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MGM Concedes Some Fair-Use Rights Exist 417

jambarama writes "MGM seems to have given a little in the Grokster case. After getting nailed on the possible implications of banning P2P software, they've now admitted it is perfectly legal to rip one's own CD and store it. Is this a return to the stripped down 'fair use' rights or a temporary court concession?"
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MGM Concedes Some Fair-Use Rights Exist

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  • by Dorsai65 ( 804760 ) <dkmerriman.gmail@com> on Sunday April 03, 2005 @04:36PM (#12128161) Homepage Journal
    for giving me my rights back.[/sarcasm]
    • Re:Thank you, MGM (Score:4, Insightful)

      by Anonymous Coward on Sunday April 03, 2005 @04:47PM (#12128241)
      The problem here is that MGM is admitting it to keep the court itself from saying it. Once the case is over MGM can always go back to claiming otherwise. And this way the court will not have to explicitly uphold our fair use rights again. So, it makes a lot of sense for MGM to say this at this point. They don't want fair use validated any more by the court than minimum.
      • by chronicon ( 625367 ) on Sunday April 03, 2005 @06:22PM (#12128844) Homepage
        Once the case is over MGM can always go back to claiming otherwise

        No they can't, according to this article [zdnet.com]:

        ...if they actually win this case they ll be barred from challenging ripping in the future under the doctrine of judicial estoppel.

        This is a very important point. They cannot have it both ways--whether they like it or not. They have let the proverbial cat out of the bag.

        • by ePhil_One ( 634771 ) on Sunday April 03, 2005 @08:43PM (#12129662) Journal
          FYI Judicial Estoppel [divorcesource.com] precludes a party from asserting a position in a legal proceeding that is contrary to a position taken by him or her in a prior legal proceeding.

          Still, This isn't why they are trying to implement copy protection and it won't affect their attempts to create an uncopyable media. If they can stop you from ripping to MP3, they can keep the song/movie/whatever off the P2P networks. The fact that its impossible to make it uncopyable without making it unlistenable won't stop them from trying.

  • Hopefully... (Score:5, Interesting)

    by quark101 ( 865412 ) on Sunday April 03, 2005 @04:39PM (#12128184)
    This is the first step in P2P being declared legal. Although it may seem like an obvious decision to the people here, remember that not everyone understands the issues so well- i.e. Politicians who make these decisions.
    • Declared legal? (Score:4, Insightful)

      by Anonymous Coward on Sunday April 03, 2005 @04:41PM (#12128198)
      When you start thinking like that, you've already admitted defeat. Things are legal until otherwise shown/declared. P2P is legal and does not need to be declared legal at this point.
  • What about DeCSS? (Score:5, Insightful)

    by SchnauzerGuy ( 647948 ) on Sunday April 03, 2005 @04:40PM (#12128187)
    A movie company saying that it is legal to rip audio CDs isn't really big news.

    Now if MGM said that ripping video DVDs is legal, then we would have something to talk about.
    • I would far rather our consecutive gouvernments say it .I do not care a bit about what some company has to say about the law and my rights .I want to hear the Gouvernments stick up for our rights for once.Though it would be nice to see them with their heads between their legs.
    • Re:What about DeCSS? (Score:5, Interesting)

      by kraada ( 300650 ) on Sunday April 03, 2005 @04:47PM (#12128246)
      Actually, I think this is big news, and here's why:

      If they say that it's ok for fair use to be able to rip media for personal use, then it follows that they must admit users can do the same for DVDs.

      If they are saying it is only allowed in cases where compact discs are involved, then the question becomes: "What makes music special in this way?"

      I for one cannot think of why it would be ok to rip cds but not rip dvds. If it is fair use to rip a medium (cd) for use on another device (like an iPod), it should be just as legal to rip a medium (dvd) for use on another device (like xine).

      They better think hard and long as to why one is okay and not the other, because the courts will draw the analogy I just made and agree that if some ripping is ok, then all should be (so long as you have the media in question legally, of course).
      • "What makes music special in this way?"

