What if the Anti-Bootlegging Statutes are Upheld Under the Commerce Clause?
Publication Title
Michigan State Law Review
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
1-1-2008
Abstract
The United States has altered its copyright laws to be more in conformity with the European Union and the WIPO. In doing so, the laws of the United States have brushed against the Constitution. Most of the constitutional challenges to the laws have been unsuccessful. In the case of the "anti-bootlegging" statutes, however, the courts have been all over the place with their constitutional analysis. While the "anti-bootlegging" statutes were promulgated under the Copyright Clause, and included in Title 17, courts have upheld them under the Commerce Clause - despite no mention of the Commerce Clause at all in the legislative history. Commerce Clause authority for what is a copyright type legislation sets up a bizarre precedent, for it can render the commerce clause superfluous, or even worse, have perpetual protection for non-copyrightable works. The Supreme Court should get one of the cases eventually, but for now we have Commerce Clause authority for granting perpetual protection to live musical performance.
Recommended Citation
Michael B. Landau, What if the Anti-Bootlegging Statutes are Upheld Under the Commerce Clause?, 2008 Mich. St. L. Rev. 153 (2008).
Institutional Repository Citation
Michael B. Landau,
What if the Anti-Bootlegging Statutes are Upheld Under the Commerce Clause?,
Faculty Publications By Year
1683
(2008)
https://readingroom.law.gsu.edu/faculty_pub/1683
Volume
2008
Issue
1
First Page
153
Last Page
172
Comments
External Links
SSRN