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Electronic Publishing
Rany Joseph Sader
The publishing sector, much alike other sectors, was affected by
the digital revolution, since most of the traditional publishers
receive offers to publish, distribute, and market some of their
special titles electronically: new technologies emerged and developed
publishing such as electronic distribution, web-based publishing,
print on demand and other new technologies. This electronic development
has affected regular publishing, since many publishers or distributors
use the policy of selling their titles on their electronic websites,
and collect their prices by credit cards.
It is worth mentioning, that the electronic publishing industry,
is considered as an integral part of this international digital
revolution, especially that most of what is being published on the
web pages has an electronic publishing feature, where new horizons
shall be opened to the publishers, as well as hobbyists. Therefore,
the electronic publishing has witnessed lately, incomparable flocking
into the publishing world in general.
Practically, the electronic publishing is a new means of information
communication and publishing, as these information were passed on
to many generations through several means, the printing paper publishing,
known as the traditional publishing, is the latest.
Practically, the "book" introduction to the world of technology
is considered an easy task. We notice nowadays that most electronic
works of books and encyclopedias are soft copies to paper works
previously published under a regular form. This is made possible
either by an easy and uncomplicated manner such as using the inexpensive
scanning technology, or by setting up a software that includes a
base of advanced information based on hyperlinks or search engines.
Many publishers, particularly those specialized in law, as Kluwer,
Lexis Nexis, Dalloz, Jurisclasseur and Sader, have web sites on
the internet through which they publish lots of information, some
for free access and others against charge.
Publishing benefits from data processing through the following means:
- Selling paper books and/or electronic references (CD Rom) through
the publishers' sites, organizations, associations or others.
- The right to copy or print one copy of the work or the research
which summary is published on their web sites, against a prefixed
charge per each download or printing.
- Annual subscription in their data banks for a prefixed annual
fee.
- Subscription in their data banks and paying a charge for download
time and the volume of the downloaded information.
This makes many publishers (especially in our Arab world) unqualified
to accompany the occurring development, and in our opinion, we will
witness the collapse of many, strictly publishing houses and the
emergence of some others which will play a significant roll in future
in the electronic publishing field. Only some of firmly established
and qualified houses will risk to enter the digital world and succeed
thus becoming alone of both paper and electronic heritage.
A-Practical comparison between electronic publishing and traditional
publishing:
Considerable differences exist between electronic and regular publishing,
some are positive and other negative, which can be summed up as
follows:
1- Speedy communication to the public:
Speed is the most distinctive characteristic of electronic publishing;
the reader can buy his electronic publication, pay its price and
receive it through downloading to his computer and/or print it (printing
on demand) and start reading it immediately, within few minutes
without any transportation outside his house and/or work place,
and without paying any taxes, freight or any other expenditures.
The speed that characterizes the electronic publishing positively
affects the publishers as well since they can publish information
and electronic publications at maximum speed and relatively low
cost.
2- Printing quantum and cost:
As far as traditional publishing is concerned, the printing quantity
impact on the cost of a single copy, and accordingly its price,
is considerable. It is well known that the larger the printing quantity,
the lesser is the cost of a single copy. For this reason, the high
cost of law books internationally is due to the shortage of its
demand in comparison with some other printings such as fiction,
love stories, cooking books and others.The quantities of printing
material have a negative effect on the capacity of the available
warehouses, thus resulting in an additional cost to the publisher.
As regards the electronic publishing, the cost of the electronic
copy (e-copy) or the copy printed on demand is the same, especially,
that the cost of setting up an electronic web site as well as the
use of electronic commerce (e-commerce) is inexpensive and relatively
within reach of everyone. Consequently, the costs born by the publisher
remain the same regardless of the quantity. Furthermore, granting
the reader the right to print one copy of the work for fee and/or
the right to download the work electronically, contributes in reducing
the cost of the single copy to the publisher, which results in the
increase of his profits, considering that the cost of making the
copy (paper, ink.) has become at the reader's expense and not the
publisher.
