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Vanderbilt Journal of Entertainment & Technology Law

First Page

701

Abstract

In recent years, the question of whether the unauthorized use of a copyrighted work is "transformative" has become a dominant consideration in determining whether the use is fair or unfair. As critics have pointed out, however, this emphasis on transformative use is both underinclusive and indeterminate of the range of uses that fall within the scope of the fair use privilege. Worse yet, efforts to define or apply the concept of transformative use, or to distinguish fair transformative uses from transformative uses that infringe the copyright owner's exclusive right to prepare derivative works, often serve only to illuminate the concept's malleability and to obscure the relevant policy considerations. Consistent with these critiques, this Article argues that much of the current emphasis on transformative use is misguided, and that courts instead should focus the fair use inquiry on whether the defendant's unauthorized use threatens cognizable harm to the copyright owner's interest in exploiting her work. In resolving this question, it sometimes may be relevant to consider whether a use is transformative in terms of its content or purpose, but transformativeness should remain subsidiary to the broader inquiry into cognizability.

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