Reply to George S. Ford’s ‘A Counterfactual Impact Analysis of Fair Use Policy on Copyright Related Industries in Singapore: A Critical Review’
Abstract
:The Historical Evolution of Ford’s Politically Motivated Article
The Aim Was to Inspire Further Research Rather Than Influence Politics
Original Text | Ford Text | Take Away |
Further research, containing more comprehensive data sets and possibly also singling out international trade aspects, would benefit the debate on the interplay of copyright law and economic growth. Laws 2014, p. 328 | While evidence on fair use policies is welcome and critical to informed policy reform, Gafelle and Gibert’s flawed empirical analysis, in my view, fails to shed light on the consequences of modifications to fair use policies…. Since policymakers are rarely skilled in statistical analysis, there is a trust that must be built between the research and the policymaking communities. Unskilled analysis threatens that trust. The formulation of public policy, especially when the economic consequences are large, deserves skilled and dispassionate empirical work. pp. 10, 11 | Ford says this study is for policy purposes, whereas the original text makes it clear that it serves as a springboard for further research. This is seriously misleading. |
We view our paper not so much as a proof that fair use increases private copying technology markets, but as a starting point to usher in more research into the subject by highlighting that the relationship between copyright, fair use, and economic growth in technology and copyright industries is far more complicated than traditional copyright discourse suggests. A possible springboard into more research could be to isolate trade effects. p. 347 |
Original Text | Ford Text | Take Away |
We re-emphasize that our analysis suggests a correlation between these factors, but more research would be necessary to gain a more comprehensive understanding of the economic dynamics surrounding exceptions and limitations to copyright law. We view our paper not so much as a proof that fair use increases private copying technology markets… (p. 347) | Gafelle and Gibert conclude that ’Fair use is good for the economy’ (p. 4) | Ford states that that authors said that Fair use is good for the economy. But the authors have never said that! |
He does not stick to the text, which suggests his partisan approach to the topic. | ||
Page 346: These limitations impose some constraints on the conclusions that can be drawn from the data but the model remains valid in its circumstances; | Since policymakers are rarely skilled in statistical analysis, there is a trust that must be built between the research and the policymaking communities. Unskilled analysis threatens that trust. The formulation of public policy, especially when the economic consequences are large, deserves skilled and dispassionate empirical work. (p. 9) | Whereas the original text very cautiously discusses the various constraints, the Ford text suggests these were never prepared and insults the authors as being unskilled. Such ad hominem comments are offensive. |
or page 346: The counterfactual impact analysis of copyright law amendments in Singapore seems to support our hypothesis that a more flexible fair use policy is correlated with faster growth rates in private copying technology industries. | ||
p. 340: We caution that statistical analysis can never capture the full spectrum of socioeconomic behavior. | Attention should be paid to the quality of the forecasting method as well as the statistical consequences of using a prediction in a statistical text (p. 4) | The original text cautions about its limitations and only speaks of potential dynamics, suggestions and rough estimates. |
All that the limited statistical assessments can do is offer an insight on potential dynamics… | ||
Against this background our preliminary results suggest fair use policy was correlated with the growth of the private copying group in Singapore; | Ford instead ignores all of that and says the authors should be more cautious. This is highly misleading. | |
Page 343: This estimate is rough because it does not account for the changes observed among non-beneficiary groups, nor does it factor out trade aspects; | ||
