Tech Heavyweights and the SSSCA 225
Keith Russell writes: "Looks like Sen. Hollings' uphill climb just got a little bit steeper. The Computer Systems Policy Project, a trade group which includes IBM, Microsoft, Intel, Compaq, Dell, and Motorola, has officially stated their opposition to the SSSCA, calling it "an unwarranted intrusion by the government." The ZDNet article also indicates that Big Media isn't quite behind it themselves. Disney's support is well-documented, and Fox seems to like it, but AOL Time Warner and the MPAA, while keen to the idea, don't like this bill in particular." Read the entire article - not supporting this proposal "in its current form" is not very strong opposition.
I still dont see... (Score:1)
Re:I still dont see... (Score:2)
At last (Score:1)
E-Mail Your Congressperson (Score:4, Informative)
Re:E-Mail Your Congressperson (Score:4, Insightful)
Use the FAX, Luke (Score:1)
Re:E-Mail Your Congressperson (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:E-Mail Your Congressperson (Score:2)
If you're a USA citizen, you might try emailing your congressional representatives with your opinions.
No! Please don't do this. Congressional representatives get enough opinions as it is. Send your reprentatives facts which support your opinion. We can only hope that she or he will ignore the opinions of the uninformed public (which would probably support the SSSCA) and instead get the facts from those who know them, and then make his or her own opinion as to what is best for the country as a whole.
Exercise your opinion at the polls. Your opinion as to which candidate is going to do the best for this country (or for you if you're the selfish type). Between elections let your representative do the job he or she was elected to do. If your representative wants opinions, your representative will seek them out, either through polls or through special panels.
The exception of course is for the lower level officials who you can get to know on a person to person basis. But anonymous letters from some anonymous concerned citizen likely go straight into the trash (after some poor worker checks it for anthrax).
Politics, Scary.... (Score:2, Interesting)
The two Probably oppose it for entirely different reasons, but Politics sure do make for strange bedfellows....
Re:Politics, Scary.... (Score:1)
1) it interferes with the first amendment; there are court precedents which define source code as protected speech, and others which say that it is not. Guess which definition most of
2) best case: it would force the industry to design all of their technology to meet a certain standard, without any compelling, clear and present danger to public safety or the economy, or else,
3) the government would step to design the technology, and thereby interfere with the free market.
Basically, it is another in a long line of corporate protection/welfare measures which our economic and political system is said to oppose.
too many years as a unix admin......Re:Politics, S (Score:1)
I cannot type
Re:Politics, Scary.... (Score:2)
In this case, I think we and Microsoft oppose it for pretty much the same reasons. We both want to be able to do whatever we want with our own shit.
Granted, MS certainly tends to try to force others to do what they (ms) want as well, but the only reason that's wrong is that they (like the government) are in the position to succeed in forcing others to comply (or, at least, make it quite painful not to comply).
Our Rights (Score:2, Interesting)
Watch Out! (Score:2)
Re:Watch Out! (Score:2)
It's rather humorous to read the RIAA's take on this [riaa.org]. Of course considering the source, I tend to believe the "trying to add an amendement" side of things.
-S
More government intervention (Score:2, Interesting)
This legislation would be an unwarranted intrusion by the government into the commercial marketplace," said Ken Kay, executive director of the Computer Systems Policy Project, a trade group that includes IBM, Intel, Dell Computer, Motorola and others as members. "This would freeze technology...(and) force government to pick winners and losers".
As much as big corporations like to protect their IP, corporations also resent the government telling them what to do. So this puts up an interesting question: What do big corporatons want more, IP protection, or free market enterprise and development?
Whether this bill passes or not will likely show which is the winner.
Re:More government intervention (Score:3, Insightful)
Microsoft? (Score:1)
MS seems to belong in both categories, but chose to be against it. Interesting.
Microsoft would be hurt by SSSCA (Score:2)
The problem is that the act forbids selling, offering to the public, importing, etc. any software device which does not include government certified security systems. A device is defined as something which processes, transmits, or displays information or data...
So hello.c would be illegal as would all the sample programs in computer science textbooks. In fact teaching computer science would be impossible because one would have to start on chapter 11 (pun intended). I can only assume that this would only be resolved by importing foreign programmers because it would be impossible to teach people in this country.
