Saturday, February 18, 2012

Open Road Update: ePubber Tells HarperCollins to Hit the Road

H
ere is a link to Open Road's answer to HarperCollins' recently filed lawsuit against them. Nothing surprising here. Open Road refutes HarperCollins’ legal position that the term “in book form” in a pre-Internet age contract includes eBook rights.

As you may recall, in its complaint for copyright infringement, HarperCollins argued that its contract for Julie of the Wolves, a book first published in 1972, gave it the sole right to publish Jean Craighead George’s YA classic in eBook form.

The big issue, hiding in plain sight, is the issue of competitive books. Most see the case through the lens of "who should control eBook rights?," but there's little doubt in my mind that the novel issue is not one of property but of equity or fairness. And, as they say, fairness is in eye of the beholder.

By way of background, most "standard" author-publisher contracts (actually there's no such thing as a standard contract in the publishing industry) prohibit the author from publishing a "competitive" book without first receiving the publisher's permission.

In its recently filed answer,Open Road neither denies nor admits that its digital version of Wolves competes directly with the sale of the book in paper form. As I wrote previously, while the grant of primary rights did not mention eBook rights, a court might find it unfair for Ms. George to collect royalties from HarperCollins, while, at the same, time enjoying a royalty stream for the same work from Open Road. There is, however, scant law on the enforceability of non-compete clauses found in publishing contracts -- and even less law on liability for deliberate or tortious interference with such contractual relationships.

Next Stop on the Long Litigation Road

What's next?  Briefs will be prepared and a parade of industry experts will be asked to submit expert affidavits in support of either HarperCollins or Open Road, stating under "penalty of perjury," that the ability to read text on a screen [did] [didn't] date back to 1971 (or earlier).

Side Bar 

If you have a sense that we've been down this road before, you are correct.  Open Road and HarperCollins' lead attorneys duked it out in 2001-2002 in the Rosetta Books case.  Yup, they've even taken the same sides of the issue.  In 2002, Rosetta, won an appeal affirming a trial judge's decision not to enjoin Rosetta from selling eBook editions of Random House's Slaughterhouse Five, Sophie's Choice and other  bestselling backlist titles.

Summation

The Rosetta Books decision reminds us that eBooks have been poised to cannibalize books in print for over decade.  This time, however, traditional publishers such as HarperCollins and Random House are in a more vulnerable position, as today it is clear that you cannot remain profitable on the sale of bound books alone.

Related

Book Publishing Contract Checklist

Resources

Author Joins Fight Over eBook Rights -- Wall Street Journal (Article)
Random House v. Rosetta Books -- (2d Cir. 2002) (Court Doc)
How Controls eBook Rights? -- Copylaw (Legal Analysis)

Wednesday, December 28, 2011

The Battle Over Ebook Rights to Older Books

The Court Battle that Could Determine the Fate of the Book Industry:A Review & Analysis (Updated)

The picture of publishing economics has changed dramatically.  Since the middle of 2011, Amazon has been selling more eBooks than hardcover and paperback books combined.  What this trend makes clear, is it is becoming increasingly difficult to publish a book profitably based solely on bound book sales.  This article looks at HarperCollins' recently filed lawsuit against eBook publisher Open Road and the role legacy publishing contracts and contract ambiguity play in the battle over lucrative eBook rights.   

Let us consider HarperCollins’ legal position that the term “in book form” in a pre-Internet age contract includes eBook rights -- a technological achievement that wasn't invented when the contract was signed.  By way of background, the publisher filed a complaint in the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York on December 23, 2011, against eBook publisher, Open Road Integrated Media.  Open Road, founded by Jane Friedman, former CEO of HarperCollins, publishes eBook versions of print books otherwise controlled by major publishers.  In its complaint, HarperCollins seeks damages and injunctive relief against Open Road because Open Road intends to publish an eBook edition of Jean Craighead George’s YA classic, Julie of the Wolves

In its complaint for copyright infringement, HarperCollins argues that its contract for Julie of the Wolves, a book first published in 1972, gives it the sole right to publish George’s novel in eBook form. It bases its argument on its interpretation of the term “in book form,” which it argues encompasses eBook rights. 