No such statement was ever made. Contrary to Ford, we refrained from such value judgments. | Thus, if the Fair Use Study tells us anything, then it is that Singapore’s 2005 copyright law was a bad one. (p. 9) | Ford makes up a statement which is nowhere in the text. |
No such claim was ever made, see above. | The Fair Use Study … on the economic impacts of Singapore’s change in its fair use policies claims to show a positive effect (+67%) on industries that manufacture goods useful for private copying of copyrighted works and a negative effect (−30%) on the copyright industries. | Ford makes up data. No such data was ever published in the text. |
Verbatim, a growth rate of 67% or −30% is not reported in the study. No such data can be found in the report. | ||
Though this work yields useful quantitative measures of fair use-related industries, it does not capture the full extent of fair use’s influence on economic growth and innovation. Our study attempts to advance research in this field by assessing the extent to which implementing fair use or fair-use style legislation stimulates growth in selected high-technology industries and copyright related sectors in Singapore. (p. 328) | The conclusion of the Fair Use study is that expanded fair use is good for the Private Copying Group and does not harm the rights holders. (p. 4) | Ford says the authors drew the conclusion that Fair is ‘is good…’, but no such statement was ever made. This is highly misleading. |
Paolo Eusebi’s Statistical Analysis of George Ford’s Comment’ A Counterfactual Impact Analysis of Fair Use Policy on Copyright Related Industries in Singapore: A Critical Review’ 29 by Paolo Eusebi30
Key Take Away
Ford’s Invalidates His Own Criticism of the Parallel Path Assumption
Ford Fails to Quantify the Forecast Error
Multiple Treatments
Hypothesis Testing and Sample Sizes
Scale Differences
Ford’s Own Analysis Is Unreplicable
Conclusions
Funding
Conflicts of Interest
1 | See Chapter 5 of his Comment and footnote 4 in his Comment. The Gibert Gafelle study was an invitation to do further research (and not a policy paper of some sort). Related updates will be posted on a website dedicated to this purpose at www.fairusestudyupdates.com Roya Ghafele is only responsible for pages 1-6. |
2 | See his comment p. 4 on his critique on statistical errors, as well as his criticism raised in Chapter 4 of his Comment. |
3 | See reference to Ford’s Comment on, p. 2 and p. 3. |
4 | The Economic Impact of Expanding Fair Use in Singapore: More Junk Science for Copyright Reform. Perspectives—Phoenix Center for Advanced Legal & Economic Public Policy Studies. http://www.phoenix-center.org/perspectives/Perspective16-01Final.pdf. |
5 | O. Stokkme: CEO at IFFRO. Access to and usages of copyright works in the digital world. IFFRO. 7th publishing Assembly of Turkey. 12th of May 2016. Istanbul, at p. 2 and p. 3. |
6 | Australian Publishers Association. A Fair Balance. Impacts of US style fair use on educational publishing. See page ‘uncertain impacts of US-style fair use.’ https://www.publishers.asn.au/documents/item/418. |
7 | The Motion Picture Association Asia-Pacific Reporter. Issue January–June 2017. Promoting and Protecting the Screen Commuity, p. 20; The Motion Picture Association Asia-Pacific Reporter. Issue July–December 2016. Promoting and Protecting the Screen Commuity, pp. 11, 19, 26, 27, 31. |
8 | The Economic Impact of Expanding Fair Use in Singapore: More Junk Science for Copyright Reform. Perspectives—Phoenix Center for Advanced Legal & Economic Public Policy Studies. http://www.phoenix-center.org/perspectives/Perspective16-01Final.pdf; 16 February 2016—The empirical analysis by Gafelle and Gibert in their Singapore Study is of stunningly poor quality; New Phoenix Center Study Refutes Claim That Singapore’s Expanded… https://www.thestreet.com/.../new-phoenix-center-study-refutes-claim-that-singapores-; Phoenix Center Responds to Singapore Fair Use Study—The Illusion of More. http://illusionofmore.com/phoenix-center-responds-to-singapore-fair-use-study/; The Economic Impact of Expanding Fair Use in Singapore: More Junk Science for Copyright Reform. Phoenix Center Perspectives No. 16-01; 12 September 2016. https://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=2837315. |
9 | The Economic Impact of Expanding Fair Use in Singapore: More Junk Science for Copyright Reform. Perspectives—Phoenix Center for Advanced Legal & Economic Public Policy Studies. http://www.phoenix-center.org/perspectives/Perspective16-01Final.pdf at p. 1, p. 2., p. 9., p. 12, as well as footnote 4 at p. 14. |
