Metallica v. Napster (Lesson 10)

Napster was the ultimate geek banner, a battle that had been fought by hackers on the biggest stage of all. Ultimately, the hackers had lost, but … it was still the biggest hack in history.”

–Ben Mezrich, Accidental Billionaires (Ch. 18)

We are going to focus on Napster in our next class (2/29), and we are going to re-enact a preliminary injunction hearing in the case of Metallica v. Napster. In that case, the rock band Metallica sued Napster for copyright infringement, in essence, accusing Napster of allowing its users to steal Metallica’s music. Accordingly, we are going to need two volunteers for this activity:

(1) One student will represent the rock band Metallica: you will argue why Napster’s file-sharing system is illegal and why your client is entitled to an injunction.

(2) The other student will represent Napster: you will argue why Napster’s file-sharing system constitutes “fair use” under federal copyright law.

Here is some background: Before Sean Parker discovered Facebook, he co-founded in June 1999 a company called Napster, a peer-to-peer file-sharing website that allowed users to share MP3 music files with each other (see image below, courtesy of the website “How Stuff Works”). At the time, Napster was huge. According to Wikipedia, for example, “verified Napster use peaked with 26.4 million users worldwide in February 2001.” By the way, Metallica wasn’t the only plaintiff who sued Napster. The powerful Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA) also brought a federal copyright infringement lawsuit against Napster in December 1999, and the RIAA eventually persuaded a court to issue a court order shutting down the website … But did the court make the correct decision? After all, how is a popular website like YouTube any different than the old Napster?

Critical thinking question: In your opinion, is file-sharing copyrighted materials unethical?

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Open borders

Via Valerio Vincenzo, check out these amazing and beautiful pictures of open borders in the Schengen area, a geographical zone consisting of a total of 26 European countries that have abolished their passport and border controls at their common borders. (Hat tip: kottke.)

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“Why don’t better movies cost more?”

This intriguing question was recently posed by economist Ashok Rao via Marginal Revolution. Personally, we have no idea, except perhaps “tradition”? So as a service to our friends and loyal readers, we are re-posting the following three blog posts on this puzzle:

Why are all movies the same price? (4 March 2005)

Why is there uniform pricing for movie tickets? (4 January 2012)

Why don’t better movies cost more? (24 February 2016)

What is your (testable?) hypothesis?

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Geological timeline

Artist Credit: Ray Troll

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Falsification, the Coase theorem, and the Apple iPhone case

Broadly speaking, the Coase theorem is a famous proposition from law and economics that postulates that conflicting parties will resolve their dispute by striking a mutually beneficial bargain when property rights are well-defined and when the costs of transacting are low relative to the benefits to be gained if the parties transact. (The classic academic example of Coasean bargaining is the cattle trespass problem–see image below.) Now, here’s a real-world question we recently posed in a previous blog post regarding the ongoing Apple iPhone case: why doesn’t the Coase theorem apply to this dispute? That is, why doesn’t the FBI just offer to pay Apple to unlock the password-protected iPhone at the center of this case? After all, both conditions of the Coase theorem are met here: (i) property rights are well-defined (the phone belongs to San Bernardino County, and the owner wants to unlock its phone), and (ii) the costs of transacting appear to be low (there are only two potential transacting parties here–the government and Apple). Nevertheless, instead of Apple and the FBI reaching a mutually beneficial Coasean bargain as the Coase theorem predicts, the FBI has decided to use the courts to compel Apple into unlocking the phone, and instead of capitulating to the feds, Apple has decided to fight them. So, we reiterate our original question: why doesn’t the Coase theorem work here?

Update (2/22): Professor Alex Tabarrok, an economist at George Mason U, wrote back to us earlier today. His thoughtful response to our original Coasean question is as follows: “Maybe the Coase theorem is working and Apple and its users have a higher value on privacy than the government is willing to pay.” In other words, even if the government were willing to compensate Apple for its services, maybe Apple would refuse to accept any offer of compensation from the feds as a matter of principle. 

But how much is privacy really worth when public safety is at stake? Doesn’t such a blanket refusal to deal signal a weakness with the Coase theorem?

Image Credit: rsvanwassenhove (via slideshare)

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Last film rites …

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Property rights and the Apple iPhone case

What do you think of Apple CEO Tim Cook’s decision to fight a court order requiring Apple to decrypt an iPhone belonging to Syed Farook, the terrorist who massacred 14 innocent people late last year? Professor Orin Kerr has written up a thoughtful tentative analysis of the recent Apple iPhone court order. Among other things, he notes that the actual owner of the particular iPhone that the FBI wants to crack is not a private citizen but rather San Bernardino County:

“… even if the [FBI] didn’t have a warrant, the [FBI] has the consent of the phone owner. The phone in this case was owned by the San Bernardino County Department of Public Health, Farook’s employer. Farook used it, but the county owned it. The county has already consented to a search of the phone. Some have speculated that the people who communicated with Farook may have Fourth Amendment rights in their communications on the phone. Not so. When you send a communication to someone, you lose Fourth Amendment rights in the communication when the message arrives at its intended recipient. As a result, you have no Fourth Amendment rights in someone else’s phone just because you sent them messages. And even if you did have such rights, either the warrant or the phone owner’s valid consent — or here, both — would ordinarily trump them.”

Critical thinking questions: Instead of forcing Apple to decrypt Farook’s iPhone via a court order, what if the FBI offered to pay Apple to unlock the iPhone? Why doesn’t the Coase theorem work here?

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Jurisdiction & Ethics (Lessons 8-9)

“This wasn’t right, damn it. This wasn’t fair.”

–Quoted from Ben Mezrich, The Accidental Billionaires.

In our next lecture (2/22), we are going to re-enact another pivotal scene from the movie “The Social Network”–a scene based on chapter 16 of the book Accidental Billionaires. This scene takes place in the spring of 2004 in the office of Larry Summers, the president of Harvard University. Tyler and Cameron Winklevoss have arranged a meeting with President Summers (in real life, they waited in line like everyone else to meet Dr Summers during his monthly office hours) in order to accuse a fellow student (Mark Zuckerberg) of violating Harvard’s Honor Code. So, we will need three volunteers for this in-class activity. In the meantime, please think about the following three questions:

1. In your opinion, did Mark violate the Honor Code?

2. Does Harvard have “jurisdiction” in this matter?

3. If not, what court would have jurisdiction, a State court or a federal one?

In addition to the technical legal issue of jurisdiction, in the second part of our next lecture we are also going to discuss the fundamental problem of personal ethics. Simply put, how do you decide between right and wrong?

don’t be evil = do the right thing?

 

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tic tac art (or reverse entropy)

TicTac

Image Credit: Adam Hillman

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17 x 17 x 17 cube

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