        It's not encrypted.
        • Re:What about DeCSS? (Score:3, Interesting)

          by CastrTroy ( 595695 )
          Of course it's encrypted. All recorded knowledge is encrypted. You just have to know how to read it. The CD makers publish how to read the bits on the CD and put it together to make music. The DVD makers don't want to divulge how to take the bits and put them together to make it into a video. So we figured it out ourselves. It's like writing a book and then suing someone for figuring out how to read it. Just because they didn't want us to read it, doesn't mean that we shouldn't be allowed to read it
          • Re:What about DeCSS? (Score:5, Interesting)

            by timeOday ( 582209 ) on Sunday April 03, 2005 @05:18PM (#12128475)
            I would say all recorded knowlege must be encoded, but encryptiond is encoding with the intent that not just anybody can read it. It's a question of intent. Granted that's not a very technically meaningful distinction, but through the DMCA it is a distinction enshrined in law (hopefully not permanantly but I'm not holding my breath).
      • Re:What about DeCSS? (Score:3, Interesting)

        by pla ( 258480 )
        I for one cannot think of why it would be ok to rip cds but not rip dvds.

        Er... Read the subject line of the post to which you responded - "What about DeCSS?"

        Although I would tend to agree with you, on any and all lines of reasoning short of "US Law" (which has very little "reason" involved), the DMCA (sort-of) says you can rip CDs but not DVDs. Why? CDs have no access control mechanism, while DVDs do (however weak and pathetic we may consider it), namely, CSS. Thus, you cannot rip a DVD without circ
        • by arminw ( 717974 )
          ...Thus, you cannot rip a DVD without circumventing that access control mechanism, thereby breaking the law...

          Actually, the DMCA does not proscribe the USE of tools to copy something, but for anybody to PROVIDE such tools to others in any manner, selling or giving it away. You can make your own hammer to pound nails (or break DVD's), but it is against the law to provide hammers to others. If you can find a hammer in a country that doesn't outlaw the manufacture of hammers, you are allowed to use it, athoug
        • Re:What about DeCSS? (Score:3, Informative)

          by Alsee ( 515537 )
          Actually you are missapplying the DMCA. It is perfectly legal to rip DVDs. You can rip the entire DVD and leave teh encryption in place.

          The issue is that ordinary consumer DVD-Rs have a critical header location destroyed before you get them and ordinary consumer DVD burners cannot write to this location. Without this headder location you lose the keys to play the DVD.

          It is perfectly legal to rip a backup of a DVD using a DVD-A burner on a DVD-A recordable disk. DVD-A burners and DVD-A disks tend to be fai
    • "Now if MGM said that ripping video DVDs is legal, then we would have something to talk about."

      What pissses me off is that I want to rip DVDs to build my own personal (i.e. only I use it) media center. They think I'm going to rip gigabytes of data and give it away to anybody who wants it. Right.
  • So..... (Score:3, Insightful)

    by FS1 ( 636716 ) on Sunday April 03, 2005 @04:41PM (#12128197)
    So, basically Hell has frozen over, or is it just experiencing a temporary ice age?
  • by Richard_at_work ( 517087 ) on Sunday April 03, 2005 @04:42PM (#12128206)
    Uhm, I know that most Slashdotters like to think otherwise, but Fair Use doesnt actually cover most of the things that are commented on on this site. Yes, its may be Fair Use to rip your own CDs, but this is an 'if possible' right, nowhere in copyright law is fair use actually a requirement of distribution - copyright owners dont have to make any considerations for it when implementing copyright protection.
    • by mark-t ( 151149 ) <markt AT nerdflat DOT com> on Sunday April 03, 2005 @04:50PM (#12128268) Journal
      Actually, ripping your own CD's isn't fair use, it's personal use, which at least in Canada is _specifically_ described in the Copyright Act. Fair use is something else, covering things like satires, research purposes, and the like.
    • No, they don't.

      However.

