By: Atul S.
Jaybhaye
        Assistant Professor
Hidayatullah National Law University
Copyright Law - India
 Concept and Meaning of Copyright:
 Copyright Act 1957
 Sec. 13 Works in which Copyright subsists?
 Sec. 14 Meaning of a Copyright.
 Sec. 51 Infringement of a Copyright.
 Sec. 52 Fair use in a Copyright
 Remedies for infringement
Copyright Law - India
 Meaning of Cyberspace:
 Cyberspace is the electronic medium of
 computer networks, in which online
 communication takes place.
Copyright Law - India
 Definition of Literary Work:
 Section 2(o) of the Copyright Act, 1957:
"'literary work' includes computer programs,
  tables and compilation including computer
  databases."
Copyright Law - India
 Subject matter of Copyright on Internet:
 computer database,
 computer programmes/software,
 computer layouts design,
 various works on web
 Multimedia works etc.
computer database and Copyright
 Database refers to collection of data, works,
  information or other independent material arranged
  in a systematic way.
 databases should be given copyright protection as they
  are the result of skill and labour employed by the
  author in creating the work.
 Ex. The name, employee identification number,
  address, telephone number of the Employee
computer database and Copyright
 The compiling author makes his selection of
  individual items of the database to include them in an:
1. Orderly manner
2. Arrangement in a effective way for users
3. Direction of compilation is sufficiently original.
Note: Copyright laws are not concerned with the origin of
   ideas, but with the expression of thoughts.
computer software as Copyright
 Meaning of a Software:
 For a computer to work, it has to be programmed,
 i.e. given a set of instructions in a language that
 computers understand. These programs are
 referred to as "software", to distinguish them from
 "hardware"
computer software as Copyright
 some examples of software:
a. Operating systems, such as Microsoft
   Windows, and Linux.
b. Software for general, everyday use, such
   Web browsers, word processors,
   spreadsheets, software for making
   presentations, etc.
c. More specialized software, such as
   computer-aided design software, software
   for statisticians, software for accountants,
   etc.
computer software as Copyright
 In India, the Intellectual Property Rights (IPR) of
  computer software is covered under the Copyright
  Law.
 Accordingly, the copyright of computer software is
  protected under the provisions of Indian Copyright
  Act 1957.
 Computer software is protected as literary work
Copyright and Digital Technologies
 All works now can be digitalised whether
  they compromise texts, images, sound,
  animation, photograph.
 The ease with which works in digital form
  can be replicated posed a difficult problem
  for the law to handle.
 Perfect multiple copies can be generated
  by the same technology.
 Such copies can be made available and
Copyright Protection in USA
 The Digital Millennium Copyright Act 1998
 (DMCA) is a United States copyright law that
  implements two 1996 treaties of the World Intellectual
  Property Organization (WIPO).
 It provides a mechanism for copyright holders to
  protect their online content.
 Once an author becomes aware that his work is being
  infringed upon it is up to the copyright holder to notify
  the Internet Service Provider (ISP)/Online Service
  Provider (OSP) that contains the material about the
  alleged infringement.
Landmark cases
 Napster Case: A&M Records, Inc. v. Napster,
  Inc. External link 239 F.3d 1004 (2001),
 Napster was a company formed by eighteen year old Shawn
  Fanning at North eastern University. Napster was the first
  user-friendly peer-to-peer file sharing service, which allowed
  any user to access other users' MP3 files, which were easily
  downloaded.
 Napster also introduced a simple searching ability from
  their central server, allowing users to quickly access a list of
  available files for which they would be searching.
 Napster quickly rose in popularity to its peak in 2001, as
  millions of users continued downloading song files for free
  from other computers around the world.
Napster Case:
 This was a landmark intellectual property case in which
  the United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit affirmed
  the ruling of the United States District Court for the Northern
  District of California, holding that defendant, peer-to-
  peer (P2P) file-sharing service Napster, could be held liable for
  infringement.
 This was the first major case to address the application of
  copyright laws to peer-to-peer file-sharing.
 Direct infringement The Circuit Court agreed with the district court's
  determination that Napster users were probably engaging in direct
  infringement of plaintiffs' copyrights.
Napster Case:
 Contributory infringement
 In order to prove contributory infringement, a plaintiff must
  show that a defendant had knowledge of infringement (here,
  that Napster knew that its users were distributing
  copyrighted content without permission across its network)
  and that defendant supplied material support to that
  infringement.
