The members of the rap music group 2 Live Crew, Luther R. Campbell[?], Christopher Wongwon[?], Mark Ross[?], and David Hobbs[?], composed a song called "Pretty Woman," a parody based on Roy Orbison's rock ballad, "Oh, Pretty Woman." 2 Live Crew's manager asked Acuff-Rose Music if they could license Roy Orbison's tune for the ballad to be used as a parody. Acuff-Rose Music[?] refused to grant the band a license but 2 Live Crew nonetheless produced and released the parody. Almost a year later, after nearly a quarter of a millioncopies of the recording had been sold, Acuff Rose sued 2 Live Crew and its record company, Luke Skyywalker Records[?], for copyright infringement. The District Court granted summary judgment for 2 Live Crew, holding that its song was a parody that made fair use of the original song under § 107 of the Copyright Act of 1976, (17 U.S.C. § 107). The Court of Appeals reversed and remanded, holding that the commercial nature of the parody rendered it presumptively unfair under the first of four factors relevant under §107; that, by taking the "heart" of the original and making it the "heart" of a new work, 2 Live Crew had taken too much under the third §107 factor; and that market harm for purposes of the fourth §107 factor had been established by a presumption attaching to commercial uses.
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Fair use materials from Supreme Court Judgment The below texts are fair use excerpts taken from the Supreme Court judgment rendered by Justice Souter, 1) an excerpt from Title 17 on fair use, 2) the court's statement that there is no bright line in fair use, it is a case by case determination; 3) the threshold issue is the character of the work, is it reasonably perceived to be parody; 4) the error of the Court of Appeals — the commercial character of the work is not dispositive, commerical works can be parody when the analysis from the other criterion are taken together.
==1). § 107. Limitations on exclusive rights: Fair use==
2). No bright line on parody After reviewing the historical development of fair use from the English law, through Joseph Story's formulation to the amendment in the 1976 which followed Judge Story's formulation the court held that there can be no single test that can be applied, but the four factors found in § must be applied to each situation on a case by case basis.
3). Threshold question The threshold question: is parody reasonably perceived to be the character of the work? Questions of the quality of the work, taste, etc. do not matter.
4). Error of Court of Appeals The Court of Appeals, however, immediately cut short the enquiry into 2 Live Crew's fair use claim by confining its treatment of the first factor essentially to one relevant fact, the commercial nature of the use. The court then inflated the significance of this fact by applying a presumption ostensibly culled from Sony, that "every commercial use of copyrighted material is presumptively . . . unfair . . . ." Sony, 464 U. S., at 451. In giving virtually dispositive weight to the commercial nature of the parody, the Court of Appeals erred.
[....to be completed...]
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