture, a common experience and a collective memory." Through their pervasive presence in the media, sports and entertainment celebrities come to symbolize certain ideas and values. … Celebrities, then, are an important element of the shared communicative resources of our cultural domain.
Because celebrities are an important part of our public vocabulary, a parody of a celebrity does not merely lampoon the celebrity, but exposes the weakness of the idea or value that the celebrity symbolizes in society. … In order to effectively criticize society, parodists need access to images that mean something to people, and thus celebrity parodies are a valuable communicative resource. Restricting the use of celebrity identities restricts the communication of ideas.[91]
A federal District Court
recently employed a similar approach in rejecting a claim by Mayor Rudolf
Giuliani that an advertisement describing New York Magazine as “possibly the
only good thing in New York Rudy hasn’t taken credit for” violated Giuliani’s
right of publicity.[92] If this style of analysis becomes more
popular, the doctrinal tide may well turn.
Another
example of the deployment of theory to suggest solutions to specific problems
comes from my own work. Should the
producer of an intellectual product be permitted to engage in price
discrimination – that is, to charge prices that vary with consumers’ ability
and willingness to pay for access to the product? When it is feasible, producers frequently try to market their
wares in this fashion.[93] Various doctrines in current intellectual
property law limit (though certainly do not eliminate) their ability to do
so. For instance, some kinds of patent
license terms (e.g., agreements to purchase only from the patentee staple items
of commerce for use in conjunction with the patented technology), though highly
effective price-discrimination tools, are currently treated as “patent
misuse.” The first-sale doctrine in
copyright law prevents a seller from prohibiting low-margin consumers from
reselling the copies they purchase to high-margin potential consumers, thereby
limiting the power of the seller to exploit the latter. And some aspects of current trademark law
concerning “parallel imports” discourage trademark owners from charging less
for their products in poor countries than in rich countries. Should these rules, or related doctrines in
contract law, be modified?
One's
initial reaction is likely to be:
no. Charging whatever the market
will bear has an unsavory flavor. It
smacks of greed and has no obvious social benefit. Impressions of that sort contributed to the Robinson-Patman Act[94]
and have colored some courts’ responses to price discrimination in the
distribution of intellectual products.
Immersion
in intellectual-property theory, however, suggests a different answer. At least two of the four approaches reviewed
in this essay – utilitarianism and social-planning theory – converge to suggest
that price discrimination in the sale of intellectual products may in some
contexts be a good thing. Recall that
one of the objectives of economic theorists is simultaneously to increase incentives
for creative activity and to reduce the associated welfare losses. Price discrimination – by enabling producers
to charge eager consumers more than less eager consumers – makes such an
unlikely combination possible. By
discriminating among subgroups of consumers, a producer is able both to
increase his or her own monopoly profits and to reduce the number of consumers
who are priced out of the market. In
combination, these two effects sharply increase the ratio between incentives
for creativity and welfare losses.
Finally, price discrimination makes possible greater approximation of
the ideal of distributive justice discussed briefly in Section III.D.
Usually (though not always), the consumers able and willing to spend
substantial sums for an intellectual product are more wealthy that the
consumers able and willing to spend only a little. Because of that circumstance, price discrimination often enables
a larger group of poor consumers to gain access to a product – and to pay less
than their wealthy counterparts.
Widespread adoption of this marketing strategy would thus enable us to
approach the goal of providing all persons equal access to works of the
intellect.[95]
To
be sure, price discrimination in some contexts may have substantial disadvantages. The resources expended in establishing and
administering price discrimination schemes represent social losses that at
least partially offset the efficiency gains described above. Price discrimination sometimes requires the
producer to obtain information about the tastes or habits of potential
consumers, and the gathering of that information may invade their privacy. In the patent context, the gathering of
analogous information concerning the business practices of licensees may
facilitate the formation of cartels.
Finally, price discrimination might sometimes result in pricing out of
the market consumers interested in making transformative uses of intellectual
products.[96] Only through careful analysis of the
markets for specific sorts of intellectual products can it be ascertained
whether these drawbacks exceed the economic and social benefits reviewed
above. But a combination of utilitarian
and social-planning theory creates a nonobvious prima facie case for the
expansion of opportunities for price discrimination.
The
other reason why intellectual-property theory retains value is that it can
catalyze useful conversations among the various people and institutions
responsible for the shaping of the law.
