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Oz High Court Hears Landmark TV Guide Copyright Case 156

highways writes "It's rare that that a copyright case is heard in the Australian High Court, let alone a case heard by all seven sitting judges. At stake is a small company IceTV (which we discussed when it launched four years back) taking on Australia's largest television station, the Nine Network, over the copyright status of the weekly broadcast schedule. That is, the schedule itself, not any synopsis or description of the individual programs. Users of PVRs such as MythTV will be well aware of the hassle it is to get a reliable program schedule stream to use for recordings. The saga has gone on for more than two years with Nine unsuccessfully suing IceTV, but later winning on appeal. At issue is whether a list of facts like an electronic program guide is a 'compilation' protected under Australian copyright law. This has implications for the copyright status of many publicly available databases and the limits to which the information can be distributed."
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Oz High Court Hears Landmark TV Guide Copyright Case

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  • Simple (Score:5, Informative)

    by ksd1337 ( 1029386 ) on Saturday October 18, 2008 @06:57PM (#25427483)
    There is no copyright on non-creative works. A schedule isn't creative.
    • Re: (Score:1, Interesting)

      by juiceboxfan ( 990017 )

      ...A schedule isn't creative.

      Why would a schedule not be considered "creative"? There are people who are paid to do nothing but come up with schedules. There is no mathematical formula and although it may appear otherwise the programming choices are not just randomly picked.

      Don't get me wrong I think that it's stupid for a TV station to prevent anyone from publishing their schedule just not for that reason.

      • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

        Because writing things down in a list isn't a creative work. This would be as stupid as saying you can copyright a grocery list.
        • Re:Simple (Score:5, Insightful)

          by NotQuiteReal ( 608241 ) on Saturday October 18, 2008 @08:05PM (#25427773) Journal
          bacon eggs bread milk
          mustard mayonaise swiss cheese
          butter sugar spam

          This haiku grocery list (C) 2008, all rights reserved.
          • This haiku grocery list (C) 2008, all rights reserved.

            No, no, no! It's not a haiku unless it has a seasonal word.

            bacon eggs bread milk
            pumpkins mayonaise swiss cheese
            butter sugar spam

            There, fixed it for you!

            (You need to get spam at the grocery? I have all the spam I need; give me your email address and I'll send you some).

          • This haiku grocery list (C) 2008, all rights reserved.

            That's a pretty creative way of describing how you can't copyright non-creative work. Good thing you copyrighted it.

            Idiot. (C) 2008, a handful of rights reserved thanks to people like the above.

          • Or how about

            egg and bacon;
            egg sausage and bacon;
            egg and spam;
            egg bacon and spam;
            egg bacon sausage and spam;
            spam bacon sausage and spam;
            spam egg spam spam bacon and spam;
            spam sausage spam spam bacon spam tomato and spam;
            spam spam spam egg and spam;
            spam spam spam spam spam spam baked beans spam spam spam;
            Lobster Thermidor a Crevette with a mornay sauce served in a Provencale manner with shallots and aubergines garnished with truffle pate, brandy and with a fried egg on top and spam.

        • This would be as stupid as saying you can copyright a grocery list.

          Many supermarkets print up charts of where various types of groceries can be found in their store. Could you copyright that? If not, why not?

        • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

          by teh moges ( 875080 )
          A schedule isn't a list. A schedule takes into account information such as who would watch the shows, what time that demographic usually watches TV and what advertising can be shown at that time.

          Like juiceboxfan said, I also think its stupid to prevent the publishing of a schedule, but just calling it a list is a reductio ad absurdum.
          • Re:Simple (Score:4, Insightful)

            by Free the Cowards ( 1280296 ) on Saturday October 18, 2008 @09:54PM (#25428397)

            Reductio ad absurdum [wikipedia.org] is a highly logical and respected technique for making an argument. Given the context in which you used the phrase, I assume you meant it as a logical fallacy, but it's not a fallacy. Perhaps you meant that it is an oversimplification?

          • Once the schedule is made, doesn't it then exist merely as a fact (station X is going to broadcast show Y at time Z)?

            I guess the Australian copyright law doesn't bear this out, but the above logic is why I don't think a list of anything should count.

