Categories
Life

A moment from the year that was…

Among the things I will remember most about 2014 is studying for the New York bar examination. One Saturday last July I rode a No. 1 train headed downtown, my thoughts deep into an outline of criminal law, which is among the subjects tested.

A few stops into my ride a man boarded the car, announced that he was a musician, produced a flute and proceeded to play what he described as an original composition titled “The Quiet Storm.”

The title of the piece notwithstanding, I braced to be assaulted acoustically. All I wanted to do was to study. Now I would have to contend with this busker while I tried to memorize the material in my hands.

But the music was as billed. Quiet, soothing, lovely in a way, at least compared with what I anticipated. Over the summer, I took to using foam ear plugs to insulate me from the sounds of the city, which in my yearning to focus I had come to resent as an intrusion.

On the subway, the setup I resented most became companions who sat on benches across from each other. That demanded they speak loudly enough to be heard by each other and anyone nearby. I expected every place to be pin quiet, even, go figure, the streets of New York City in July.

The library was worse. I resented fellow students who rippled the silence with the force of their typing. I felt entitled to silence, which, of course, inverts what’s reasonable. It also shows how the bar exam or, for that matter, any undertaking that demands a mass of memorization, can consume us.

The man with the flute finished his piece and asked those of us around him for money. “Canadian coins are OK,” he offered as a made his way the length of the car. This I also largely ignored. Then he said something that caused me to gaze up from my notes. “I’m sorry everybody,” he said.

The apology snapped me from self-absorption. He had only played music and here he apologized. That seemed disproportionate to anything he had done. Of course, it can be nice to ride the train without being panhandled. Still, I wondered, what have we come to if someone has to apologize for playing a piece of music that qualifies as tolerably lovely?

I reached into my pocket and hoped I had a dollar. I didn’t, but I had a $5 bill, which I walked over to the musician and handed to him. “Thanks man,” he said, looking me in the eye.

“That was a nice piece, you played,” I replied. “Thank you.”

The man brightened. “It’s the first I played in six months,” he added. “I lost my son recently.”

My next thought was to ask him what had happened. But the train had arrived at my stop, the doors opened and I stepped out, instinctively, onto the platform. “Take care,” I said.

That was that. For a moment, I regretted not riding along so that we might continue the conversation. Then again, our exchange seemed enough to create a connection that will stay with me always.

Categories
Asides

Some highs of 2014…

Tortured but not tortious
Tortured but not tortious

Visiting northern Namibia with Krista

Chapman’s Peak Drive

Running with Tala and Juma

24hoursofhappy

Securing a roadworthy designation for the Landy

Watching Kaizer Chiefs battle Maritzburg United

Making pasta with Krista and Rachel

Walking through Williamsburg as winter receded

Columbia hoops with the Wave

Riding the J train across the Williamsburg Bridge, gazing out at Lower Manhattan

Figuring out with Krista how to tie a mattress to the roof of a van

A nap at 2:00 a.m. at a roadside plaza en route to the city

May 11 in the Conservatory Garden with Krista

Dad’s bar mitzvah

“Much Ado About Nothing” in the park, with Krista (and Meryl Streep)

Discussing the law (and more) with Sam

Josh’s introducing me to Nike Roshe Runs

Shaken iced green tea lemonade at Starbucks

Original Pinkberry with blueberries and chocolate chips

Walks through Central Park’s North Woods to defrag my brain and lift my spirits

James Franco’s signing my torts outline

Riverside Park on summer evenings

Stacy’s quizzing me about constitutional law

Browsing at Book Culture

Riding the Thunderbolt and the Cyclone with Krista

The Rockaways in summer

Hearing Wallace Roney and his orchestra debut music by Wayne Shorter, at the Charlie Parker Jazz Festival

Swimming with Krista at Jackie Robinson Park Recreation Center

Editors who accepted my pitches then made my stories better

Cy Twombly at the Morgan

Break-fast, from Murray’s Sturgeon Shop, with Krista

Riding the bus to the ball game with Dad

Listening to Mom tell me about her investment club

“Transparent,” “Masters of Sex,” “The Good Wife” and “TURN”

Forging new ties at Quartz and strengthening old ones at American Banker

Passing the New York bar examination!

