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In comments on this answer (now moved to chat) user supercat wrote:

While there seems to be a belief that use of short clips is automatically fair use, a key requirement of fair use is that the reproduced material serve some legitimate purpose which could not be served without it. If one is doing a video about the way [a] landscape photographer balances light and shadow, showing one of his photos of Seattle would serve a purpose that could not be served by substituting a Creative Commons photo of that city. If, however, one is doing a video about Seattle, the CC photo would be a perfectly usable substitute, and thus use of the photo by a professional landscape photographer would not be subject to the same fair use protections.

This claimed requirement that for a use of a work to constitute fair use in US law the work must serve some legitimate purpose "which could not be served without it" is not present in 17 USC 107. So if it is correct as a matter of law, it must be imposed via caselaw, that the the decisions of US Federa courts in copyright infringement cases where fair use has been raised as a defense. Is such a rule present in caselaw?

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  • I wish that any downvoters would leave a comment indicting what they think is wrong with this question . In the absence of a comment, I cannot improve the post , others cannot use the reasons to write better posts, and readers have no idea why someone objects to the question. Such a downvote seems pointless. Commented Aug 3, 2022 at 23:04
  • The topic is interesting, but the way it's presented -- by a quote from another question's comment to answer, a comment which has been moved to chat -- seems less than ideal. Personally I didn't upvote nor downvote.
    – Brandin
    Commented Aug 18, 2022 at 13:10
  • @Brandin when I posted this question, the comment it quotes was still live. I wish it had not been moved to chat. Consider the situation: A claim was made in a comment, urging that it be incorporated into an answer. I thought the claim incorrect, but any useful response was far too long for comments. I could have invented a person who made the same points, paraphrasing Supercat's comment, but that seemed dishonest. I could have ignored the issue. I knew of no actual source that made a similar claim, so I couldn't quote such a source instead. What would you suggest I should have done? Commented Aug 18, 2022 at 16:25

2 Answers 2

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The claim seems novel, so I looked at several sources, including several recent cases where fair use has been upheld.

Rozier

In Easter Unlimited Inc v. Rozier, 18-CV-06637 (KAM) (E.D.N.Y. Sep. 27, 2021) the defendant arranged for creation of a cartoon image of himself wearing the copyrighted mask used in the movie Scream. This was found to be fair use, largely on the ground of the transformative nature of the use changing the purpose from evoking horror to a humorous reference to a horrifying movie. Rozier had originally considered using a representation of the hockey mask work by the character Jason in the Friday the 13th series of films.

“Rozier and his management team decided that the clothing line would feature the name “Scary Terry, ” as well as a cartoon drawing of Rozier accompanied by a mask associated with a serial killer from popular horror.” Easter Unlimited, Inc. v. Rozier, 18-CV-06637 (KAM), 42 (E.D.N.Y. Sep. 27, 2021) at page 42

It would seem that the Jason mask would have satisfied the purpose as well as the "Scream" mask. Nothing in the fair use analysis (section C of the opinion, starting at page 31) refereed to a need (to establish fair use) for the work appropriated to serve a legitimate purpose which could not be served without it or any similar concept. This simply was not part of the fair use analysis.

Further the opinion states, at page 17:

“Copyright infringement is a strict liability offense, meaning “intent or knowledge is not an element of infringement.” Fitzgerald Publ'g. Co. v. Baylor Publ'g. Co., 807 F.2d 1110, 1113 (2d Cir. 1986). ” Easter Unlimited, Inc. v. Rozier, 18-CV-06637 (KAM), 17 (E.D.N.Y. Sep. 27, 2021)

This seems to dispose of the de minims exception suggested by supercat's comments cited in the question.

McGucken

In McGucken v. Pub Ocean Ltd. 2:20-cv-01923-RGK-AS, 2021 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 153361 (C.D. Cal. July 27, 2021) The district court found fair use. The Copyright office's fair use index summarized the case, writing:

Key Facts: Plaintiff Elliot McGucken photographs landscapes and seascapes, which he posts to his public Instagram account. Twelve of McGucken’s Instagram posts depict photographs he took of an ephemeral lake in Death Valley (the “Photographs”). On April 15, 2019, Defendant Pub Ocean Limited (“Pub Ocean”) published McGucken’s Photographs to five websites owned by Pub Ocean as part of an article written by a freelance writer titled “A Massive Lake Has Just Materialized in the Middle of One of the Hottest Places on Earth.” The article contained ten of the Photographs, with credit to McGucken and a link to his Instagram page, as well as several photos that were not McGucken’s and commentary on the conditions in Death Valley, the Sahara, and other natural phenomenon. McGucken brought an action for copyright infringement and moved for summary judgment, asserting Pub Ocean’s use did not constitute fair use.

Issue: Whether including photographs posted on social media in a news article to illustrate the subject of the photograph is fair use when accompanied by commentary.

