DIGITAL RIGHTS MANAGEMENT AND ACCESS TO COPYRIGHTABLE WORKS IN NIGERIA: LESSONS FROM INDIA
Abstract
Copyright laws confer on authors a bundle of rights such as the rights of production, publication, performance, adaptation, broadcasting, etc. in relation to their works. This is to encourage authors to create more works by allowing them to reap economic benefits accruing from their creation. By doing so, authors contribute to the pool of knowledge. However, the laws try strike a balance between the enjoyment of these rights and the public interest right of access to copyrightable works for advancement of knowledge and information. This long existing rule has been distorted as a result of the emergence of digitalization and other technological innovations of the 20thand 21stcenturies which created more access to copyrightable works; in most cases, unauthorized access, to the detriment of the right owners. Copyright laws have embraced technological protection of these works in the face of the legal uncertainties and a number of lacunae inherent in the obsolete Copyright Laws, especially those of Nigeria which were oriented towards analogue exploitative technologies. What this means is that these technological devices which do not admit of fair use of protected works are bound to end creativity in that they inhibit public access to works. The work examined the Copyright Acts of Nigeria, India and other Copyright related Instruments in order to discover the areas of conflict between the authors’ rights and those of the general public caused by the use of technological protective devices and made recommendations on ways to achieve everlasting solution to these conflicts; and in order to achieve a holistic enforcement of Copyright.
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