Visiting the South African Cricketeers’ Association, the Company’s Garden and the South African National Gallery with Vasu

My first bunny chow, with Krista and Mary

Figuring out where Pacer fees go

LSE podcasts and New Yorker cartoons

My ‘Dice volleyball shirt, from Maddie

Discovering Freedom Café and the square across the street

American Thanksgiving in South Africa

The Turkey Bowl with Dan, Andrew and Josh

Catching up with classmates

Discussing “Interstellar” endlessly

Categories
News

News quiz, week ending Dec. 26

1. Who won Tunisia’s presidential election?

2. Who was singer Bryan Adams referring to on Monday when he tweeted the following: “RIP my good friend, you were one of the best rock singers EVER.”

3. Who said this, referring to the price of oil: “Whether it goes down to $20, $40, $50, $60, it is irrelevant.”

4. Princess Cristina de Borbón, the younger sister of King Felipe IV, will be the first member of a Spanish royal family to do what?

5. Why did the Gay Men’s Health Crisis on Tuesday term the FDA’s proposal to end a decades-old prohibition on blood donations by gay and bisexual men “offensive and harmful.”

6. In his Christmas Day message, Pope Francis prayed for the entire world, including for 11 nations that he cited specifically. Name at least six of them.

7. Who said: “He is a guest among brothers of ours in Syria Islamic State.”

8. “He says it’s been his worst Christmas ever,” Ros Bruce, from Essex, U.K., told the BBC, referring to her son, who received an Xbox One for Christmas. What prompted her comment?

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Answers:

1) Beji Caid Essebsi, 88, who served in cabinet posts under two authoritarian regimes; 2) Joe Cocker; 3) Ali al-Naimi, the Saudi oil minister, who vowed that his country would not cut production; 4) Face trial, on charges of tax fraud, following a court ruling Monday; 5) Because the proposal would not permit donations from men who have had sex with a man in the last year; 6) Syria, Iraq, Ukraine, Nigeria, Libya, South Sudan, Central African Republic, Democratic Republic of Congo, Liberia, Sierra Leone, Guinea; 7) Saif al-Kaseasbeh, father of First Lt. Mu’ath al-Kaseasbeh, a Jordanian pilot who was captured by militants with the Islamic State after his jet crashed Wednesday in Syria while on a bombing mission against the militants; 8) A disruption to online services at both Xbox and PlayStation that a group of hackers claimed responsibility for

Categories
News

Why ‘The Interview’ marks a milestone for theater owners

The cyberattacks on Sony may be remembered for more than hackers rummaging through systems at one of the world’s top studios.

Distribution of “The Interview” in the aftermath of the cyberattack also marks a milestone in the movement of movies to streaming services and away from theaters. Sony’s announcement that it would stream the film in the US via three online services means that many people will have watched the comedy on their computers. Though Sony also released the film to about 300 theaters, that’s roughly 2,700 fewer screens than planned to show it originally.

The unfolding of events presents theater owners with a tricky test that may accelerate the arrival of a time when studios release movies to streaming services and theaters simultaneously.

“We’re watching ‘The Interview’ online tonight at 10:00 p.m.,” a boy of about 14 told two friends Wednesday at a Starbucks in Manhattan. While results of the box office remain to be seen, theater owners, who have warned for years of the disruption headed their way, seem likely to face more such sentiment.

https://twitter.com/TheInterview/status/547817336485711872

The latest drama has unfolded in ways that few theater owners or anyone for that matter anticipated. Theaters owners, faced with threats to their audiences if they screened the film as they anticipated originally, decided to delay the debut.

That produced a backlash all the way to the White House, where President Obama slammed Sony for pulling the picture. Sony said that the theater chains cancelled the booking. The chains charged they had been sold out by Sony.

Still, the dustup pales compared with the threat theater owners face from the move of entertainment to many screens from the silver screen. Though seeing a movie in a theater has its delights, the prospect of schlepping to a theater is giving way to the convenience of watching a film from on-demand services such as iTunes, Netflix and others.