More specifically, continued explicit discussion of the kinds of themes
addressed in this essay would be valuable in three contexts. First, interaction among Congress, the
courts, and administrative agencies (in particular, the Patent and Trademark
Office) would be improved. Congress,
when it adopts or amends intellectual-property laws, frequently fails to
anticipate difficult interpretive questions.
If the courts, when compelled in the context of individual disputes to
resolve those questions, articulate a general theory they are using to guide
their decisionmaking, they increase the likelihood that Congress, during the
next general revision of the relevant statute, will be able thoughtfully either
to endorse or to reject the courts’ judgments.
Much the same can be said of decision-making by administrative agencies
that are then appealed to the courts.
Second,
explicit reliance upon intellectual-property theories will improve
conversations between lawmakers and their constituents. Why
should the term of a copyright be extended from the life of the author plus
fifty years to the life of the author plus seventy years? Because the additional time is necessary to
encourage additional creativity?
Because authors deserve greater rewards for their labors? Because the culture would be worse off if
works like “Steamboat Willie” were released to the public domain? Why should it be possible to register as
a federal trademark the sound made by motorcycles bearing a particular brand –
thereby preventing other manufacturers from making motorcycles that sound the
same? Because otherwise consumers will
be confused concerning the manufacturers of the motorcycles they are
buying? Because a culture in which
motorcycles can be recognized from a distance by the noise they make is better
than a culture in which they cannot?
Because employees of the first company deserve a reward for the effort
they invested in constructing a muffler that emits a distinctive guttural
sound? By articulating and defending a
theoretical rationale for each innovation, Congress (in the first example) or
the courts (in the second example) would increase the ability of the public at
large or, more plausibly, affected interest groups critically to appraise the
change. Lawmakers, in short, would
become more accountable.[97]
Finally,
through continued conversations among scholars, legislators, judges, litigants,
lobbyists, and the public at large, there may lie some hope of addressing the
inadequacies of the existing theories.
For the reasons sketched above, the analytical difficulties associated with
the effort to apply the Lockean version of labor theory to intellectual
property may well prove insurmountable, but there may be some non-Lockean way
of capturing the popular intuition that the law should reward people for hard
work. Only by continuing to discuss the
possibility – and trying to bring some alternative variant of labor theory to
bear on real cases – can we hope to make progress. Much the same can be said of the gaps in personality theory. The conception of selfhood employed by
current theorists may be too thin and acontextual to provide lawmakers much
purchase on doctrinal problems. But
perhaps, through continued reflection and conversation, we can do better.
Conversational uses
of intellectual-property theories of the sort sketched above would be different
from the way in which such theories most often have been deployed in the
past. Instead of trying to compel
readers, through a combination of noncontroversial premises and inexorable
logic, to accept a particular interpretation or reform of legal doctrine, the
scholar or lawmaker would attempt, by deploying a combination of theory and
application, to strike a chord of sympathy in his or her audience. The sought-after response would not be, “I can’t
see any holes in the argument,” but rather, “That rings true to me.”
* This essay has benefited substantially from the comments of Charles Fried, Paul Goldstein, Jim Harris, Ned Hettinger, Edmund Kitch, Ed McCaffery, Stephen Munzer, Samuel Oddi, J. E. Penner, John T. Sanders, F. M. Scherer, Seanna Shiffrin, Stewart Sterk, and a generous group of anonymous outside readers.
[1] The history of these doctrines in the United States – and possible reasons for their growing importance – are considered in William Fisher, “Geistiges Eigentum – ein ausufernder Rechtsbereich: Die Geschichte des Ideenschutzes in den Vereinigten Staaten,” in Eigentum im internationalen Vergleich (Göttingen: Vandenhoeck
and Ruprecht, 1999) (available in English at http://www.law.harvard.edu/Academic_Affairs/coursepages/tfisher/iphistory.html).
[2] William Landes and Richard Posner, "An Economic Analysis of Copyright Law," Journal of Legal Studies, 18 (1989): 325. This argument is derived in substantial part from Jeremy Bentham, A Manual of Political Economy (New York: Putnam, 1839); John Stuart Mill, Principles of Political Economy, 5th ed. (New York: Appleton, 1862); and A. C. Pigou, The Economics of Welfare, 2nd ed. (London: Macmillan and Co., 1924).
