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19 Rev. Econ. Rsch. on Copyright Issues 1 (2022)

handle is hein.journals/rvwoecrh19 and id is 1 raw text is: 
















Review of Economic Research on Copyright Issues, 2022, vol. 19, pp. 1-51


         A  PRACTICAL MODEL OF COPYRIGHT ECONOMICS WITH
                                    INTERMEDIARIES


                                        PETER  DICOLA


        ABSTRACT. After streaming, what should copyright economics look like? The standard model of
        copyright economics used by courts and other policy makers - the protect what would otherwise
        be a public good from copyists model - is not general enough. It is particularly poorly suited
        for the era of internet streaming, because it assumes that the producers of creative works are
        vertically integrated with the utlimate retailers of those works. In this paper I argue for a new,
        rough-and-ready framework for use in formulating copyright policy. Rather than assuming a
        vertically integrated producer-retailer, my proposed model disaggregates the producer and the
        retailer, which I refer to more generally as an intermediary. One central feature of the streaming
        era is the growth and resulting bargaining power of technological intermediaries, including the
        large internet platforms and various popular streaming services. My proposed model of copyright
        economics allows for variation in the bargaining power of intermediaries, rather than implicitly
        assuming their power away. Making this shift in our mental model - our metaphor - for how
        copyright works changes the way we think about copyright law's economic functions. It also
        suggests the need to refocus copyright policy on the important dynamics between producers and
        intermediaries.






                                      1. INTRODUCTION


   A key  assumption  in the standard  model  of copyright  economics  is that copyright own-

ers are the  relevant decisionmakers   in the  market  for copies of their works.   Copyright

protection  affords owners the opportunity   to charge a price greater than the marginal  cost

of making  and  selling a copy. Without  question, the standard  model  depicts  the copyright

owner  as facing constraints in their choice. They face the costs of creating the work  itself -

the first copy - and  the costs of producing  subsequent  copies. They   also face a demand

curve.  That  demand   curve  economists  conceive  has a lot of information  embedded   in it.

It implicitly reflects not just consumer preferences in the abstract, but also consumer   pref-

erences  given the existing, known   set of business  models  for distributing and  delivering

copies of works  for consumption.   Somewhere in that demand curve, in other words, lurk

the intermediaries  that copyright  owners  almost always  contract with  to distribute, retail,
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