The drama over distribution of “The Interview” may foretell a future that theater owners have been fearing. As Jason Lynch explains in Quartz:

“For years, premium video on-demand has been a white whale for studios, which have been unable to convince theater chain owners to grant any leeway in their traditional 90-day exclusive window after a film’s theatrical release. Those exhibitors have good reason to be worried: This year’s North American movie ticket sales fell 4%, to $10.5 billion, and one of the most reliable moviegoing demographics, kids and young adults ages 12 to 24, went to the movies 15% less often.”

At issue is a shrinking of the period between the release of a film to theaters and its availability via streaming, DVD and other platforms. As of September 25, the window averaged three months and 27 days, according to the National Association of Theater Owners, a trade group. That’s down from roughly five months and 22 days in 1997.

The window matters to the profitability of moviemakers and theater owners, who all say they will see their profits shrink if the window continues to shorten.

Not surprisingly, the two camps find themselves on the same side of the issue. According to a letter signed in 2011 by 31 filmmakers, including Kathryn Bigelow, James Cameron, Christopher Nolan and Quentin Tarantino, among others:

“Major studios are struggling to replace the revenue lost by the declining value of DVD transactions. Low-cost rentals and subscriptions are undermining higher priced DVD sales and rentals. But the problem of declining revenue in home video will not be solved by importing into the theatrical window a distribution model that cannibalizes theatrical ticket sales.”

Hundreds of millions of dollars happen to be at stake, according to the group, which calls on the studio not to alter the “sequential distribution window” that forces moviegoers to see films in theaters first.

The theater chains adopt a similar stance. “We believe that a material contraction of the current theatrical release window could significantly dilute the consumer appeal of the in-theatre motion picture offering, which could have a material adverse effect on our business and results of operations,” Regal Entertainment Group, the largest exhibitor of films in the U.S. and Canada, wrote in its most recent annual report.

Of course, the straight-to-streaming of “The Interview” may foreshadow a reckoning for theater owners that industries from music to media continue to confront. Last spring, Jeffrey Katzenberg, the CEO of DreamWorks Animation, predicted a three-week window within a decade:

“A movie will come out and you will have 17 days, that’s exactly three weekends, which is 95% of the revenue for 98% of movies. On the 18th day, these movies will be available everywhere ubiquitously and you will pay for the size. A movie screen will be $15. A 75” TV will be $4.00. A smartphone will be $1.99. That enterprise that will exist throughout the world, when that happens, and it will happen, it will reinvent the enterprise of movies.”

The attack on Sony has unearthed information about the studio that may be unflattering to its executives. But whatever slew of embarrassments and security headaches for Sony, the attack reminds us that for exhibitors, the worst may be yet to come.

Categories
News

News quiz, week ending Dec. 19

1. Negotiators from 196 countries reached an agreement in Lima on Sunday that does what?

2. Russia’s central bank on Tuesday took what action to stanch the collapse of the ruble?

3. Google this week released its list of top searches worldwide in 2014. Which one of the following did not make the list?

a) Flappy Bird, b) Frozen, c) Ferguson, d) Conchita Wurst, e) the ALS Ice Bucket Challenge, f) Robin Williams

4. Why did at least five teams in the National Hockey League delay players’ visits to hospitals and participation in charity events that normally mark the holiday season?

5. The Church of England achieved a first on Wednesday. What was it?

6. As part of the normalization of diplomatic relations announced Wednesday by the U.S. and Cuba, Americans who visit the island will be able to bring back how much worth of Cuban goods (in U.S. dollars)?

7. What prompted mayhem Thursday in Kenya’s parliament?

8. The Kepler space telescope has discovered a new planet, scientists confirmed Thursday. What is the diameter of the planet that Kepler discovered?

a) 15,000 miles, b) 20,000 miles, c) 25,000 miles, d) 30,000 miles

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

ANSWERS:

1) Creates a framework for an accord on climate change to be signed in Paris next December; 2) Increased its main interest rate to 17 percent, from 10.5 percent; 3) Ferguson; 4) Because of an outbreak of mumps around the league; 5) Named the Rev. Libby Lane as its first female bishop; 6) $400; 7) A bill to tighten security in the country that opposition members say threatens civil liberties; 8) 20,000 miles

Categories
News

The Sony Pictures hack and the decision to publish

The recent hack into systems at Sony Pictures Entertainment has spurred demands by the company that the news media refrain from publishing the plundered data.

