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2.19.2004
 Eldred and Economics 
Professors Stan Liebowitz and Steven Margolis, who have done fine work on the intricacies of network issues and the Microsoft case, have published an analysis of the amicus brief filed by a pack of economists in Eldred v. Ashcroft (last year's Supreme Court decision on the extension of copyright terms).

Their conclusion: "There are important aspects of the economics of copyright that were ignored or not fully considered by the Eldred economists. They overlook factors, such as the elasticity of supply of creative works, which might reverse their conclusion about the impact of copyright extension on the creation of new works. They neglect the possibility of network effects in the market for derivative works that might make a copyright commons uneconomic, independent of any impact on supply. Finally, they avoid the difficult empirical work that would be needed to provide an answer to the question they entertain."

Read it: Seventeen Famous Economists Weigh in on Copyright: The Role of Theory, Empirics and Network Effects (AEI-Brookings Joint Center for Regulatory Studies, January 2004).

It is a nervy piece, considering that the brief was signed by some of the true big-foots of the profession, but it is also an important one. I admit to an interest here; I was feeling lonely because of my criticism of the economists' brief in a PFF paper last year, Intellectual Property in the Internet Age: The Meaning of Eldred (see pages 13-15), and I am happy to have company, especially because my lawyer-based treatment lacks the elegance of Liebowitz and Margolis.
posted by James DeLong : 2/19/2004 09:44:36 AM

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Home Page
2.19.2004
 Eldred and Economics 
Professors Stan Liebowitz and Steven Margolis, who have done fine work on the intricacies of network issues and the Microsoft case, have published an analysis of the amicus brief filed by a pack of economists in Eldred v. Ashcroft (last year's Supreme Court decision on the extension of copyright terms).

Their conclusion: "There are important aspects of the economics of copyright that were ignored or not fully considered by the Eldred economists. They overlook factors, such as the elasticity of supply of creative works, which might reverse their conclusion about the impact of copyright extension on the creation of new works. They neglect the possibility of network effects in the market for derivative works that might make a copyright commons uneconomic, independent of any impact on supply. Finally, they avoid the difficult empirical work that would be needed to provide an answer to the question they entertain."

Read it: Seventeen Famous Economists Weigh in on Copyright: The Role of Theory, Empirics and Network Effects (AEI-Brookings Joint Center for Regulatory Studies, January 2004).

It is a nervy piece, considering that the brief was signed by some of the true big-foots of the profession, but it is also an important one. I admit to an interest here; I was feeling lonely because of my criticism of the economists' brief in a PFF paper last year, Intellectual Property in the Internet Age: The Meaning of Eldred (see pages 13-15), and I am happy to have company, especially because my lawyer-based treatment lacks the elegance of Liebowitz and Margolis.
posted by James DeLong : 2/19/2004 09:44:36 AM

This page is powered by Blogger. Isn't yours?

 

IPcentral WebLog
Blog Main
Recent Posts
  Civility, in an IP debate? Hah!
More FCM
More on the Free Culture Movement
Copy Left (continued) OR The Free Culture Movement
Copy Left: The opposite of copyright
Super Bowl (c)
Open Source & Intellectual Property
And the Survey Says...
It's not over 'til it's over
Compulsory licenses
Archives by Month
  December 2003
January 2004
February 2004
March 2004
April 2004
May 2004
June 2004
July 2004
August 2004
September 2004
October 2004
November 2004
December 2004
Links
  PFF Blog
Atom.xml Site Feed
   
 
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