This has substantial ramafications for Microsoft and all other technology firms. I wonder if Disney is scared enough to try to deliberately kill the tech industry...
Re:More government intervention (Score:2, Insightful)
There is *no* way the industry could agree upon a DRM technology in 18 months and I think they know it. Then it comes down to the government mandating a solution with the very real possibility that nobody gets the brass ring and makes a ton of money selling a proprietary solution.
Re:More government intervention (Score:3, Interesting)
them. If I develop some kind of "intellectual property" and ask the government to intrude into OTHERS' rights, the government is not interfering with my rights.
Similar example: Democrats don't want government intrusion in abortion and reproductive rights, but they are fine with government dictating what parents teach their kids. They oppose government road blocks that search for illegal drugs, they support mandated smog testing.
My point: 99% of politics is not fundamental principal, it's a matter of convenience.
Re:More government intervention (Score:2)
I like the Greens better:
THe need of the consumer out wieght the need of the Corperations, but in an environmentaly friendly way.
Re:More government intervention (Score:2)
see the iffrence....greens do not want corps in politics, causes coruption, dems do not have a large urgency for consumers rights, look at the sponsers of the DMCA and SSSCA
the rebpulicrats and demicans are the same goal wise, the differ politicly( ie the how to reach the goal)
greens are totaly diffrent from this, the do not want corps in politics, they want strong consumer rights, they want to have more well targeted social programs, the want to be environmentaly friendly.
demicrat politicians are out for #1, the people that vote for them however, probably would agree with most or all of what the greens say, that is why they were not and most likly wil not be alloed into any debate.
Re:More government intervention (Score:2)
The real point is, that in SSSCA, smog controls, the "drug war," and every other issue, politics is based on personal gain, not ideals. Both liberals and conservatives.
Re:More government intervention (Score:2)
Re:More government intervention (Score:2)
However, that doesn't mean big corporations want a free market either. The ultimate goal of any true capitalist is to eliminate the competition and thus establish a monopoly. I'm not advocating communism, because communism sucks even more than capitalism. I really like the idea of the free market, it's really good for me as a consumer. But I think people need to realize that it is the free market that allows capitalism, not the other way around, and the free market is what we really need to protect. Totally unrestricted capitalism will destroy the free market just as surely as communism will.
For How Long? (Score:3, Insightful)
Doesn't standards decrease cost over the long term? I get the impression hardware manufacturer's main gripes boil down to:
1. Additional cost to implement SSSCA into their products.
2. SSSCA provisions limiting future product design.
Make no mistake, I am against SSSCA, but if Sony can make money from CD and DVD players, why not be able to make money from these hypothetical devices?
Copy protected devices (DVD/ e-nbook readers, MiniDisc) seem to be the trend anyway. Especially as the content creators become content distributors.
Re:For How Long? (Score:2)
Negotiation? (Score:3, Informative)
At least the media companies are being told that they are NOT the only game in town.
you *know* a law is bad (Score:4, Funny)
Re:you *know* a law is bad (Score:2)
The same thing actually happened with the CDA (Communications Decency Act). It was refreshing to see Microsoft on the side of good for once. Another case that comes to mind that Slashdot and Microsoft agreed on was the case where Ticketmaster sued Microsoft for linking to the Ticketmaster site (whatever happened to that case anyway?). It just goes to show that Microsoft isn't 100% pure evil (probably closer to 99.44%).
Re:you *know* a law is bad (Score:2)
when /. and Msft are both against it!!
You sure about that?
Although the article starts with "technology companies including Intel, IBM, Microsoft and Compaq Computer held a coming-out press conference Monday to oppose a broad copyright protection proposal," it later lists some of the members of the trade group, the Computer Systems Policy Project: "IBM, Intel, Dell Computer, Motorola and others."
No Microsoft.
Wondering if maybe Microsoft was one of the "others," I checked the web site [cspp.org] for this group. Down the left side of the page are its members: Compaq, Dell, HP, IBM, Intel, NCR, Unisys, and Motorola.
Still no Microsoft.
Now, that's not to say that Microsoft definately isn't opposed to the SSSCA, just that the story gives us no actual reason to believe that it is.
Have they already made some kind of statement, either on their own or as part of another organization? If not, perhaps we should still consider them silent on the issue?