      In most countries, and in the US up until recently, (before the DMCA), copyright owners also had no recourse if their anti-copying measures were circumvented. They implemented them to make a statistical difference, not a legal one (and it worked more or less)

      Fair use was not spelled out, but was a defence against copyright violation.
      Nowadays, in the US, if you break copy protection in order to make fair use of the work, you have STILL broken copyright law.. making fair use moot.

      I
    • If it's Fair use to rip your CDs, then it's Fair Use to rip your CDs even if there is DRM in the way. You are converting from one medium to another. This would severely weaken the DMCA, a law about which we have all been complaining profusely.

      You're right that the music and video industries can try and implement more and more complicated DRM in order to make it very hard for people to rip said materials. However, they will continue to be broken. And if the conversion is legal, the tool used to do the c
  • AFAIK, all of the lawsuits thus far were from people sharing large volumes of MP3s on P2P networks. Have the record companies have ever even threatened to prosecute people who rip music from CDs and put it on their portable MP3 players? I highly doubt that this really the big concession that the ZDNet blog says it is.
    • by dalutong ( 260603 ) <djtansey@@@gmail...com> on Sunday April 03, 2005 @05:10PM (#12128422)
      I highly doubt that this really the big concession that the ZDNet blog says it is.

      Ah, but it is. Admitting that people have _any_ rights to their purchase (other than listening to it in its original form) is a big step. After all, you can't argue that you have the right to share something legally until you have crossed the very basic step of establishing that you have the right to do something with it besides listen to it on the original medium.
      • After all, you can't argue that you have the right to share something legally until you have crossed the very basic step of establishing that you have the right to do something with it besides listen to it on the original medium.

        I'd like to know how someone can reasonably think they have the legal right to "share" works they don't own over the Internet? The difference between personal use of a legitimately paid-for product and letting anyone and everyone have a copy is pretty large.

        I think both the *AAs
    • "Have the record companies have ever even threatened to prosecute people who rip music from CDs and put it on their portable MP3 players? "

      They have attempted to 'protect' the discs so that ripping wasn't possible.
    • They haven't gone after the rippers and ipodders because of the Diamond Rio case (Recording Industry Association of America v. Diamond Multimedia Systems, Inc., 180 F.3d 1072 [9th Cir. 1999]). The specific facts elude me, but the main gist is that ripping for the purpose of playing the music on a computer or using the music on an mp3 player was found to fit within the purpose of the AHRA (Audio Home Recording Act).

      So, this is probably the primary reason they people haven't gotten drilled.
  • short term problem (Score:5, Insightful)

    by geoff lane ( 93738 ) on Sunday April 03, 2005 @04:48PM (#12128254)
    Writers and artists survived for a long time before copyright laws existed and will continue to survive for a long time after copyright laws are abandoned as unenforceable because of modern technology.

  • Of course (Score:5, Insightful)

    by bonch ( 38532 ) on Sunday April 03, 2005 @04:49PM (#12128261)
    As technically-inclined people, we need to make sure society as a whole understands that there is a difference between technology and the use of technology. P2P is just a technology. Banning P2P because there are people who use it illegally is ludicrous. We have to make sure the fair and legal uses for P2P are known.

    Naturally, this opens up other discussions about technologies and their uses. Some might argue that based on the above argument, everyone should have the right to own a gun, since it's not the technology that's bad but the use of it by certain people. But these are debates that need to be had to mature the discussion about the difference between a simple object or technology and the way human beings use it for their own gains or against others.

    Basically, confronting the issue with education and discussion, instead of reacting with lawsuits, is the way to find a position the majority of society can agree on.
  • by angle_slam ( 623817 ) on Sunday April 03, 2005 @04:50PM (#12128276)
    No matter what the attorney said in court, it's not binding on any party at all. What he said is law only if the Court agrees with him and rules as such. Because ripping one's own CD is not actually before the Court, they probably won't rule on it.

