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The Courts Government Censorship News

JibJab Sues for Fair Use of Right to Parody 273

An anonymous reader writes "A few days ago, Slashdot mentioned that JibJab was threatened by a copyright lawsuit. Well, it looks like JibJab decided to sue first with the help of the EFF. Lots more info here." (Here's the Bloomberg News article.) Update: 07/31 20:43 GMT by T : Seth Finkelstein has posted the court info on his website.
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JibJab Sues for Fair Use of Right to Parody

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  • Good for them (Score:5, Interesting)

    by raistphrk ( 203742 ) on Saturday July 31, 2004 @03:15PM (#9854004)
    In intellectual property cases, a good offense is probably the best defense. At least this way, if they lose their declarative judgement, they can minimize the amount of damages. But I don't see that being a problem, in this case: the JibJab parody is grounded in the orignal work, not simply capitalizing off it. The criticism in the clip is that this land ISN'T your land AND my land, but just "my land", in that each candidate is saying "I deserve respect and you don't."

    But yeah. I think Woody is up in heaven, proud of JibJab for their work.
    • I hope they win (Score:3, Interesting)

      by The Tyro ( 247333 )
      but it's for purely selfish reasons... I want them to keep making those little cartoons. I've gotten some real gut-busting laughs out of those guys. I watched the latest one over and over... Also, if you can find it, watch the old hip-hop one they did with Bush, Clinton, Gore, etc (I think it was called "Capitol Ill") that one was also an unqualified riot (Sorry... I googled, but couldn't find a link)

      It'd be a shame to have those guys muzzled; particularly when they do such nice work (there are a lot of
      • Re:I hope they win (Score:5, Interesting)

        by phats garage ( 760661 ) on Saturday July 31, 2004 @06:23PM (#9854977) Homepage Journal
        Woody Guthry used to include a copyright notice on songbooks he would mail to his fans:
        • This song is Copyrighted in U.S., under Seal of Copyright # 154085, for a period of 28 years, and anybody caught singin it without our permission, will be mighty good friends of ourn, cause we don't give a dern. Publish it. Write it. Sing it. Swing to it. Yodel it. We wrote it, that's all we wanted to do.

          (from www.woodyguthrie.com [woodyguthrie.com])

        I like to think that he'd approve of jibjabs outstanding version of one of his songs ;-)

        • Re:I hope they win (Score:3, Interesting)

          by srleffler ( 721400 )
          Does anybody know if This Land was ever published with that notice? IANAL, but a smart attorney would probably argue that that notice constitutes a non-exclusive license to use the song.
  • Well (Score:4, Interesting)

    by iamdrscience ( 541136 ) on Saturday July 31, 2004 @03:23PM (#9854055) Homepage
    By the letter of the law, Jib Jab's use of the song is probably not parody. That said though, I feel that really, their use of the song should probably be allowed. So hopefully, this will come out favorably for Jib Jab and establish some nice legal precedent. I think that this is probably why the EFF has chosen to take this case in particular.

    Another thing though, I feel less inclined to protect the rights of the owner of a song or other work when the owner is not the person who actually wrote the song. In this case, it is not Woody Guthrie's family suing, it's a company.
    • Funny - I don't remember ol' Woody singing the words "U.N. Pussy" or "Right-wing Nut Job" in any of his performances, nor does it appear to be in the copyrighted text of the lyrics.

      So the copyright violation is what, exactly?

      This is clearly a parody of a song used in satire.

      I hope they can get punitive damages in their preemptive suit.
  • It's not a parody (Score:3, Interesting)

    by Billobob ( 532161 ) <billobob@[ ]il.com ['gma' in gap]> on Saturday July 31, 2004 @03:25PM (#9854059) Homepage Journal
    It's political satire - they are not making a parody of the song itself. This use of the song is not protected in courts.
    • by Anonymous Coward on Saturday July 31, 2004 @03:47PM (#9854178)
      Just as Michael Jackson's Beat It is to Weird Al's Eat It, the music is not changing but the words are. Yes, Al got permission but he was not required to. If you look up the legal definition of what a parody is you'll find: According to law.com [law.com] parody is "the humorous use of an existing song, play, or writing which changes the words to give farcical and ironic meaning." Given that JibJab's lyrics (Read them for yourself [runaked.com]) did not use the song in it's original state, and unless the definition of a parody [borgus.com] has changed, Jibjab should be in the clear.
    • Re:It's not a parody (Score:2, Informative)

      by geekoid ( 135745 )
      wierd Al's songs our conmsidered Parody, but he makes fun of the Amish, Food, Star Wars, etc . . .
    • by Tassach ( 137772 ) on Saturday July 31, 2004 @04:07PM (#9854261)
      It's political satire - they are not making a parody of the song itself
      I don't know what planet you are living on. Parody and satire are not mutually exclusive. You can have satire which is not parody (EG any Dennis Miller routine) and you can have parody which is not satirical (EG any Wierd Al song). Or, as in this case, you can have something which is BOTH an amusing parody of a song AND a satirization of political candidates.