Holding: The court concluded that Pub Ocean’s use of McGucken’s Photographs was fair use. The first factor, the purpose and character of the use, favored fair use because Pub Ocean’s use of the Photographs was transformative because the article included discussion of facts and commentary that provided context for the Photographs and included other photographs as well. The transformative nature of the use reduced the importance of the commercial purpose factor. The court held the second factor, the nature of the work, disfavored fair use as McGucken’s works, although previously published, are highly creative. The court found the third factor, the amount and substantiality of the work used, favored fair use. The court concluded that, despite displaying the “heart” of the Photographs, the article expressed ideas “beyond what Plaintiff expressed in his photographs,” rendering the amount of McGucken’s copyrighted images “insubstantial in context.” The fourth factor, the effect of the use upon the potential market for or value of the work, favored fair use because Pub Ocean’s transformative use “mut[ed] the degree of market substitution.” The court also noted that McGucken licensed the Photographs to other publications after Pub Ocean published its article, which indicated that Pub Ocean’s use did not usurp or destroy the market for the Photographs.

Note that other photos of the same temporary lake would have fulfilled the legitimate purpose of news reporting, and there seems to have been no allegation that these particular images were essential to this purpose, but the court still found fair use.

DMCA Subpoena to YouTube

In In re DMCA Section 512(h) Subpoena to YouTube (Google, Inc.) United States District Court for the Southern District of New York January 18, 2022, Decided; January 18, 2022, Filed 7:18-mc-00268 (NSR) the district court considered a motion to quash a subpoena because a claimed infringement was alleged by the defendant to be fair use.

In this case a person using a pseudonym created and posted to YouTube stop-action videos of characters represented by Lego constructions watching and reacting to substantial excerpts from a video published by the Watchtower Bible Society (publishing arm of the Jehovah's Witnesses). Watchtower claimed that this was copyright infringement, and obtained a subpoena to force YouTube to reveal the identity of the maker of the video. The unnamed maker sought to cancel (quash) the subpoena, claiming that the video made fair use of the videos published by Watchtower, so no infringement action could possibly succeed, and that Watchtower had no legitimate reason to obtain his identity, and wished only to harass and discredit him for having questioned its teachings. (The allegedly infringing video expresses disagreement with, and attempts to ridicule, the teachings expressed in the Watchtower video.)

The district court found the allegedly infringing video to be fair use, and duly quashed the subpoena. Note that the unnamed maker could have used any of several other videos by Watchtower for a similar purpose, there was apparently noting unique to the particular video that was appropriated in part which was essential to the maker's use, nor did the court so much as mention any such unique aspect essential to the maker's purpose as being important to a finding of fair use.

Excessive Use

As this answer bv Accumulation correctly points out, when a defendant uses more of the sourc work than is required to fulfill the purpose of the use, that weighs against a finding of fair use. But this is not an absolute bar to fair use (or anything close to one), as the rule proposed by user supercat would be. In several cases I have read court opinions that say, in effect "The defendant used more of the source work than was needed, adn that weighs against fair use, but the degree of transformativeness present outweighs that, so we find this to be a fair use." Thwe rule suggested by suoercat would not allow such findings. Excessive use leans against fair use, but is in no way dispositive.

Conclusion

I searched for any court case or law review paper which mentioned any such doctrine, and read through the fair use analysis in several recent court decisions in which fair use was found. I did not find any mention of the idea that fair use requires that the source work must be essential to the alleged infringer's legitimate purposes, and that those purposes could not be fulfilled by some other work, including perhaps a work available under a permissive license or in the public domain.

I conclude that there is not, and never has been, any such requirement in US copyright law to successfully assert fair use.

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"While wholesale copying does not preclude fair use per se, copying an entire work militates against a finding of fair use." However, the extent of permissible copying varies with the purpose and character of the use. If the secondary user only copies as much as is necessary for his or her intended use, then this factor will not weigh against him or her.
Worldwide Church of God, 227 F.3d at 1118 (internal quotation marks omitted).
Campbell, 510 U.S. at 586-87, 114 S.Ct. 1164.
This factor neither weighs for nor against either party because, although Arriba did copy each of Kelly's images as a whole, it was reasonable to do so in light of Arriba's use of the images. It was necessary for Arriba to copy the entire image to allow users to recognize the image and decide whether to pursue more information about the image or the originating web site. If Arriba only copied part of the image, it would be more difficult to identify it, thereby reducing the usefulness of the visual search engine.

Kelly v. Arriba Soft Corporation [bolding added]

Supercat's comment overstates the situation, but it is not completely without foundation. If a defendant could easily have accomplished their goal without using copyrighted material, that will be a factor against them.

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    This deals more about the amount of the use -- "If Arriba only copied part of the image, it would be more difficult to identify it, thereby reducing the usefulness of the visual search engine." The comment from supercat is more about whether using some other work instead (e.g. a Creative Commons photo instead) would have worked. Sure, in this case, substituing a different photo for the original (e.g. a CC photo instead of the original) would have also reduced the usefulness of the visual search engine. But such a comment is not part of the analysis.
    – Brandin
    Commented Aug 18, 2022 at 12:47

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