D-S. C. (Score:1)
" and parsed it as "Disney-South Carolina"?
Some commentary on the article (Score:5, Insightful)
...and because it turned out to be so easy to crack SDMI, despite their claims to the contrary. Oops...
"Hollings' plan would restart this process, this time with the force of law behind it, and apply it to all digital devices. "
Can't do it with technology? Buy a law instead. That's how the DMCA happened. You can't stop people by adding more pickable locks, so they chose to make it illegal to pick a lock, to own picks in the first place, and even to discuss how to pick locks with your buddies. Overkill, but that's how government works.
"The early draft bill would require the technology industry to come to its own decision on a copy-protection standard within 18 months, or else have the government step in to mandate a solution. "
There's a scary thought: When the private sector fails to come up with an uncrackable system, the government will step in and have a go.
"The bill would bar the sale of any "interactive digital device" that did not have the anti-piracy technology built in. It would also be illegal to remove or disable the security technology as well as to remove the piracy protections from a song, movie or other piece of content. "
And the government's solution, as I said, is to ignore the fact that they can't make it uncrackable from a technology point-of-view, and to just say, "Illegal!" every time someone tries to crack it. The idea of working with consumers to come up with a balance that can work for everyone, as with traditional "fair use" provisions, never seems to occur to them.
Re:Some commentary on the article (Score:2)
>fails to come up with an uncrackable system, the
>government will step in and have a go.
Hm...even if the private sector succeeds in coming up with an uncrackable, the government, specifically the NSA, will STILL step in and have a go...at cracking it.
Shot across the bow (Score:2)
Interesting to see AOL/TW siding, sort of, with tech. Apparently that's where most of the profits are.
Re:Shot across the bow (Score:2)
Who provides the bigger campaign contributions, and who provides them in small unmarked non-sequential notes?
Surprising.... (Score:3, Interesting)
Intel, IBM, Microsoft and Compaq Computer held a coming-out press conference Monday to oppose
a broad copyright protection proposal being backed by Walt Disney and Sen. Ernest Hollings Wow, maybe they realize this'll be bad for business? I mean to the average consumer, nobody will really care, they'll see it as being just another development or something. But most
The bill would bar the sale of any "interactive digital device" that did not have the anti-piracy
technology built in I don't think most people realize what that means, and i think that's what these companies need to do. They have the money, now start advertising. Make sure people know how restrictive this is. I know somebody said this in a discussion yesterday, but oh well. Show a cartoon of a kid trying to print a picture for school and being taken to prison and being abused there. Finally, there's some compainies opposing this, at least a little bit!
Valenti doesn't make sense (Score:4, Insightful)
All the parties except for the consumers, right?
Re:Valenti doesn't make sense (Score:2, Insightful)
Or how about the CD replacements DataPlay [slashdot.org] Think any "focus groups" met for this wonderful product?
The more copy protection capabilities they can put into a device or the more laws that they can push that will provide for copy protection, the better. And if they can get it through without consumers knowing, at least at first, all the better.
Re:Valenti doesn't make sense (Score:2)
Yeah, I bet they did. Remember, all they'd tell Joe Sixpack is "look at this new CD thingie! It's the size of a quarter, and cool looking too!"
Did you think the focus group people would say, "and oh, we won't let you make MP3s off it"?
Re:Valenti doesn't make sense (Score:2, Informative)
Sounds not bad (Score:1)
Pat
Re:Sounds not bad (Score:2)
Hearing delayed on SSSCA (Score:2, Informative)
The SSSCA threatens everything. (Score:5, Informative)
I'm sitting at my desk, doing my job (being a productive engineer) to the benefit of my company and my country's economy. Society benefits greatly through technological progress made by the thousands of people like me all around the world. Let's have a look at what "Interactive Digital Devices" I'm using, which I might soon be unable to use.
1. My PC, on which I'm writing this. It has a variety of uses which we're all familiar with. It runs a variety of software -- free, proprietary, open source, closed course, stuff I've written myself too. Without it, my job would be impossible.
