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The Threat to Astronomical Databases

Ray Norris

CSIRO ATNF


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What is the threat?

  • The WIPO (World Intellectual Property Organisation) database protection treaty (proposed)
  • The EU (European Union) database protection directive (enacted)
  • The US database protection bill (status?)
  • These all have very similar content, and will be treated here as one issue


    Why do we need a database protection treaty?

    • Example 1:
      • US Supreme Court ruled that a white-pages telephone directory was not covered by copyright
      • Example 2:
        • A French court ruled that a complete chronological list of French wines based on production region and vintage was not protected
        • WIPO argue that:
          • Without protection, there is no incentive for companies to produce useful databases

          • Intellectual Property Protection

            • Patents
              • protect inventions
              • Copyright
                • protects written work and creative work
                • Proposed database protection
                  • protects information (about anything)

                  • So what's wrong with the proposed treaty?

                    A problem of principle

                    • For the first time in our history, a person can "own" facts about the Universe
                    • Recent genomics controversies ("patenting a gene") could be extended to all of science
                    • Example

                      • I measure a set of redshifts
                      • I charge people to use them
                      • Citing my redshifts in a publication without paying me would be illegal and punishable


                      Problems with the details of the treaty

                      E.g. no (default) fair use provision

                      Compare with copyright rules:

                      All countries that signed the "Berne convention" include a "fair use" clause in their copyright laws.

                      E.g.

                      • I can photocopy a paper for my own use
                      • I can copy a diagram on to an overhead for a lecture
                      • The WIPO treaty does not include a "fair use" clause.

                        • I can not cite a redshift in a lecture without getting permission
                        • It does allow countries to include such a clause, but this would need to be argued on a country-by-country basis

                        • More problems

                          • Range
                            • It makes protection the default
                            • It uses the word "database" to include nearly everything on the www
                            • It makes perpetual protection possible
                            • It imposes civil or criminal penalties for infringement
                            • Example

                              • A scientist passing protected data to a colleague will be subject to prosecution
                              • It allows use of "insubstantial parts" but then voids this by banning "repeated and systematic use"

                              • Paper-trails

                                • If you use data in a publication
                                  • You have to check the data is not protected (and maybe pay fees)
                                  • If you use data cited by someone else, you will need to get permission from the original owner
                                  • This will
                                    • make it very difficult to compile data from many sources (e.g. radio-FIR correlation, Tegmark diagram, logN-logS correlation)
                                    • kill off data-miming projects
                                    • make books of reference data near-impossible to compile (e.g. K.R.Lang, Astrophysical Quantities, etc)

                                    • Commercial Pressures

                                      • Presumably NASA & other gov't agencies will declare their data to be public domain (but NB Landsat!)
                                      • What about the business manager of a small fund-starved university?
                                      • What about a small developing country?
                                      • What about individuals?
                                      • Almost certainly, at least some astronomical data will be protected

                                        • Science has a tradition of open scrutiny and access
                                        • Problem: we will not have access to data used by an author
                                        • We won't be able to check or reproduce an author's results

                                        • Current status

                                          WIPO

                                          • Treaty proposed in 1996
                                          • Withdrawn after pressure from ICSU and others
                                          • On back-burner - will re-appear!
                                          • EU

                                            • Directive (96/9/EC) enacted to apply from 31-Dec-97
                                            • This has already happened!
                                            • All the above is becoming a reality within Europe
                                            • It will be reviewed in 2001
                                            • US

                                              • Bill passed by House of Reps in 98 but rejected by Senate
                                              • Bill re-introduced in 1999 - current status uncertain
                                              • б 


                                                What can we do?

                                                • Join with our colleagues in other scientific unions to defeat this at all levels, especially through CODATA and ICSU
                                                  [Click
                                                • here for graphic showing relationship between IAU, CODATA, ICSU, WIPO]
                                                • Attend CODATA meeting on EU directive in October 2000 in Italy (see
                                                • www.codata.org)
                                                • Encourage national WIPO and CODATA representatives to oppose it
                                                • For more details, see

                                                  www.codata.org/codata/data_access/summary.html
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