Old Wine in New Bottles

By filing its complaint, HarperCollins follows a well-established pattern in the entertainment industry. Cases addressing whether older entertainment industry contracts granted rights for new uses such as player piano rolls, radio, motion pictures, television, and videocassettes are plentiful. Like HarperCollins, motion picture studios once claimed that they already had the right to exhibit films on television, and to distribute them as home videos.

When a contract is ambiguous, the job of ascertaining the parties’ intent is left to the courts. To determine the parties’ intent, a court will consider the precise language of the grant (e.g., the existence of any “future technologies” clause, the inclusion or exclusion of a “reserved rights” clause), whether the parties contemplated “new uses” when the contract was entered into, and the sophistication of the parties. Since contracts are not drafted in a vacuum, courts may also look at industry practice. What this case makes very clear is that a contract is a private body of law between two parties.   Ideally, a contract between an author and publisher anticipates potential problems by clearly setting down in writing both parties rights and obligations.  If done properly, future readers of that contract will be able to discern what was intended.

Tesla's Original eBook
Most likely, the court will ask whether the distribution of books in digital form was recognized by knowledgeable people in the publishing industry in 1972.  The court will also analyze the contract to see if there are any provisions that tend to limit the “exclusive right to publish . . . in book form." If the court finds there is no clear intent – which is often the case in dealing with a later-developed technology -- the court may decide the matter based on social policy considerations.[1] That is when the intent of the parties -- the Holy Grail in contract interpretation -- cannot be ascertained, courts apply “off the rack” rules to decide what they feel the proper result should be. In other words, if there’s no Rosetta Stone to help decipher the parties’ intent, the court will decide the matter for the parties

New York courts have adopted one rule of contract interpretation that favors large entertainment companies.  The rule states that if there’s a broad and general grant of rights, an ambiguous grant will be interpreted to apply to technologies that were known at the time of the grant. The seminal case for this proposition is Bartsch v. Metro-Goldwyn Mayer, Inc.2

Bartsch involved an agreement entered into in 1930, in which plaintiff’s predecessor in interest granted Warner Bros. Pictures, all of its motion picture rights in a popular musical play.3 The issue in Bartsch was whether a grant of motion picture rights included the right to broadcast the film, based on the play, on television. The court focused on the grant of rights to “copyright, vend, license and exhibit . . . the motion picture photoplay throughout the world.” In holding that the grant did include television rights, the court observed that “if the words are broad enough to cover the new use, it seems fairer that the burden of . . . negotiating an exception should fall on the grantor,” at least when the new medium is not completely unknown at the time of contracting.4

Notwithstanding Bartsch, which can be limited to its facts (a film producer's expectations are different than a book publisher's or author's expectations), when a contract is susceptible to two reasonable interpretations, with each party knowing or having reason to know of the other party's understanding of the term, courts, as a policy matter, will often construe the agreement against the party that drafted the contract. The Restatement (Second) of Contracts states that an agreement susceptible to more than one interpretation should be construed against the party who drafted the language.5 Here, since, HarperCollins was in a stronger bargaining position, the the burden of negotiating new ways to exploit their exclusive rights, should have fallen on them.6 If the court follows the Restatement, as opposed to the Bartsch line of cases, it would appear, then, that unless the author's representative had an equal hand in drafting the agreement, which is almost never the case, the contract should be interpreted in the light most favorable to Ms. George, and, in turn, Open Road.  


When an agreement is equally susceptible to either interpretation, the author or grantor often wins.7 
 In Cohen v. Paramount Pictures Corp, the 9th Circuit Court of Appeals held that “television viewing” and “videocassette viewing” were not “coextensive” terms.8  And, that a license that included the right to exhibit a film on TV did not include the right to distribute the film on home video.  In resolving this “old wine in a new bottle” dilemma , the court placed primary emphasis on the fact that videocassette recorders were not invented when the license was signed.  Focusing on the means by which videocassettes were viewed and distributed (i.e., by sale or rental), the court emphasized that exhibition of a film on television differed fundamentally from the exhibition by a videocassette record/player.9 A similar argument – persuasive or not – can be made for printed books sold in bookstores, and eBooks downloaded and displayed on a screen.  eBooks were neither invented nor reasonably foreseeable when the HarperCollins contract was signed. 

