User Generated Content Promotions: Balancing The Sponsor's Rights Against Risks

INTRODUCTION

User generated content (“UGC”) has quickly come to dominate the current landscape of online promotions and marketing initiatives.  As UGC is generally made available for public viewing without prior screening, its growing prevalence raises liability concerns when the UGC contains third party references or materials.  Web site operators/promotion sponsors have broad protections under the Communications Decency Act (“CDA”) and the Digital Millennium Copyright Act (“DMCA”) against liability for infringing UGC, but that protection is not without limits.

Promotion sponsors often want the right to exploit certain UGC beyond posting it online in connection with the promotion.  For example, a sponsor may want to incorporate artwork created by entrants in an online contest in a print or television advertisement for a new product or service.  Similarly, video submissions entered into a contest tied to a motion picture’s theatrical release may make a great “extras” feature to include in the DVD release of the motion picture.  To secure such rights, the official rules for UGC promotions generally accord the promotion sponsor a broad grant of rights to further exploit UGC submissions or require a transfer of ownership in the UGC to the promotion sponsor upon posting.  These mechanisms enable the promotion sponsor to utilize the UGC more fully, if it so chooses, but these options also raise the question of whether a transfer of ownership in UGC affects the scope of protection offered to the promotion sponsor under the CDA and DMCA.
 

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Some Rights Reserved - Copyright Terminations Coming Into Clearer Focus

"Seventy years after Eric Knight first penned his tale of the devoted Lassie who struggled to come home, at least some of the fruits of his labors will benefit his daughter." So said the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit in Classic Media Inc. v. Mewborn on July 11, 2008, when it held that Eric Knight’s daughter had duly terminated the motion picture, television and other rights that had been granted in the "beloved children’s story ‘Lassie Come Home’", which her father first published in 1938. In so holding, the Ninth Circuit significantly narrowed its precedent-setting 2005 copyright termination opinion relating to "Winnie the Pooh," which held that copyright grantees could renegotiate their terminable grants and, thereby, avoid termination under Section 304 of the Copyright Act. Offering some hope for grantees seeking to renegotiate their terminable copyright grants, the Classic Media decision left the door slightly ajar to the possibility that a renegotiation did not have to occur during the actual five-year termination window but could instead occur at any time during the longer statutory notice period. But just one month later the Second Circuit kicked that door wide open in an opinion relating to various novels and other works written by John Steinbeck. Until there is a case resolving the issue in the Ninth Circuit or in the United States Supreme Court, copyright grantees seeking to renegotiate terminable grants should consider taking advantage of the precedent in the Second Circuit that now appears to be more tolerant of renegotiations on this issue by designating New York choice of law and venue in their renegotiated contracts.
 

The following article by Ben Mulcahy was originally published in The New York Law Journal. To read the article please click here, or visit The New York Law Journal.
 

Author's Note: A footnote was inadvertently left of the version of this article that went to press. That footnote was in reference to the termination notice period for Superman opening in 1970. The omitted footnote read "These dates were chosen to mirror the dates in the Siegel case that follows, and the 1970 date is when the notice window would have opened if there had been a termination right that year, but the Copyright Act was amended in 1976, effective 1978, and there was no termination right prior to that."
 

Authored by:

Benjamin R. Mulcahy

(212) 332-3841

bmulcahy@sheppardmullin.com