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action or later. Please see Debugging in WordPress for more information. (This message was added in version 6.7.0.) in /home4/scienrds/scienceandnerds/wp-includes/functions.php on line 6114Source: https:\/\/www.theverge.com\/23139793\/nft-crypto-copyright-ownership-primer-cornell-ic3<\/a> A long-running meme at The Verge is that copyright law is the only functional law on the internet \u2014 the entire internet is just made of copies, after all, so copyright law has become the go-to mechanism for everything from fighting harassment to stopping leaks. Confusion about how copyright law works is everywhere \u2014 and it\u2019s getting even more complicated in the world of Web3. What does \u201cowning\u201d something on a blockchain mean, when that something is still just a bit of code that can be infinitely copied? Courts and lawmakers haven\u2019t settled the question, and many NFT projects have run into immediate, confounding problems as they have conflated owning an NFT with owning a copyright. <\/em><\/p>\n To help, we\u2019ve adapted <\/em>a guide on copyright and the blockchain<\/em><\/a> from three legal scholars from Cornell University and the Initiative for CryptoCurrencies and Contracts (IC3) \u2014 James Grimmelmann, Yan Ji, and Tyler Kell. It explains how courts might actually treat NFTs \u2014 and why everyone who buys and sells them needs to take copyright law more seriously. – Adi Robertson and Nilay Patel<\/em><\/p>\n *<\/em><\/p>\n Many blockchain projects \u2014 like non-fungible tokens (NFTs) and decentralized autonomous organizations (DAOs) \u2014 are designed to provide new or more convenient ways to own and sell creative works.<\/p>\n But at the same time, many of these projects have run into copyright trouble due to confusion about how copyright law applies to NFTs. Here are just a few problems they\u2019ve encountered:<\/p>\n Ownership of an NFT can<\/em> be used to give the owner substantial control over a creative work, but that control is not automatic. Copyright law does not give an NFT owner any rights unless the creator takes affirmative steps to make sure that it does \u2014 ideally, by executing a standard, formal copyright license to the work connected to the NFT.<\/p>\n Our survey of some existing NFT projects and their licenses reveals that very few of them take all of the necessary steps needed to make NFT copyrights behave the way that people expect. Thinking through the legal issues should be part of the NFT design process, not an afterthought.<\/p>\n Many blockchain projects are based on the premise of ownership<\/em>. But what does owning an NFT actually mean? To answer that, we need to recognize the difference between \u201con-chain\u201d and \u201coff-chain\u201d assets.<\/p>\n It\u2019s common in crypto to hear things like \u201cAlice owns 10 Bitcoins.\u201d Bitcoin is an on-chain<\/em> asset: something that exists as a self-contained entry on a blockchain. When someone says Alice \u201cowns\u201d a Bitcoin, they typically mean she controls the private key to a blockchain address, either directly or via a cryptocurrency wallet. If she wants, she can choose to transfer that Bitcoin to another address.[1]<\/a><\/p>\n NFTs have an on-chain component too, typically a software-based smart contract that whoever controls the key can initiate. But sometimes that blockchain entry represents something that exists off-chain \u2014 like a tungsten cube<\/a>.[2]<\/a> <\/em>The Tungsten Cube NFT blockchain entry is not the same as the physical tungsten cube. But according to the project creator TungstenDAO, the Tungsten Cube NFT and the actual tungsten cube are connected.[3]<\/a><\/p>\n Here, the rights to an off-chain asset (the physical cube) are linked by an invisible legal connection to an on-chain asset (the NFT). Lawyers sometimes call this connection \u201ctethering\u201d \u2014 although some legal scholars<\/a> are skeptical about whether tethering actually holds up in court.<\/p>\n This means there are actually three (yes, three) different kinds of assets involved in this NFT.<\/p>\n If everything works correctly, the legal right links the on-chain NFT to the off-chain cube. The current owner of the NFT can control the physical cube because they also own<\/em> the associated legal right.[4]<\/a><\/p>\n A tungsten cube is a specific physical object that exists in only one place. (Any other cube, even if it\u2019s identical-looking, is a different cube!) But a creative work<\/em> can be intangible and take many forms. It can exist in one unique object, like an oil painting on a canvas. It can exist in many copies at once, like when a publisher prints thousands of copies of a book. It can exist in no copies at all, like when one person tells another person a story.<\/p>\n Legally speaking, a creative work is not the same thing as any of its copies \u2014 someone can own a copyright<\/em> but not a specific copy<\/em> of their work, or vice versa. That\u2019s because a copyright is a limited set of exclusive rights<\/a> that\u2019s not tied to any specific physical object. Most importantly, owning the copyright to a creative work includes the right to make more copies of the work and prevent anyone else from doing so (that\u2019s why it\u2019s called a \u201ccopy\u201d \u201cright.\u201d) It also includes the right to make derivative<\/a> works<\/a> like a movie adaptation.<\/p>\n Let\u2019s say Bob writes a book and sells a copy to Alice. Here\u2019s what they each own:<\/p>\n Now let\u2019s say Alice wants to make a movie out of Bob\u2019s novel. She needs Bob\u2019s permission, and she can get it one of two ways: by buying the copyright outright from Bob, or by getting him to give her a license<\/em>.