Future Tense Publishing

Where things get interesting, is the impact of HarperCollin’s “future technologies” or “now known or hereinafter” clause.   Here the book publisher’s claim seems stronger, although, not all courts have enforced these provisions.  For example, in Tele-Pac, Inc. v. Grainger, the court held that the license to distribute films for “broadcasting by television or any similar device now known or hereinafter to be made known” did not encompass videocassette rights.10 The Appellate Division of the New York Supreme Court, rejecting the lower court’s attempt to equate broadcasting with the grant of videocassette rights, held that distribution of a film by videocassettes was not analogous to broadcasting by television. 

If the Southern District of New York adopts the Tele-Pac analysis, it could determine that “in book form” does not encompass eBooks.  Just as broadcasting by television is not analogous to the sale of videocassettes, distribution of physical books is not analogous to the sale of downloadable eBooks.  That is, a plausible argument can be made to suggest eBooks and bound books are two distinct media. Whereas a book is a book, an eBook -- whether downloadable or accessible from a cloud -- is a community.   If the batteries run low on your Kindle, Nook, or smart phone, the screen goes black, and your ability to link beyond the book is lost. Unlike an ad supported Kindle, or Nook you can synch with various electronic devices, bound books are low tech, and can survive fire and ice.  Run an iPad below 32 degrees, or above 95, and it's likely to shut down, whereas, legible writing on papyrus over two thousand years old has been rescued from the fiery ruins of Pompeii.  When it comes to fire and ice, tree-based books trump plastic and silicon-based readers.   And, have you ever tried to read an iPad in the sunlight?  

There are other arguments – some favor HarperCollins' interpretation while others would support Open Road.  Richard Curtis, for example, in an excellent piece on his eReads blog, addresses the significance of the phrase “Computer Storage and Retrieval” found in many legacy contracts.  It’s a solid piece of reporting and legal analysis. 

Good Contracts Make Good Neighbors

While HarperCollins pleads only one count of copyright infringement, the complaint also raises breach of contract and state law unfair competition claims.  Reference is made to a provision in George’s contract that requires HarperCollins to ask George to consent to the license of “computer, computer-stored, mechanical or other electronic” rights.  It's unclear if this provision supports the publisher or Open Road.  If the publisher is incapable of exploiting these rights without the author's prior approval, does HarperCollins possess an exclusive right or something less?   What exactly is this evidence of?  What distinguishes this case from other "old contract - new technologies" cases is the complaint states that George’s ability to withhold consent, does not give her the ability to grant a third party the right to publish an eBook edition.   A court could reason that since neither the 1972 advance paid for the book, nor the P&L for the book, placed any value on eBook rights, the publisher did not bargain for those rights.  The significance of the case, however, is the exploding market for eBooks and the very real danger Open Road, and others, pose to old school print publishers.  That danger recognized in several places in the complaint, but no more poignantly than in paragraph 29:   

Open Road’s unlawful exploitation of those rights is directly competitive with sales of the Work in paper format and HarperCollins’ own plans to publish June of the Wolves as an e-book.  Open Road is understandably content to allow HarperCollins to have made its considerable investments in the Work, only now to reap where Open Road has not sown, by seeking to divert sales of the Work from HarperCollins in the rapidly expanding e-books market.

HarperCollins’ attorneys may be accused of trying to stretch the definition of “in book form," but, it is harder to take issue with the proposition that a publisher should be able to protect its investment in an author’s work. While the grant of primary rights does not mention eBook rights, the court may find it unfair for Ms. George to collect royalties from her print publisher, while, at the same, time enjoying a royalty stream for the same work from Open Road.  However, there’s scant case law on the enforceability of non-compete clauses found in publishing contracts.  Even in the absence of a non-compete clause, there is an implicit duty in every publishing agreement that neither party will do anything that will destroy or injure the right of the other party to enjoy the benefits of the contract.11 While this doctrine is riddled with exceptions, is not without force.12

A Battle Over Words on Paper Will Determine the Digital Future

Because many in the book trade were not thinking about future technologies that would enable readers to license or purchase digital books, old contracts are being dusted off and ambiguous language scrutinized by lawyers like myself to answer the question, “Who controls eBook rights?”  In the case of pre-Internet contracts, author and publisher often ascribe different meanings to the phrase “in book form.”  Where the grant of rights can be interpreted in more than one way, it can lead to disputes, and, in the case of Jane Friedman’s Open Road, expensive and distracting litigation. 