This does not prevent us from drawing the attention to the fact
that the problem facing the electronic publishing remains in the
various softwares adopted in such publishing and the high cost of
some: Word from Windows and PDF are only examples. Such variety
has a negative effect on the reader who find himself in a permanent
struggle with development, high quality and the program price more
than the content of the electronic book, and in a certain way limits
the electronic readers' number internationally, especially that
the reader has to learn how to use the software first, before starting
to read the electronic book.
Electronic publishing remains the best means to the publisher, since
it reduces around 50 % of the production cost and regular printing,
especially that the publishing contract remains by nature an aleatory
contract.
3- Quality:
As previously mentioned, publishing cost through printing is high
and for this reason most of the publishers rely on accuracy in selecting
the publishable especially that traditional publishing remains a
trade work requiring most of the time big capital due to paper cost
and its internationally noticeable increase. For this reason, publishers
seek the best titles to avoid any possible trade loss.
In electronic publishing, however, the cost is low, as previously
mentioned, and may have a negative impact on the quality of whatever
may be published. Wrong information are published by some persons
while others publish whatever they want without any control or censorship.
This statement does not negate the fact that are many electronic
publishers who adopt editing policy and focus on the layout and
fine quality.
It is worth mentioning, that many authors, who were not fortunate
with any publisher, adopted the unilateral electronic publishing
means, a matter which may affect quality.
4- Violation of author's rights and related rights:
The positive development occurring in the electronic publishing
field, concerning the rapidity and facility of obtaining the required
information, has undoubtedly a negative side: the easy violation
of the author's and related rights (Cyber piracy). The facility
of data communication (Copy & Paste) and its exploitation without
the authorization of the right owner and/or without mentioning the
source is considered nowadays one of the most widely spread piracy
operations. In addition, the means used to protect the works such
as the Encryption are most of the time useless due to the possibility
and even the facility of decoding the password. For this reason,
we face a big number of violations such as publishing books and/or
songs and/or movies and/or photos, electronically, without obtaining
the permission of the author or the right owner.
It is worth mentioning that until today, there is no 100% secured
and guaranteed way to protect the website against theft and piracy.
This makes the electronic publishing an actual danger, considering
that means of piracy concerning the printed books is limited to
its photocopy and/or re-print without the author's authorization,
and which in spite of its illegality, is expensive due to the necessity
of producing the counterfeited work.
Many publishers have resorted to different means to protect their
programs and the works published by them like using the PDF program
or prohibiting Copy & Paste or granting the right of printing a
hard copy without the right of electronic copying or giving passwords.
Examples on violations are numerous, such as:
- Publishing the words of the songs on the internet without the
permission of their authors.
- Copying, selling and distributing data bases without authorization.
- Distributing the electronic work without the permission of its
author.
- Downloading unauthorized programs on the computer. A decision
was rendered on 18th November 2004 by the public prosecution at
the court of cassation, the first of its kind in Lebanon, in which
it has put one computer engineer under arrest for copying computer
programs without the permission or the authorization of the right
owners of the mentioned programs.
- Publishing photos and artistic works on the internet without any
authorization.
- Publishing articles, photos and pornographic movies or against
religion, or violate the right regarding the persons' image or others
on the internet, saving or distributing them on compact disks Such
works remain in general subject to the criminal law and the general
laws in effect.
5- Mistrust in Electronic Commerce:
Mistrust in electronic commerce in our Arab world remains the largest
problem, although some countries and associations like are concerned
with the edification of the advantages of this commerce. In addition,
the project "e-comleb" financed by the European Union sat down the
final touches of the general framework of electronic commerce in
Lebanon.
The lack of confidence cannot be translated as a lack of trust in
legal informatics itself, especially as regards the specialized
legal data bases such as "Sader's Compendium of legal informatics::
Lebanese laws", acquired by a significant number of law offices,
judges and public entities, as a basic reference source thus confirming
the confidence of the legal community in informatics and its positive
impact on its professional life.
