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EBay and Google say in court papers that the appellate ruling "threatens the increasingly important e-commerce sector of the economy." Art museums fear that the ruling, if allowed to stand, would jeopardize their ability to exhibit art created outside the United States. Conversely, the producers of copyrighted movies, music and other goods say that their businesses will be undercut by unauthorized sales if the court blesses Kirtsaeng's actions. Kirtsaeng says the example of textbooks illustrates the larger point of how manufacturers already drive up prices for U.S. customers. "Textbook publishers have long exploited their captive customers," E. Joshua Rosenkranz, Kirtsaeng's lawyer, said in court papers. Citing government statistics, Rosenkranz said the price of textbooks has tripled over the past 20 years, rising much more quickly than the pace of inflation. In response, Wiley argues that the other side's "parade of horribles" is speculative and unpersuasive. Current copyright law in place since 1976 has not resulted in any threats to museums or other institutions that house or display foreign-made works, lawyer Theodore Olson said on behalf of Wiley. And Olson said there may be good reasons why manufacturers price the same goods differently for domestic and foreign sales, including lower incomes and standards of living in many foreign countries. The case is Kirtsaeng v. John Wiley & Sons, 11-697.
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