Abstract
Sony has included a “share” button on the next version of their popular PlayStation video game system. This feature is meant to allow players to record and share videos of their gameplay. This service shares similarities with the controversial “record” button that Sony included with its Betamax players over thirty years ago. The Betamax player was the subject of the landmark case Sony v. Universal, a foundational case for the modern application of copyright law to new technology. This Issue Brief examines how this “share” feature would fare under the framework laid out by Sony v. Universal and other evolutions in copyright law.
Citation
Seth Ascher, Will Sony’s Fourth Playstation Lead to a Second Sony v. Universal?, 12 Duke Law & Technology Review 231-245 (2014)
Available at: https://scholarship.law.duke.edu/dltr/vol12/iss1/13