COLLECTIONS OF INFORMATION ANTIPIRACY ACT: SUMMARY OF H.R. 2652

CRS Report for Congress
Collections of Information Antipiracy Act:
Summary of H.R. 2652
Douglas Reid Weimer
Legislative Attorney
American Law Division
Summary
H.R. 2652, 105th Congress, 1st Sess., proposes to create a new body of copyright
law which would be entitled “Misappropriation of Collections of Information.” The bill
would impose liability on anyone who extracted or used in commerce all or a substantial
portion of a collection of information in such a way so as to harm the market for the
product or service that contained the information and is offered in commerce. The
database collection would be protected for a term of fifteen years. The bill provides for
civil and criminal remedies and sets time limitations for bringing actions for
misappropriation. The bill was introduced on October 9, 1997 by Representative Coble
and reported to the House with amendments by the House Committee on Judiciary on
March 24, 1998, H.Rept. 105-525.
Background
In 1991, the Supreme Court rejected the “sweat of the brow” theory for copyright
protection in Feist Communications v. Rural Telephone Service Co., Inc.1 The case
involved the protection of telephone listings that had been compiled through great effort.2
The Court determined that the telephone listings lacked sufficient originality to merit
copyright protection, in spite of the fact that considerable time, effort, and expense
(“sweat of the brow”) had been involved in the compilation of the listings. As a result of
this decision, limited compilation copyright protection has been available for computer
databases.3


1499 U.S. 340 (1991).
2See CRS Report No. 91-552, Copyright and Compilations of Fact, Feist Publications v.
Rural Telpehone Service Co.
3Some databases may consist of extensive lists of commands which have limited creativity
and therefore currently have limited copyright protection available under the Feist doctrine.
Courts have scrutinized the copyrightability of software in light of the Feist principles. See
(continued...)
Congressional Research Service ˜ The Library of Congress

On October 9, 1997, Representative Coble introduced H.R. 2652 which would protect
compilations of information and which would, in effect, provide a new form of database
protection. The bill deals with the “misappropriation of information,” but sets forth
certain “permitted acts” and provides for certain “exclusions.” Specific provisions of the
bill are examined below.
Proponents of database protection legislation argue that the limited compilation
copyright protection available for databases after the Feist decision left a “gap” in
intellectual property protection that could serve as a disincentive to investment in new
database development. Supporters of the legislation include the database industry, some
publishers, and their related interest groups. They wish to protect their intellectual property
interests and the time, effort, and financial resources which were devoted to the
development of the databases. Opponents of the legislation include some research groups,
libraries, educators, and public interest groups. These groups wish to have as much
information as possible made freely available to the public. Concerns have also been
expressed that such protection may restrict database development and may impact the use
and development of the Internet.
Summary of the Bill’s Provisions
The “Collections of Information Antipiracy Act,” H.R. 2652, 105th Congress, 1st Sess.
would amend the copyright statute by adding a new Chapter 12 entitled “Misappropriation
of Collections of Information” which would create statutory protection for collections of
information.
Proposed Section 12014 would provide specific prohibitions against the
misappropriation of collections of information. Recourse would be available against
anyone who extracted or used in commerce, all or a substantial portion of information
gathered, organized, or maintained by another person through the utilization of substantial
financial or other resources, in a manner to harm the other person’s actual or future market
for the product or service that incorporated that collection and is offered in commerce.
Certain permissible acts are set out in Section 1202. Individual items of information
and other insubstantial parts of a collection of information may be used or extracted. The
bill would not restrict any person from independently gathering information or using
information obtained by means other than extracting it from a collection of information
gathered by another person through the investment of substantial financial or other
resources. The bill would not restrict the extraction of information for the exclusive
purpose of verifying the accuracy of information which had been independently gathered,
organized, or maintained by that person. Nothing in the bill would restrict any person
from extracting or using information for not-for-profit educational, scientific, or research
purposes in a manner that did not harm the actual or potential market for the product or


3 (...continued)
Bateman v. Mnemonics, Inc., 79 F.3d 1532 (11th Cir. 1996); ProCD, Inc. v. Zeidenberg, 908
F.Supp. 640 (W.D. Wis. 1996); Allen-Myland, Inc. v. IBM, 770 F.Supp. 1004 (E.D.Pa. 1991);
Atari Games Corp. v. Ninentdo of America Inc., 975 F.2d 832 (U.S. App. 1992).
4To be codified as 17 U.S.C. § 1201.

