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This article is part of an IP-Watch and Infojustice.org series analyzing the Trans Pacific Partnership intellectual property provisions by leading experts around the world. The series will publish weekly through the first quarter of 2016.
During the negotiation of the Trans-Pacific Partnership Agreement, many concerns were voiced about how TPP would mandate adoption of U.S. style statutory damages. Under the U.S. Copyright Act, a court can award damages of up to $30,000 per work infringed, which can be ratcheted up to $150,000 per work infringed in cases of willful infringement. Scholars have found that statutory damages in the U.S. have discouraged investment in innovative technologies while incentivizing the emergence of copyright trolls.
So how bad is the statutory damages provision in the final TPP agreement?
The TPP damages provisions go beyond TRIPS but are more flexible than the Korea-U.S. Free Trade Agreement (KORUS) and allow the adoption of a statutory damages framework less onerous than that of the U.S. Copyright Act.
In addition to providing for the recovery of actual damages under TPP Article 18.74.3 and the infringer’s profits under Article 18.74.5, a Party under Article 18.74.6 must establish or maintain a system that provides for “pre-established damages” or “additional damages.” Footnote 111 clarifies that “additional damages may include exemplary or punitive damages.” Thus, pre-established damages means what the U.S. Copyright Act calls statutory damages. Article 18.74.8 then requires that pre-established damages “shall be set out in an amount that would be sufficient to compensate the right holder for the harm caused by the infringement, and with a view to deterring future infringements.” In contrast, TRIPS Article 45.1 only requires compensatory damages – not that damages be set higher to “deter” infringement. (TRIPS Article 45.2 does permit Members in appropriate cases to authorize judicial authorities to order recovery of profits or the payment of pre-established damages, but this provision is not mandatory and does not appear directed toward deterrence.)
Despite embracing a damages regime beyond that required by TRIPS, these provisions give Parties flexibility on the issue of statutory damages. To begin, the concept of “deterrence” is – of necessity – an open one, subject to range of interpretations. More specially, a Party doesn’t have to adopt a comprehensive system of statutory damages. Instead, it can opt for a system of additional damages, such as treble damages only in cases of willful infringement. In this respect, TPP is more flexible than KORUS, which required the adoption of pre-established damages.
Second, if a Party does adopt a system of statutory damages, the system need not be anywhere near as draconian as 17 U.S.C. § 504(c). The primary objective of the system would be to compensate the right holder for the harm caused by the infringement, and deterrence would only serve as a secondary consideration.
Third, the TPP’s general enforcement provisions require Parties to protect the interests of defendants:
Applying these provisions, a legislature enacting a system for pre-established damages could, as in the United States, set one range of statutory damages for willful infringement, another range for ordinary infringement, and a third for innocent infringement, which could go down to zero (as it does in 17 U.S.C. § 504(c)(2) for libraries, archives, educational institutions, and public broadcasters who reasonably believed their use was fair). The maximums could also be significantly lower than in the United States. The legislature could decide to treat the use of orphan works as a form of innocent infringement, or it could come up with a separate framework for orphan works, e.g., reasonable compensation as proposed by the U.S. Copyright Office, which would meet Article 18.74.8’s compensation requirement. (Additionally, the legislature would be free to adopt an exception permitting the use of orphan works without payment under Article 18.66.) The legislature could also provide a cap on statutory damages against consumers, as in Canada’s copyright law.
Importantly, a legislature enacting a system for pre-established damages could provide its court with far more guidance on how to apply the statutory ranges than the U.S. Copyright Act. (17 U.S.C. § 504(c) only instructs a court to allow recovery within the statutory range “as the court considers just.”) The legislature would be free to direct the court to focus on compensation for the right holder’s injury and to take into account the need for proportionality between the seriousness of the infringement and the amount awarded.
In short, although TPP requires parties to adopt a deterrent system of damages rather than only providing compensation, TPP allows for the adoption of a statutory damages system that is more fair than that of the U.S. Copyright Act, and that is less prone to abuse by copyright trolls. Indeed, TPP provides the U.S. Congress with a roadmap on how to improve the U.S. Copyright Act’s statutory damages system.

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