[3] William Landes and Richard Posner, "Trademark Law: An Economic Perspective," Journal of Law and Economics, 30 (1987): 265. Other works that address trademark law in similar terms include Nicholas Economides, “The Economics of Trademarks,” Trademark Reporter, 78 (1988): 523-39 and Daniel McClure, “Trademarks and Competition: The Recent History,” Law and Contemporary Problems, 59 (1996): 13-43.
[4] See, for example, Justin Hughes, "The Philosophy of Intellectual Property," Georgetown Law Journal, 77 (1988): 287, at 299-330. These initial impressions are examined in more detail in Section III, below.
[5] Robert Nozick, Anarchy, State, and Utopia (New York: Basic Books, 1974), pp. 178-82.
[6] John Locke, Two Treatises of Government (P. Laslett, ed., Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1970), Second Treatise, Sec. 27.
[7] See Margaret Jane Radin, Reinterpreting Property (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1993); Jeremy Waldron, The Right to Private Property (Oxford: Clarendon, 1988).
[8] See Hughes, “Philosophy of Intellectual Property,” at 330-350.
[9] See, for example, James Harrington, Oceana (Westport, Conn.: Hyperion Press, 1979); Thomas Jefferson, Notes on the State of Virginia (New York: Norton, 1972); Karl Marx, Economic and Philosophic Manuscripts of 1844 (New York: International Publishers, 1964); Morris Cohen, "Property & Sovereignty," Cornell Law Quarterly, 13 (1927): 8; Frank Michelman, “Law’s Republic,” Yale Law Journal, 97 (1988): 1493; William Fisher, Morton Horwitz, and Thomas Reed, eds., American Legal Realism (New York: Oxford University Press, 1993).
[10] “Copyright and a Democratic Civil Society,” Yale Law Journal,106 (1996): 283. See also idem., “Asserting Copyright’s Democratic Principles in the Global Arena,” Vanderbilt Law Review, 51 (1998): 217-329.
[11] See, for example, Rosemary J. Coombe, "Objects of Property and Subjects of Politics: Intellectual Property Laws and Democratic Dialogue," Texas Law Review, 69 (1991): 1853; Niva Elkin-Koren, "Copyright Law and Social Dialogue on the Information Superhighway: The Case Against Copyright Liability of Bulletin Board Operators," Cardozo Arts & Entertainment Law Journal, 13 (1995): 345; Michael Madow, "Private Ownership of Public Image: Popular Culture and Publicity Rights," California Law Review, 81 (1993): 125; William Fisher, "Reconstructing the Fair Use Doctrine," Harvard Law Review, 101 (1988): 1659-795, at 1744-94.
[12] Gregory S. Alexander, Commodity and Propriety (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1997), p. 1.
[13] Article I, Section 8, Clause 8 of the United States Constitution empowers Congress "to Promote the Progress of Science and useful Arts, by securing for limited Times to Authors and Inventors the exclusive Right to their respective Writings and Discoveries."
[14] See, for example, Fox Film Corp. v. Doyal, 286 U.S. 123, 127-28 (1932); Kendall v. Winsor, 62 U.S. (21 How.) 322, 327-28 (1858).
[15] See, for example, Hustler Magazine v. Moral Majority, 796 F.2d 1148, 1151 (9th Cir. 1986); Consumers Union of United States v. General Signal Corp., 724 F.2d 1044, 1048 (2d Cir. 1983).
[16] Testimony of Elizabeth Janeway, Copyright Law Revision: Hearings on H.R. 4347, 5680, 6831, 6835 Before Subcomm. No. 3 of the House Comm. on the Judiciary, 89th Cong., 1st Sess. (1965), reprinted in George S. Grossman, Omnibus Copyright Revision Legislative History, vol. 5 (1976), p. 100.
[17] 347 U.S. 201, 219 (1954). For a similar argument in the patent context, see Motion Picture Patents Co. v. Universal Film Manufacturing Co., 243 U.S. 502 (1917).
[18] Many examples are set forth in Stewart E. Sterk, “Rhetoric and Reality in Copyright Law,” Michigan Law Review, 94 (1996): 1197; Alfred C. Yen, "Restoring the Natural Law: Copyright as Labor and Possession," Ohio State Law Journal, 51 (1990): 517; and Lloyd Harvard Law Review Weinreb, "Copyright for Functional Expression,", 111 (1998): 1149-254, at 1211-14.
