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Tasini, Further Developments?



The clip below is reproduced from a recent issue of Library Journal's e-edition, the only place I'd seen reference to this new ruling about the Tasini settlement. Anyone else surprised? Ann Okerson/Yale Library

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Freelance Writers "Outraged" as Appeals Court Voids Settlement in Tasini Case

The Second Circuit Court of Appeals last week voided a March 2005 settlement agreement between freelance writers and publishers following the landmark 2001 New York Times v. Tasini Supreme Court decision, a ruling that found publishers had violated freelancer's copyrights by using their works in electronic databases without permission. The Second Circuit, in a 2 to 1 decision, ruled that under U.S. copyright law, although no registration is necessary to secure copyright, registration is required to sue for damages. Because the overwhelming majority of freelance writers' works included in the settlement were not registered, the Second Circuit held that the District Court was wrong to approve payments under the negotiated settlement.

"The precise issue on appeal is whether the District Court had jurisdiction to certify a class consisting of claims arising from the infringement of unregistered copyrights and to approve a settlement with respect to those claims," the decision reads. "We hold that it did not. We therefore vacate its order and judgment and remand the case for proceedings consistent with this opinion." In a dissenting opinion, however, Chief Judge John M. Walker argued that the non-registration should not disqualify the agreement, holding that registering for a copyright was more like a "claim-processing rule" than a "jurisdictional prerequisite."

The ruling voids a deal in which publishers' agreed to pay a minimum of $10 million and a maximum of $18 million to writers. Notably, in an FAQ on the claims site for writers freelancers were explicitly told copyright registration was not needed, and both sides in the settlement had agreed to compensate writers for unregistered works. "Even if you did not register the copyright, you would still be eligible for cash compensation in the Settlement," the FAQ notes, citing a "Category C Compensation for unregistered Eligible Works." The modest settlement would've paid as much as $60 for unregistered works sold for $3000 or more and as little as $5 for works that were written for less than $300.

Gerard Colby, president of the National Writers Union, declared the second circuit decision "an outrage," saying the court essentially affirmed that "unregistered writers can't sue for anything, even compensatory damages." The Second Circuit's decision, meanwhile, does not affect the Supreme Court's ruling that freelance writers' copyrights were infringed. It could affect, however, how many writers benefit from that decision and will likely send attorneys back to the slow, costly drawing legal board for freelance writers.

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