Depending upon how the case brought by HarperCollins is decided, or resolved, the big six New York-based, publishers (and their cousin to the north, Harlequin) could either score a copyright and unfair competition protection windfall, or meet their digital Waterloo.  Only time will tell. 

Update:  On March 14, 2014 a New York federal judge handed HarperCollins a decisive victory, holding Open Road infringed HarperCollins's exclusive right to publish Ms. George's Julie of the Wolves in eBook form.   What distinguished this case from the Rosette Books' decision was the wording of the contract.  Here, the grant of rights ("the exclusive right to publish . . . in book form") was a broader grant than that found in the Random House contract ("to  print, publish and sell").  What further distinguished the HarperCollins' agreement from the Random House agreements, was non-boilerplate language inserted by Ms. George's forward thinking literary agent which afforded the author approval over the licensing and sub-licensing of, among things rights by "electronic means now known or hereafter invented."
Anything to the contrary herein notwithstanding, the Publisher shall grant no license without the prior written consent of the Author with respect to the following rights in the work: use thereof in storage and retrieval and information systems, and/or whether through computer, computer-stored, mechanical or other electronic means now known or hereafter invented and ephemeral screen flashing or reproduction thereof, whether by print-out, phot[o] reproduction or photo copy, including punch cards, microfilm, magnetic tapes or like processes attaining similar results, and net proceeds thereof shall be divided 50% to the Author and 50% to the Publisher. However, such license shall not be deemed keeping the work in print once the work has gone out of print in all editions."

While the contract contained an author-friendly reserved rights clause ("[a]ll rights in the Work now existing, or which may hereafter come into existence, not specifically herein granted" are reserved to the author), it was the language Ms. George's literary agency negotiated that swayed the court in HarperCollins' direction.  Citing a rule of contract interpretation that states "contract provisions are generally to be construed against the drafter," the court pointed out that the above amendment was "inserted verbatim into the contract at the request of Ms. George's agent."  Because the suit was filed against Open Road, technically, I  can't say that Ms. George was hoisted by her own petard, but, you get the point.   

Relying on the pro-publisher "new use" Bartsch case discussed above, applying so-called  "neutral principles of contract interpretation," the court reasoned that "[i]f the contract is more reasonably read to convey one meaning, the party benefitted by that reading should be able to rely on it; the party seeking exception or deviation from the meaning reasonably conveyed by the words of the contract should bear the burden of negotiating for language that would express the limitation or deviation."  That, plus a forward looking "future technologies" clause - and specific references to exploitation by "electronic means" -- cinched it for HarperCollins.   

Additional take aways:  Reserved rights clauses are not all they are cracked up to be - especially if there's a grant of electronic rights to be found elsewhere in the contract.  Absent an express grant of eBook rights in the main granting clause, a grant of electronic rights found in the subsidiary rights section should not be considered surplusage or useless language.  Further, if you wish to argue "that  foreseeability at the time of the grant is required to extend a copyright to a new use," you can't turn a blind eye to the future technology clause lurking within.   Also, there's a plausible argument that electronic publishing has been contemplated by both authors and publisher for well over one hundred years.  Ironically, in 1900, Harper Brothers, HarperCollins' predecessor-in-interest, offered Mark Twain a handwritten contract which was anticipated books sold or displayed by electronic means.  The contract, for his autobiography, which was to be published "100 years hence." specified that the book would be issued by Harper Brothers "in whatever modes should then be prevalent, that is by printing as at present or by use of phonographic cylinders, or by electrical  methods, or  by any other other method which may be in use."  So, 114+ years ago, Mark Twain signed a letter agreement granting Harper Bros. the right to publish his memoirs in electronic book form.  Foreseeable?  You decide.   