[19] See Thomas Cotter, "Pragmatism, Economics, and the Droit Moral," North Carolina Law Review, 76 (1997): 1, at 6-27; Jeri D. Yonover, "The ‘Dissing’ of Da Vinci: The Imaginary Case of Leonardo v. Duchamp: Moral Rights, Parody, and Fair Use," Valparaiso University Law Review, 29 (1995): 935-1004.
[20] See Niva Elkin-Koren, "Cyberlaw and Social Change: A Democratic Approach to Copyright Law in Cyberspace," Cardozo Arts & Entertainment Law Journal, 14 (1996): 215.
[21] Harper & Row v. Nation Enterprises, 471 U.S. 539, 563 (1985). See also Time v. Bernard Geis Associates, 293 F.Supp. 130, 146 (S.D.N.Y. 1968); Rosemont Enterprises v. Random House, 366 F.2d 303, 307 (2d Cir. 1966); Holdridge v. Knight Publishing Corp., 214 F.Supp. 921, 924 (S.D.Cal. 1963).
[22] See Fisher et al., American Legal Realism, p. 170.
[23] But cf. Weinreb, "Fair’s Fair: A Comment on the Fair Use Doctrine,” Harvard Law Review, 103 (1990): 1137-61.
[24] See Harper & Row v. Nation Enterprises, 471 U.S. 539, 564 (1985); Salinger v. Random House, 811 F.2d 90, 97 (2d Cir. 1987).
[25] 1783 Conn. Pub. Acts Jan. Sess., reprinted in U.S. Copyright Office, Copyright Enactments of the United States, 1783-906, at 11 (2nd ed., Washington: Government Printing Office, 1906).
[26] Harper & Row v. Nation Enterprises, 471 U.S. 539, 545-46 (1985).
[27] The pertinent literature is enormous. A few entries, suggesting the importance of the divisions drawn in the text, are H. L. A. Hart, "Between Utility and Rights," Columbia Law Review 79 (1979): 828; Michael Sandel, Liberalism and the Limits of Justice (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1982).
[28] For discussions and illustrations of the canon, see, J. Roland Pennock and John W. Chapman, eds., Property (Nomos XXII) (New York: New York University Press, 1980); Alan Ryan, Property and Political Theory (Oxford: Blackwell, 1984); Waldron, Right to Private Property. To be sure, not all property theorists are inclined to maintain the traditional boundaries between natural law, utilitarianism, and theories of the good. For one prominent pluralist theory, see Stephen R. Munzer, A Theory of Property (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1990).
[29] For more thorough discussion of this standard, see Richard Posner, Economic Analysis of Law (3rd ed., Boston: Little, Brown, 1986), pp. 11-15.
[30] See Nicholas Kaldor, "Welfare Propositions in Economics and Interpersonal Comparisons of Utility," Economic Journal, 69 (1939): 549-52.
[31] For explorations of these difficulties, see, for example, C. Edwin Baker, “Starting Points in Economic Analysis of Law,” Hofstra Law Review 8 (1980): 939, at 966-72; Duncan Kennedy, “Cost-Benefit Analysis of Entitlement Problems: A Critique,” Stanford Law Review 33 (1981): 387; Ronald Dworkin, “Is Wealth a Value?,” Journal of Legal Studies, 9 (1980): 191; Louis Kaplow and Steven Shavell, “Principles of Fairness versus Human Welfare: On the Evaluation of Legal Policy,” John M. Olin Foundation, Discussion Paper No. 277 (2000).
[32] A thorough review of the many varieties of economic analysis may be found in Peter Menell, “Intellectual Property: General Theories,” Encyclopedia of Law & Economics (forthcoming 2000).
[33] William D. Nordhaus, Invention, Growth, and Welfare: A Theoretical Treatment of Technological Change (Cambridge: M.I.T. Press, 1969).
[34] Among the lessons that Nordhaus derived from his analysis are that “commodities that have lower elasticity of demand have higher optimal [patent] lives” and that “patents for industries having more progressive (or easier) invention should have shorter lives.” Ibid., p. 79.