2. My telephone. This is quite high-tech for a phone. I interact with it, and it's full of digital circuitry.
3. The development platform which I'm working on. This contains digital signal processors, FPGAs, CPLDs, PROMS, RAM, glue logic, and various buttons, switches, LED readouts and so on. It's really a cut-down version of a product which my company ships. Interacting with one of these is the only way to get any work done round here. It connects to my PC via a JTAG in-circuit emulation box, which is also mildly interactive.
4. A small "performance monitor" board, which I've been developing and testing. This connects to my development platform, and produces analogue outputs based on digital inputs. (I'm trying not to give too much away here.
5. A digital oscilloscope. This is displaying traces from the hardware on my desk. Often, I screen-grab these traces onto a disk (in a standard graphics format).
6. A data transmission analyser. This box outputs digital test patterns, and monitors its inputs for the purposes of bit error rate measurement. I can set it up to do a variety of things, to verify the design of the hardware I'm helping to create.
If the UK were to pass a law like the SSSCA, it would put my company out of business for two reasons - the engineers would be unable to work because their tools would be illegal, and in any case the product we create (wireless telecoms equipment, UMTS Node-B) would also be illegal until the 3GPP mandated spread-spectrum radio standards were updated to include this copy protection/DRM/PITA standard.
I rest my case. Passing the SSSCA would, I think, bring the digital revolution to an ugly and unceremonious end.
Re:The SSSCA threatens everything. (Score:2)
I hear you. I'm developing an IP phone right now. The one in front of me has 2 x RJ-45 and 2 x RJ-11 ports, and a text web browser on it. It also has blanks for USB and PS-2 ports in future versions, plus another couple of blanks for ports that I don't even know about yet. It's perfectly capable of sending and receiving copyrighted audio and text (eBooks?)
I'm having a hard time thinking how I could argue that it's exempt from SSSCA. There's a pretty thought for you; we'll have to tag any voice traffic originating on the RJ-11 as being owned by "public domain", or whatever scheme the SSSCA comes up with.
SSSCA is a nasty, dumb, horrid bill, and I hope it dies a huge death and is buried very deep, in a very dark place and never surfaces again. Ever.
Re:The SSSCA threatens everything. (Score:2)
Actually, that won't go either... (Score:2)
It doesn't make distinctions of "professional" or "consumer"- it's any computing device whatsoever.
Re:The SSSCA threatens everything. (Score:2)
... while posting to Slashdot? Riiiiiight.
Re:The SSSCA threatens everything. (Score:2)
In other news, the US government have decided to restrict the sale of bar magnets. "It has come to our attention that the DeCSS DVD-piracy-enabling software could be written onto a hard disk using these devices." The use, design of, trafficking in and discussion of bar magnets is now a federal offence.
Beware the "good bill" (Score:5, Insightful)
sPh
Re:Beware the "good bill" (Score:2)
Re:Beware the "good bill" (Score:2)
Indeed. (Score:2)
Re:Beware the "good bill" (Score:2)
This bill provides a legal mandate for individual companies to create legally protected monopolies. Different companies in different areas. (Well, you need to mix in the DMCA, but that's already there.)
Do you have enough imagination to believe that several different companies in that position won't each raise their prices until people stop buying? I give it five years before the dollar totally collapses. Paper is only worth what it can buy, and if it can't buy anything... Phones, cars, computers, etc. will be the first to raise their prices, as each will become monopolized. (Perhaps cars will remain an oligopoly, and thus slightly less voracious.) As these start taking a larger share of the cash, people will need to earn more in order to exist (in most places one can't hold down a job without a car, and many jobs also require a phone). Certain industries will collapse as people conserve their cash. These people will now be out of work, soon out of housing, REALLY SOON out of food. Because grocery stores, which are already operating on a thin margin, need to raise their prices to meet expenditures. This cycle will repeat several times, with several industries destoryed before things start to get really bad. (This may give you some hint of how bad I expect things to get.)
As faith in the money supply disappears, the trust of the citizens in their government would disappear. This is not something that it is easy to recreate.
My expectation is that we would devolve to a barter society, with only locally available goods being available. And that one of the big trade goods would be ammunitions. At some point anyone who actually had something of value would refuse to accept paper at any markup.
None of this depends on the precise details of the current bill. Merely on it's general provisions. We no longer live in a predominately rural economy, where most families were self-sufficient. As any large share of the population gets desperate, expect crime to skyrocket. If cameras start to be used to catch the intruders, expect that fires will get set to eliminate the evidence. (Not often, at first, but still, too often.)
