Sunday, September 12, 2010

Ladies and gentlemen, the Innovative Design Protection and Privacy Prevention Act

Early this summer, I wrote a post about how fashion designers are bereft of copyright protection. Turns out, Chuck Schumer and the Council of Fashion Designers of America are trying to do something about it. In August, Senator Schumer introduced proposed legislation into Congress that, if passed, would extend limited copyright protection to fashion designs. Specifically, the new legislation would protect any fashion design from being copied for a period of three years from the date the fashion design is made public. You can read the bill here.

Clearly, a lot of designers are in support of the proposed legislation. On the other hand, Johanna Blakley, our fashion theorist in a bullet-proof vest from early this summer, points out that "right now, designers pore over vintage magazines and patterns and visit museum archives in order to find inspiration for the next season’s look, cherry picking design elements that feel fresh and in line with the current zeitgeist. It’s a refreshingly open process unhindered by legal consultations. Those archives could become battlefields where litigants try to find evidence to support their assertion that a design is or is not unique. The geeky librarian in me is worried that some powerful people may attempt to limit access to particularly rich collections of design history and some unscrupulous types may destroy or hide rare materials that prove that their new design isn’t as unique as they claim."