            List: I was creative while making it, but once I'm done, it's just a list.
            Novel: Still creative once it's been written.
            (If that makes any sense.)

        • Creating a television line-up is certainly a creative work. Of course, once the line-up is done, the actual schedule is fact.

          I'd argue that to copy a television line-up, you'd have to own your own television station and actually use that line-up. Sharing the schedule is really just dealing in facts.

          • by sr180 ( 700526 )
            I dont know what TV like is in the US, but in Australia the published guides are never 'FACT' and remain as fiction. The TV networks quite happily change shows and delay start times, ensuring that the published guide (and online ones) are never actually correct.
      • Re:Simple (Score:4, Insightful)

        by schon ( 31600 ) on Saturday October 18, 2008 @07:27PM (#25427605)

        Why would a schedule not be considered "creative"?

        Because there is no creative element.

        There are people who are paid to do nothing but come up with schedules.

        There are people who are paid to do nothing but dig ditches. Is ditch-digging considered "creative" now too?

        Just because someone is paid to do something, doesn't mean it's creative.

        • Re: (Score:2, Interesting)

          by Anonymous Coward

          You might be coming from a US position which has gone a different way on compilations, referable to different constitutional arrangements.

          It's trite law now outside the US that things like betting coupons, train timetables, etc, get copyright protection.

          The basis for protection is the skill and labour that went into them - the fact that you've created them, not a sort of artistic creativity.

          • Re:Simple (Score:5, Insightful)

            by j0nb0y ( 107699 ) <(jonboy300) (at) (yahoo.com)> on Saturday October 18, 2008 @08:25PM (#25427877) Homepage

            Absolutely correct. Copyright law in the US is based on the idea of a utilitarian social contract. "In order to promote the progress of science and the useful arts" as the US Constitution puts it.

            Outside the United States, copyright law is largely based on Lockean moral rights. Workers have a right to their work product. Under this theory, copyright can protect works with little to no creativity.

            Although I am largely a believer in Locke's natural rights, I do not believe that it is a good idea to apply them in the field of Intellectual Property. I favor the general US approach, although I have many issues with the way the US Congress has implemented IP laws.

            • Thank you for succinctly explaining the philosophical difference between US and Australian copyright law, and indeed for pointing out that there is a difference.

              In fact, you need to add a further distinction. Continental Europe tends to favour unassignable, everlasting rights held by the author of a work, whereas the UK and common law world is more inclined to allow the complete assignment of rights.

              In Australia there are now 'moral rights' under the Copyright Act which remain with an author no matter what

              • by beav007 ( 746004 )
                If you'd ever watched Channel 9, you'd know that the schedule is far from fact.

                The Channel 9 schedule has about the same mix of fact and creativity that weather forecasting does...
              • by Xaria ( 630117 )

                Bring on unassignable copyright!

                The ability to assign copyright to a corporation is what started this whole mess...

        • Because there is no creative element.

          Really? So if you had, say, 24 hours of programming to fill you wouldn't give it any thought? Just schedule a kids show between two episodes of 'CSI: NY'? Run the evening news in the noon time slot?

          I am hoping that this does get struck down but as a special case not because it's not "creative".

          There are people who are paid to do nothing but dig ditches. Is ditch-digging considered "creative" now too?

          Nice try [wikipedia.org].

          • by Retric ( 704075 )
            It's a classic linear programming problem. A machine with the same basic facts as a person would come to basically the same solution. In the US there are limits on what can be broadcast in what time slots. Add in basic ratting information and I would be surprised in most stations built the schedules totally by hand.
          • by penix1 ( 722987 )

            I am hoping that this does get struck down but as a special case not because it's not "creative".

            First of all it is creative on the part of the broadcasting company not the TV guide publishers. So using your logic the copyright should belong to the station broadcasting and the guide people have no standing.

            • First of all it is creative on the part of the broadcasting company not the TV guide publishers. So using your logic the copyright should belong to the station broadcasting and the guide people have no standing.

              That is what the case is all about.
              Quote TFA;
              ...taking on Australia's largest television station, the Nine Network, over the copyright status of the weekly broadcast schedule.