service. The bill also would not restrict anyone from extracting or using the information
for the sole purpose of news reporting.
Two specific exclusions are provided in Section 1203. Protection is not extended to
the collections of information maintained by any Government (Federal, State, and local)
entities and their employees and agents. Computer programs, including any program used
in the manufacture, production, and operation in the collection of information, (except for
collections of information incorporated in such programs) are also exempted from
protection of this legislation.
Definitions are set out in Section 1204. “Information” is defined as facts, data, works
of authorship, or any other intangible material capable of being collected and organized
in a systematic way. “Commerce” means all commerce which may be lawfully regulated
by the Congress.
Section 1205 deals with the relationship of this legislation to other laws. Section
1205(a) provides that subject to preemption of equivalent State law protection of
databases, nothing in this legislation will affect rights, limitations, or remedies concerning
copyright, or any other rights or obligations relating to information, including laws with
respect to patent, trademark, design rights, antitrust or competition, trade secrets, privacy,
access to public documents, and the law of contract. State law is specifically preempted
by Section 1205(b) of the bill. After the bill’s enactment, all rights equivalent to those in
section 1201 concerning the collection of information shall be governed exclusively by
Federal law and no one is entitled to any equivalent right under common law or under
State law. State laws dealing with trademark, design rights, antitrust or competition, trade
secrets, privacy, access to public documents, and the law of contract are not deemed to
provide equivalent rights and hence, are not preempted by the legislation. Section 1205(c)
provides that nothing in the legislation will restrict the rights of parties to enter into
licenses or other contracts concerning the use of information. Section 1205(d) states that
the legislation does not affect the operation of section 222(e) of the Communications Act
of 1934 (47 U.S.C. 222(e)), as added by the Telecommunications Act of 1996. Section
222(e) requires that a telecommunications carrier must provide subscriber list information
under certain conditions, to any person upon request for the purpose of publishing
directories in any format.
Civil remedies are provided by Section 1206. A civil action may be brought by
anyone injured by a violation of Section 1201 in an appropriate United States district
court, without regard to the amount in controversy, except that any action against a State
governmental entity may be brought in any court that has jurisdiction over claims against
that entity. A court having jurisdiction over a civil action under this section shall have
the power to grant temporary and permanent injunctions based upon principles of equity
and upon terms as the courts find reasonable in order to prevent a violation of Section
1201. Such an injunction may be served anywhere in the United States on the person
enjoined and it may be enforced by proceedings in contempt or otherwise by any United
States district court having jurisdiction over that person. When an action is pending under
this section, the court may order the impoundment, on reasonable terms, of all copies of
contents of a collection of information extracted or used in violation of section 1201, and
of all masters, tapes, disks, diskettes, or other articles by means of which such copies may
be reproduced. The court may order the remedial modification or destruction of all copies
of contents of a collection of information extracted or used in violation of Section 1201



and of all masters, tapes, disks, diskettes, or other articles by means of which such copies
may be reproduced.
When a section 1201 violation has been established in any civil action, the plaintiff
may recover defendant’s profits, any damages sustained by the plaintiff, and the costs of
the action. The court shall assess such profits or damages or cause the same to be assessed
under its direction. Direction is provided for assessing profits and damages and for
awarding reasonable costs and attorney’s fees to the prevailing party. Actions brought
under this chapter against the United States Government may not seek temporary and
permanent injunctions and/or impoundment. The remedies available under this section
shall be available against a State governmental entity to the extent permitted under
applicable law. Monetary relief, however, is not available against employees of nonprofit
educational, scientific, or research institutions, libraries, or archives, if the employee
believed and had reasonable grounds for believing that his or her conduct was permissible.
Criminal offenses and penalties are provided in Section 1207. The willful violation
of Section 1201 will result in criminal sanctions if it: 1) is done for direct or indirect
commercial advantage or financial gain; or 2) results in loss or damage aggregating
$10,000 or more in any 1-year period to the person who gathered, organized, or maintained
the information. Such an offense shall be punishable by a fine of not more than $250,000
or imprisonment for not more than 5 years, or both. A second or subsequent offense under
subsection (a) shall be punishable by a fine of not more than $500,000 or imprisonment
for not more than 10 years, or both. The criminal penalties do not apply, however, to
employees of nonprofit educational, scientific, or research institutions, libraries, or
archives who act within the scope of their employment.
Section 1208 sets time limitations on actions. No criminal proceedings may be
brought under this chapter unless the action is brought within three years after the cause
of action arose. No civil action may be maintained under this chapter unless it is
commenced within three years after the claim accrued. No criminal or civil action shall
be maintained under this chapter for the extraction or use of all or a substantial part of a
collection of information that occurs more than fifteen years after the investment of
resources that qualified the portion of the collection of information for protection under
this chapter that is extracted or used.
The effective date of this legislation is the date of the enactment of the Act and will
apply to acts committed on or after that date. No person shall be liable under this chapter
for the use of information lawfully extracted from a collection of information prior to the
effected date of the Act, by that person or by that person’s predecessor in interest.