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58 UCLA L. Rev. 889 (2010-2011)
Digital Exhaustion

handle is hein.journals/uclalr58 and id is 897 raw text is: DIGITAL EXHAUSTION

*
Aaron Perzanowski
**
Jason Schultz
As digital networks emerge as the dominant means of distributing copyrighted
works, the first sale doctrine is increasingly marginalized. To the extent the use and
alienation of copies entails their reproduction and adaptation to new platforms, the
limitations first sale places on the exclusive right of distribution decrease in their
legal and market impact. This fact of the modern copyright marketplace has led to
calls for statutory clarification of digital first sale rights. Acknowledging the obstacles
to legislative intervention, this Article argues that courts are equipped to limit copyright
exclusivity, enabling copy owners to make traditionally lawful uses of their copies,
including resale through secondary markets. We argue that first sale is not simply
an isolated limitation on the distribution right. Instead, it is a component of a
broader principle of copyright exhaustion that emerges from early case law
preceding the U.S. Supreme Court's foundational decision in Bobbs-Merrill v.
Straus. This context reveals a common law of copyright exhaustion that embraces
a set of user privileges that include not only alienation but renewal, repair,
adaptation, and preservation. Despite congressional recognition of exhaustion in
sections 109 and 117 of the Copyright Act, this Article concludes that courts have
ample room to apply and continue to develop common law rules that preserve the
many benefits of the first sale doctrine in the digital marketplace.
INTRO DU CTIO N ................................................................................................................890
I.  THE MARGINALIZATION OF THE FIRST SALE DOCTRINE.........................................892
A.  Four Documented   Benefits of First Sale ..........................................................894
B. Two Additional Benefits: Innovation and Platform Competition.................897
*    Assistant Professor, Wayne State University Law School.
**    Assistant Clinical Professor, and Director, Samuelson Law, Technology & Public Policy
Clinic, UC Berkeley School of Law.
Thanks to Doug Lichtman, John Rothchild, Pam Samuelson, Molly Van Houweling, Fred von
Lohmann, Jon Weinberg, the Berkeley Law Junior Working Ideas Group, and the participants of the
Tenth Annual Intellectual Property Scholars Conference and the Advanced Copyright Seminar
at the UC Berkeley School of Law for insightful comments on previous drafts. Thanks also to
George Justin Mallone for his excellent research help.

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