            • by thetan ( 725014 )

              First of all it is creative on the part of the broadcasting company not the TV guide publishers. So using your logic the copyright should belong to the station broadcasting and the guide people have no standing.

              Yes, you are exactly correct. The Nine Network (broadcasting company) asserts ownership of the schedule. They are the party in the court case.

          • by schon ( 31600 )

            So if you had, say, 24 hours of programming to fill you wouldn't give it any thought?

            Nice try. [wikipedia.org]

            There are people who are paid to do nothing but dig ditches. Is ditch-digging considered "creative" now too?

            Nice try

            Sorry, I don't think I understand you. Are you now trying to claim that you didn't say that working on anything is creative?

            You distinctly said that people are paid to work on something, therefore that is creative. If this isn't what you meant, then you need to explain what you *did* mean, rather than trying to escape by (rather feebly) claiming you didn't say that.

            The bottom line is: If being paid to do something is what defines "creative", then anytime anyone is paid to do something (even di

            • by mabinogi ( 74033 )

              You distinctly said that people are paid to work on something, therefore that is creative.

              No he didn't, that's how you (poorly) interpreted his words. Just because you can put words in his mouth doesn't mean they're his words.
              What he actually said was:

              Why would a schedule not be considered "creative"? There are people who are paid to do nothing but come up with schedules. There is no mathematical formula and although it may appear otherwise the programming choices are not just randomly picked.

              He did state that people were paid to work on the schedules, but that was a separate statement which has no logical connection to the assertion that programmes are creative.

              The part that asserts that programmes are creative is the part that says that there is no mathematical formula, and that they are not just randomly picked.

              So, if an ordering is

    • Re:Simple (Score:5, Insightful)

      by lysergic.acid ( 845423 ) on Saturday October 18, 2008 @07:24PM (#25427589) Homepage

      a relevant and insightful first post? i'm shocked.

      honestly, how can the TV network claim copyright over a TV schedule? copyright law, like patents, were created to stimulate innovation & creativity and encourage individuals to contribute to society with copyrighted works or patented ideas. so artistic/creative works are given copyright protection, just as original inventions are given patent protection.

      but a simple program schedule does not contribute anything meaningful to society. it is not a cultural work. it's a list of factual information--something which no person or organization has the exclusive rights to. if this were a compilation of program synopses/reviews plagiarized from the TV network's writers, that would be a different story. but this is like saying you hold the copyright on a news event, and no one else can report on this event.

      i think there was a similar case to this a few years ago involving the MLB and baseball stats. i don't know how that case turned out, but both claims are equally groundless.

      • by Splab ( 574204 )

        That's the whole point of the suit. Too bad the ruling wont have influence here in Denmark, it is very annoying that some company has copyright on whats on TV.

      • Because it is tritely applying US copyright law to a non-US jurisdiction, being Australia.

        Copyright in the UK and Australia (and no doubt many other parts of the common law world) can in some circumstances protect works which do not contain anything which would be regarded as "creative" in the "creative expression" sense. Our law recognises copyright in a compilation is significant skill and labour are involved in its creation. The factual information contained in the work is not protected per se, but the

        • there may be no legal requirement for societal contribution, but that's still what such laws were created for. that's why you can't copyright facts, number, etc. you did not create them, and granting such copyrights would not encourage any kind of positive contribution to society. and how does copyright protect expression in this case? who's expression is being protected by forbidding IceTV from publishing their schedule stream? who's expression is being hindered/suppressed by IceTV's schedule stream? and
    • by Anonymous Coward

      While I quite agree that a television schedule shouldn't be copyrighted, schedules can be quite creative. This is particularly true in some areas and not so much in others, at least to the POV whomever gets to make the judgement. A schedule determines the flow of events though the functionability of the events often determines the flow of the schedule, either in part or in its entirety. If schedules didn't matter then chapters in a book, even the pages themselves could fall in any order, you could randomize

      • Assuming this is true, the "harm" done is negligible if non-existent. TV stations create schedules to increase viewership of individual programs. The purpose of a schedule is to schedule and not to sell as a commodity. Whether it is a legal entity in itself is besides the point. People don't want to be sued for telling their friend that The Simpson's is going to be on TV at 6 oclock on channel 5.