    There is no such thing as "judicial estoppel". If he meant collateral estoppel or res judicata, those only apply to rulings by the court, not statements made in court.

    • It already is. Personal and private use is _explicitly_ given as a limitation to the scope of a copyrighted work during the period it is protected by copyright. If you abuse that privilege, however, and start giving away copies that may have been afforded to you by this limitation, expect a herd of angry lawyers to come sniffing after you.
    • by jasomill ( 186436 ) on Sunday April 03, 2005 @05:06PM (#12128391)
      There is no such thing as "judicial estoppel". If he meant collateral estoppel or res judicata, those only apply to rulings by the court, not statements made in court.

      judicial estoppel. Estoppel that prevents a party from contradicting previous declarations made during the same or a later proceeding if the change in position would adversely affect the proceeding or constitute a fraud on the court. --- Also termed doctrine of preclusion of inconsistent positions; doctrine of the conclusiveness of the judgment.

      ---
      Black's Law Dictionary, Seventh Edition
      • You can see the key word in that defination as "declaration". This word has special meaning is is not what happened here. The attorney was arguing a case and not making a legal declaration. Further, it was in response to a question, and could be constued as a hypothetical.

        In real life attorneys state a lot of different things in arguments and easily go back and forth on positions. This case does not have the issue of fair use in front of it so a passing statement like this will get news headlines but w
  • by geekee ( 591277 ) on Sunday April 03, 2005 @04:51PM (#12128286)
    "What about using DeCSS to watch DVDs on Linux or other platforms? It should be interesting to see MGM try to wriggle out of this, since I doubt that the company is going to champion any expansion of fair use."

    Although it should be legal to rip a DVD to make a backup, there are IP issues with using DeCSS. DVD player manufacturers must pay a licensing fee to use the DVD format. By using DeCSS to play your own movies on your computer, you are not violating fair use, but you are using the technology without paying the licensing fee. Therefore, it seems DeCSS should be legal as a copying tool, but not as a playback tool, although IANAL.
    • Again, nothing you read on Slashdot is legal advice.

      Although it should be legal to rip a DVD to make a backup, there are IP issues with using DeCSS. DVD player manufacturers must pay a licensing fee to use the DVD format.

      Given the vagueness of the term "intellectual property" [gnu.org], it's best to call these copyright, patent, or trade secret issues what they are. In this case, most DeCSS-based DVD players appear to violate patents on MPEG-2 video and Dolby Digital audio.

  • by lxt ( 724570 ) on Sunday April 03, 2005 @05:01PM (#12128355) Journal
    This seems like a good time to ask a question that's been bugging me since I bought a new release DVD a few days ago - as well as some copy propaganda video that came up, I also got a FACT (the UK copy protection "federation") warning which in very bold letters told me "It is illegal to copy this DVD".

    It didn't say anything about distribution - merely "It is illegal to copy this DVD". But I thought under UK (and US) law I was allowed to copy physical media for my own personal use, or if not that for my use as a backup copy.

    If I'm right, does that mean someone could actually have some sort of legal case against FACT, seeing as they are wrongly informing consumers of their legal rights?

    I'm obviously not a lawyer, and I only ask this out of curiousity...
    • "If I'm right, does that mean someone could actually have some sort of legal case against FACT, seeing as they are wrongly informing consumers of their legal rights?"

      I'm not claiming to be super informed on this topic, but I'm fairly certain the DMCA says "Nah, you can't copy this because you'd be undoing encryption."

      I don't know if the UK has that law also or not. Clarification appreciated.
      • Why would copying require decryption? If you send me an encrypted digital file, I can copy the encrypted digital file verbatim even if I can't decrypt it to reveal the plaintext. Unless every system that could duplicate it has hardware protection to prevent reading it as bytes rather than sending it to some approved playing software?
    • Actually, if I remember correctly (and really can't be bothered trawling through UK copyright law right now, so sorry for lack of a link), the UK's copyright laws don't have an provision for copying for personal use. Doing a very quick search, this seems to have a good summary:

      http://www.patent.gov.uk/copy/indetail/usingcopyr i ght.htm [patent.gov.uk]

      See "But if I've bought something, can't I use it however I like?" specifically.

