Arguments are being heard before the Supreme court beginning Oct 29 that will make it illegal to sell used possessions made or originally sourced overseas. The basis for the argument is from differences in the US vs. foreign copyright law, dating back as far as 1908. What the law will require is if you have an item that has any resource or manufacturer overseas, you will be denied the legal authority to sell the item without permission from the original owner of the item. Under current copyright, the original owner's rights only extent to the first sale. For example, you can buy a new book and later sell that book as a used book without the need to get permission from the original owner. What this change would do is make it illegal to sell the used piece if it was made overseas unless you got permission or paid royalties to the original owner. I don't fully understand why this only affects foreign made products but that pretty much affects everything we have in the US. I suppose we will found out when this case specifics hits the news and the details of what the Supreme court is hearing is made public.
This sounds crazy insane and hopefully will be shot down but if it doesn't, we could see a whole new black market, places like ebay would demand proof of permission to sell. Large markets such as used foreign cars would be affected, Dealers would be put out of business. Pawn shops would be all made instantly illegal. Antique business would be gone.
Some additional info and quotes pulled from a Market Watch article:
This sounds crazy insane and hopefully will be shot down but if it doesn't, we could see a whole new black market, places like ebay would demand proof of permission to sell. Large markets such as used foreign cars would be affected, Dealers would be put out of business. Pawn shops would be all made instantly illegal. Antique business would be gone.
Some additional info and quotes pulled from a Market Watch article:
"It means that it's harder for consumers to buy used products and harder for them to sell them," said Jonathan Band, an adjunct professor at Georgetown University Law Center, who filed a friend-of-the-court brief on behalf of the American Library Association, the Association of College and Research Libraries and the Association for Research Libraries. "This has huge consumer impact on all consumer groups."
"It would be absurd to say anything manufactured abroad can't be bought or sold here," said Marvin Ammori, a First Amendment lawyer and Schwartz Fellow at the New American Foundation who specializes in technology issues.
The case stems from Supap Kirtsaeng's college experience. A native of Thailand, Kirtsaeng came to America in 1997 to study at Cornell University. When he discovered that his textbooks, produced by Wiley, were substantially cheaper to buy in Thailand than they were in Ithaca, N.Y., he rallied his Thai relatives to buy the books and ship them to him in the United States.
He then sold them on eBay, making upward of $1.2 million, according to court documents.
Wiley, which admitted that it charged less for books sold abroad than it did in the United States, sued him for copyright infringement. Kirtsaeng countered with the first-sale doctrine.
In August 2011, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit upheld a lower court's ruling that anything that was manufactured overseas is not subject to the first-sale principle. Only American-made products or "copies manufactured domestically" were.
"That's a non-free-market capitalistic idea for something that's pretty fundamental to our modern economy," Ammori commented.
If the Supreme Court does rule with the appellate court, it's likely that the matter would be brought to Congress to force a change in law. Until then, however, consumers would be stuck between a rock and a hard place when trying to resell their stuff.
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