House Resolution 354 (1999)
House Resolution 354 (1999)
106th Congress - 1st Session
Introduced in the House of Representatives 1/19/99
by
Mr. Coble which was referred to the Committee of the Judiciary
A BILL
To amend title 17, United States Code, to provide protection for
certain collections of information. Be it enacted by the Senate and
House of Representatives of the United States of America in Congress
assembled,
SECTION 1. SHORT TITLE.
This Act may be cited as the `Collections of Information Antipiracy
Act'.
SEC. 2. MISAPPROPRIATION OF COLLECTIONS OF INFORMATION.
Title 17, United States Code, is amended by adding at the end the
following new chapter:
CHAPTER 14--MISAPPROPRIATION OF COLLECTIONS OF INFORMATION
1401. Definitions.
1402. Prohibition against misappropriation.
1403. Permitted acts.
1404. Exclusions.
1405. Relationship to other laws.
1406. Civil remedies.
1407. Criminal offenses and penalties.
1408. Limitations on actions.
Sec. 1401. Definitions
As used in this chapter:
(1) COLLECTION OF INFORMATION- The term `collection of information'
means information that has been collected and has been organized for
the purpose of bringing discrete items of information together in one
place or through one source so that users may access them.
(2) INFORMATION- The term `information' means facts, data, works of
authorship, or any other intangible material capable of being collected
and organized in a systematic way.
(3) POTENTIAL MARKET- The term `potential market' means any market that
a person claiming protection under section 1402 has current and
demonstrable plans to exploit or that is commonly exploited by persons
offering similar products or services incorporating collections of
information.
(4) COMMERCE- The term `commerce' means all commerce which may be
lawfully regulated by the Congress.
Sec. 1402. Prohibition against misappropriation
`Any person who extracts, or uses in commerce, all or a substantial
part, measured either quantitatively or qualitatively, of a collection
of information gathered, organized, or maintained by another person
through the investment of substantial monetary or other resources, so
as to cause harm to the actual or potential market of that other
person, or a successor in interest of that other person, for a product
or service that incorporates that collection of information and is
offered or intended to be offered for sale or otherwise in commerce by
that other person, or a successor in interest of that person, shall be
liable to that person or successor in interest for the remedies set
forth in section 1406.
Sec. 1403. Permitted acts
(a) EDUCATIONAL, SCIENTIFIC, RESEARCH, AND ADDITIONAL REASONABLE USES-
(1) CERTAIN NONPROFIT EDUCATIONAL, SCIENTIFIC, OR RESEARCH USES-
Notwithstanding section 1402, no person shall be restricted from
extracting or using information for nonprofit educational, scientific,
or research purposes in a manner that does not harm directly the actual
market for the product or service referred to in section 1402.
(2) ADDITIONAL REASONABLE USES-
(A) IN GENERAL- Notwithstanding section 1402, an individual act of use
or extraction of information done for the purpose of illustration,
explanation, example, comment, criticism, teaching, research, or
analysis, in an amount appropriate and customary for that purpose, is
not a violation of this chapter, if it is reasonable under the
circumstances. In determining whether such an act is reasonable under
the circumstances, the following factors shall be considered:
(i) The extent to which the use or extraction is commercial or
nonprofit.
(ii) The good faith of the person making the use or extraction.
(iii) The extent to which and the manner in which the portion used or
extracted is incorporated into an independent work or collection, and
the degree of difference between the collection from which the use or
extraction is made and the independent work or collection.
(iv) Whether the collection from which the use or extraction is made is
primarily developed for or marketed to persons engaged in the same
field or business as the person making the use or extraction.
In no case shall a use or extraction be permitted under this paragraph
if the used or extracted portion is offered or intended to be offered
for sale or otherwise in commerce and is likely to serve as a market
substitute for all or part of the collection from which the use or
extraction is made.
(B) DEFINITION- For purposes of this paragraph, the term `individual
act' means an act that is not part of a pattern, system, or repeated
practice by the same party, related parties, or parties acting in
concert with respect to the same collection of information or a series
of related collections of information.