      • and you can have parody which is not satirical (EG any Wierd Al song).

        I would like to point out that Weird Al pretty much does all three. Song's like Eat It and Yoda quite clearly are parodies, since his lyrics are completely unrelated to the originals. Some of his original songs, like Germs and Dare to be Stupid, satirize a particular musical style. However, songs like Achy Breaky Song and Smells Like Nirvana both satirize the very songs they are parodying.

        Of course, discussing satire vs. parody
  • by chcorey ( 801648 ) on Saturday July 31, 2004 @03:28PM (#9854072)
    The brothers Gregg and Evan Spiridellis appeared on Jay Leno earlier this week talking about their website and how popular it has become over the past months.

    I give these guys Kudos for having the balls to try to make a living off of making these online cartoons.

    In the interview, they said that they make money off of donations and they joked that they'd just have enough money from this "Your land is my land" cartoon to pay one month's rent and maybe a few meals.

    I hope they are allowed to continue what they are doing but unfortunately, i'm not familiar with american copyright laws.

    • One of the claims that can be made regarding a parody or satire is that it is for non-commercial purposes. Having these two guys shilling their site on Leno and talking about how this animation has increased their commercial prospects is not really the sort of statements that a lawyer would advise them to make...
      • Your post brings up an interesting question. Is setting up a site so that people can donate to your cause make it a commerical purpose?

        Correct me if I'm wrong, but when a presidential candidate is campaigning and receives a donation, nobody considers that as a commercial purpose. But is it any different when it comes to a parody or a satire?
      • One of the claims that can be made regarding a parody or satire is that it is for non-commercial purposes.

        Yes, it is a claim you can make that claim in some cases, but there is absolutely no requirement of such. While non-commercial certainly weighs in favor of fair use, commercialism certainly does not preclude fair use. The perfect example would be the Pretty Woman case - the parody version of Pretty Woma was absolutely done and sold for profit and still qualified as fair use.

        -
    • I'm an American, and I'm not familiar with them either. Any time we think we have them figured out, Congress changes them. "Fifty years! No, no, seventy!"
  • by laing ( 303349 ) on Saturday July 31, 2004 @03:28PM (#9854075)
    More info about this on EFF's site:

    http://www.eff.org/deeplinks/archives/001779.php
  • by dackroyd ( 468778 ) on Saturday July 31, 2004 @03:28PM (#9854076) Homepage
    From wikipedia Woody Guthrie [wikipedia.org] has already given his permission.

    "This song is Copyrighted in U.S., under Seal of Copyright # 154085, for a period of 28 years, and anybody caught singin it without our permission, will be mighty good friends of ourn, cause we don't give a dern. Publish it. Write it. Sing it. Swing to it. Yodel it. We wrote it, that's all we wanted to do."

    There is something wrong where the author of a work doesn't give a damn about people using his material but his descendants get to control it for almost a century after his death.

    • by Anonymous Coward
      This song is my song, it is not your song
      I got a shotgun, and you don't got one
      This song is Private Property
    • The author could have released it into the public domain if he/she wanted to make their intentions clear.
  • Annoying! (Score:4, Informative)

    by aka-ed ( 459608 ) <robt DOT public AT gmail DOT com> on Saturday July 31, 2004 @03:30PM (#9854095) Homepage Journal
    A "registration-required" link.

    Posted on Sat, Jul. 31, 2004
    JibJab defends use of 'This Land'
    Bloomberg News

    ""This Land" was made for you and me, JibJab Media says in a lawsuit seeking the right to use the Woody Guthrie song This Land Is Your Land in an online parody of President Bush and Sen. John Kerry.

    JibJab, which creates cartoons and children's books, wants a court order saying the song's inclusion in an animated video that shows Bush and Kerry slinging insults is a fair use under copyright law. The song's copyright owner, Ludlow Music, has threatened to sue JibJab if the song isn't pulled from its Web site, JibJab claims.

    In the two-minute video, Bush's cartoon character declares that his Democratic opponent has "more waffles than a House of Pancakes," and Kerry counters that Bush "is a right-wing nut job." The video has been aired on shows including ABC World News Tonight, The Today Show and Larry King Live.

    Kathryn Ostien, director of copyright, licensing and royalties for New York-based Ludlow Music, didn't immediately return a call seeking comment.