      Sucks, doesn't it.
    • by arkhan_jg ( 618674 ) on Sunday April 03, 2005 @05:55PM (#12128701)
      Actually, that's not an explicit defence against infringement under UK copyright law. Our version of Fair Use is called Fair Dealing [wikipedia.org], and has very limited exceptions -
      basically, you can only use a limited portion of a copyrighted work for education or news reporting etc. A wholesale copy, even if it's for your own use, is technically illegal. Ergo, ripping a CD to MP3's, or a DVD to your hard drive are not legal - but not enforced.

      However, the courts have generally ruled that a non-distributive, non-profit copying is legal, such as timeshifting by taping radio shows, or making transient copies in order to run a program.

      It's likely that ripping a CD or DVD, for your own personal use (and not say, your mate) would equally be judged non-infringing if it ever came up in court.

      That is until the EUCD comes into force. The UK has already signed up to this european legislation, we're just waiting on the patent office to write a version of the law for parliament to pass. The EUCD is more restrictive than the DMCA, and the UK version will almost certainly prevent the bypassing of copy-control mechanisms by any means. Therefore when it passes, bypassing CSS to rip your own copy will likely be explicitly illegal, rather than technically as at the moment.

  • Property Rights (Score:5, Insightful)

    by hhawk ( 26580 ) on Sunday April 03, 2005 @05:01PM (#12128358) Homepage Journal
    Lots of issues here; let's walk through them all

    1) File sharing and "ripping and sharing" in general expand the market and drive up sales and possible, disintermediation of the record labels.

    2) MPIA has been wrong about this issue; they would have killed the VCR rental market, for example; instead a multi-billion dollar business was created.

    3) For a song, there is the copyright on the words (Lyrics; song writer) and the (Music; composer) and is their copyright for the performance as well (e.g., the artists). I believe the record companies also assert a copyright on the finished album (CD) as well; which maybe legal and all, but well isn't really for something all that creative and artistic that it would worth copyrighting (and the some day releasing it into the public domain.

    4) You certainly have the right to make archive copies and/or to use that copy and keep the "master/original" safely stored for safe keeping.

    5) If you also have the right to lend your CD to a friend or have a library and lend out CDs/DVDs.

    6) Do you really however, have the right make copies of your archive and lend/give those?

    6a) While it's good for business to do so (my belief), I think it is illegal.

    6b) I've driven through south central LA and seen crack being sold in 20 sec. transactions and at the time said, when you can sell 1 Terabyte of music that way, legal or NOT, copyright becomes some you can not enforce. That doesn't make it legal, but makes it so you would want to change the law...

    7) Economist and Hover Inst. Fellow, Thomas Sowell called P2P sharing akin to fencing stolen goods, but for that to fly you'd have to "selling" the copies... It's not fencing, if anything its accessory to theft, but it's possible (AND THIS IS BIG THING) that accepting that it is THEFT, that there is NO Damage and NO Loss; again it actually has inverse damages; it enriches the copyright holders (see points 2 and 6a.

    • Re:Property Rights (Score:3, Insightful)

      by hhawk ( 26580 )
      What I didn't say, is I'd like to see some type of legal challenge to the record companies copyright claiming that the finished song, music and performance is no different from the Album so that they can't claim the rights that have already been award to the creative arists.

      Now they will claim every thing from the layout of the tracks and the final production, etc. but those are in my view all work for hire and those rights should be wrapped up in the various artist rights.

      Basically, since they are coming
      • Assigned rights (Score:3, Insightful)

        by tepples ( 727027 )

        What I didn't say, is I'd like to see some type of legal challenge to the record companies copyright claiming that the finished song, music and performance is no different from the Album so that they can't claim the rights that have already been award to the creative arists.