1See Dolch v. Garrard Publishing Company, 289 F.Supp. 687 (S.D.N.Y. 1968) (exclusive right of publication of books” held to encompass right to publish in paperback form). But see, Field v. True Comics, 89 F. Supp. 611, 614 (S.D.N.Y. 1950) (“the sole and exclusive right to publish, print and market in book form” did not include the right to publish the work in “comic book” form).
2 Bartsch v. Metro-Goldwyn Mayer, Inc., 391 F.2d 150 (2d Cir.1968), cert. denied, 393 U.S. 826 (1968).
3 Id at 152
4 Id. at 154.
5 RESTATEMENT (SECOND) OF CONTRACTS § 206 (1981).
6 See, e.g., US Naval Inst. v. Charter Communications, Inc., 875 F.2d 1044,1050,1051 (2d Cir. 1989) (interpreting ambiguous copyright grant against party preparing agreement); See, also, Rey v. Lafferty, 990 F.2d 1379, 1390 (1st Cir.) (ambiguity should be construed against drafter-grantee, especially given relative expertise of parties), 67 Wall Street Co. v. Franklin National Bank, 37 N.Y.2d at 249, 333 N.E.2d at 187, 371 N.Y.S.2d at 918; Rentways, Inc. v. O'Neill Milk & Cream Co., 308 N.Y. at 348, 126 N.E.2d at 273-74.
7 Cohen v. Paramount Pictures Corp., 845 F.2d 851,854 (9th Cir. 1988).
8 Id. at 854.
9 Id. at 853,854.
10 Tele-Pac, Inc. v. Grainger, 168 A.D.2d 11,13, 570 N.Y.S.2d 521, 522 (1st Dep’t 1991), appeal dismissed, 79 N.Y.2d 822, 588 N.E.2d 99 (1991).
11 Van Valkenburgh v. Hayden Pub. Co., 30 N.Y.2d 34, 281 N.E.2d 142, cert. denied, 409 U.S. 875 (1972).
12 See Wolf v. Illustrated World Encyclopedia, 34 N.Y.2d 834, 316 N.E.2d 342, 359 N.Y.S.2d 59 (1974) (author can license same illustration to another publisher absent a contractual prohibition against doing so).

Saturday, December 17, 2011

Outside of a Dog #3: Poe's Legal Battle


Poe's Successful Defamation Lawsuit

Outside of a Dog is a series that features publishing wisdom from a variety of classic and contemporary sources.  As a lawyer, I'm fascinated by the economics and entrapments of publishing contracts and cases.

The New York Times reports that the literati have reached for their plagiarism pitch folks andtorches.  This time the literary prey is the author of a work of historical fiction whose main character is Mrs. Edgar Allan Poe.  The author of The Raven's Bride is in a perilous position - a literary outcast.  Ironically, Poe was vilified by New York's carnivorous literary establishment toward the end of his career.  In defense, instead of the pen, Poe reached for a lawyer.  Long forgotten, Poe's literary feud and lawsuit are a sad account of what happens when good writers do bad things.  

While famous for The Raven, Edgar Allan Poe was notorious for writing painful, intimate sketches of New York's literati.  Three years before his death, Poe's literary output was at a virtual standstill.  However, he had no difficulty spewing gossip for Godey's Lady's Book.  An abhorer of literary cliques, he used this lofty perch for self-promotion and to mercifully skewer friend and foe alike. He also used it to settle old debts. In July 1846,  Poe picked a fight with Thomas Dunn English, a minor poet and publisher, who Poe "profiled" in The Literati of New York.  Poe took issue with English's appearance (comparing him to an ass), his poetry (allegedly plagiarized) and even punctuation.  Poe knew English from his hardscrabble days in Philadelphia. Although the two had been friendly, that friendship ended in 1843, when English published a pro temperance novel, in which he ridiculed Poe by depicting him as a deceitful and quarrelsome drunk.   While English did not name Poe, the character in the novel was unmistakably a drawn-from-life portrayal of the brilliant writer.