 The Court held that since Napster was aware the specific
  infringing files being transmitted through its system it could
  be held for contributory liability.
Super Cassettes v. MySpace
 In 2007, Super Cassettes Industries Limited (SCIL) filed a
  suit against MySpace, a social networking platform,
  alleging copyright infringement against MySpace.
 The platform allowed users to upload and share media
  files, inter alia, and it was discovered that users were
  sharing SCIL’s copyrighted works.
 SCIL promptly proceeded to file a civil suit against
  MySpace for primary infringement under section 51(a)(i)
  of the Copyright Act.
Super Cassettes v. MySpace
 On 23rd December 2016, Delhi High Court delivered a
  decision overturning the 2012 order in the matter of Super
  Cassettes Industries Limited v. MySpace.
 The 2012 order was heavily criticized, for it was agnostic to
  the technological complexities of regulating speech on the
  Internet and cast unnecesssary burdens on MySpace.
 The latest judgment in the matter of Super Cassettes v.
  MySpace is a landmark and progressive ruling, which
  strengthens the safe harbor immunity enjoyed by Internet
  intermediaries in India.
Super Cassettes v. MySpace
 A safe harbor is a provision of a Statute or a regulation
  that specifies that certain conduct will be deemed not to
  violate a given rule.
 The Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA) has notable
  safe-harbor provisions which protect Internet service
  providers from the consequences of their users' actions.
 It interprets the provisions of the IT Act, 2000 and the
  Copyright Act, 1957 to restore safe harbor immunity to
  intermediaries even in the case of copyright claims.
Super Cassettes v. MySpace
 MySpace Complying with Safe Harbor Requirements Sec. 79
  IT Act 2000 & Intermediary Rules, 2011)
 The court held that MySpace's operations were in compliance with section
  79(2)(b). The content transmission was initiated at the behest of the users, the
  recipients were not chosen by MySpace, neither was there modification of
  content.
 On the issue of modification, the court reasoned that since modification was an
  automated process which changed the format only, without MySpace's tacit or
  expressed control or knowledge, it was in compliance of the legislative
  requirement.
Ban on Songs.pk
 The Calcutta High Court has passed an ex-parte injunction restraining a
  number of Internet Service Providers (ISPs) from providing access
  to www.songs.pk, a website which has gained notoriety for providing the
  latest Bollywood music for free downloading to all visitors.
 The lawsuit before the Calcutta High Court has been filed by the
  Phonographic Performance Ltd. (PPL), Indian Music Industry (IMI) and
  Sagarika Music Pvt. Ltd.
 The defendants named in the suit are various ISPs such as Dishnet Wireless
  Ltd, Reliance Wimax Ltd, Hathway Cable & Datacom Pvt Ltd, Hughes
  Communications Ltd India, Tata Teleservices (Maharashtra) Ltd, Reliance
  Communications Infrastructure Ltd, Wipro Ltd, Sify Technologies Ltd, Bharti
  Airtel Ltd, Vodafone India Ltd, and BG Broadband India Pvt Ltd.
John Doe” orders or “John Doe”
injunctions
“John Doe” orders or “John Doe” injunctions are “cease and desist”
orders passed by a court against anonymous entity/entities. These
orders in the recent times have been issued in matters of protecting
copyrights.
Order 7 Rule 1 of the Code of Civil Procedure provides that the plaint
shall contain the name, description and place of residence of the
defendant so far as can be ascertained.
When such identification is unknown, a “John Doe” suit is
maintainable. An U.S. Court held that for entertaining the John Doe
suit, the plaintiff should identify the missing party with sufficient
specificity such that the Court can determine that the defendant is a
real person or entity who could be sued in federal court.
Reliance Pictures v. ‘John Doe’s I.A. No. 13476/2011 in
the Delhi High Court (“Bodyguard” Movie Case)
 In the Bodyguard Movie Case, the Delhi High Court opined that
  “defendants and other unnamed and undisclosed persons, are
  restrained from communicating or making available or
  distributing, or duplicating, or displaying, or releasing, or
  showing, or uploading, or downloading, or exhibiting, or playing,
  and/or defraying the movie ‘Bodyguard’ in any manner without a
  proper license from the plaintiff or in any other manner which
  would violate/infringe the plaintiffs copyright in the said
  cinematograph film ‘Bodyguard’ through different mediums like
  CD, DVD, Blue-ray disc, VCD, Cable TV, DTH, Internet services,
  MMS, Tapes, Conditional Access System or in any other like
  manner. Plaintiff is permitted to publish the ‘John Doe’
  injunction order passed in the local newspapers.”