On Sunday, lawyers for Sony delivered letters to news outlets insisting that they destroy the leaked emails, documents and other information in their possession. According to the letter, which the company’s lawyer, David Boies, sent on the studio’s behalf:

“The stolen information includes, but is not limited to, documents and information protected under U.S. and foreign legal doctrines protecting attorney-client privileged communications, attorney work product, and related privileges and protections, as well as private financial and other confidential information and communications of [Sony’s] current and former personnel and others, confidential personal data, intellectual property, trade secrets and other business secrets and related communications, and other confidential information.”

The description seems largely accurate, based on the leaks that have been reported. They include emails that contain disparaging comments by executives, information about the health of nearly three dozen employees and their families, and at least four unreleased films.

There’s reportedly more to come. The hackers, who call themselves Guardians of the Peace, claim to have taken 100 trillion bytes of documents and other material. Thus far they’ve released an estimated 235 gigabytes worth of files.

Sony’s demands on the press garnered support from some in the creative community. “As demented and criminal as it is, at least the hackers are doing it for a cause,” screenwriter Aaron Sorkin wrote in a Times op-ed. “The press is doing it for a nickel.”

Movie producer Judd Apatow compared publicizing the emails of Sony executives to publishing nude selfies of Jennifer Lawrence and other celebrities.

The news media itself wrestled with whether to publish the information. Andrew Wallenstein, co-editor-in-chief of Variety, considered a series of arguments before concluding that publishing the leaks is inevitable.

“Journalism is, in some sense, permissible thievery,” Wallenstein wrote last Thursday. “Occasionally we catch wind of what our subjects would rather us not know, and we don’t hesitate to report it if it contributes to an understanding of what we’re writing about.”

That’s not to condone the theft of information. One way to incentive hacking is to give hackers the expectation that whatever they put into the public domain will find news organizations ready to amplify it.

Still, like Wallenstein, I agree that the leaks – with the exception of personal information about the health or identities of specific people – deserve to be published. While the news media may, as Wallenstein notes, appear to be doing the hackers’ bidding, not publishing the information would be worse.

There’s little legal basis to refrain from publishing most of the information. Contrary to Boies’ assertion, the attorney-client privilege matters not at all here. The privilege applies in a judicial proceeding in which a lawyer may be called as a witness. In short, it holds that an attorney may not divulge matters communicated by a client in confidence.

David Boies cannot be forced to testify in court about matters communicated to him by his client Sony. But the privilege has nothing to do with the press.

Of course, the Constitution has everything to do with the press. Broadcasting a recording of a conversation that was picked up illegally is protected by the First Amendment.

Then there’s the apparent double standard implicit in Sony’s demand on the press to stop publishing. As Dawn Chmielewski, a reporter who covers the tech industry for Re/code, observed, referring to “The Interview,” the film from Sony that is said to have provoked the hacking:

“Sony has been talking about the importance of releasing this film and not being cowed, that the studio has a right to free expression under First Amendment concepts. So I find it interesting that now the same studio is serving journalists who are reporting on this devastating hack trying to curb our free expression rights here.”

Though hackers have dumped copyrighted movies onto file-sharing sites, news outlets have avoided republishing the material to an extent that would constitute infringement. Gawker, for example, published a 30-second clip of “The Interview,” which depicts as comedy a plot to assassinate Kim Jong-un, the North Korean leader. As Gawker sees it, the film has become newsworthy.

That judgment was affirmed late Wednesday, when Sony cancelled the film’s release. The move followed statements by theater owners that they would not show the movie, which has elicited threats of terror.

What about ethical arguments for refraining from publishing the leaked material?

Wallenstein distinguishes between reporting on the government and reporting on Sony, which of course is a corporation. “Both are sizable institutions, but am I, a journalist, entitled to see every last spreadsheet a private company has even if they were stolen just because I am reporting on Sony the way, say, Glenn Greenwald reports on Snowden?” he asks.

No, and yes.

In some ways, corporations hold as much sway over society as governments do with a fraction of the transparency. That’s true of Hollywood but it’s also true of the financial industry, the pharmaceutical industry and many others. The correspondence of U.S. presidents becomes public for everyone to read eventually. It’s hard to imagine a corporation giving the public access to the correspondence of a former CEO.