In payment for Poe's unkind portrayal of him in Godey's Lady's Book, English dished out double what Poe had heaped in front of him in print.  On June 23, 1846, The Evening Mirror published English's "Reply to Mr. Poe," in which he called Poe a drunk, a forger, a fraud, a plagiarist, and, channeling Monty Python, an abject poltroon.  Curiously, Poe's large head and tiny hands were spared, but not his manhood.  My theory concerning English's apparent restraint, is that he had a large forehead and small hands. Petty, nasty and prideful describes both Poe and English.  English painted Poe as an unprincipled poseur:
"He is not alone thoroughly unprincipled, base and depraved, but silly-vain and ignorant -- not alone an assassin in morals, but a quack in literature.  His frequent quotations from languages of which he is entirely ignorant, and his consequent blunders expose his to ridicule, while his cool plagiarisms from known or forgotten writers, excite the public amazement."
Poe, no longer welcome in New York's literary salons, retreated north to a small, drafty, cottage in the village of Fordham.  Blacklisted and broke, he sued the owners of The Evening Mirror (but, not English) for publishing English's rejoinder. Why did Poe drop his pen and deploy a lawyer?  Three reasons.  English challenged Poe to sue him. Poe's lawyer took the matter on a contingency fee basis.  And, in a letter to Horace Greeley, Poe wrote,  "I sue; to redeem my character from these foul accusations."  On February 17, 1847 a jury awarded "Mr. P. $225 damages and six cents costs."   He had sued for $5,000 in compensatory damages.  Within three (horrible and unhappy years) Poe was dead.

Was Godey's Lady's Book a good career move for Poe?  I don't think so.  Was challenging Poe to make good on his threat to sue him a smart move on the part of English?  Ditto. 

On a personal level, while not condoning possible bad behavior, I hope the author of The Raven Bride survives the persecution and returns as a full-member of the literary world. The journals that vilified Poe are long forgotten.  Poe is evermore. There are second acts.  

Related
Outside a Dog: Nos. 1 & 2 (Mark Twain's 1900 eBook Contract  & Reserved Rights)
Libel-in-Fiction: Is Dick Cheney a Robot?  by Lloyd J. Jassin
Poe Makes Appearance as Marmaduke Hammerhead in Tom Dunn English's 1844 Roman a Clef 

Resources
Poe's Major Crisis: His Libel Suit & New York's Literary World (1970, Duke Univ) by Sidney P. Moss
Israfel: The Life & Times of Edgar Allan Poe  (1927, Doran) by Harvey Allen
Poe's Poisoned Pen: A Study in Fiction as Vendetta (2009), by CL Givens

Edgar Allan Poe's "The Bells" sung by Phil Ochs


Thursday, November 10, 2011

Amazon’s Lending Library Liability

Was “Freeloading” Contemplated by Contract?

In September, I wrote, "It comes as no surprise that Amazon is exploring a Netflix-like subscription service for digital book.  But what might Amazon's subscription book service actually look like for subscribers, authors and publishers?" 
 
Amazon's Lending Library answers my question.  It looks a lot like free. 

While the lesson is not yet clear, free is clearly a problem for publishers – especially when offered by a legal consumer-retailer like Amazon.  Actually, free is even more of a problem when offered by Amazon, since, they are the very model of efficiency and customer convenience.  When paying Amazon becomes optional, eBook consumption increases, but, the perceived value of the book (in all formats) drops. 

From published reports, Amazon didn't pretend to negotiate terms with publishers.  They simply forged ahead with a free eBook subscription program.  If true, Amazon has legal grief to pay.  

Amazon vs. Publisher’s Rights

Two separate legal issues: 

While copyright and publishing contracts may seem like chains that clank and confine us, they secure for rights holders the right to say no.  If publishers had trouble with Amazon’s “We Won’t Be Undersold” eBook pricing, Amazon had to know “free” would be an even tougher sell.  For all the criticism publishers must endure, they are the custodians of our print culture.  And, they have contracts to prove it. 