We must stress, in this respect, on the importance and the necessity
of teaching the law on informatics , legal informatics and electronic
commerce at schools in Lebanon, for its positive impact especially
on the development of the electronic publishing, and the legal community
in general.
We must not neglect mentioning the concern of the Lebanese Ministry
of Justice, which established lately the first electronic law library,
and the Beirut Bar Association (which formed lately the first information
technology committee in the history of the Association) and its
effect on law which will soon have an impact on the electronic publishing
and its development.
On a worldwide scale, the electronic commerce considerably affects
both the world of traditional publishing and electronic publishing,
since many libraries and publishers started to market and sell books
and hard copy publications on the internet (the most significant
of which remains the popular site www.amazon.com). Some publishers
adopted the print on demand and/or send files electronically such
as electronic files against a remuneration considered as author's
right.
6- Transitory conflict of laws and the competent court to adjudicate
disputes:
The essential problem concerning the electronic publishing is in
general the same relating to electronic commerce, which is the problem
of conflicts of law in time and the problem of the competent court
to adjudicate disputes, which fall outside the scope of this study.
Nevertheless, it is necessary to remind briefly the following:
- It is necessary to insert a clear clause concerning the territorial
jurisdiction and the governing law, should any dispute arise regarding
the contract, as an implementation of the principle of contracting
autonomy .
- Most of the international conventions concerning the international
sales (The Hague 1955 to Vienna 1980) gave the jurisdiction to the
law enforced at the vendor's place. It is possible, however to insert
a clause in the contract that gives jurisdiction to the law of the
place of execution of the main obligation, which is the obligation
to deliver, specially that there are many delivery problems starting
from non-delivery to delay of delivery and the delivery of bank
statement that differs from what the reader has paid or amount which
the author has received or believed to be paid on completion of
the electronic contract.
These differences make some people believe that the electronic world,
and accordingly the electronic publishing is sunken in a swamp of
law vacuum owing to the non-existence of various legislations that
tackle these subjects.
This belief is wrong: The general legal rules are to a large extent
applicable on electronic publishing due to its being governed by
the Law on the Protection of Literary and Artistic Property no.
75/1999 especially as regards the written texts, photos, drawings,
music, layout, addresses, the executed program and others of the
innovative elements. In addition, other elements are protected and
regulated by other laws such as those concerning the trademarks,
criminal law, printed materials and others (unfair competition.).
This wrong belief has sunk many publishers in lots of problems,
when they converted their publications especially the encyclopedias,
dictionaries, important paper books, into electronic, and published
them on disks (CD Roms) or on the internet at their web sites, without
the approval of the author or authors.
For this reason, it is necessary to state that the first thing the
publisher must do when he decides to change the books published
by him from paper to electronic, is to review all the contracts
previously signed by him and, in general, be aware of the extent
of the rights granted to him to exploit the work, especially that
the rights which the author assign for his interest are construed
in a restrictive manner. For this reason changing hard copies to
electronic ones without obtaining the author's explicit approval,
is considered an infringement to his rights.
B-Electronic publishing Contracts:
The right owners especially the publishers, are trying to exploit
all or most of the works, by all means, the latest and most significant
is the electronic publishing.
The author and the publisher are required to review all the contracts
previously signed by them, due to the fact that the overwhelming
majority of the traditional publishing contracts did not include
any clause concerning the exploitation of the electronic rights..
Furthermore, the publisher, before publishing any electronic work
and if the contracts signed or to be signed by him do not include
the right of exploiting the rights electronically, is required to
enter into fresh negotiations with the right owners to obtain an
explicit authorization for the electronic publishing.
Sending a written letter, by the publisher, to the right owners,
including the authors, in which he explains the situation, and requests
what is called as "publishing authorization", and receiving their
Replies with the phrase "with approval" is deemed sufficient to
obtain this right. In case of their refusal and/or their silence,
the publisher must negotiate with them, and obtain a written approval
at the risk of legal prosecution, especially that the right of exploitation
of the hardcopy of the book assigned by the author to the publisher
doesn't mean assignment of the electronic exploitation right of
the work, a matter which has misled many Lebanese and Arab publishers.