        • Re: (Score:1, Interesting)

          by Anonymous Coward

          People don't want to be sued for telling their friend that The Simpson's is going to be on TV at 6 oclock on channel 5.

          That would be simply free advertising via word of mouth. As pointed out here [slashdot.org] though "one of the things that IceTV can do is to skip ads when recording, or mute them when watching live" and therein is the perceived harm, particularly if advertisers could determine the percent of "views" lost via that function. They need to just assume this is part of the "restroom and refridgerator runs" and

        • by Starayo ( 989319 )
          Well you could be sued for false advertising - it's on at 6pm on channel 10! :P
        • The purpose of a schedule is to schedule and not to sell as a commodity.

          The other purpose of the schedule, surely, is advertising. You want as many people as possible to know when your TV programmes are on, especially if, like the Nine Network, you're in the habit of shifting all of the good shows around during the graveyard shift.

    • I've never heard that non-creative works cannot be copyrighted. You certainly don't offer any references or proof. All of my techie books have copyright notices in them. From the Wiki,

      "Copyright may apply to a wide range of creative, intellectual, or artistic forms, or "works".

      "Intellectual" should certainly be emphasized.

      In this case there may be lawyers who will push the bounds of copyright beyond the more obvious. If there is money to be made and taxes to collect then governments may very well create new laws (assuming the plaintiffs lose) to appease unbounded capitalism (the plutocracy).

    • by deniable ( 76198 )

      Incorrect. Australian copyright law allows software to cover the code and 'required data.' The rulings that did this came from a case where a guy reverse engineered an AutoCAD hardware lock and started selling work-alike versions. The case went back and forth but AutoDesk eventually won. It meant that schedules, bus timetables and the like could hold copyright on the data.

    • Re:Simple (Score:5, Funny)

      by NoMaster ( 142776 ) on Saturday October 18, 2008 @08:51PM (#25428039) Homepage Journal

      There is no copyright on non-creative works. A schedule isn't creative.

      You're wrong. Australian law, not US law, applies in Australia - and a collated list is considered a creative work & copyright applies. There's a landmark case that set the benchmark for this, involving a 3rd-party company (in India? The Philippines?) copying phonebooks to provide an alternative forward/reverse phonebook.

      Regardless of that, why isn't a schedule creative? Sure, a list of facts may not be, but a schedule probably is. Events on a schedule aren't facts until they actually happen in order and on time; until then it's a creatively-envisioned list of events with a high probability of occurring. Besides, Australian TV guides are mostly fiction anyway, which is covered by copyright. An entry like this:

      • "8:30pm - Australia's Funniest Home Videos - hosted by a flouncy trollop in a breezy sundress, so Dad can get a little stiffy while watching TV with the kids"

      will most likely turn out to be:

      • "8:47 - Mostly Recycled Cretinously Unfunny American Home Videos, With A Few Australian Ones Thrown In To Make You Think It's All Australian Content"

      Note, not even the start time is correct, so it's definitely a work of fiction. It'll still be hosted by a flouncy trollop in a breezy sundress, so Dad can get a little stiffy while watching TV with the kids, though...

    • There is no copyright on non-creative works. A schedule isn't creative.

      The ones for the commercial stations in Australia must be. Anything that turns what is, say, a 1hr show on a commercial station in the UK to 1.5hrs on a commercial station in Aus must involve enormous amounts of creativity!

    • Saying 'a schedule isn't creative' doesn't clarify things at all. How did you decide this? (NB: this is a reply not just to the author of this post but to all who submitted similar comments, so don't get paranoid). Is it 'obvious?'.

      The concept of 'obviousness' may seem plain to us, but it is not plain enough to be admitted to law. If it was, then we would only need one law: "Don't Do Bad Things", and assume we all understood.

      The common solution is to refer to a prior case if there is one. In this case,

      • There was a copyright argument over a century ago in the US about the copyright of telephone directory data.

        That may very well be true; I'd have to check.