    JibJab, which is run by brothers Gregg and Evan Spiridellis, says in its suit, filed Thursday in San Francisco federal court, that the video is a parody and doesn't infringe on Ludlow Music's copyrights."

  • by iamdrscience ( 541136 ) on Saturday July 31, 2004 @03:31PM (#9854098) Homepage
    I think this case is a prime example of how copyright terms have grown out of control. Woody Guthrie wrote the song almost 3/4 of a century ago and has been dead for over 35 years. The fact that this song is still covered by a copyright is absolutely ridiculous. And the kicker is, it's owned by a company that has nothing to do with Woody Guthrie or any of his descendants!
  • by Anonymous Coward
    I think one of the most scarry thing in this world is people taking things to serious.
    You must be able to make fun of, parody, joke with anything, especially the things that are very well known, like a president, etc.

    Religion is one of the things we people should start to take a little LESS serious!

    Don't make fun of Emacs, you will get a ^F^a^t^w^a and it will killall -9.
  • I'm curious (Score:4, Insightful)

    by iamdrscience ( 541136 ) on Saturday July 31, 2004 @03:49PM (#9854184) Homepage
    I'd like to know what Arlo Guthrie, Woody Guthrie's son, would have to say about this case.
    • Re:I'm curious (Score:3, Insightful)

      by dsanfte ( 443781 ) *
      It shouldn't fucking matter what he has to say about it. He didn't write it. He didn't all but put it into the public domain (in writing!). He wasn't the one who lifted it from the Carter folk song.

      Decendents contribute nothing, inheritance should be taxed and copyrights should be non-transferrable, and expire on death.
      • No, you're wrong. Perhaps you're right about non-transfer of copyright. I don't know, that's a whole 'nother topic.

        But a descendant can provide insight into the intentions and wishes of the creator who has passed.
      • Well, I'm curious about whether Arlo will chime in with a satirical parody of the song.

        This song is our song,
        It is not your song.
        You did not write it,
        and we can sing it.

        My daddy wrote it,
        He gave it to us all to sing.
        This song was made for you and me.

        ... or something like that ...

      • Re:I'm curious (Score:2, Insightful)

        by devilspgd ( 652955 ) *
        Copyrights non-transferable? That will pretty much kill off the modern economic world as we know it.

        Selling the copyright to your work is essentially what keeps programmers, authors, artists, and anyone involved in any form of creation creativity employed.

        I've never grasped why inheritance should be taxed though, can you fill me in on the logic there? Why should I be punished by the gov't for dying?
        • Why should your descendants be rewarded for making zero contributions to society? That's why. Each man should have to work for what he owns, not get it handed to him on a silver platter upon birth.
          • woman didn't work much, and if the artist died, you wanted to make sure his family had support. ~1 Generation makes since (i.e. give time enough for the wife to die and the kids to grow up). Anything more is excessive, but so what. The current state of c/p law is meant to create a sort of Guild system ala the old European printer's guilds. And it's doing a damn fine job thank you very much.
          • On that theory you just made paupers that we never heard of out of Bush and Kerry both. Thank you!
    • I'd like to know what Arlo Guthrie, Woody Guthrie's son, would have to say about this case.

      But it would take him 15 minutes to sing it to you.

  • by chatooya ( 718043 ) on Saturday July 31, 2004 @03:56PM (#9854220)
    From FreeCulture.org [freeculture.org], the student movement for free software, free speech, and free culture, comes: National Barbie in a Blender Day [barbieinablender.org].

    It's a celebration of victory in a similar free speech / fair use case that finished recently. Mattel had sued a photographer for taking photographs of Barbie in a blender and other appliances. The ACLU took on his case and he not only won, but Mattel had to pay his $1.8 million in legal fees.

    The Barbie in a Blender gallery [barbieinablender.org] is pretty great.
  • Off-topic (Score:5, Funny)

    by foidulus ( 743482 ) * on Saturday July 31, 2004 @05:49PM (#9854833)
    but in the same vein. If I had any artistic talent, I would set up a Alient vs. Predator website, "Election 2004, Bush vs. Kerry, regardless of who wins, we lose"-stolen from the Alien vs. Predator tv commercial.

  • Anyone that goes after JibJab is going to run into the great big wall of popular opinion from both sides. Their creative work is pretty inoffensive and non-partisan. Anyone attacking them will be pilloried.
  • whatever (Score:3, Funny)

    by asscroft ( 610290 ) on Saturday July 31, 2004 @07:59PM (#9855359)
    We used to sing this song with jacked up lyrics back in grade school. The copyright owners can kiss my ass, I'm gonna sing this "illicit version" from now on, until I die, just cause they pissed me off with this lawsuit threat.