A wide array of essays in both the patent and copyright fields attempt to refine or apply the general approach developed by Nordhaus. See, for example, Pankaj Tandon, “Optimal Patents with Compulsory Licensing,” Journal of Political Economy, 90 (1982): 470-86; Richard Gilbert and Carl Shapiro, “Optimal Patent Protection and Breadth,” RAND Journal of Economics, 21 (1990): 106-12; Paul Klemperer, “How Broad Should the Scope of Patent Protection Be?,” RAND Journal of Economics, 21 (1990): 113-30; Landes and Posner, “Economic Analysis of Copyright Law”; William Fisher, "Reconstructing the Fair Use Doctrine," at 1698-1744; S. J. Liebowitz, "Copying and Indirect Appropriability: Photocopying of Journals," Journal of Political Economy, 93 (1985), 945; A. Samuel Oddi, “Beyond Obviousness: Invention Protection in the Twenty-First Century,” American University Law Review, 38 (1989): 1097, at 1101-2, 1114-16; and Frederic M. Scherer, Industrial Market Structure and Economic Performance (2nd ed., Chicago: Rand McNally, 1980), pp. 439-58. The history of this perspective is traced in Gillian K. Hadfield, "The Economics of Copyright: An Historical Perspective," Copyright Law Symposium (ASCAP), 38 (1992): 1-46.
[35] See Harold Demsetz, "Information and Efficiency: Another Viewpoint," Journal of Law and Economics, 12 (1969): 1.
[36] See Paul Goldstein, Copyright's Highway (New York: Hill & Wang, 1994), pp. 178-9.
[37] See Wendy J. Gordon, “An Inquiry into the Merits of Copyright: The Challenges of Consistency, Consent, and Encouragement Theory,” Stanford Law Review 41 (1989): 1343, at 1439-49; Robert P. Merges, “Are You Making Fun of Me?: Notes on Market Failure and the Parody Defense in Copyright,” American Intellectual Property Law Association Quarterly Journal, 21 (1993): 305, at 306-7; Netanel, “Copyright and Democratic Civil Society,” at 308-10. In this vein, Robert Merges has argued that lawmakers should not be quick to institute compulsory licensing systems. Private institutions such as collective-rights management organizations are likely to be superior to any governmentally mandated regime -- and will often spring up spontaneously if lawmakers refuse to intervene.
[38] The work of this group of economists is well summarized in Menell, “General Theories,” at 7-8. Among the leading works are: Yoram Barzel, “Optimal Timing of Innovations,” Review of Economic and Statistics, 50 (1968): 348-55; Partha Dasgupta, “Patents, Priority and Imitation or, The Economics of Races and Waiting Games,” Economics Journal 98 (1988): 66, at 74-8; Partha Dasgupta and Joseph Stiglitz, “Uncertainty, Industrial Structure and the Speed of R&D,” Bell Journal of Economics, 11 (1980); 1, at 12-13; Drew Fundenberg, Richard Gilbert, Joseph Stiglitz, and Jean Tirole, “Preemption, Leapfrogging, and Competition in Patent Races,” European Economic Review 77 (1983): 176-83; Michael L. Katz and Carl Shapiro, “R & D Rivalry with Licensing or Imitation,” American Economic Review 77 (1987): 402; Steven A. Lippman and Kevin F. McCardle, “Dropout Behavior in R. & D. Races with Learning,” RAND Journal of Economics 18 (1987): 287; Glenn C. Loury, “Market Structure and Innovation,” Quarterly Journal of Economics, 93 (1979): 395; Frederic M. Scherer, “Research and Development Resource Allocation Under Rivalry,” Quarterly Journal of Economics, 81 (1967): 359, at 364-6; Pankaj Tandon, “Rivalry and the Excessive Allocation of Resources to Research,” Bell Journal of Economics, 14 (1983): 152; Brian D. Wright, “The Resource Allocation Problem in R & D,” in The Economics of R & D Policy 41, 50 (George S. Tolley, James H. Hodge & James F. Oehmke eds., 1985).
[39]
See Louis Kaplow, “The Patent-Antitrust Intersection: A Reappraisal,” Harvard Law Review, 97 (1984): 1813-92; Edmund Kitch,
“The Nature and Function of the Patent System,” Journal of Law and Economics, 20 (1977): 265; idem, “Patents,
Prospects, and Economic Surplus: A Reply,” Journal
of Law and Economics, 23 (1980): 205; Mark F. Grady & J. I. Alexander,
"Patent Law and Rent Dissipation," Virginia Law Review,
78 (1992): 305; Robert Merges and Richard Nelson, "On the Complex
Economics of Patent Scope," Columbia
Law Review, 90 (1990): 839-916; Mark Lemley, “The Economics of Improvement
in Intellectual Property Law,” Texas Law Review, 75 (1997): 993-1084.