Business tends to be opaque. For all the financial results that companies file, press releases they issue and tweets they send, the fact remains that many companies control tightly the information that flows from them. The breakdown of a corporate spin machine is itself news.

It’s also impossible to report on the theft at Sony without describing what was stolen. As Wallenstein notes:

“Were a publication to report on the fact of the Sony hack and merely allude broadly to the data that has been disclosed, a tiptoe dance around the data itself begins. To convey the enormity of what Sony had stolen without any degree of specificity is to feel the quicksand pull of what’s so awfully hard to avoid here.”

Though he may have meant to type “enormousness,” Wallenstein has a point. It’s difficult to report a story about a hack without describing what was hacked. Reporting that an email exchange between Sony co-chairwoman Amy Pascal and movie producer Scott Rudin included disparaging comments by Rudin about Angelina Jolie would leave you asking the obvious question of what those comments happened to be. If I write that Rudin referred to Jolie as a “minimally talented spoiled brat,” you get it instantly.

What about Apatow’s argument? Is reporting the documents plundered by hackers tantamount to publish nude selfies of ingénues? Actually, the case for publishing the documents is much stronger. Publishing photos that someone never intended to be public violates her privacy solely for the purpose of gratifying others.

Publishing the details of business at Sony, on the other hand, sheds light on an industry. As Anne Helen Peterson writes in BuzzFeed:

“These conversations were private, but the art they produced has very public, if often sublimated, ramifications. The Lawrence hacks don’t contribute to any understanding save what Lawrence’s breasts look like. The Sony hacks speak loudly, and at length, about contemporary film industry and its generation of popular culture.”

Journalists use the term news judgment to refer to one’s ability to anticipate what does and does not constitute news. “These aren’t new challenges,” Ben Smith, BuzzFeed’s editor-in-chief, told Peterson. “Some of the greatest revelations in American history have come from sources with dubious or outright destructive motives.”

As news judgment suggests, the media has the burden of weighing the capacity of information to substantiate and explain. That includes an obligation not to injure private citizens maliciously or recklessly. But it includes a responsibility to illuminate too.

Categories
Law News

‘Millions March NYC’ images

(Photo by Brian Browdie)
(Photo by Brian Browdie)

At least 25,000 people marched through Manhattan on Saturday to highlight the deaths of Eric Garner, Michael Brown and other unarmed black men who died during encounters with police.

Some images from the day.

(Photo by Brian Browdie)
(Photo by Brian Browdie)

 

(Photo by Brian Browdie)
(Photo by Brian Browdie)
(Photo by Brian Browdie)
(Photo by Brian Browdie)
(Photo by Brian Browdie)
(Photo by Brian Browdie)
(Photo by Brian Browdie)
(Photo by Brian Browdie)
Categories
Law

The Eric Garner grand jury and the need for disclosure

The protests in New York City and across the nation over the decision by a grand jury not to issue an indictment in the death of Eric Garner follow at least in part from the incongruity between that conclusion and images of Garner’s arrest.

In video that in its varied forms has roughly 6.3 million views on YouTube, Garner tells police officers that he cannot breathe while Officer Daniel Pantaleo collars him. Whether it was a chokehold or, as Pantaleo contends, a takedown maneuver, the hold caused Garner’s death, according to the city’s medical examiner.

The calls for justice also follow, it seems, from the Garner grand jury’s decision and what we know about grand juries generally. That grand juries indict easily. That they do whatever the district attorney tells them to do. That a grand jury could “indict a ham sandwich,” as Sol Wachtler, the former chief judge of New York State, put it nearly 30 years ago.

Thus, the decision by the Garner grand jury not to indict Pantaleo mystifies many of those who have viewed the videos. By a margin of nearly three to one, Americans say the officer should have faced charges, according to a USA Today/Pew Research Center poll released Wednesday.

Of course, the American people don’t get a vote inside the grand jury room.

Still, the decision by the Garner grand jury raises the question of what legal standard guides grand jurors when deciding whether the evidence before them warrants an indictment.

Under New York law, a grand jury may indict a person when the evidence “is legally sufficient” to establish that the person committed the offense and provides reasonable cause to think that the person committed the crime.