<\/p>\n Buying the copyright is known as a \u201ctransfer of ownership,\u201d and it moves all the rights Bob had into Alice\u2019s possession. She\u2019d have the option to make her movie, and also to authorize other derivative works like a graphic novel or action figures. <\/p>\n A license is more limited. Bob would grant specific rights to Alice, but he\u2019d keep the overall copyright, so the results might look something like this:<\/p>\n The same splits exist for other kinds of creative work. If you buy an oil painting from an artist, for instance, you don\u2019t necessarily receive ownership of the copyright. Yes, you own the original canvas with paint on it, but the artist retains the copyright, and they can sell prints of it if they like. If you want to buy the copyright too, you\u2019d need to get a separate agreement.<\/p>\n This was all much easier before the internet, when making copies required things like printing presses and vinyl-record-stamping plants. Making copies was expensive, so they were scarce<\/em>: there were only so many copies to go around, making it easy to put a price tag on each copy. Since all of this was expensive, only a handful of people ever really had to think about copyright law.<\/p>\n But the internet made the cost of copying effectively drop to zero. NFTs are in some ways a reaction to that: since there are only so many NFTs in a mint, they create digital scarcity<\/em>, and they can be priced like the books and CDs of old. But they\u2019re running right into the basic fact of the internet, which is that it\u2019s trivially easy to make copies, and the boundaries of copyright law are pushed by ordinary people every day.<\/p>\n As explained above, NFTs can theoretically be \u201ctethered\u201d to a legal right. But there are two separate rights in play here: the right to possess<\/em> one copy<\/em> of the creative work (the way one could possess a tungsten cube), and the right to make copies<\/em> and create derivatives of the original creative work. These rights could be bundled into one NFT. But they could also be divided \u2014 into, as an artist might call them, a \u201cCopy NFT\u201d and a \u201cCopyright NFT.\u201d<\/p>\n To see the difference in practice, let\u2019s look at Spice DAO. The project bought and tokenized ownership of one physical copy of Jodorowsky\u2019s pitch book. So the owners of SPICE tokens can collectively decide to sell or lend<\/a> that one copy<\/em> or put it on public display offline. (That\u2019s similar to a \u201cCopy NFT.\u201d) But the copyright<\/em> to the Dune<\/em> novel is still held by Frank Herbert\u2019s estate<\/a>, which licensed film rights to Legendary Entertainment, which produced the 2021 film version. And the copyrights in the artwork in the pitch book are held by the original artists<\/a> and their estates. In other words, there isn\u2019t<\/em> a \u201cCopyright NFT.\u201d The Spice DAO can\u2019t make additional copies of the pitch book, or make derivative works from it, like a movie. They just have the book.<\/p>\n When you\u2019re talking about digital copies instead of physical ones, things get more complicated, because the law has an unintuitive definition of \u201ccopy.\u201d It includes any \u201cmaterial objects \u2026 from which the work can be perceived, reproduced, or otherwise communicated,\u201d including computer hard drives and sometimes even computer memory<\/a>.[5]<\/a> Every computer that interacts with the work makes a separate \u201ccopy\u201d for copyright purposes; even just browsing to a webpage makes a \u201ccopy\u201d of the images on that page for your computer to display to you.<\/p>\n US copyright law explicitly states<\/a> that transfers of copyrights and transfers of copies are different.[6]<\/a> This means that for most NFTs, a \u201cCopy NFT\u201d actually needs<\/em> some kind of \u201cCopyright NFT\u201d element \u200b\u200bthat lets the owner make more copies \u2014 or they\u2019ll become an infringer the moment they access the art on their computer.<\/p>\n Actually ensuring that NFT owners have the copyrights they think they do is a subtler problem than it appears. Consider the following passage from the Bored Ape Yacht Club Terms & Conditions<\/a>:<\/p>\n i. You Own the NFT. Each Bored Ape is an NFT on the Ethereum blockchain. When you purchase an NFT, you own the underlying Bored Ape, the Art, completely.<\/p>\n This looks like it tethers ownership of the copyright to ownership of the NFT \u2014 that if a buyer sells the NFT, for instance, they sell the copyright as well. Unfortunately, U.S. copyright law sets a high threshold for what it takes to transfer ownership of a copyright, requiring that transfer be \u201cin writing and signed by the owner.\u201d[7]<\/a><\/p>\n The writing part isn\u2019t a problem; the terms on the website count as \u201cwriting\u201d under federal law<\/a>. And under the E-SIGN Act<\/a>, even a digital signature like a person\u2019s name printed in a script typeface can be a<\/a> signature[8]<\/a> Courts have held<\/a> that clicking \u201cI agree\u201d to a website\u2019s terms when you create an account is enough to show an \u201cintent to sign.\u201d So an NFT maker could satisfy that requirement by modifying the terms to add a signature line.<\/p>\n The real problem crops up when one NFT buyer tries to pass on ownership of their copyright. Let\u2019s imagine Alice buys an NFT from a fictitious company that uses the same terms as BAYC. Alice acquires full ownership of the copyright from that company. (She can display it in her Twitter profile, sue right-clickers for infringement, etc.) Then she sells the NFT to Bob on OpenSea. This should theoretically transfer the copyright too.<\/p>\n
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A blockchain primer<\/h2>\n
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A copyright primer<\/h2>\n
Now back to NFTs<\/h2>\n
Selling a copyright is hard. Licensing it is easier.<\/h2>\n