[40] See, for example, Joan Robinson, The Economics of Imperfect Competition (London: Macmillan, 1933); Arnold Plant, "The Economic Aspects of Copyright in Books," in Economica (n.s.) (1934): 30-51; Jack Hirshleifer, “The Private and Social Value of Information and the Reward to Inventive Activity,” American Economic Review, 63 (1973): 31-51; Stephen Breyer, “The Uneasy Case for Copyright,” Harvard Law Review, 87 (1970): 281-351.
[41] See, for example, Barry Tyerman, "The Economic Rationale for Copyright Protection for Published Books: A Reply to Professor Breyer," UCLA Law Review, 18 (1971): 1100.
[42] The relevant literature includes John Kay, “The Economics of Intellectual Property Rights,” International Review of Law & Economics, 13 (1993): 337, at 344-6; R. C. Levin, A. K. Klevorick, R. R. Nelson, and S. G. Winter, “Appropriating the Returns from Industrial Research and Development,” Brookings Papers Economic Activity (1987): 783-831; Edwin Mansfield, “Patents and Innovation: An Empirical Study,” Management Science, 32 (1986): 173-81; George L. Priest, “What Economists Can Tell Lawyers About Intellectual Property,” Research in Law and Economics, Vol. 8 (John Palmer, ed., 1986), 19, 21; Antoon A. Quaedvlieg, “The Economic Analysis of Intellectual Property Law,” in Willem F. Korthals Altes et al., eds., Information Law Towards the 21st Century (Boston : Kluwer Law and Taxation Publishers, 1992), pp. 379, 393; D. Schwartzmann, Innovation in the Pharmaceutical Industry (Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 1976); C. Taylor and Z. Silberston, The Economic Impact of the Patent System (London: Cambridge University Press, 1973).
[43] More specifically, Shavell and Ypersele contend that a regime in which, after an invention had been commercialized, the government used sales data and surveys to assess its social value and then periodically paid the inventor accordingly might be better, despite the familiar difficulties associated with governmental estimates of this sort, than a patent regime – and that a system in which each inventor had the option of either obtaining a traditional patent or collecting the government’s reward would certainly be better than a simple patent system. See “Rewards versus Intellectual Property Rights,” National Bureau of Economic Research, Working Paper 6956 (February 1999).
[44] See, for example, Robert M. Hurt and Robert M. Schuchman, "The Economic Rationale of Copyright," American Economic Review, 56 (1966): 425-26; Jessica Litman, "The Public Domain," Emory Law Journal, 34 (1990): 997; Lloyd Weinreb, "Copyright for Functional Expression," at 1232-6; John Shepard Wiley, Jr., "Bonito Boats: Uninformed but Mandatory Innovation Policy," Supreme Court Review (1989), 283.
[45]See Glynn Lunney, Jr., "Reexamining Copyright's Incentives-Access Paradigm," Vanderbilt Law Review, 49 (1996): 483.
[46] See Kitch, “The Nature and Function of the Patent System.” See also Suzanne Scotchmer, “Protecting Early Innovators: Should Second-Generation Products Be Patentable?,” RAND Journal of Economics 27 (1996): 322-31.
[47] Grady and Alexander, "Patent Law and Rent Dissipation.”
[48] First developed by Herbert A. Simon, the concept of “satisficing” has come to be associated with behavior under which a decision maker ceases activity after meeting a minimum requirement – such as the laziness displayed by lions when prey is abundant. See David Ward et al., “The Role of Satisficing in Foraging Theory,” Oikos, 63:2 (1992): 312-17.
[49] Merges and Nelson, "Complex Economics of Patent Scope.”
[50] For debate on these issues, see Donald G. McFetridge and Douglas A. Smith, "Patents, Prospects, and Economic Surplus: A Comment," Journal of Law and Economics, 23 (1980): 197; A. Samuel Oddi, "Un-Unified Economic Theories of Patents – The Not-Quite-Holy Grail," Notre Dame Law Review, 71 (1996): 267, at 283 (disagreeing with Merges and Nelson); Donald L. Martin, "Reducing Anticipated Rewards from Innovation Through Patents: Or Less is More," Virginia Law Review, 78 (1992): 351, at 356; Robert P. Merges, "Rent Control in the Patent Districts: Observations on the Grady-Alexander Thesis," Virginia Law Review, 78 (1992): 359, at 376-77.
[51] See Oddi, "Un-Unified Economic Theories of Patents.”
[52] Two Treatises of Government, Sections 25-6.