Amazon is a digital licensee, not a traditional retailer of books.    Unless Amazon specifically – in a gentlemanly manner –secured rights to give away free eBooks, my bet is that the publishing houses win. If Amazon wants to give away a bound book, that transaction poses no copyright issues. Giving away a free eBook does.  It’s the difference between a “sale” and a “license” for purposes of the First Sale Doctrine and the Copyright Act.   Giving away an eBook is not analogous to giving away a physical copy of a book.  Let’s build on that.  Selling or giving away an eBook is not analogous to selling or giving away a physical copy of a book. The latter poses serious copyright issues.

The impulse to give away eBooks for free is clearly understandable.  Retail sales are nice, but free is what sells devices.  Publishing is a niche business.  Amazon isn't.  Amazon's objective is device lock in.  As such, they have no problem with cannibalizing eBook sales to increase mobile device sales.  Free gives Amazon greater exposure, and makes them better positioned to win the coming tablet wars.  Amazon is willing to trade eBook sales for subscribers.  eBooks are cheap fuel. 

Several years ago the Authors Guild and the AAP brought suit against Google to wrestle back control of books Google scanned without permission.  Google made a colorable (i.e., plausible) argument that digitizing for indexing purposes fell under the Fair Use Doctrine of the Copyright Act.  Did Google exceed what was allowed under the Copyright Act?   The jury is still out.  Did Amazon exceed what was allowed under their digital books distribution or participation agreements?   The jury has not yet convened.  But, if Amazon exceeded the scope of their agreements with publishers, their breach, sounds in copyright, not contract.  If you exceed the scope of a license, you infringe the underlying copyright.  The damages can be significant.  

It’s worth pointing out that the Google Book Settlement contemplated an institutional subscription service.  The business model was broadly sketched for purposes of the settlement, but, the details were left  to further negotiation.

Agent-Author Concerns

Moving to the subject of author contracts, normally, if a retailer wishes to give away books for free -- or sell them at a deep discount -- the author takes a hit on royalties.  High-discount wholesale sales to powerful retailers, who, then slash the price of books sold to their customers, results in reduced royalties for authors under the shared pain theory of royalty agreements.  While deep discount clauses can be ameliorated by a good agent or attorney, they are a harsh fact of life for authors.  As Amazon’s “fix” is to treat each free download as a sale, here, the author is not being squeezed by the deep discount clause lurking in their author-publisher agreement.       
What to Do?

So, when Rachel Deahl at Publishers Weekly called me yesterday and asked “Could Amazon’s lending library end in court?” I said “Yup.”  Should Amazon be hauled off to copyright jail?  Nah.  A slap on the wrist should do (for now).  

The white hot issue right now is legal liability.  However, instead of getting inflamed, we need to negotiate a definition of “Subscription Revenue” that works for Amazon, publishers, authors – and their respective attorneys.  Once we accomplish that, we will then need to retrofit 70-years of publishing agreements. Perhaps, the lesson learned is we are shackled to one another by contract and copyright.

Next Great eBook Debate

Welcome to next great eBook debate. It’s not about territorial rights, or talking eBooks, or e-Book pricing. It’s about how to define the term Subscription Revenue.


Subscription book services are on the march. They make sense for both publishers and readers for reasons discussed in an earlier post.  However, a payment based on subscription revenue is a complex formula.  What trickles down to the author, ultimately, will be defined by both the “Subscription Revenue” definition hacked out between Amazon and publishers, and, in many cases, pre-internet author-publisher agreements. It is good to be an attorney working in the information age.  Thank you Norbert Wiener, father of cybernetics, and patron saint of information workers everywhere.   

Conclusion

In order to launch a subscription service offering downloads or streaming books, in addition to entering into terms of service agreements with subscribers, Amazon must obtain rights from publishers.  Amazon and its publisher partners need to start negotiating the contours of an acceptable download and cloud based subscription service.  It is, after all, under both contract and copyright law, the right thing to do.

If you want a snap shot of subscriber terms gathered from allied industries, click here and scroll down about half-way down the page.  Looking at it, what's clear to me is that the new metric of an eBook’s financial success is not just the number of books purchased and stored on devices, but revenue from advertising and other sources.  It's about monetizing readers.    


