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Fwd: Publisher Loses Ruling on E-Books

Jul 13, 2001 12:16 PM
by Eldon B Tucker


The following might be of interest to theosophical authors.
If the book was written and published a few years back, the
publisher may not have electronic rights to the book. This
might mean that many authors could put their books on the
Internet and distribute them in ebook form, if they wish,
without needing advance permission from the publishers.

-- Eldon

--------------------
Publisher Loses Ruling on E-Books
--------------------

Courts: Judge says traditional contract doesn't contain right to issue
authors' works electronically.

DAVID STREITFELD
TIMES STAFF WRITER

July 12 2001

A traditional book publishing contract does not automatically cover the
rights to issue the work electronically, a federal judge ruled Wednesday.

In denying a request from Random House for a preliminary injunction
against upstart electronic publisher RosettaBooks, U.S. District Judge
Sidney Stein in New York delivered a major setback to established
publishers and a modest victory to writers.

"This decision says that authors own the e-book rights to their works,"
RosettaBooks lawyer Michael Boni said. "We're quite pleased."
RosettaBooks, based in New York, began selling e-books Feb. 26. Among its
initial offerings were eight titles by Kurt Vonnegut Jr., William Styron
and Robert B. Parker. RosettaBooks got the rights from the authors' agents.

On Feb. 27, RosettaBooks was sued for contract interference and copyright
infringement by Random House, which had issued the eight novels back when
electronic texts were pure science fiction.

It was not until recently that traditional publishing houses added clauses
in contracts to cover electronic rights to authors' works.

Those older contracts, however, gave Random House the right to publish the
works "in book form." Because an e-book reproduces the whole work,
faithfully presenting the tale just as the author intended, Random House
argued in court that it controlled those rights as well.

Judge Stein disagreed, but he emphasized at the conclusion of his 20-page
ruling that "this is neither a victory for technophiles nor a defeat for
Luddites. . . . Because Random House is not likely to succeed on the
merits of its copyright infringement claim and cannot demonstrate
irreparable harm, its motion for a preliminary injunction should be denied."

A spokesman for Random House, the country's largest book publisher,
couldn't be reached for comment. Random House is owned by German media
giant Bertelsmann.

Letty Cottin Pogrebin, president of the Authors Guild, told Bloomberg
News, "We're overjoyed. It's not a final decision, but it seems that it
verifies and affirms our rights, and we hope other publishers take note."

The decision was the second in a row to go against traditional purveyors
of content. The Supreme Court ruled last month that freelancers own the
electronic rights to their stories. The decision means electronic
databases must either pay the freelancers for their archived material or
excise it.

For five years or so, publishing contracts have specifically addressed the
question of electronic rights. But there are many works that are still in
print that depend on contracts written before 1996, and these "backlists"
are a steady source of revenue for publishing houses.

The eight works at issue in this case included Vonnegut's "Player Piano,"
which was published half a century ago, as well as his "Breakfast of
Champions" and Styron's "Sophie's Choice," both of which appeared in the
'70s.
Michael Cader, who publishes a daily electronic newsletter about
publishing, said both sides of the case had a reasonable point. From the
authors' point of view, he recognized that the only rights granted in
contracts were the ones specifically listed and that if a right wasn't
granted it was withheld. So authors should control e-book rights.

But Cader also noted that contracts usually have clauses saying the author
won't compete with the publisher by issuing any versions of the work
himself or allowing anyone else to do so.

"A successful version of an e-book is potentially dead-on competitive with
the traditional book," Cader said. In that sense, he said, Random House's
argument will only sharpen with time. "The closer e-books come to being a
viable product, the less distinction there is to be drawn between book
publication and e-book publication."

In the last few years, as Internet usage has surged, there has been much
hype about e-books but minimal action in the marketplace. Random House's
own AtRandom.com, which was announced a year ago as a digital-only
emporium, debuted in February to sales that reportedly didn't exceed more
than a few dozen per title. The publisher quickly announced that the books
would be issued in the traditional form as well.

Such disappointments are likely to temper the immediate consequences of
Wednesday's decision. But Boni, RosettaBooks's lawyer, said there now
would be "less trepidation" among writers and agents in selling electronic
rights to other literary classics.

Copyright 2001, Los Angeles Times



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