        U.S. copyright law grants copyright in the sound recordings on a CD to the recording artists, but by standard industry contract, the artists have assigned (i.e. given in exchange for money or other consideration) their copyright inte

  • by superdude72 ( 322167 ) * on Sunday April 03, 2005 @05:02PM (#12128364)
    For the thousandth time: Copyright regulates *distribution*. It simply doesn't apply to making a copy for my own use. I can make as many copies as I want for myself and the copyright holder has no right to any control over this, provided I don't distribute the copies. I don't need a "fair use" exemption--the law simply doesn't apply.

    "Fair use" is an exception to the law. This is what permits me to reprint verbatim part of a copyrighted work in, say, a book review, and publish that review without violating copyright.

    This is what is so evil about the DMCA. It enables copyright holders to invent new rights for themselves--such as the right to prevent me from making copies for personal use--with DRM technology, then enforce that new right by making it illegal for me to circumvent the DRM.
    • by Rumor ( 99829 ) on Sunday April 03, 2005 @07:01PM (#12129060)
      For the last time, you are wrong.

      The right to copy belongs solely to the copyright holder. There is no caveat on that right except fair use. The right to make one copy, for you, for someone else, for throwing in the garbage, for anything, is a right solely vested in the copyright holder.

      There is no law against distribution. If there were, there would be no First Sale doctrine, because only the copyright holder would be able to sell or give away a copyrighted work. Anyone who possesses a copyrighted work can sell it or give it away (in general). If copyright was distroright, then you would never be able to sell your books or your cds to anyone, or even give them away. But that would be stupid. You simply cannot make a duplicate of a copyrighted work, for any purpose.

      Unless it falls under fair use.
    • For the thousandth time: Copyright regulates *distribution*. It simply doesn't apply to making a copy for my own use.

      For the thousandth time, you're wrong.

      There are numerous exclusive rights compromising copyright. One is distribution, but reproduction is another. Read 17 USC 106.
  • by Rightcoast ( 807751 ) on Sunday April 03, 2005 @05:06PM (#12128392) Homepage
    Like the article says:
    But they've now conceded the contrary in open court, so if they actually win this case they ll be barred from challenging ripping in the future under the doctrine of judicial estoppel.
    It is of course obvious to most us that this is allowed, and has been for some time. There are many people who aren't sure if this is legal or not, and as they find out it is, will begin to wonder:

    If I can rip a Song off of my compact disk, what makes it so wrong to rip one I have paid for and my kid scratched, broke, etc.

    I wonder if the major players in litigation realize that by taking these cases to court, they are hurting their cause. The more people become educated though soundbytes alone, the less power over our rights the MGM's of the world will have.
  • The article said...

    This was a very interesting point for them to make, not least because I would wager that there are a substantial number of people on MGM s side of the case who don t think that example is one bit legal.

    Show me one official instance where anyone has claimed that ripped CDs for personal use is not legal. I HATE when people on the other side exaggerate (and apparently flat-out lie) just to score points.

  • by Husgaard ( 858362 ) on Sunday April 03, 2005 @05:31PM (#12128551)
    This reminds me of what I think was the best April 1st joke this year [infoworld.com], claiming that a 100 years old supreme court decision said:
    Therefore, in the matter of defendant Thomas Alva Edison versus respondent the Book Authors Guild and respondent the Sheet Music Publishers Association, this court unanimously concurs with the lower court's decree. In inventing and offering for sale his "moving picture" and "phonograph" devices, the defendant induced countless infringing acts against the holders of copyrights for books and music. Defendant Edison's assets are to be seized in order to make restitution to the respondents. Furthermore, all phonographs, record players, moving picture equipment and similar devices are to be confiscated and destroyed. All "record" companies and "film studios" most disgorge their ill-gotten gains and henceforth cease and desist all operations now and forevermore.

    One side of this court case does IMHO not know what they are doing.

    The recording industry tried the courts to stop radio airplay of recordings. Now radio is both a revenue source and a major free (except for payola) advertising channel.