If things happen slowly enough, those rich enough may withdraw to walled enclaves, but the tactics of invasion have developed a lot more than the tactics of defense. And the invaders will be more reckless, and can choose their time.
When the desperate reaches over 30%, then expect an insurrection. If it hits 40%, expect it to be successful.
Nobody will win. Everybody will loose. Those left alive may envy those who died. This is a "water empire", so any significant disruption of the infrastructure will be accompanied by widespread death. Water, food, power
I would not be surprised by a death rate of 9 out of 10, or higher (I left our a lot of compounding effects).
We are living in a country populated above the carrying capacity of the land unless highly skilled techniques are used. We don't have plows. We don't have horses. We don't have oxen. We've depleated the water tables. If power goes, we don't have water. And most of us don't have any idea of how to be a subsistence farmer. We don't dare court this kind of breakdown. But hardly anybody realizes it. And most are tightly focused on the short term profitable choice. This is quite dangerous.
As the matter of fact, it's insanely dangerous even without these lunatic bills that seem to have no function except to destroy the country. (Yes, I know it ostensibly has a different purpose. But the way that it's drawn up suggests that the ostensible purpose doesn't match the real one.)
Were I in a jury, I would vote for a conviction of malfeasance for anyone who voted for that bill without hearing any other evidence. If the charge were treason, I would want to be shown that they had some idea of what they were voting for. But I would feel like I was being picky.
Glad to see the tech boys against it. (Score:2)
Thankfully, this bill isn't masquerading as an anti-terrorism/anti-pedophile bill but rather being seen for the anti-consumer bill that it really is.
When is it a computer? (Score:2, Interesting)
If shit like this is put in computers, will the computer still feel like a universal tool? There is of course a limit when a computer is to restricted to feel like a computer. Most geeks here appreciate computers because they are so flexible.
Hopefully, there will always be a quite large demand for computers like they are today. And even though most people might buy "computers" that are more like a Nintendo with WWW/email/DVD/office, for scientific uses and in the industry, truly flexible and programmable computers will be needed.
Re:When is it a computer? (Score:2)
I'm sure the final SSSCA (or Son of SSSCA) will contain a provision to allow limited numbers of licensed unrestricted devices.
Compare with gun control. Bring in restrictions, little by little, arguing that there's no valid / legal / non-special interest use of unrestricted devices. Transfer responsibility from the users to the manufacturers. Assume that people are guilty, and make them people prove their innocence and good intent through registration. Get them used to the idea that their rights are now priveledges that they have to ask nicely for.
SSSCA actually leapfrogs gun control, but this is a first draft. Expect to see it watered down to something that doesn't look too bad - at first.
Thank God... (Score:2)
Or whatever beings or forces of nature you want to thank that the self-interests of major companies and industries are seldom in line with each other. For as long as there's a solid business reason for one industry or company to oppose the actions or legal efforts of another industry or company, those of us who always get caught in the middle will have a chance to survive and maybe even prosper, however we individually understand prospering.
Maybe we'll get really lucky and have Sony Entertainment and Sony Electronics on the opposite sides of another lawsuit. That's always fun.
Re:Thank God... (Score:2)
Never thought I'd said this... (Score:1)
Speak the language Congress understands: Money (Score:3, Interesting)
In this case, a boycott would surely impact the hardware manufacturers and Microsoft. Even without SSSCA, Q4 2001 is not going to be all that good for these companies.
Businesses will continue to buy computers and software, but the Dells and Gateways of the world will scream loudly if Congress makes a mess of the home market.
legislation as last resort (Score:2, Insightful)
they tried to restrict media distribution via encryption, and it failed as it was destined to do; it's theoretically impossible to devise a truly secure media distribution format. if YOU can read it, the guy sitting NEXT to you can, too. since that failed, their only option is legislation.
i don't condone it. it's evil. but the media companies are trying to survive the paradigm shift in content distribution that the internet has started. corporations are considered people under the law; like people, they're just trying to survive as best they can, and they'll do whatever it takes. thus, if they can get legislation passed that lets them live, they'll do anything they can to ensure it gets passed.
everyone keeps suggesting that media companies "revise their traditional methods of distribution". how are they supposed to do that? either you give the media away for free, or you restrict distribution any way you can. there's no room in Scott McCloud's pass-the-hat paradise for media companies.
so, the big question is: if YOU were a major media corporation's CEO, and YOUR family's livelihood depended on keeping your corporation afloat in the face of underground distribution channels, what would YOU do?
i'll bet your answers, if you're truthful, aren't that far from what's happening now.
