Document Type
Article
Publication Date
2006
Keywords
copyright, intellectual property, environmental, economics
Abstract
The fair use defense in copyright law shields an intellectual commons of protected uses of copyrighted material from infringement actions. In determining whether a given use is fair, courts must assess the new use's potential effect on the market for the copyrighted work. Fair use jurisprudence too often fails to address the complementary, network, and long-range effects of new technologies on the market for copyrighted works. These effects parallel the indirect, direct, and option values of biodiversity recently recognized by environmental economists. Their sophisticated methods for valuing natural resources in tangible commons can inform legal efforts to address the intellectual commons' effect on the market for copyrighted works.
Publication Citation
8 Yale Journal of Law and Technology 78 (2006).
Disciplines
Intellectual Property Law | Law and Economics
Digital Commons Citation
8 Yale Journal of Law and Technology 78 (2006).