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53 UCLA L. Rev. 977 (2005-2006)
My Library: Copyright and the Role of Institutions in a Peer-to-Peer World

handle is hein.journals/uclalr53 and id is 991 raw text is: MY LIBRARY: COPYRIGHT AND THE ROLE OF INSTITUTIONS
IN A PEER-TO-PEER WORLD
Rebecca Tushnet
Today's technology turns every computer-every hard drive-into a type of
library. But the institutions traditionally known as libraries have been given
special consideration under copyright law, even as commercial endeavors and
filesharing programs have begun to emulate some of their functions. This Article
explores how recent technological and legal trends are affecting public and school-
affiliated libraries, which have special concerns that are not necessarily captured by
an end-consumer-oriented analysis. Despite the promise that technology will
empower individuals, we must recognize the crucial structural role of
intermediaries that select and distribute copyrighted works. By exploring how
traditional libraries are being affected by developments such as filesharing
services, the iTunes Music Store, and Google's massive digitization project, this
Article examines the implications of legal and technological changes that are mainly
not directed at libraries, but are nonetheless vital to their continued existence.
IN TRO DU C TIO N  ............................................................................................................. 978
I.   PU BLIC  LIBRA RY  ..................................................................................................... 983
A. New Options Undermine Established Practices ............................................ 984
B. The Role of Transformative Fair Use in Constraining Libraries ................... 993
C. Regularizing Nonprofit Institutions as Market Participants ........................ 1000
II.  IT U N ES  LIBRA RY  ................................................................................................... 1002
A. Libraries Experimenting at the Margins of Technology and Law ................ 1003
B.   A Note on the Institutional User and the Inevitable Insufficiency
of Digital Rights M anagement ..................................................................... 1008
C .  Locking  D own  the  Library  ........................................................................... 1011
1.   The Digital Millennium Copyright Act and Institutions ..................... 1011
2.   Garage Door Openers in the Library: Access Versus Fair Use? ............ 1015
111.  G OOG LE  LIBRA RY  ................................................................................................. 1018
A .  Legal Issues of the  Universal Library ............................................................ 1018
*    Associate Professor, Georgetown University Law Center. Thanks to Ann Bartow, Dan
Cohen, Julie Cohen, Sonia Katyal, Michael Madison, Bob Oakley, Zachary Schrag, Hannibal
Travis, and the participants at the 2005 Cybercamp: Julie Cohen (again), Kevin Collins, Susan
Crawford, Terry Fisher, Brett Frischmann, Paul Hoffert, Mark Lemley, Dierdre Mulligan, Dotan Oliar,
Peggy Radin, Pam Samuelson, Chris Sprigman, Molly Van Houweling, and Jonathan Zittrain.
This paper was originally prepared under a grant from the American Library Association for the
conference Correcting Course: Rebalancing Copyright for Libraries in the National and
International Arenas, at Columbia University, May 5-7, 2005.

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