(b) INDIVIDUAL ITEMS OF INFORMATION AND OTHER INSUBSTANTIAL PARTS-
Nothing in this chapter shall prevent the extraction or use of an
individual item of information, or other insubstantial part of a
collection of information, in itself. An individual item of
information, including a work of authorship, shall not itself be
considered a substantial part of a collection of information under
section 1402. Nothing in this subsection shall permit the repeated or
systematic extraction or use of individual items or insubstantial parts
of a collection of information so as to circumvent the prohibition
contained in section 1402.
(c) GATHERING OR USE OF INFORMATION OBTAINED THROUGH OTHER MEANS-
Nothing in this chapter shall restrict any person from independently
gathering information or using information obtained by means other than
extracting it from a collection of information gathered, organized, or
maintained by another person through the investment of substantial
monetary or other resources.
(d) USE OF INFORMATION FOR VERIFICATION- Nothing in this chapter
shall restrict any person from extracting or using a collection of
information within any entity or organization, for the sole purpose of
verifying the accuracy of information independently gathered,
organized, or maintained by that person. Under no circumstances shall
the information so used be extracted from the original collection and
made available to others in a manner that harms the actual or potential
market for the collection of information from which it is extracted or
used.
(e) NEWS REPORTING- Nothing in this chapter shall restrict any
person from extracting or using information for the sole purpose of
news reporting, including news gathering, dissemination, and comment,
unless the information so extracted or used is time sensitive and has
been gathered by a news reporting entity, and the extraction or use is
part of a consistent pattern engaged in for the purpose of direct
competition.
(f) TRANSFER OF COPY- Nothing in this chapter shall restrict the
owner of a particular lawfully made copy of all or part of a collection
of information from selling or otherwise disposing of the possession of
that copy.
Sec. 1404. Exclusions
(a) GOVERNMENT COLLECTIONS OF INFORMATION-
(1) EXCLUSION- Protection under this chapter shall not extend to
collections of information gathered, organized, or maintained by or for
a government entity, whether Federal, State, or local, including any
employee or agent of such entity, or any person exclusively licensed by
such entity, within the scope of the employment, agency, or license.
Nothing in this subsection shall preclude protection under this chapter
for information gathered, organized, or maintained by such an agent or
licensee that is not within the scope of such agency or license, or by
a Federal or State educational institution in the course of engaging in
education or scholarship.
(2) EXCEPTION- The exclusion under paragraph (1) does not apply to any
information required to be collected and disseminated--
(A) under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 by a national securities
exchange, a registered securities association, or a registered
securities information processor, subject to section 1405(g) of this
title;
(B) under the Commodity Exchange Act by a contract market, subject to
section 1405(g) of this title.
(b) COMPUTER PROGRAMS-
(1) PROTECTION NOT EXTENDED- Subject to paragraph (2), protection under
this chapter shall not extend to computer programs, including, but not
limited to, any computer program used in the manufacture, production,
operation, or maintenance of a collection of information, or any
element of a computer program necessary to its operation.
(2) INCORPORATED COLLECTIONS OF INFORMATION- A collection of
information that is otherwise subject to protection under this chapter
is not disqualified from such protection solely because it is
incorporated into a computer program.
(c) DIGITAL ONLINE COMMUNICATIONS- Protection under this chapter
shall not extend to a product or service incorporating a collection of
information gathered, organized, or maintained to address, route,
forward, transmit, or store digital online communications or provide or
receive access to connections for digital online communications.
Sec. 1405. Relationship to other laws
(a) OTHER RIGHTS NOT AFFECTED- Subject to subsection (b), nothing in
this chapter shall affect rights, limitations, or remedies concerning
copyright, or any other rights or obligations relating to information,
including laws with respect to patent, trademark, design rights,
antitrust, trade secrets, privacy, access to public documents, and the
law of contract.
(b) PREEMPTION OF STATE LAW- On or after the effective date of this
chapter, all rights that are equivalent to the rights specified in
section 1402 with respect to the subject matter of this chapter shall
be governed exclusively by Federal law, and no person is entitled to
any equivalent right in such subject matter under the common law or
statutes of any State. State laws with respect to trademark, design
rights, antitrust, trade secrets, privacy, access to public documents,
and the law of contract shall not be deemed to provide equivalent
rights for purposes of this subsection.
