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With this project, I'll be looking at various cases, and articles discussing them, that have affected the conception of fair use as it regards parody.

The Fair Use Doctrine in the U. S. American Copyright Act and Similar Regulations in the German Law -- Holger Postel and Jean-Luc Piotraut, 5 Chi.-Kent J. Intell. Prop. 142, Spring 2006 (LexisNexis -- SEARCH IN “LAW REVIEWS” USING THE TITLE IN THE “KEYWORD” FIELD)
    This article analyzes the differences between American and German copyright laws as they relate to fair use. In large part, the differences amount to different interpretations based on natural rights. For instance, the article notes, “Campbell shows that there is no distinction between musical work and other forms of work as long as the purpose is in accordance with one of the criteria set out by section 107. While the German Copyright law does not allow an artist to use musical works without the licensee of the copyright holder, the American law does not recognize this distinction” (II.1).


    Both the American and German legal systems interpret parody narrowly, mainly out of pragmatism: if they do not, it would “open the floodgates” to excessive parodying (which “ THE FAIR USE COMMERCIAL PARODY DEFENSE AND HOW TO IMPROVE IT” argues is already happening). However, as the article notes, “The dilemma courts face is that parody is a form of art and courts are generally cautious in defining art” (II.2). The dilemma also entails the problem of how do you protect copyrighted works on the one hand, while not stifling creative and transformative parodies on the other.


    Interestingly, German law does not allow for music parody at all, though it does allow for other forms of fair use and parody similar to those in the US, including videotaping, photocopying, quoting, and news reporting. However, often American and Germans laws have similar ends, though their means differ.


    Ultimately, both German and American laws will begin to come together more and more than in the past because of globalization. Especially as a result of the internet, the rules are changing and the world is getting smaller and smaller, and countries will soon no longer be able to have legal structures that are vastly different for fear of being incompatible with a neighbor, as evidenced by the streamlining of laws and codes with the Berne Convention the European Union.

belongs to Fair Use/Parody project
tagged Copyright_Act German_law copyright fair_use parody by maxr ...and 9 other people ...on 02-AUG-06