        But the main case here about copyrighting phone books is Feist v. Rural, which took place in 1991. There, while no one claimed that the data was copyrightrightable, it was claimed that the compilation and arrangement of the data was, which would require competitors to laboriously re-gather all the underlying data if they wished to print their own phone bo

    • "There is no copyright on non-creative works"

      If *that* were true, you'd be unable to copyright *any* TV programme!

    • In the US, yes that is true (Feist Publications Inc v Rural Telephone Co), but not in Europe where you can get database copyright. I don't know what the position in Australia is.

    • Re: (Score:2, Interesting)

      by PeonPete ( 1190503 )
      First article, First comment I read on a Monday morning and I'm already angry (and haven't had my coffee yet).

      Mods: Any comment that attempts to put a legal argument to be with such categorical statements that do not contain IANAL are to be modded -1 Clueless.

      For the uninformed, Australia is not the 52nd State:
      http://www.austlii.edu.au/au/journals/DTLJ/2001/1.html [austlii.edu.au]

      (Albeit decision was held in the Federal Court, and this case is being heard in the High Court so a new precedent could be set, but Austr
  • When copyright was created it was to protect artistic work, music, writing, stories, images etc. It was designed to protect artistic endeavor.

    The idea that you can copyright a fact, rather than its representation is just dumb.

    Besides, you would think that a TV station would want people to know what was on. Objecting to this is like objecting to people linking to your site. Personally I think it would be great if we could just collectively ignore idiots like this, since that seems to be what they want.

    • by ian_mackereth ( 889101 ) * on Saturday October 18, 2008 @07:39PM (#25427663) Journal

      Besides, you would think that a TV station would want people to know what was on. Objecting to this is like objecting to people linking to your site. Personally I think it would be great if we could just collectively ignore idiots like this, since that seems to be what they want.

      One of the things that IceTV can do is to skip ads when recording, or mute them when watching live.

      The networks are keen to keep them away from their schedules so that people won't buy IceTV for this functionality and then realise that they can also avoid the ads that the networks need to have watched.

      IceTV (and their precursors) have always been careful not to play up this ad-skipping too much, trying to stay 'under the radar' of the networks.

      • One of the things that IceTV can do is to skip ads when recording, or mute them when watching live.

        VCRs also allow you to skip ads, although not quite in the same way.

        Really, there are now quite literally dozens of products that can record TV and enable you to easily skip ads if you want, many of them commercial (i.e., not free as in beer or speech) and some quite well known (TiVo, for example). There are also many PC software products like IceTV that have similar functionality, and some are relatively well known (like MS Media Center). I can't really believe not wanting commecials skipped is the reaso

      • by NoMaster ( 142776 ) on Saturday October 18, 2008 @09:26PM (#25428237) Homepage Journal

        One of the things that IceTV can do is to skip ads when recording, or mute them when watching live.

        No it can't.

        This ability was mentioned as part of their PR/publicity spiel at the beginning, but never happened. Rumour at the time had them working on the idea of having a bunch of people watching the show live pressing the pause button when the ads came on, which would then be distributed (by the pager or phone network; this was pre widespread broadband) to IceTV-enabled recorders across the country. Never got off the ground, and IceTV have been playing down the fact that it was ever mentioned since the day they actually launched their guide. Can't see how it would work reliably anyway, without the help of the broadcasters in putting 'ad break' flags in the signal - the traditional means of detecting ad breaks (e.g. full black, etc), have way too high a false positive/negative rate to be reliable for unattended use.

        Now Ch 9, who own HWW (the actual guide aggregators), kept bringing up this 'threat' every chance they got during the actual court case, giving the impression that ad-skipping was what it was really all about. It wasn't; never was - it was about keeping control over who distributed TV guide data, and what the end-user could do with it. Note that TiVo in aus has had the 30-second skip completely disabled; it's not even recoverable by using any of the hacks available in the US versions. Note also that the TV networks here refuse to 'approve' (dunno what that means in practice, but I suspect we might start finding out in the next 12-18 months if the "Freeview" branding/approval actually takes off) any PVR with any sort of ad-skipping capacity. They maintain that, for a device to be 'allowed' to use their EIT EPG on digital, one of the conditions is that it have no ad or 30-second skip capability.

