Sunday, October 29, 2006

Intellectual Property Auctions: Hendrix


There is apparently a push to create a market for intellectual property auctions, which I am not quite sure how to interpret. Apparently companies like Ocean Tomo have set up auctions where you can bid for the intellectual property embodying a particular object, not necessarily the objects themselves.

Jimi Hendrix's entire music portfolio was up for auction and was purchased by a phone bidder for $15 million. Hendrix's music was--allegedly--the property of his manager, Michael Frank Jeffery, who died in the late 1970's. The beneficiaries of his estate are a number of charities in the U.K. Jeffery's estate put the songs up for sale to the highest bidder. But Hendrix's family--who believe that Jeffery never had rights to the music--is going fight: "Whoever bought this bought themselves the right to be a litigant."

The most common reaction I hear when I tell people about this story is how terrible it is that Hendrix's songs are being traded, and that the family deserves the money. Perhaps I've already been indoctrinated by the property rights-centric canon of IP law, but I think I've read enough cases to know that practically every party, often the author him or herself, is a rent-seeker.

In this case, it is difficult to identify the "good guy." Is the family trying to make some profit on the 600,000 records Hendrix still sells a year? Should the fact that the beneficiaries of the Jeffery estate include the Asthma Research Council, the British Heart Foundation and the Kings College Hospital sway my opinion? The answer, I'm not sure and, frankly, I don't much care.

Courts and law professors often make character judgments based on the parties (and I suppose that's what good lawyers have to do). At any given time, a movie studio can be an evil corporation or a business held hostage. An author can be a powerless cog in corporate machinery or an unoriginal pirate. An estate can be a greedy rent-seeker or a deserving widow. Knowing just how fickle and opaque these characterizations are most of the time, I'm willing to suspend judgment in this matter.

An interesting aside on IP auctions: at this auction, a number of trademarks were also up for sale. This seems a bit counter intuitive to me because I always assumed that the sale, transfer or assignment of a trademark included "the goodwill of the business connected with the use of and symbolized by the mark.” If so, I wonder how smart it is to open up the sale of a trademark to anyone willing to bid on it without asking whether the buyer has any interest in using the mark for similar goods or services.

2 comments:

Anonymous said...

(posted from an e-mail response)

I was interested in your post, but I'm not entirely sure I understand how you're using "rent-seeker". I obviously understand from context and connotation, but wasn't sure if that is a legal term? What's going on there? — In terms of wrong or right, I'm very inclined to your viewpoint. Whoever has the rights should be able to sell them, or use them, or whatever he wants to do. I have no predilection towards the family.

A.H. Rajani said...

to me, a rent-seeker is a derogatory term many IP lawyers and scholars use to describe people that are just trying to suck a particular work dry, usually not caring much about the value of the work as a contribution to society in and of itself.

i found a pretty decent characterization on IPcentral:

the term "rent-seeking" means looking to government for sources of profit above and beyond what one would get in a free market. More formally, "rent-seeking" is defined as "the behavior associated with the use of scarce resources in the pursuit of monopoly profits created by government action." (That's from Economics, 3rd Edition, by Robert B. Ekelund, Jr. and Robert D. Tollison). Instead of creating new wealth through trade, a rent-seeker gets wealth by getting the government to take it away from someone else. A technical term for special-interest lobbying, if you will.

I think my problem with the term rent-seeker is that the entire concept of giving someone a property right for their tangible intellectual contributions to society necessarily is based on using those exclusive rights for economic advantage. In my mind, everyone is a rent-seeker, and in my mind, being a rent-seeker isn't so bad.