 Scope of Online Service Provider
            Liability
      • Addressed by Digital Millennium
 US     Copyright Act of 1998
      • Addressed by Digital Economy Act 2010
UK      (DEA).
      • Addressed by Information Technology
India   Act, IT (Amendment) Act, 2008
Intermediaries Under IT Act 2000
 In India, intermediaries are governed under the IT
 Act, which defines an intermediary as “any person who
 on behalf of another person receives, stores, or
 transmits that electronic record or provides any service
 with respect to that record”.
 This definition is very wide and covers a diverse set of
 service providers, ranging      from Internet service
 providers, search engines, web hosting service
 providers, to e-commerce platforms or even social
 media platforms.
Indian Safe Harbour
   India grants intermediaries a conditional safe harbour under the IT Act
    and the Information Technology (Intermediaries Guidelines) Rules 2011.
   Section 79 of the IT Act provides that an intermediary is not liable for any
    third-party content hosted/made available through such intermediary
    when: (1) the function of the intermediary is limited to providing access
    to the system; or (2) the intermediary does not initiate, select the receiver
    of or select/modify the information contained in a transmission; and (3)
    the intermediary observes due diligence and abides by other guidelines
    prescribed by the Government.
   The 2011 Intermediaries Guidelines provides a diligence framework to
    be followed by intermediaries in order to avail of the exemption under
    Section 79. Various procedures have been prescribed which need to be
    observed by an intermediary, such as (i) the need to inform the users of
    the computer resource not to transmit any information that among
    other things is harmful, obscene or defamatory; (ii) the requirement to
    “act within 36 hours” of receiving knowledge of the transmission of any
    prohibited information; and (iii) the requirement to disable information
    that is contradictory to the Intermediaries Guidelines.
Sega Enterprises Ltd. v. Maphia
857 F. Supp. 679 (N.D. Cal. 1994)
 The defendants owned and operated a computer bulletin board service.
  Sega was the copyright owner of various video games as well as the
  trademark Sega.
 With defendants' knowledge and indeed with their encouragement, users
  of the bulletin board service uploaded and downloaded various Sega
  copyrighted video games onto the bulletin board.
 The court further found that defendants profited from this activity
  through sale of other services.
Sega Enterprises Ltd. v. Maphia
857 F. Supp. 679 (N.D. Cal. 1994)
 Moreover, the court found that many of the games were located in
  files on defendants' computer bearing the name Sega, which also
  appeared when a Sega video program downloaded from the bulletin
  board was run.
 Sega brought an action against the defendants, charging them, inter
  alia, with federal copyright and trademark infringement, unfair
  competition and false designation of origin, as well as the violation
  of a series of California statutes.
 On Sega's motion, the court issued a preliminary injunction, which
  enjoined defendants from continuing to engage in this conduct and
  directed the seizure of infringing materials in defendants'
  possession.
 The injunction included a provision barring defendants from
  making Sega programs available to users of the bulletin board in
  question, or storing Sega video programs in files accessible to such
  bulletin board users.
Eastern Book Company Limited v D. B
Modak (2008) 1 SCC 1
 The appellants were engaged in business of printing judgements of the
  Supreme Court of India through its publication ‘Supreme Court Cases’.
  These judgements would be copyedited by them to make these more
  user friendly by putting cross references, inputs, paragraph numbers,
  formatting and headnotes.
 Appellants contended the work is an original literary work and the
  appellants alone had exclusive rights to make hard copies or electronic
  copies of the publications under Section 14 of the Copyright Act, 1957.
 It was alleged by the appellant that the respondent had produced a
  software called Grand Jurix by scanning, copying and reproducing
  portions of the publication of the Appellant which constituted
  infringement of copyright as per Section 51 of the Copyright Act.
Eastern Book Company Limited v
D. B Modak (2008) 1 SCC 1
 Judgments delivered by the Supreme Court would be a government work
  and in the absence of any agreement to the contrary, the government
  shall be the first owner of the copyright in the judgments of the Supreme
  Court.