Re:legislation as last resort (Score:1)
It's not about money or survival... (Score:4, Insightful)
That's the trick, though, isn't it? It's not their welfare that's being hurt by underground distribution channels. BSA companies in particular are some of the wealthiest companies in the world despite rampant piracy of their products. Truthfully, it's not even their pocketbook.
As has been said many, many times before, you *cannot* assume that a sale of your product through piracy would have resulted in a sale for you had the pirate copy not existed.
Case in point:
http://www.wired.com/news/politics/0,1283,47617,0
Do you think that every 15 yeal old webmaster who uses a warezed copy of Photoshop could get mommy or daddy to drop the $600 for a real copy? Does *anyone* think that less affluent people who build their own computer but don't really know linux can really afford a $300 Windows 2000 license?
The same goes for music. I don't buy RIAA CD's any more because of the RIAA's actions, but beforehand, I wouldn't even consider buying a CD without hearing at least some, and preferrably all the music from the disc. Napster was providing this service for millions. Accordingly, CD sales rose. Now that Napster is gone, CD sales have plummeted.
What is being hurt by underground distribution channels is control. In the case of the software companies, it's the ability to say who and who does not use their software. They lose the ability to lock people into licenses and 'upgrade cycles' if they are illegally using software. Even though they would never profit from those people, the loss of control is unbearable.
The same goes for the music industry. As has been noted by many research firms, Napster helped CD sales. Long and Short, CD sales rose while Napster was in operation and have now leveled off and even decreased. It was never about money for RIAA labels. It was about the ability to control not only their pet artists, but their listeners as well. Do you think that listener choice controls what is a 'hit' and what is not? Think again. A song may be catch, true, but the labels pour big $$$ into artist, songs, and music videos they want to be popular. This includes paying radio stations to play it, as well as putting together concerts, commercials, and promotional material. Look at 'O-Town' for chrissakes! The band is so fake they made a TV show about how fake it was. They have singles in the top 40 though. You think that wasn't entirely due to the effort of their label?
The same thing goes for movie studios, newspapers, televison networks, etc... etc.. etc...
We are living in a time that is analogous to the late middle-ages, just before the emergence of a real middle class. We have an oligarchy of rich, powerful individuals, Corporations and their executives in this case, who know that their continued survival is entirely dependant upon the serf classes. If those classes cannot be controlled, they cannot be trusted to allow the oligarchy to remain in power. Just like the French nobility, however, the aristocracy of money and power in the United States has decided not to try to adapt to the changing world.
Orv wiv'er heads...
It's already there... (Score:2)
All it takes for it to happen online is someone to use shorten and a fat pipe to allow downloading/uploading. MP3's, WMA's, TVQ's, and Ogg's merely make it easier with the need for a fat pipe lessened.
They're on the brink of obsolecence right now- bandwidth is high enough to make it a real problem for them, they're pissing off the artists left and right, and they're beginning to see the pissing off of the consumers themselves.
I just wish they'd die or adapt quickly- all this tar-pit thrashing about they're doing right now is going to make things ugly for everyone, including themselves.
what about a strike? (Score:1)
Something like "we all tech workers who care about privacy will stop working until such acts are dismissed".
there will be threats. dangers of being fired. people working anyway. but hey, weren't that the same issues that the factory workers faced since the first industrial revolution?
and at that time, it was normal to work all day with no days off, with kids working all day doing the same underpaid job of their fathers just to pay for living, while big corporations are enlarging their profits by passing laws to a government that don't care at all about the workers
Makes sense why microsoft wouldn't like it. (Score:1)
1) Make a U.S. version of windows, and make a non U.S. version of windows. With SSSCA stuff in the U.S. version, there will be incompabilities, not to mention the extra cost of making the other version.
2) Include the SSSCA "enhancements" worldwide, and risk the wrath of the European Union.