    The movie industry tried the courts to make the video recorder illegal. Now video rentals and sales are one of their largest revenue streams.

    And now they try the courts to make new technology illegal - again. I bet that p2p will end up generating more revenue for these companies. (In France and several other european countries they already are generating revenue from p2p [slashdot.org].)

    Don't these companies want to earn money?

  • by bravo369 ( 853579 ) on Sunday April 03, 2005 @05:34PM (#12128578)
    they were put out of business by the movie industry and now they concede it's perfectly fine to make copies. With that revelation, 321 studios should be allowed to sell dvdxcopy again.
  • Comparison to DVD... (Score:5, Informative)

    by doormat ( 63648 ) on Sunday April 03, 2005 @05:40PM (#12128622) Homepage Journal
    I like the last question in the article. Basically it poses the question that since MGM admitted its legal, vis a vis fair use, to rip CDs to put on an iPod, shouldn't fair use cover ripping DVDs to another device (like a PSP, or some portable media jukebox).

    The answer involves the DMCA and encryption and how the DMCA is worded to excerpt fair use, even though you broke the encryption. I'm quite interested to see what legal geeks say about this (since IANAL).
    • by Alsee ( 515537 )
      DMCA is worded to excerpt fair use

      No it isn't. It may look that way, and I suspect it was a deliberate deception to make it look that way, but it isn't.

      The DMCA says that fair use defenses to copyright infringment are not affected. However a DMCA anticircumvention violation is illegal even if you are not commiting infringment. There is no fair use defense to a DMCA violation, therefore saying that a nonexistant fair use defenses is "not affected" is at best worthless and at worst a deception.

      -
  • Fair Use (Score:4, Interesting)

    by Nom du Keyboard ( 633989 ) on Sunday April 03, 2005 @07:02PM (#12129069)
    Fair Use should always cover translation to a new format when the old format cannot be used in that situation (e.g. ripping a CD to MP3 to play on a portable player that does not include CD capabilities).

    I'm not saying it does -- although I hope the court will say so -- but it should. The copyright owner should have no ability to determine or limit how you view the work.

  • by wombert ( 858309 ) on Sunday April 03, 2005 @07:07PM (#12129093)
    http://www.copyright.gov/title17/92chap1.html#107 [copyright.gov]

    Read sections 107 and 108 -

    "Fair Use" refers to reproducing works in part or in whole for comment, criticism, or scholarship. It doesn't work for your private DVD collection

    Archival copies are permitted for public libraries or research archives. Again (and unfortunately), this doesn't apply to your private DVD collection.
    • Dual use technology (Score:3, Informative)

      by deblau ( 68023 )
      Disclaimer: IANAL, and this is not legal advice. I'm not even going to cite authority correctly, so nyah.

      In order to understand 17 USC 107, you have to read the interpretations given by the Supreme Court in the Sony-Betamax [eff.org] case. Basically, it comes down to interpreting 107 in light of the four factors laid out by Congress:

      (1) the purpose and character of the use, including whether such use is of a commercial nature or is for nonprofit educational purposes;

      (2) the nature of the copyrighted work;
      (3) th

  • by rice_burners_suck ( 243660 ) on Sunday April 03, 2005 @07:55PM (#12129399)
    I have an idea: Congress should step in and create new legislation that returns the time-restricted copyright and patent protections to their original length, retroactively.

    Keep the part of the law that states that any work is immediately copyrighted by its creator, even if a notice is not present, but you only get so many years, and then, that's it. It goes into the public domain.

    And here's something cool: Offer an additional "extra bonus" copyright protection term, say, ten years extra, for full release of "source"... If it's music, all notation, lyrics, recordings, and other matter used in production. If it's a movie, all the original film, etc. If it's software, the source code and building scripts. Whatever it is, it must be submitted to a government agency created for the purpose a year or so before the copyright expires, and that agency will make sure that all the required materials are there. If they are, the additional "extra bonus" time will be awarded, with the materials released to the public domain when that additional term expires.

