EFF Launches New Fight to Free the Law



EFF is filing against the Consumer Product Safety Council (CPSC) to ensure that the public has full access to the laws that govern us.

Our client Public.Resource.Org (Public Resource), a tiny non-profit founded by open records advocate Carl Malamud, has a mission that’s both simple and powerful: to make government information more accessible. Public Resource acquires and makes available online a wide variety of public documents such as tax filings, government-produced videos, and federal rules about safety and product designs. Those rules are initially created through private standards organizations and later incorporated into federal law. Such documents are often difficult to access otherwise, meaning the public cannot read, share, or comment on them. 

Working with Harvard Law School’s Cyberlaw Clinic, Public Resource has been submitting Freedom of Information Act requests to the CPSC requesting copies of the legally binding safety codes for children’s products—an area of law of intense interest to child safety advocates and consumer advocates, not to mention the families who use those products. But CPSC says it can’t release the codes, because the private association that coordinated their initial development insists that it retains copyright in them even after they have been adopted into law. That’s like saying a lobbyist who drafted a new tax law gets to control who reads it or shares it, even after it becomes a legal mandate.

Faced with similar claims, some courts, including the Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit, have held that the safety codes lose copyright protection when they are incorporated into law. Others, like the D.C. Circuit (in a case EFF defended on Public Resource’s behalf), have held that even if the standards lose copyright once they are incorporated into law, making them fully accessible and usable online is a lawful fair use. 

Now EFF has teamed up with the Cyberlaw Clinic to continue the fight. We’re asking a court to rule that copyright is no barrier to accessing and sharing the rules that are supposed to ensure the safety of our built environment and the products we use every day. With the rule of law under assault around the nation, it is more important than ever to defend our ability to read and speak the law, without restrictions.



Source link

  • Related Posts

    Meta is bringing more international news to its AI

    Meta AI should soon be better at surfacing international news content thanks to a set of new deals with publishers. The company announced new agreements with international outlets and offered…

    These Genetically Engineered Brain Cells Devour Toxic Alzheimer’s Plaques

    Alzheimer’s disease and cancer have something in common: They’re hard to treat. Despite decades of research, both still plague humanity, robbing people of longer, healthier lives. In Alzheimer’s, a protein…

    Leave a Reply

    Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

    You Missed

    Meta is bringing more international news to its AI

    Meta is bringing more international news to its AI

    How Qatar Airways’ New Business Class Stacks Up Against Emirates In 2026

    How Qatar Airways’ New Business Class Stacks Up Against Emirates In 2026

    Trump says U.S. forces have ‘obliterated’ the military assets of Kharg Island 

    Trump says U.S. forces have ‘obliterated’ the military assets of Kharg Island 

    Kansas vs. Houston prediction, odds, spread, time: 2026 Big 12 Tournament picks from proven model

    Kansas vs. Houston prediction, odds, spread, time: 2026 Big 12 Tournament picks from proven model

    U.S. Attacks Iran’s Kharg Island, a Key Port for Oil Exporting, Trump Says

    Leafs captain Auston Matthews out for season after Radko Gudas hit

    Leafs captain Auston Matthews out for season after Radko Gudas hit