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Against progress: Intellectual property and fundamental values in the internet age. By Jessica Silbey. Stanford: Stanford University Press, 2022. 448 pages, $90.00 hardcover/$30.00 paperback.

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Against progress: Intellectual property and fundamental values in the internet age. By Jessica Silbey. Stanford: Stanford University Press, 2022. 448 pages, $90.00 hardcover/$30.00 paperback.

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  01 January 2024

Or Cohen-Sasson*
Affiliation:
Faculty of Law, Tel Aviv University, Tel Aviv, Israel
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Abstract

Type
Book Reviews
Copyright
© 2022 Law and Society Association.

Jessica Silbey has done it again: Like her previous book (Reference SilbeySilbey, 2015), Silbey's new work, Against Progress: Intellectual Property and Fundamental Values in the Internet Age, urges us to rethink the very conception of intellectual property (IP) and the role it plays in society.

The conventional understanding of IP is that it creates rights designed to incentivize innovation. Once public, unprotected creative works and inventions can easily be replicated by others, diminishing the motivation to engage in the intellectual labor of producing them. Therefore, society grants creators and innovators limited, exclusive rights to their works to allow them to recoup their investments. In this way, the theory goes, IP regimes encourage creativity and innovation. Silbey refers to this conception as “the grand incentive narrative,” (Reference RoseRose, 2013, pp. 1205–07) which reflects the prevalent economic underpinnings of IP regimes (pp. 4–5).

In recent decades, however, an increasing number of scholars and activists have questioned whether this narrative reflects the actual function of IP, as well as whether this is its desired role in modern society (Reference Heller and EisenbergHeller & Eisenberg, 1998; Reference StallmanStallman, 2013). Silbey's book joins this thread; its stated objective is “to demonstrate how contemporary debates about intellectual property may be moving away from the classic story of private property rights that incentivize creativity and innovation and embracing new understandings with other fundamental values at their center.” Consistently with the principles expressed in the Intellectual Property Clause of the U.S. Constitution—“to promote the progress of science and useful arts”—Silbey examines how copyright, patents, and trademarks can and should promote fundamental values that better represent “progress” in modern society, rather than merely create commercial incentives.

Silbey's book offers a much-needed bridge between IP rights and the contemporary, evolving social justice environment. Though critical, studying this intersection has thus far been relatively marginal in the IP literature (Reference ChonChon, 1993; Reference PollackPollack, 2004). Silbey takes an important step towards bringing this topic to the forefront. She argues that “progress” no longer means what it meant 230 years ago; at that time, “progress” implied “more” (namely, economic progress), leading to an overexpansion of IP rights. Today, she contends, sociopolitical interests such as equality, privacy, distributive justice, and institutional resiliency reflect a more modern understanding of “progress” (namely, social progress) that is based on promoting these interests rather than on strengthening monopolistic rights. Notably, the book explores the interplay between IP and fundamental values in the context of Web 2.0 and the Digital Age, as society has become much more networked and virtual.

Through her analysis of caselaw and observations drawn from interviews with creators and innovators, Silbey underscores how everyday IP matters contribute to and are influenced by the discourse of fundamental values. For instance, the Naruto case—the monkey who took a selfie and “claimed” copyright (pp. 1–4); a patent dispute regarding the reselling of genetically modified seeds (pp. 126–130); and IP initiatives such as the Innovator's Patent Agreement and patent pledges by mega-corporations (pp. 261–265) demonstrate, respectively, that IP plays a role in the fields of animal rights, equal treatment, and autonomy.

Chapter 1, Everybody's a Photographer Now, illuminates how the concept of photography authorship is being reshaped in the digital environment. Chapter 2, Equality, reveals equality-related principles, specifically nondiscrimination and anti-hierarchy, in IP caselaw. Chapter 3, Privacy, addresses the interrelationship between IP and privacy. Chapter 4, Distributive Justice, suggests that creators and inventors are more tolerant and accepting of unauthorized uses than is commonly assumed. Finally, Chapter 5, Precarity and Institutional Failures, contours a relatively new trend in IP law: a focus on communities and institutions rather than on individuals.