Thursday, September 29, 2011

Why is Amazon willing to sell the Kindle Fire for $50.00 below actual cost?


Short answer.  The value they get per purchaser will far exceed the $50.00 shortfall. 
Amazon's goal is to make it affordable and easy for people to give up (in addition to printed books) cable TV for streaming video.  

Cutting the Cable TV Cord

In 1990, I was a legal intern at Viacom International. It was one of the largest owners of cable television systems in the United States.  It was a great job. My main “clients” were Heckle & Jeckle, Mighty Mouse, and the company's library of classic television shows from the 50s and 60s.  The library included the iconic Twilight Zone, I Love Lucy and The Honeymooners.  My focus copyright and trademark issues -- and sending default notices to television stations that stopped paying license fees. Down the hall from from me lived the cable television attorneys.  In the early 90s, they spent a lot of time buying and selling cable television systems.  When valuing a cable system, they looked at multiple of cash flow and value per subscriber. In the early 90s, the price you paid for a subscriber when you acquired a cable system was in the $2,000 to $2,500 range.    

If the price Viacom was willing to buy and sell subscribers was $2,500, then to acquire a Fire user for $50.00 is a steal. 

Unlike cable, launching a tablet is not (relatively speaking) capital intensive.  No laying of cables.  No tough federal regulations.   $50.00 is Mr. Bezos’ advance on the right to sell you and I – and our families – books, magazines, music, movies and video content his proprietary platform.        

Curbing Cable & Book Publishing's Power

Recently, Eric Schmidt, Google's chairman, was grilled over similar issues.  One of the concerns voiced at recent Senate hearings was whether Google (and by implication, Amazon and Apple) should own the content that flows through their virtual cables. Ironically, Viacom was formed in 1971, when the FCC issued consent decrees preventing the big three television networks (the Amazon, Apple and Google of their day) from owning a stake in the prime time programs they broadcast. 

Under what were called the Fin-Syn rules, the networks were forced to divest themselves of programs they had a financial interest in.  The FCC's goal was to encourage more diverse and innovative television content.  From my point of view, it is unlikely that the regulators will get in the way of Amazon, Apple or Google. Why? We live in an era of abundance. Amazon, Apple and Google are fueled by an endless supply of user generated content, and unlike broadcast television, the Internet pipes can support an endless supply of content.    

Just as content providers like HBO are a threat to cable system operators, book publishers and motion picture studios are a threat to Amazon. At the end of the license term, content providers can raise their fees, and squeeze the platform for more money.  Amazon and Google are wise to that. 
 
What if HBO Wasn't Beholden to Cable?

What’s next for Amazon?  To compete with its distribution partners in the gaming, music, movie, publishing and television industries, Amazon will continue to develop its own content -- original books, co-branded magazines, as well as exclusive transmission rights to music and sporting events.  You don’t need a weatherman to know which way the wind blows.  Who knows, maybe they’ll even start a channel dedicated to original family programming.  Acquiring an interest in Viacom's Nickelodeon to keep the lid on the price of content makes sense.  Or, perhaps, J.J. Abrams will option the rights to produce a new Twilight Zone series (from Viacom), and license Amazon exclusive  first-run rights.   

Unlike the 70s, today, the concern is control of production, distribution and dissemination of not just television programming, but books, , games, music and video.  
 
Will the Internet giants use their power unfairly?  Will Amazon, Apple and Google evolve in such a way that they undermine the role of independent content producers?  Or, do we applaud Amazon, Apple and Google, and their ability to endure short-term losses while creating innovative business models we all benefit from?  

The potential of Amazon's multi-function tablet is a mystery. What’s no mystery is why Mr. Bezos is willing to sell a Kindle Fire for $50.00 below cost.  

Big cable and big publishing are bleeding.    

If I were seeking an internship today, I know where I’d send my resume. Under Mr. Bezos’ leadership, Amazon is doing Amazing things.  


[revised 8/30/12]


*Footnote.  By 1991, the FCC relaxed the Fin-Syn rules.  Shortly thereafter, Viacom acquired CBS Corporation.  Viacom, once CBS’s child, was now, to quote the old Willie Nelson song, "it’s own grandpa."