        They were also making noises initially about not allowing 'search' capability (because OMFG! You might have your PVR automatically record programs and watch them later while ffwding over the ads!), but they seem to have let that slip, at least in the specific case of TiVo. I imagine that they realised, what with search being the core of TiVo's usefullness, without it TiVo would have just been another overpriced PVR.

        When talking about the commercial TV networks in Australia, it's best to keep the phrase "a cunch of bunts" in mind...

      • Soryy, but I just have to point out, Ice TV is only providing the TV Schedules, it is not a device or a recording program.

        This is all about providing the tv schedules, nothing else. Channel Nine DON'T want to share or play nice.

        That is all.

    • When copyright was created it was to protect artistic work, music, writing, stories, images etc. It was designed to protect artistic endeavor.

      The idea that you can copyright a fact, rather than its representation is just dumb.

      In many jurisdictions databases, information independent of a specific presentation, are protected (to some extent) by copyright law - in Europe (and hence the UK where I am) a directive was made to add an additional "database right" (see eg http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Database_right [wikipedia.org] ) to ensure that pure information was fully protected.

      That aside, some are arguing that you can't copyright a running order (schedule) - I'm sure DJs, radio stations and editors of "Top 100 ..." clips shows would disagree.

    • by whrde ( 1120405 )

      Copyright was also developed (at least in Australia) to protect skilled labour. They are not protecting a "fact" here, they are protecting a compilation. IceTV employed someone to compile the schedule by watching TV for a week, that was ok (well, it's probably ok). But they updated it by using Channel Nine's published guide --- that's a little more shady. This case sits on the boundaries of copyright law in Australia, and brings into question the notions of "original work" and "substantial part". The reason

    • by quinks ( 1172373 ) on Saturday October 18, 2008 @09:09PM (#25428145)
      Well, the Nine Network has its head so far up its own ass that they can see the cluetrain whooshing past their head through their ears and empty skull. The media landscape in Australia is a mess, and it's just best to stay as far away from that as you can. Specific examples:
      • No free-to-air TV network is allowed to transmit to more than 75% of the population
      • When AM radio was introduced in the twenties, it was introduced with a DRM scheme where receivers were locked to a single station
      • There isn't a single commercial FTA general entertainment channel on satellite. You'd think that satellite TV would be a great idea in a country like Australia...
      • No more than 3 commercial free-to-air networks have been allowed for the past 40 years.
      • The government mandated HD all the way back in 2001 because they thought it'd be a great idea. Then they made sure that everything on SD was simulcast on HD, killing choice.
      • Because of the above restriction, no FTA station can introduce new channels. Although they've been allowed to show different things on HD for a little while now.
      • Because of the early commitment to HD, the MPEG2 + DVB-T standards were chosen. Had they introduced HD at the same time as the UK or New Zealand, they could have saved themselves about 40 MBit/s through the spectrum in capital cities, easily accomodating about 6 new channels with the current frequencies, while still having HD.
      • Our latest communication minister is as much an idiot as his predecessors. See Internet Regulation, on Slashdot earlier today/yesterday.
      • Regional television in Australia is broken. Let's just leave it at that - it could fill a book.

      And then there's something else, Telstra:

      • The incumbent telco ($150/GB to $2000/GB excess fees on their ISP plans) is so deep in Foxtel it's not funny.
      • The government is one of the largest shareholders in Telstra.

      And then there's Channel Nine:

      • It took them about 5 years to show the last few episodes of Voyager. At 1am or something.
      • They're news/breakfast hosts are fundamentally unlikeable.
      • They just fired half their journalism department and killed the long-running 'Sunday'.
      • They just have crap and nothing else on.
      • They're quite closely affiliated with Microsoft/MSN. Go figure.
      • by mgblst ( 80109 )

        For somebody who (rightly) hates CH9, you sure seem to watch it a lot. CH9 has been a joke for many many years, 7 and 10 aren't much better. Just do what I do, and skip the shit. Find something else to do with all the time you now have.

    • IAAAL (I am an Australian lawyer).