    You'll find a lot of software companies running up against the copyright limit for versions they released so many years ago, and they'll be desperate for the additional time. Say it's version 9 right now, but version 1 is nearing the copyright limit... Ten years from now, when it's version 12, the complete source code for version 1 will come out. May seem like a huge lag of so many years, but UNIX was created how many years ago? Ten years ago they were saying that BSD is dying. And what the heck am I using to type this up? A Mac. Running BSD. Some of the code running in this thing, I'd bet you, is at least 20 years old. Probably crap they wrote, perfected, and never touched again. How often do you look at the code for tail?

    So, yes, you could get additional time in exchange for all the source, or simply let the release go into the public domain and keep the source secret.

  • In response to a casual user of the Internet who asked me what FTP is, I ranted off the response below. You can send it to your non-tech friends and family who may not be aware of what the Internet was meant for.
    File Transfer Protocol -- the original "P2P" file sharing from the 1980's.

    http://www.faqs.org/rfcs/rfc959.html [faqs.org]

    As the Internet was used mainly by the military and by universities back then, it was used to allow researchers to share published papers, research data, and software they had written.

    That's why MGM v. Grokster is so bogus. P2P file sharing was one of the main purposes of the Internet (it wasn't to surf cnn.com).

    http://www.pcworld.com/news/article/0,aid,120228,0 0.asp [pcworld.com]
    http://www.eff.org/IP/P2P/MGM_v_Grokster [eff.org]

    Which brings me to another pet peeve. I keep seeing news reports on various topics that say things like "Internet and e-mail access". What they really meant to say was "web and e-mail". HTTP is but one of many protocols that run on the Internet. "The Internet" is much bigger than just "the web".

    To make that even more clear, prior to the web, when you signed up to the Internet, you would expect "e-mail and UseNet". Now you expect "e-mail and web and maybe UseNet if the ISP is a) nice and b) retro".

    It just illustrates that Internet protocols come and go. FTP was a file sharing protocol. Grokster, Kazaa, etc. are just new file sharing protocols.

    UseNet itself is actually also based on peer-to-peer technology. UseNet is the globally distributed message board system. groups.google.com archives UseNet posts, but they are just one of thousands of UseNet servers across the globe collaborating to provide the service. UseNet servers talk to each other as "peers" to synchronize their message postings.

    The whole nature of the Internet was originally "peer-to-peer". But two things have come along to keep that concept out of the minds of most Internet users:

    a) Web technology, which is more client-server than peer-to-peer. The popularity of the HTTP protocol has made it seem to most people that the web is the Internet, and thus most people think that to participate on the Internet means you are supposed to "log in" to some "official" computer (e.g. browsing to cnn.com)

    b) Dynamic IP. The inventors of the Internet thought that 2 billion IP addresses was enough for the world. Well, we've run out, and so now when you get an Internet account you no longer get your own "static" IP address. Instead, you get a "dynamic" IP address. That makes it impossible to register a domain name (like underreported.com) to your own computer at home. Instead, you have to pay a "hosting provider" to use their computer running on their network that happens to be privileged enough to have static IP addresses. In the old days, everyone's computer handled their own e-mail, their own FTP server, etc. FTP is really only effective with static IP addresses. The rise in popularity of so-called "P2P file-sharing apps" is due in part that they were built to work with dynamic IP addresses (because they advertise themselves on a custom protocol as opposed to relying on the DNS (Domain Name System, where names like underreported.com are recorded along with their static IP addresses)).

    • To put it even simpler, sharing files directly between peers was one of the oldest functions of the Internet and FTP (File Transfer Protocol) was the main method. This predates the web by many years, and is one of many protocols like HTTP (web), SMTP (sending e-mail) and POP (recieving e-mail). However, it lacked a good way to index content.

      What we know as peer-to-peer programs today serve fairly much the same purpose as search engines such as Google do for web. It indexes files from each peer to make it e

Software production is assumed to be a line function, but it is run like a staff function. -- Paul Licker

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