[53] Ibid., Sections 32, 35.
[54] Ibid., Sections 27, 44.
[55] Ibid., Section 34.
[56] Ibid., Sections 38, 40-43.
[57] See Ryan, Property and Political Theory, at 22 ff.
[58] See Seana Shiffrin, "Lockean Arguments for Private Intellectual Property," in this volume.
[59] See Tom Palmer, “Are Patents and Copyrights Morally Justified?,” Harvard Journal of Law and Public Policy, 13 (1990): 817-65, at 832.
[60] Lawrence Becker, “Deserving to Own Intellectual Property,” Chicago-Kent Law Review, 68 (1993): 609.
[61] The first of these options – thought common in the discourse of copyright law – is vulnerable to criticism as naively Platonist. See, for example, Jessica Litman, "The Public Domain," Emory Law Journal, 39 (1990): 965, at 996; Jane Ginsburg, "Sabotaging and Reconstructing History," Bulletin of the Copyright Society, 29 (1982): 647, at 658.
[62] Plainly these options are not mutually exclusive. For example, one intuitively plausible interpretation of the "the commons" would be a + b + c. Some of the options nest. For example, d is a subset of e, which is a subset of f, which is a subset of g.
[63] For discussions of alternative understandings of "the commons," see Yen, “Restoring the Natural Law”; Wendy Gordon, " A Property Right in Self‑Expression: Equality and Individualism in the Natural Law of Intellectual Property," Yale Law Journal, 102 (1993): 1533-609; Hughes, “Philosophy of Intellectual Property”; Shiffrin, “Lockean Arguments.”
[64] Closely examined, real-property rights also lack the exclusivity Locke attributed to them, but the difficulty is more apparent in the case of property in ideas. See William Fisher, “Property and Contract on the Internet,” Chicago-Kent Law Review, 73 (1998) 1203, at 1207.
[65] Seana Shiffrin points out, however, that some evidence that Locke understood property rights to be more temporally limited may be found in Two Treatises of Government, First Treatise, Sections 88-9.
[66] For exploration of these issues, see Gordon, “Property Right in Self-Expression”; Edwin C. Hettinger, "Justifying Intellectual Property," Philosophy and Public Affairs, 18 (1989), 31-52; Sterk, "Rhetoric and Reality"; Weinreb, "Copyright in Functional Expression," at 1218.
[67] See Hughes, “Philosophy of Intellectual Property”; Becker, “Deserving Intellectual Property.” Cf. James W. Child, “The Moral Foundations of Intangible Property,” The Monist (1990); Wendy Gordon, “Property Right in Self-Expression.”
[68] See Waldron, The Right to Private Property, at 295; cf. Charles Fried, Right and Wrong (Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard Univ. Press 1978), p. 1.
[69] See Waldron, The Right to Private Property, at 296.
[70] See ibid., at 300-01; cf. Abraham Lincoln, "Address to the Wisconsin State Fair, 1859," in Richard N. Current, ed., The Political Thought of Abraham Lincoln (Indianapolis: Bobbs-Merrill, 1967), p. 134.
[71] See Waldron, The Right to Private Property, pp. 296-7; Carol Rose, Property and Persuasion (Boulder, Colo.: Westview Press, 1994), pp. 146-7.
[72] See Waldron, The Right to Private Property, pp. 302-3; Margaret Jane Radin, Reinterpreting Property.
[73] See Waldron, The Right to Private Property, pp. 304-6; cf. George Fitzhugh, Cannibals All! (1857) C. Vann Woodward, ed. (Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press, 1960) (defending the ownership of slaves on similar grounds).
[74] See Waldron, The Right to Private Property, pp. 308-10; Thomas Hill Green, Lectures on the Principles of Political Obligation (Ann Arbor: Univ. of Michigan Press, 1967), Lecture N.
[75] See Radin, Reinterpreting Property.
[76] See Hannah Arendt, On Revolution (New York: Viking Press, 1965); Alexander, Commodity and Propriety, pp. 43-71.
[77] See Green, Lectures on Political Obligation, at Section 220.
[78] Neil Netanel, "Copyright Alienability Restrictions and the Enhancement of Author Autonomy: A Normative Evaluation," Rutgers Law Review, 24 (1993): 347; Weinreb, "Copyright for Functional Expression," at 1221. Good illustrations of both positions may be found in the current debate over the legitimacy of Gary Larson's effort to persuade his fans not to post copies of his cartoons on their websites. For a sample of the debate, see http://stud.unisg.ch/~rportmann/gary.html.