      You cannot copyright a "fact", but you can copyright a compilation of factual information if sufficient skill and labour has gone into its production.

      For example, I can tell you that The Simpsons is on at 6:30pm next Wednesday on a particular channel without infringing copyright. However, if I take the entire compilation comprised in your weekly TV schedule as published on your website, or a substantial part of it, and reproduce it, then I may well infringe copyright.

      Many

  • The Australian government's assertion that the list of airports, runways and tower frequencies was subject to international copyright was used as a flimsy excuse for the US NGA to block all public access to the DAFIF, a database of information about airports worldwide that had been publicly available since the mid 1970s.

    Wanna bet that even if the Aussie high court rules reasonably the NGA will still try to keep everything secret?

    The NGA is the National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency - used to be the Defens

    • > The Australian government's assertion that the list of airports, runways and tower
      > frequencies was subject to international copyright was used as a flimsy excuse for the
      > US NGA to block all public access to the DAFIF, a database of information about airports
      > worldwide that had been publicly available since the mid 1970s.

      Extremely flimsy, since such a list is very clearly not protected by copyright in the US, which is all that NGA need concern itself about.

  • "Users of PVRs such as MythTV will be well aware of the hassle it is the get a reliable program schedule stream to use for recordings" - which means what? As users, we can't post unless we've spent thirty seconds or so re-reading our writing. How about the editors do the same?

    • Makes sense to me. To automatically record programs using PVRs, the PVR needs to know when the programs are actually being shown. These schedules are difficult to obtain in machine-readable format. Someone who has used a PVR which doesn't come with such a schedule will have experienced this. Which part didn't you get?

      • I think the "will be" when "should be" or "are" would have worked is a little confusing. I know people still use "will" that way but it's less common now and just seems really old-fashioned to me. It did throw me off a little, but maybe it's just lack of sleep.

        Also, it does say "the get a...schedule" instead of "to get a...schedule".

        Just nitpicking obviously, but I get what the OP is saying.

        • Also, it does say "the get a...schedule" instead of "to get a...schedule".

          I read right past that! Funny.

          As for "will be", maybe this is just a regional thing, because I find absolutely nothing strange about it at all. Of course that certainly doesn't mean that you don't.

  • by PMuse ( 320639 ) on Saturday October 18, 2008 @09:45PM (#25428339)

    Let's just suppose that we're talking about a country that believes in the sweat-of-the-brow theory of copyright protection for factual compilations (since we are).

    It's one thing to protect a person who goes out and ascertains facts and compiles them. After all, the second guy can always go out and sweat and compile his own database.

    It is quite another thing to allow a person who generates facts to refuse to tell anyone what those facts are except for a fee. Nine Network didn't compile these facts, they made them up. One of the underpinning rationales of the sweat-of-the-brow theory is the option for the second guy to compile an independent database of the facts. That option is absent here, giving Nine Networks a monopoly over these facts. The desire to protect compilers should not justify creating monopolies over facts.

    • by Xiroth ( 917768 )

      Uh, wow, right up until your last sentence I thought that you were making a very good point as to why Nine Network should be allowed to copyright the guide. After all, the guide is a written down version of a completely invented schedule - shouldn't it, therefore, fall under standard understandings of copyright? It's not like they're writing things that exist independently of themselves - it's entirely their own creation.

      I actually was against being able to copyright something like this before I read your p

      • by PMuse ( 320639 )

        Well, consider this: Is everything that some one arbitrarily determines an act of creativity? How about a train schedule? How about the numbering of the houses on a given street?

        Let me suggest that it is possible to make something up without performing creative expression sufficient to merit copyright protection under a moral-rights/promotion-of-useful-arts theory.

  • ...what it takes to compile these schedules?

  • by indaba ( 32226 ) on Saturday October 18, 2008 @10:53PM (#25428695)
    In Australia, there is no *automatic* right of appeal to the High Court - you get 20 minutes per side to argue why they should hear you and the judge's WILL cut off counsel mid-sentence.

    Essentially, this is to stop the High becoming clogged with appeals that have zero legal merit.