10 | O. Stokkme: CEO at IFFRO. Access to and usages of copyright works in the digital world. IFFRO. 7th publishing Assembly of Turkey. 12th of May 2016. Istanbul, at p. 2 and p. 3. |
11 | Australian Publishers Association. A Fair Balance. Impacts of US style fair use on educational publishing. See page ‘uncertain impacts of US-style fair use.’ https://www.publishers.asn.au/documents/item/418. |
12 | The Motion Picture Association Asia-Pacific Reporter. Issue January–June 2017. Promoting and Protecting the Screen Commuity, p. 20. |
13 | The Motion Picture Association Asia-Pacific Reporter. Issue July–December 2016. Promoting and Protecting the Screen Commuity, pp. 11, 19, 26, 27, 31. |
14 | See also Ford’s Comment. ‘The Lisbon Council’s 2015 Intellectual Property and Economic Growth Index: A Showcase of Methodological Blunder.’ Perspectives. Phoenix Center for Advanced Legal and Economic Public Policy Studies. 29 June 2015, http://www.phoenix-center.org/perspectives/Perspective15-03Final.pdf, as well as Phoenix Center finds Critical Flaws in Lisbon Council Copyright Study. http://www.phoenix-center.org/perspectives/Perspective15-03PressReleaseFinal.pdf. |
15 | See his conclusions on page 9. |
16 | Fair Use Study, pp. 328 & 347. |
17 | Fair Use Study, pp. 340, 244–346, 348. |
18 | Fair Use Study, p. 328. |
19 | See for example. |
20 | Ibid, p.340. |
21 | Ibid, p. 343. |
22 | Ibid, p. 346. |
23 | Ibid, p.347. |
24 | Ibid, p. 347. |
25 | See, for example, p. 9 of Ford’s document: Lead to a massive increase in the sale of pirating technology. |
26 | Ford, p. 9. |
27 | Fair Use Study, pp. 328, 330, 331, 333, 334, 336. |
28 | Ford, p. 3. |
29 | Ford 2018) Ford, George. 2018. A Counterfactual Impact Analysis of Fair Use Policy on Copyright Related Industries in Singapore: A Critical Review. Laws 7: 34. Ford (2018). |
30 | Independent Statistician; Department/Faculty/School/Institute, University Ospedaliera di Perugia, Andrea delle Fratte, 06156 Perugia, Italy; [email protected]. Paolo Eusebi is solely responsible for pp. 7–10. |
31 | Ford, ibid p.8. |
32 | Ford, ibid, p. 7. |
33 | Flores and Mitnik 2009) Flores, Carlos A., and Oscar A. Mitnik. 2009. Evaluating Nonexperimental Estimators for Multiple Treatments: Evidence from Experimental Data. Bonn: IZA Institute of Labor Economics, pp. 7–14. |
34 | Ford, ibid p. 5. |
35 | Ford, ibid p. 5. |
36 | Angrist and Pischke 2008) Angrist, Joshua D., and Jörn-Steffen Pischke. 2008. Mostly Harmless Econometrics: An Empiricist’s Companion. Princeton: Princeton University Press, p. 234. |
37 | Ford, ibid p. 6. |
38 | A possible case where both the treated and control groups receive the treatment but the control group remains valid (possibly) is if the control group is genetically immune from the disease being treated (or the treatment itself). Even so, the control group would be suspect. p. 6 Footnote 2. |
39 | Ibid. |
40 | Ford, ibid p. 7. |
41 | Ford, ibid p. 9, Footnote 4. |
42 | Ford, ibid p. 9. |
Industry Group | 2010 Observed | 2010 Predicted (95% CI) | Effects (95% CI) |
---|---|---|---|
Private Copying | 5.02% | 1.68% (−0.56% to 3.92%) | 3.34% (1.10% to 5.58%) |
Copyright | 0.55% | 0.78% (0.59% to 9.64%) | −0.23% (−0.41% to −0.04%) |
Control | 0.44% | 0.43% (0.04% to 0.82%) | 0.01% (−0.49% to 0.52%) |
© 2020 by the author. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
Share and Cite
Ghafele, R. Reply to George S. Ford’s ‘A Counterfactual Impact Analysis of Fair Use Policy on Copyright Related Industries in Singapore: A Critical Review’. Laws 2020, 9, 2. https://doi.org/10.3390/laws9010002
Ghafele R. Reply to George S. Ford’s ‘A Counterfactual Impact Analysis of Fair Use Policy on Copyright Related Industries in Singapore: A Critical Review’. Laws. 2020; 9(1):2. https://doi.org/10.3390/laws9010002
Chicago/Turabian StyleGhafele, Roya. 2020. "Reply to George S. Ford’s ‘A Counterfactual Impact Analysis of Fair Use Policy on Copyright Related Industries in Singapore: A Critical Review’" Laws 9, no. 1: 2. https://doi.org/10.3390/laws9010002
APA StyleGhafele, R. (2020). Reply to George S. Ford’s ‘A Counterfactual Impact Analysis of Fair Use Policy on Copyright Related Industries in Singapore: A Critical Review’. Laws, 9(1), 2. https://doi.org/10.3390/laws9010002