(c) RELATIONSHIP TO COPYRIGHT- Protection under this chapter is
independent of, and does not affect or enlarge the scope, duration,
ownership, or subsistence of, any copyright protection or limitation,
including, but not limited to, fair use, in any work of authorship that
is contained in or consists in whole or part of a collection of
information. This chapter does not provide any greater protection to a
work of authorship contained in a collection of information, other than
a work that is itself a collection of information, than is available to
that work under any other chapter of this title.
(d) ANTITRUST- Nothing in this chapter shall limit in any way the
constraints on the manner in which products and services may be
provided to the public that are imposed by Federal and State antitrust
laws, including those regarding single suppliers of products and
services.
(e) LICENSING- Nothing in this chapter shall restrict the rights of
parties freely to enter into licenses or any other contracts with
respect to the use of collections of information.
(f) COMMUNICATIONS ACT OF 1934- Nothing in this chapter shall affect
the operation of the provisions of the Communications Act of 1934 (47
U.S.C. 151 et seq.), or shall restrict any person from extracting or
using subscriber list information, as such term is defined in section
222(f)(3) of the Communications Act of 1934 (47 U.S.C. 222(f)(3)), for
the purpose of publishing telephone directories in any format.
(g) SECURITIES AND COMMODITIES MARKET INFORMATION-
(1) FEDERAL AGENCIES AND ACTS- Nothing in this chapter shall
affect
(A) the operation of the provisions of the Securities Exchange Act of
1934 (15 U.S.C. 78a et seq.) or the Commodity Exchange Act (7 U.S.C. 1
et seq.);
(B) the jurisdiction or authority of the Securities and Exchange
Commission and the Commodity Futures Trading Commission; or
(C) the functions and operations of self-regulatory organizations and
securities information processors under the provisions of the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934 and the rules and regulations
thereunder, including making market information available pursuant to
the provisions of that Act and the rules and regulations promulgated
thereunder.
(2) PROHIBITION- Notwithstanding any provision in subsection (a), (b),
(c), (d), or (f) of section 1403, nothing in this chapter shall permit
the extraction, use, resale, or other disposition of real-time market
information except as the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, the
Commodity Exchange Act, and the rules and regulations thereunder may
otherwise provide. In addition, nothing in subsection (e) of section
1403 shall be construed to permit any person to extract or use
real-time market information in a manner that constitutes a market
substitute for a real-time market information service (including the
real-time systematic updating of or display of a substantial part of
market information) provided on a real-time basis.
(3) DEFINITION- As used in this subsection, the term `market
information' means information relating to quotations and transactions
that is collected, processed, distributed, or published pursuant to the
provisions of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 or by a contract
market that is designated by the Commodity Futures Trading Commission
pursuant to the Commodity Exchange Act and the rules and regulations
thereunder.
Sec. 1406. Civil remedies
(a) CIVIL ACTIONS- Any person who is injured by a violation of section
1402 may bring a civil action for such a violation in an appropriate
United States district court without regard to the amount in
controversy, except that any action against a State governmental entity
may be brought in any court that has jurisdiction over claims against
such entity.
(b) TEMPORARY AND PERMANENT INJUNCTIONS- Any court having
jurisdiction of a civil action under this section shall have the power
to grant temporary and permanent injunctions, according to the
principles of equity and upon such terms as the court may deem
reasonable, to prevent a violation of section 1402. Any such injunction
may be served anywhere in the United States on the person enjoined, and
may be enforced by proceedings in contempt or otherwise by any United
States district court having jurisdiction over that person.
(c) IMPOUNDMENT- At any time while an action under this section is
pending, the court may order the impounding, on such terms as it deems
reasonable, of all copies of contents of a collection of information
extracted or used in violation of section 1402, and of all masters,
tapes, disks, diskettes, or other articles by means of which such
copies may be reproduced. The court may, as part of a final judgment or
decree finding a violation of section 1402, order the remedial
modification or destruction of all copies of contents of a collection
of information extracted or used in violation of section 1402, and of
all masters, tapes, disks, diskettes, or other articles by means of
which such copies may be reproduced.