    This land is my land,
    It isn't your land,
    I've got a shotgun
    And you don't got one.
    If you don't get off,
    I'll blow your head off.
    This land is private proper-teeee.

    Or maybe this.

    This song is our song,
    It isn't your song,
    It wasn't intended
    to have an owner
    I don't care if you own it
    That doesn't mean you control it
    this song was made for you and me

  • by davidwr ( 791652 ) on Saturday July 31, 2004 @09:15PM (#9855621) Homepage Journal
    Tune: "This Land Was Made For You And Me"
    Tune (c) 1940, Woodie Guthrie
    As of 2004, the rights to Guthrie's tune are administered by The Richmond Organization, located in New York, NY.

    The following is a parody of the dispute between The Richmond Organization and Evan and Gregg Spiridellis of Jibjab.com surrounding JibJab's 2004 hit "This Land," which parodies the US Presidential Race between Republican candidate George W. Bush and Democratic candidate John Kerry and which uses Guthrie's tune "This Land Is Made For You and Me."

    "This Song We Sing For You and Me"
    Lyrics by David W. Richardson

    Chorus:
    This song is your song, this song is my song,
    From A. P. Carter, to his "Little Darling,"
    From the Babtist Hymnal, to the "Lovin' Brother,"
    This song we sing for you and me.

    A man named Guthrie, he had a vision.
    He wrote a folk song, and shared it with us.
    He sang a tune that was familiar, thinking
    "This song I sing for you and me."
    (Chorus)

    Two men named Evan and Gregg Spiridellis
    Sat down to write a song about Bush and Kerry.
    They borrowed music, from Woodie thinking
    "This song, he sang for you and me."
    (Chorus)

    "Stop!" said the Richmond Organization.
    They own the rights to Guthrie's music.
    Evan and Gregg, they called it humor, saying
    "This song, we sing for you and me."
    (Chorus)

    The two famous brothers, they filed a lawsuit
    To preserve our rights to use Guthrie's work.
    The judge will say that it is okay, saying
    "This song, you sing for you and me."
    (Chorus)

    But it may happen that they lose and then their song will die....
    Since this can happen, I put pen to paper
    And write these lyrics, daring them to sue me, for
    "This song, I write for you and me."
    (Chorus)

    These lyrics are copyright (c) 2004 David Richardson (davidwr.geo -at- yahoo.com), posted to Slashdot.org under the Creative Common License Attribution-NonCommercial 2.0, as found on http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/2.0/ [creativecommons.org].
    P ublication date: July 31, 2004, on Slashdot.org
    Slashdot.org is not responsible for the content of this post.

    Sources:
    John Dowdell's commentary on this issue [corante.com]
    Woodie Guthrie Lyrics [univie.ac.at]
  • Censorship (Score:3, Insightful)

    by macdaddy357 ( 582412 ) <macdaddy357@hotmail.com> on Saturday July 31, 2004 @11:23PM (#9856145)
    Ludlow Music trying to muzzle JibJab is the clearest example in recent memory of copyright as censorship.

    Locking up ideas as property, whether works of art or in any other form, is ultimately no different than suppressing them. If JibJab doesn't have the right to keep this video on their servers, then they don't have freedom of speech, and guess what? Neither do we.

    The purpose of copyright was to prevent plagarists from passing off other people's work as their own for profit, not to censor similar expressions of ideas. It seems to me that a plagarist trying to pass off other people's works as their own (i.e. Woody Guthrie's) for profit is a perfect description of Ludlow Music.

    I propose that those wishing to possess "intellectual property" should keep their thoughts in their head.

  • by crem_d_genes ( 726860 ) * on Sunday August 01, 2004 @02:36AM (#9856693)
    From this link [reason.com]:

    "Turns out Woody Guthrie lifted the melody of "This Land is Your Land" essentially note-for-note from "When the World's on Fire," a song recorded by country/bluegrass legends, The Carter Family, ten years before Guthrie wrote his classic song. Here's a short snippet (380k mp3) of the song (the song can be found on the box set, The Carter Family: 1927-34). You don't need to be a musicologist to hear what we're talking about.

    Now we've got nothing against Woody's borrowing. In fact, it's a part of the "folk process" that Woody himself championed. I can't imagine that The Carter Family minded.

    But in the letter threatening copyright litigation over JibJab's animated political parody, "This Land," Ludlow's lawyer goes out of his way to attack JibJab for copying "the entire melody, harmony, rhythm and structure of the [sic] Mr. Guthrie's song."

    Er, sorry there Ludlow, but actually, the entire melody, harmony, rhythm, and structure of "This Land is Your Land" doesn't belong to you. And I'd like to think Mr. Guthrie would never have claimed credit for them, if he were still alive to ask."

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