    Here is the transcript of the special leave hearing for the IceTV case.

    http://www.austlii.edu.au/au/other/HCATrans/2008/308.html [austlii.edu.au]

    To give you a flavour of the arguments being put by MR BANNON appearing for Channel Nine. :

    MR BANNON: ... the exercise which was engaged in by the Nine network staff was to prepare a document, which was the Nine weekly schedule, which was a step by step process, as a result of consideration, discussion, working out what statutory obligations had to complied with, what program would be regarded as entertaining for particular ranges of viewers and/or ultimately obtaining advertising revenue. That process ultimately resulted in the preparation of a written document, namely, the weekly schedule, which was available, true it was, in computer format as well, but ultimately it was a standard fare literary work in the form of a compilation.

    and later with respect to the program title / time pairings...

    MR BANNON: Her Honour simply said it was a question of slivers, they were too small. Well, as the Full Court correctly observed, we respectfully submit, the learned trial judge either discounted or put no account of the skill and labour invested in the association of particular times with particular titles, treating that as preparatory work and work not directed to the production of copyright work.

    and

    MR BANNON: Well, your Honour, for the reasons I have indicated, we would submit not. As I say, there is no public interest defence of copyright. There are a myriad of fair dealing defences, none of which have been sought to have been taken advantage of. There is no argument about implied licence. To the extent that there is a stepping back to say, well, this is your TV program, how can you stop somebody else using it, we submit to the extent it is â" as we know, copyright is a pure creature of a statute â" to the extent that there is a substantial reproduction, that is the end of it. As I say, there are specific defences which deal with that. It is not a case to be concerned one way or another as to the breadth or the consequences of this. It is a pure question of statutory construction.

    GUMMOW J: Yes, you may well be right, Mr Bannon, ultimately, but one is just a little concerned that Justice Bennett in a long and careful judgment came to an opposite result.

    MR BANNON: But informed, we respectfully submit, as confirmed by the Full Court, by incorrect considerations. Justice Bennett came to the same result as we sought on indirect copying, it was just a question of substantiality. As the Full Court said, one of the errors her Honour, we respectfully submit, made was to say, to test whether it is a substantial part is â" we have to show that the synopses were more important than the time and title and, we submit, with the greatest respect, your Honour, that is clearly wrong. In other words, her Honour was not assessing the matter by reference to Feist type of considerations.

    The other matter which the Full Court identified as an error was her Honourâ(TM)s dismissal of the preparatory work and we say that, apart from being the longstanding authority as a matter of fact here, all this work was directed to the production of this and that is the time and title information. The most original part was the parts they took. It is crucial, it is important, it satisfies the tests long held in this Court and, with the greatest respect, this is a very, very clear case of copyright infringement.

  • Nine is attempting to use the fringes of copyright law to protect an effective monopoly position on guide information held by HWW (http://www.hww.com.au/. Founded as Horan Wall & Walker in 1974 and acquired by ninemsn Pty Ltd in 2006, HWW Pty Limited has more than 30 years of experience as a creator, aggregator and publisher of quality content.)

    HWW absolutely refuses to licence guide data to anyone proposing to use the data in a non-media controlled PVR, and imposes the same conditions on users of thei

  • Phone Book ? (Score:3, Informative)

    by Eth1csGrad1ent ( 1175557 ) on Sunday October 19, 2008 @07:48PM (#25435987)

    Remember, this is the network that tried (and failed) to stop another network (ABC)from filming
    the fireworks over Sydney Harbour Bridge on Millenium Eve because they owned the trademark on
    the "Eternity" logo displayed on the bridge.

    This is similar to the argument thats already been had over the humble phonebook.

    In essence, the phone book is also just a collection of factual information: Name, Address, Phone Number
    But the High Court in Australia deemed that the effort required to compile the data gave it copyright status.

    Telstra Corporation Limited v Desktop Marketing Systems Pty Ltd:
    http://www.austlii.edu.au/au/cases/cth/federal_ct/2001/612.html [austlii.edu.au]

    Presumably the Nine Network will be arguing a similar point and, given that any version
    of schedule will ultimately be derived from the programming material put out by Nine,
    the only other way to compile the list is after the programs have aired... which is kinda useless.

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