The Lebanese law is clear in this respect.
It is worth mentioning, that the publisher may prohibit the author
of the hard copy of the book from the exploitation of the same work
published by him for many reasons such as the use of the same layout
The electronic publishing contracts are similar, to a large extent;
to the traditional publishing contracts:
1- Bilateral partnership contract:
The contract is considered the starting point of all the electronic
publishing activities. The electronic publishing contract is a bilateral
contract in which both the writer and the publisher agree on mutual
specific obligations, and rights. This contract is effective only
after being signed by all parties.
It is worth mentioning, that both the publisher and the author are
required to take the maximum precautions when drawing up such contract
due to the fact that its effects may affect their future rights.
It goes without saying, that each time the electronic publishing
contract is drafted in the spirit of partnership contracts, the
chances of its success, continuance, and development of its effects
between the author and the publisher are increased.
It is worth reminding that the electronic publishing operations
are mostly collective operations, and accordingly the rights of
all co-authors must be respected.whatever their number may be.
2- The deposit of the work with the Ministry of Economy and Commerce:
It is unnecessary to deposit the work with the Ministry of Economy
and Commerce (Intellectual Property Protection Office) to protect
the literary and artistic works. The work, in this respect, means
as: the site or the software itself (which is protected by article
1 of law no. 75/1999) and the information inscribed in it (when
it is not considered of the public domain). The author of any artistic
or literary work shall, as a result of the creation of the work,
have an absolute property right over his work and shall reserve
all his rights without having to follow any formalities" (article
5 of law no. 75/1999). The deposit is a presumption that the work
is the depositor's property, unless otherwise established by all
means of evidence.
3- The condition of writing the electronic publishing contracts:
The electronic publishing contract is considered among the contracts
for the exploitation of the authors economic rights, which must
be drawn up in writing, regardless of their subject, at the risk
of nullity between the contracting parties. Accordingly, the electronic
publishing contracts shall not be oral or implied, but must be written
and signed by both parties.
A unified sample of traditional or electronic publishing contract
does not exist in Lebanon or in any Arab country.
These contracts varies from one publisher to another (taking into
consideration his specialization), or from author to another, or
from subject to another.
Practically, every publisher of a minimum professionalism has a
sample of a regular publishing contract that includes a regular
publishing clause and/or a sample of a special electronic publishing
contract, to his interest, through which he is willing to acquire
the largest number of rights at a lesser cost.
This sample shall not be considered as leading to an adhesion contract,
so every author must review it carefully, asking the necessary questions,
modifying whatever to be modified so that the contract meets his
expectations. It is to be noted, that many of the samples used in
Lebanon include clauses contrary to the laws in effect concerning
intellectual property in general.
Hence, every party must resort to specialized attorneys considering
that the electronic publishing contracts are complicated and must
not ignore that the author is the "right owner" and accordingly
has the right to decide the manner, conditions and means of exploitation
of his intellectual production according to his expectations, and
add to the contract the clauses that are in line with these expectations,
examine its clauses and modify it before signing it.
4- The content of the electronic publishing contract:
The electronic publishing contract regulates the rights and obligations
of the author and the publisher.
The contract must set out in detail the rights covered by it, be
limited in time and space, and imperatively provide for the author's
participation in a percentage of the revenues resulting from the
exploitation and sales operations.
It is necessary to emphasize that the assignment by the author of
any of his rights must always be restricted to this right only,
taking into consideration that the electronic publishing contract
is among the contracts that must be construed in a restrictive manner
(articles 17 and 19 of law no. 75/1999). Moreover, granting the
publisher the right to distribute the work fixed on paper shall
not be construed as giving the publisher the right to distribute
it electronically.
Moreover, the author's assignment, to the publisher, of the right
of distributing the work electronically through electronic means
(CD Rom), prevents the publisher from publishing the work on the
internet and vice versa. This specific characteristic of the electronic
publishing contracts requires clear and explicit delimitation of
the rights assigned.