In the Garner case, prosecutors instructed the grand jury about the law that governs a police officer’s using physical force when arresting someone. According to that law:

A police officer or a peace officer, in the course of effecting or attempting to effect an arrest, or of preventing or attempting to prevent the escape from custody, of a person whom he or she reasonably believes to have committed an offense, may use physical force when and to the extent he or she reasonably believes such to be necessary to effect the arrest, or to prevent the escape from custody, or in self-defense or to defend a third person from what he or she reasonably believes to be the use or imminent use of physical force.

We know that grand jurors received this instruction thanks to an order published recently by Acting Judge Stephen Rooney of the trial court that oversaw the Garner grand jury. The grand jurors heard from a total of 50 witnesses and reviewed 60 exhibits, including medical records, records regarding police procedures and photographs of the scene.

What we don’t know – because prosecutors appear not to have asked the court to release transcripts from the Garner grand jury’s deliberations – is what other principles of law the grand jury was instructed on.

For example, we don’t know whether prosecutors instructed grand jurors about manslaughter in the second degree, which arises when someone recklessly causes the death of another person. For purposes of the law, a person acts recklessly when he consciously disregards a substantial and unjustifiable risk of death.

We also don’t know whether grand jurors received instruction on the legal standard for criminally negligent homicide, which arises when a defendant should have been aware of a substantial and unjustifiable risk of death.

The difference between the offenses lies in the defendant’s mental state.

If the grand jury received either or both of those instructions, we don’t know whether or to what extent jurors found the evidence to be legally insufficient, based on their decision not to indict.

By law, grand juries operate in secret. Among the reasons: the law aims to protect the reputations of people who may be accused of crimes but not indicted or convicted.

The Garner case – in which the officer’s identity is clear and many of the facts have been reported widely – compelled the court to order disclosure. As Rooney noted:

Somewhat uniquely in this matter, the maintenance of trust in our criminal justice system lies at the heart of these proceedings, with implications affecting the continuing vitality of our core beliefs in fairness, and impartiality, at a crucial moment in the nation’s history, where public confidence in the even-handed application of these core values among a diverse citizenry is being questioned. It is from this vantage point that a limited incursion into the sacrosanct principle of grand jury secrecy is deemed necessary to serve overarching public interest.

The Legal Aid Society, the New York Civil Liberties Union and others are asking Rooney to unseal the grand jury proceedings completely. “Only with substantially more information about the facts and evidence it considered, and the legal instructions it received, can the public begin to understand the grand jury’s decision,” Arthur Eisenberg and Daniel Cohen of the New York Civil Liberties Union wrote in court papers filed Wednesday.

One hopes Rooney grants the requests. Until we see more of the record, we cannot know fully what transpired over the course of the nine weeks the grand jury sat. Americans may need a conversation about race relations but we also need to know that justice was done in the case of Eric Garner.

Categories
News

News quiz, week ending Dec. 12

1. On Sunday, the U.S. announced the transfer of six detainees from the prison at Guantanamo Bay to what country? How many detainees remained at Guantanamo Bay following the transfer?

2. Who said this on Sunday, referring to the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge: “To have those two, to say they were traveling here and one of the things that they wanted to do was see me play, it’s a pretty big deal in my household.”

3. On Monday, the White House announced the departure of Sam Kass at the end of this month. Name at least one job Kass holds.

4. Korean Air on Tuesday apologized for an action by a top executive that the company termed “excessive.” What did the executive do?

5. The U.S. Senate Intelligence Committee on Tuesday released a report detailing the use of torture by the CIA in the years after the 9/11 attacks. Match the quote with the person who said it (speakers below):

a. “Torture is wrong. Torture is always wrong.”

b. “Some things were done that should not have been done.”

c. “The CIA’s use of torture was a stain on our values and history.”

d. “The truth is sometimes a hard pill to swallow. It sometimes causes us difficulties at home and abroad. It is sometimes used by our enemies in attempts to hurt us. But the American people are entitled to it, nonetheless.”

e. “Every country, every country, has engaged in activities somewhere along the line that it has not been proud of.”