A particularly interesting argument that emerges from Silbey's work concerns the complex reciprocity of IP and privacy. Silbey points out a two-directional interaction: Parties annex IP-related arguments to privacy arguments to secure a legal advantage, such as to overcome First Amendment constraints that may otherwise block privacy claims, or to acquire priority in the legal balance of rights (pp. 168–169). Conversely, parties invoke relational privacy rights—mainly the control of identity—as an instrument to secure IP-like interests, among others (pp. 192–193). Silbey interlaces this argument beautifully with insights from multiple legal cases, anchoring her analysis in real-life examples and illustrating the sophisticated, underexplored relationships between IP and democratic (though not necessarily constitutional) principles.

Silbey also forcefully underscores the tension between values advanced by IP law and those creators and innovators wish to protect. This dissonance is especially evident in the practices and business models of photographers in the Digital Age. High connectivity has given some entities, according to Silbey, “inordinate market power.” These parties (e.g., Getty or Flickr) serve as intermediaries, not as creators of artistic works; nevertheless, they are the primary beneficiaries of the current copyright regime. Silbey emphasizes the mismatch between creators of original digital content and those who reap the benefits of current copyright law, noting that it can yield absurd results: copyright enforcement sometimes prohibits uses that most photographers would tolerate or even encourage, while other uses that threaten photographers' interests and professional standards are practiced freely (pp. 46–66, 80–86).

Against Progress not only extracts observations from numerous cases, it also draws insights from 107 interviewees, including scientists, photographers, engineers, and IP attorneys (pp. 311–333). Silbey's qualitative methodology—her close reading of court cases and investigation of her interviewees' practices and considerations—collects both legal and sociological understandings of IP and merges them into one constructive corpus. However, the conclusions she draws would benefit from quantitative research to provide measurable evidence for her study's findings. Indeed, Silbey calls on others to verify her results (p. 318). I believe that a widely distributed, cross-sectional survey would fit the task. For example, Silbey's findings could be tested through research involving two separate surveys: one for IP lawyers to assess what legal players think of the actual status of fundamental values in IP law as arising from statutes and caselaw; and a second for creators and innovators to examine which values they desire to protect through IP rights.

I conclude with a critical observation. Throughout the book, Silbey often presents a confrontational relationship between the economic progress and social progress approaches to IP, using terminology such as “tension,” “alternative,” and “shift gears,” and juxtaposing the “old story” with the “new story” (pp. 4–5, 214, 271, 307). But economic progress and social progress are not necessarily binary alternatives. Enhanced autonomy and equality, for instance, may lead to further creativity and innovation as individuals have more liberty and access to engage in the arts and sciences. Indeed, Silbey acknowledges the potential for positive synergies between economic and social interests (e.g., pp. 261–265); yet she does not give this idea the attention I believe it is due. Portraying these interests as complementary rather than confrontational would have made the book's argument even more compelling.

Nonetheless, this criticism does not alter my view that Silbey's latest book is a necessary contribution to the extant literature. While the book will undoubtedly be of great interest to IP scholars, it also offers valuable insights to sociologists and legal scholars engaged in the discourse of fundamental values, as well as to researchers interested in the effects of a changing social and technological climate on longstanding narratives, norms, and legal systems.

References

REFERENCES

Chon, Margaret. 1993. “Postmodern 'Progress': Reconsidering the Copyright and Patent Power.” DePaul Law Review 43: 97146.Google Scholar
Heller, Michael, and Eisenberg, Rebecca. 1998. “Can Patents Deter Innovation? The Anticommons in Biomedical Research.” Science 280: 698701.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Pollack, Malla. 2004. “The Democratic Public Domain: Reconnecting the Modern First Amendment and the Original Progress Clause (A.K.A. Copyright and Patent Clause).” Jurimetrics 45: 2340.Google Scholar
Rose, Simone. 2013. “The Supreme Court and Patents: Moving Toward a Postmodern Vision of 'Progress'?Fordham Intellectual Property Media and Entertainment Law Journal 23: 11971247.Google Scholar
Silbey, Jessica. 2015. The Eureka Myth: Creators, Innovators, and Everyday Intellectual Property. Stanford: Stanford Law Books.Google Scholar
Stallman, Richard. 2013. “Patent Law Is, at Best, Not Worth Keeping.” Loyola University Chicago Law Journal 45: 389399.Google Scholar