The right owner may assign his electronic rights to one or several
publishers. The author must be cautious not to assign all his rights
at one time but fraction or reserve some of these rights to himself
for future exploitation. For example, the assignment of the electronic
publishing right of his book on the internet to a well-known publisher,
and the assignment of the right of adapting his intellectual work
to a Game to another publisher specialized in electronic games.
As regards the regular publishing contracts previously signed by
him, it is very important for the author to review, even scrutinize
it, to clear up the scope of the rights assigned, especially that
most of the previous contracts have not mentioned any clause regarding
the electronic exploitation of the contract. In case it is not mentioned
in the previous contract, the author should be aware of the fact
that the exploitation rights of his work electronically are his
property and must not assign any of these electronic rights before
he receives a new clear and explicit offer, reserving his financial
rights (royalties), from the publisher.
As regards the publisher, it is extremely important for him to be
aware of the importance of reserving to himself the publishing rights
of the work intended to be exploited electronically through ordinary
means, in view of the effect of the electronic publishing on paper
publishing as previously mentioned.
The publisher is required to observe the rights assigned to him
at the risk of legal prosecution. The distribution right granted
to him does not include the electronic adaptation of the work, hence
he must always go back to the contract and the extent of its explicitness
and observe it, in order to get to know the extent of the rights
assigned. He should also verify that the rights assigned belong
to the assignor. The author may grant to the electronic publisher
the rights mentioned hereunder, as example:
- Granting third parties the right of electronic printing of the
work against a consideration or for free (Print on demand).
- The right of electronic distribution of the work.
- The right of translating the electronic work and/or the paper
work and distributing this translation electronically.
- The electronic adaptation of the work by introducing few additions
such as animation.
- The right of distributing it independently and/or merging it with
anpaper electronic data base through the internet or compact disks
(CD Rom).
- The right to amend the electronic copy of the work by entering
some notes and linking its texts (hyperlink), at the risk of infringing
the author's moral rights.
5- The authors' royalties:
The Lebanese law has adopted the theory of having " the author participate
in a percentage of the exploitation revenues and sales proceeds"
as an obligation at the risk of nullity (article 17 of law no. 75/1999).
The obligation of paying the author his royalties that may reach
30 % of the sale price is among the essential obligations undertaken
by the publisher.
In this respect, attention should be drawn to the fact that granting
the publisher the right of publishing a hard copy and an electronic
one as well puts him under obligation to pay the royalhes of both
copies. The same principle is applied when the author assigns to
the publisher the exploitation right of the work that has been previously
printed electronically. Usually, these rights are paid once per
year, and the author may receive a payment in advance on his royalties.
The publisher is required to pay the royalties for every exploitation
operation of the work separately (Per use, Per Sale)
In our opinion, the author must abstain from accepting a lump sum
as a remuneration for all the electronic exploitation works, taking
into consideration, that such clause is subject to nullity owing
to the fact that it contravenes the explicit wording of the Lebanese
law (a percentage of the revenues). The French courts have decided
in this direction.
6- The duration of the electronic publishing contract:
The contract stands as the law between the parties thereto, hence
they may agree on a duration they deem adequate. "Should the contracts
fail to provide for a determined duration, they shall be construed
as being effective for ten years only as of the date of signature
of the contract" (article 17 of law no. 75/1999). This provision
aims at the author's protection. The contract's duration may extend
to the lifetime of the author and fifty years thereafter as of the
date when death of the author occurred (article 49 of law no. 75/1999).
We advise not to assign such rights for a long term due to the recent
developments in the data processing field.
Many other conditions may, of course, be included in the electronic
publishing agreement, and this study is not meant to be comprehensive.
Much alike any other agreement, details are important, but the crucial
factor is execution.
Last but not least, and in order to meet the interests of both parties,
the electronic publishing contracts must be drawn up by a specialized
attorney, and not to take or copy passages of a sample published
in a book or electronic web sites.
Rany Joseph SADER
Attorney at law
rsader@saderlaw.com
www.saderlaw.com
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