Senator John McCain, Prime Minister David Cameron, Vice President Joe Biden, Senator Dianne Feinstein, U.S. Director of National Intelligence James Clapper

6. An alarm clock app named “Wakie” arrived this week on Apple’s iOS. How does Wakie wake you up?

7. Who referred to Angelina Jolie as a “minimally talented spoiled brat.”

8. Trade unions in this country staged a strike Friday to protest laws they say weaken workers’ rights.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Answers:

1) Uruguay, 136; 2) LeBron James; 3) Personal chef to the first family, executive director of the first lady’s “Let’s Move” initiative, senior policy advisor on nutrition; 4) Delayed a flight from New York to Incheon after the executive took issue with the way a flight attendant served macadamia nuts in the first-class cabin; 5) a. Cameron, b. Clapper, c. Feinstein, d. McCain, e. Biden; 6) With a call from a stranger; 7) Movie producer Scott Rudin, in an email leaked this week by hackers who attacked Sony Pictures; 8) Italy

Categories
Law

‘Julie of the Wolves’ battle gives glimpse into copyright in a digital age

A battle over rights to publish an electronic edition of an award-winning children’s novel offers a glimpse into an evolving area of copyright law.

HarperCollins has the exclusive right to publish “Julie of the Wolves,” a book first published in 1971, in e-book form, a federal judge in New York has ruled. The ruling ended a lawsuit that started nearly five years ago, when HarperCollins sued Open Road Integrated Media, a publisher of electronic books that had published an e-book of the novel.

Though the fight ended recently, it has roots in a contract forged in 1971 between Jean Craighead George, the book’s author, and Harper & Row, a predecessor of HarperCollins. The agreement gave Harper & Row the right to publish “Julie of the Wolves,” which won the Newberry Medal in 1973 and tells the story of an Eskimo girl who learns to live in the wild.

In 2010, George entered into an agreement with Open Road to publish its version of her novel after HarperCollins declined to match the terms of Open Road’s offer, which included a 50% royalty to George. However, shortly after Open Road published the electronic edition, HarperCollins sued, charging that the e-book contravened a copyright that belonged to HarperCollins under the contract formed roughly 40 years earlier.

HarperCollins prevailed. “Based on a plain reading of the contractual language, we hold that the 1971 contract grants HarperCollins the exclusive right to license third parties to publish e-book versions of ‘Julie of the Wolves,’” Judge Naomi Reice Buchwald of the U.S. District Court in Manhattan wrote in a ruling last March. “This determination follows from the contract as a whole, and chiefly from Paragraphs 1, 20 and 23.”

Paragraph 1 of the agreement gave Harper & Row the exclusive right to publish “Julie of the Wolves” in book form. Together with Paragraph 23, Paragraph 20 granted Harper & Row the right to license the book “in storage and retrieval and information systems, and/or whether through computer, computer-stored, mechanical or other electronic means now or hereafter invented.”

Buchwald’s ruling should have ended the lawsuit. But Open Road, which hoped to obtain a license to publish the e-book, sold 304 more e-books between March 17, when the court issued its order, and April 9, when HarperCollins’ general counsel told Open Road’s lawyer that HarperCollins had no interest in a license and demanded that Open Road stop selling its electronic edition.

In May, HarperCollins returned to court to ask Buchwald to permanently enjoin Open Road from publishing “Julie of the Wolves” or presenting itself as an authorized publisher of the novel.

The court agreed. “Rather than take immediate steps to conform to our decision, [Open Road] apparently viewed that decision as merely a prelude to negotiations,” Buchwald wrote in an order published Nov. 24. “Furthermore, although Open Road discontinued sales after receiving HarperCollins’ demand, it is apparent that Open Road did not take every reasonable action to discontinue marketing its unauthorized edition of ‘Julie of the Wolves’ until after briefing on the appropriate remedies had commenced.”

“In other words, Open Road failed to ensure compliance with our decision until its failure was called to the Court’s attention,” Buchwald added.

The court awarded HarperCollins damages of $30,000 to compensate the company for sales of the e-book by Open Road in markets covered by HarperCollins’ copyright.

Though HarperCollins also asked the court to order to award attorneys’ fees of roughly $1 million, Buchwald denied the request, finding that Open Road’s advocating for a right at odds with the 1971 contract was not unreasonable as that term is defined by the Copyright Act.

“Our reticence to characterize the losing position as objectively unreasonable is informed by the fact that this dispute arose in the context of a developing, and still somewhat uncharted, area of copyright law,” Buchwald wrote.