[79] See Cotter, "Pragmatism and the Droit Moral," at 8-9. For other treatments of the divergence of Kant and Hegel, see Palmer, “Are Patents Morally Justified?,” at 837-41; Sterk, "Rhetoric and Reality in Copyright Law," at 1243.
[80] Hughes, "Philosophy of Intellectual Property," at 338, 340.
[81] Hettinger, "Justifying Intellectual Property"; Paine, "Trade Secrets and the Justification of Intellectual Property," Philosophy & Public Affairs, 20 (1991): 247, at 251-3.
[82] Hughes, "Philosophy of Intellectual Property," at 340-41; Madow, "Private Ownership of Public Image,” at 182-97 & n. 338.
[83] See Margaret Jane Radin, “Property and Personhood,” Stanford Law Review, 34 (1982): 957, at 970.
[84] See Fisher, "Property and Contract on the Internet.”
[85] On distributive justice, see, for example, Aristotle, Nicomachean Ethics, Book V, Ch. 2; Bruce Ackerman, Social Justice in the Liberal State (New Haven: Yale University Press, 1980); Charles Fried, “Distributive Justice,” Social Philosophy & Policy 1 (1983): 45; John Rawls, A Theory of Justice (Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press, 1971); Michael Sandel, Liberalism and the Limits of Justice (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1982).
[86] See, for example, Ronald Dworkin, "Liberalism," in A Matter of Principle (Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press, 1985), pp. 181-204.
[87] For exploration of this argument, see Fisher, "Fair Use Doctrine," at 1762-66.
[88] Cf. Weinreb, Copyright for Functional Expression," at 1252-4 (suggesting that courts should cease trying to resolve complex copyright questions through efforts to ascertain and then apply underlying policies and should instead rely upon the traditional common-law interpretive techniques of "analogy and metaphor").
[89] J. Thomas McCarthy, The Rights of Publicity and Privacy (New York: C. Boardman, 1992), Section 1.1[B][2], at 1-5. See also ibid., Section 2.1[B] ("The advocate of a Right of Publicity, when called upon to explain why such a right should exist at all, is not being illogical in simply challenging: 'Why not?'").
[90] The three scholars most influential in developing these arguments are Jane Gaines, Rosemary Coombe and Michael Madow. See Gaines, Contested Culture: The Image, the Voice, and the Law (Chapel Hill, N.C.: University of North Carolina Press, 1991); Coombe, "Objects of Property and Subjects of Politics"; and Madow, "Private Ownership of Public Image."
[91] Cardtoons, L.C. v. Major League Baseball Players Association, 95 F.3d 959, 972-73 (10th Cir. 1996).
[92] New York Magazine v. Metropolitan Transit Authority, 987 F. Supp. 254, 266 (1997).
[93] See, for example, Patricia M. Danzon, Pharmaceutical Price Regulation : National Policies versus Global Interests (Washington, D.C.: AEI Press, 1997) (geographic price discrimination for drugs); ProCD, Inc. v. Zeidenberg, 86 F.3d 1447 (7th Cir. 1996) (discrimination between commercial and noncommercial customers in sales of nationwide telephone directories); Michael Meurer, “Price Discrimination, Personal Use, and Piracy: Copyright Protection of Digital Works,” Buffalo Law Review, 45 (1997): 845 (distribution of digital works on the Internet). For a useful taxonomy of types of price discrimination, see Scherer, Industrial Market Structure, pp. 315-34.
[94] 15 U.S.C. § 13.
[95] The argument is developed at greater length in Fisher, "Property and Contract on the Internet," at 1234-40.
[96] These disadvantages of price discrimination are explored in Julie E. Cohen, “Copyright and the Jurisprudence of Self-Help,” Berkeley Technology Law Journal, 13 (1998): 1089-143; Wendy Gordon, “Intellectual Property as Price Discrimination,” Chicago-Kent Law Review, 73 (1998): 1367-90; Kaplow, “Patent-Antitrust Intersection.”
[97] It was largely for this reason that the Legal Realists urged lawmakers (including judges, whom the Realists insisted were as much lawmakers as legislators) to be more explicit concerning the policy bases of their decisions. See, for example, Felix Cohen, “Transcendental Nonsense and the Functional Approach,” Columbia Law Review, 35 (1935): 809.