 For the reasons stated in the aforesaid discussion, the appeals are partly
  allowed.
 The respondent-defendants shall be entitled to sell their CD-ROMS with the text
  of the judgments of the Supreme Court along with their own head notes,
  editorial notes, if any, they should not in any way copy the head notes of the
  plaintiff-appellants;
DRM (Digital Rights Management)
 Digital rights management includes technologies that control the use,
  modification, and distribution of copyrighted works.
 Copyright holders are allowed to use DRM to safeguard their work being
  duplicated or utilized by others.
 However, copyright laws across the world allow fair use of the
  copyrighted work.
 Ex. Limitation as to number of copies, limitation as to copy/install the
  material / information.
DRM (Digital Rights Management)
 E-content can be locked and it can be
  used by authorised persons only.
 Due to this DRM, persons can not use this
  even for fair use/proper use.
 WPPT and WCT mandates parties to have
  adequate and effective legal remedies to
  prevent the misuse of online data/
  information.
 Though India is not a member of WPPT
DRM under Copyright Act 1957
 The new section 65A, introduced technological
  protection measures (TPM) used by a copyright owner
  to protect his rights on the work, makes circumvention
  of it a criminal offence punishable with imprisonment
  which may extend to two years and shall also be liable
  to fine.
 Section 65B has been introduced to provide protection
  of rights management information.
 The introduction of Sections 65A and 65B is expected
  to help the film, music and publishing industry in
  fighting piracy.
Functions of DRM
It controls number of copies that can be made.
It specifies modifications allowed.
How much of work can be accessed, after its sale to the user.
DRMs are widely used in e-books, video-games , computer softwares
 etc.
Linking     Framing
    Metatagging
Linking
 Linking to one website with another is considered as
 Copyright infringement in cyberspace.
                  Linking
        Surface                  Deep
        Linking                 Linking
Surface Linking:
 Surface linking, where the home page of a site is linked.
 Surface link transfers the user from the webpage of one
  site to the home page of the linked site.
 A simple link from one Web site to the home page of another
  Web site does not normally raise concern.
Deep Linking:
 Linking to the internal pages of the website is called as the
  Deep Linking.
 This takes the user to the internal web pages without having
  any look to the homepage of the website.
 The problem arises only with regard to the practice of deep
  linking.
Relevant cases on Linking
 Ticketmaster Corp., et al. v. Tickets.Com, Inc.
 United States District Court for the Central District of California 2000
 Both the plaintiffs and defendants had websites providing information
    about sports events.
    The decision permitted Tickets.com to place deep links to Ticketmaster
   Tickets.com used to sell the events ticket online. Tickets.com had created
    a link to its webpage i.e. “Buy this ticket from another online ticketing
    company.”
   Clicking on this link used to instantly transfer the customer to the interior
    webpage of Ticektmaster.
   It was held in this case that deep linking didn’t violate the Copyright Act of
    1976.
Shetland Times Ltd v Dr Jonathan Wills and
Zet News Ltd. (1997) FSR 604,
 This is another Scottish case relating to deep linking.
 The plaintiff owns and publishes The Shetland
  Times newspaper.
 The defendant had deliberately reproduced the headlines of
  plaintiffs site and were hyperlinked to the internal pages of
  the plaintiffs site.
 The Defendant had bypassed the home page of the plaintiff
  which carries the paid advertisement.
Shetland Times Ltd v Dr Jonathan Wills and
Zet News Ltd. (1997) FSR 604,
 Issue: Whether deep linking to the plaintiffs websites
 news headlines was an act of copyright infringement
 under the UK’s Copyright Designs and Patents Act
 1988.
 The Court rightly granted an interim injunction for
 Copyright protection and issued order against
 defendant for not involving in such activities.
Ticket Master Corporation vs. Microsoft
Corporation April 28, 1997
 Ticketmaster filed a suit against Microsoft for practice of deep linking
    without permission of the plaintiff.
   The plaintiff i.e. was losing advertising revenue because of the diversion of
    the users.
   The plaintiff had entered into contract with other companies for linking to
    its website.
   However, Microsoft was availing this service free of cost by hyper linking.
   The matter was settled down out of the court, deep links were removed by
    the defendant.
Thank you….