Re:Makes sense why microsoft wouldn't like it. (Score:2)
interesting (Score:1)
Today is an awfull lot like the thirties. (Score:5, Insightful)
About the only thing missing is prohibition. But we have global taxing and rulemaking without representation to make up for that, or perhaps SSSCA could make computing the underground role by (effectivly) prohibiting computers.
I wish more people would learn from history, it might save us some pain.
Re:Today is an awfull lot like the thirties. (Score:1)
Sure, there's no alcohol prohibition - but there's plenty of prohibition of drugs that are arguably less harmful than alcohol.
Because many of them are dangerous to use... (Score:2)
Cocaine is damn dangerous as are all the opiates.
Many of the halucinogens are dangerous as well.
All the deleriants (e.g. scopalamine) are very dangerous.
Dangerous in the sense of serious bodily harm in the form of easy overdose, injury to oneself because you're very definitely not in control of yourself, etc.
I don't agree with all the thinking they have, but some things are beyond ill-advised.
Re:Because many of them are dangerous to use... (Score:2)
Re:Today is an awfull lot like the thirties. (Score:5, Insightful)
Casual recreational drug use is so widespread today that it's not so far from the mass civil disobedience and general contempt for "no victim" laws that we saw during prohibition. And the only material effect is to make a few crime lords very, very rich.
I do take your point about SSSCA being much like prohibition though. For "speakeasy", read "share-easy". Or for Orwell's conspiratorial whisper of "I have a room without an Eye in it", read "I have a CD-RW without an SSSCA chip in it."
bin Laden in ... S. America?? (Score:3, Offtopic)
So, either the war on drugs is creating the economic environment that supports al Qaeda, or else this claim by a "senior official" is BS intended to excuse military action in S. America. Why does it seem incredible to me that S. American coke runners would welcome or benefit from partnership with Moslem religious/political extremists? Yes, they do business with local Marxist insurgencies, but that's because those have a political base there. Like, Columbians need help money laundering or running drugs? And we're supposed to be prepared for this war not to end in "our lifetime"?
I'm prepared to stand behind America doing some really ugly things to those who have actually attacked us. Doing ugly things to those who provide consumer society with its vices I'm only for it also broadens to include the idiots who sold us the SUVs that make us oil-addicted clients of the Saudi princes who have financed bin Lauden all along.
Re:Today is an awfull lot like the thirties. (Score:2)
It's new name is "The war on (some) drugs". Same product, new packaging.
Re:Today is an awfull lot like the thirties. (Score:2)
Well, in some states (Kansas) masturbation is illegal.
Or maybe I should compare this to mandatory filtering. We must protect the public morality.
Or perhaps a "war on masturbation".
Re:Today is an awfull lot like the thirties. (Score:2)
Why is left as an exercise to the reader.
You forgot one... (Score:2)
50-60 year cycles (Score:2)
Here's an article [wholeearthmag.com] [wholeearthmag.com] from 1998 that gives a good overview of Kondratieff's work as well as more recent studies, and a website [1-888.com] [1-888.com] with links to several others.
If these people are right, the good news is that things should go uphill over the next few decades.
TheFrood
Re:Today is an awfull lot like the thirties. (Score:2)
In addition I took the phrase "Digital Crowbar" used by the MPAA lawyer and gave it a more apropos meaning: DMCA = Digital Millineum Crowbar Assault, because that is what it is, an assault on our rights, bludgeoning us just as a crowbar would be used other than its intended purpose.
Ironically, I was being facetous in a way, but it was considered insightful. Heh, I just appreciated that my penchant for esoteric thought processes was figured out.
Oh, and let me just say "Bravo" you put out a few historical relations/connections I did not see. I am surprised you did not pull a mention of Sept 11 ~= Dec 7.
An attack on "American Soil" (Hawaii, at the time is debatable...close enough, I think).
Very interesting post.
Brain-surgery mandatory! (Score:1)
Since the human brain stores information digitally by using protein chains, then everybody will have to have a brain implant.
Resistance is futile
RIAA to four-year old: 'Sharing is bad' (Score:4, Insightful)
To further spread the word about SSSCA, RIAA representatives have begun traveling from high school to grade school speaking on the evils of file sharing. After a recent speech at St. Bernard's Grade School in Peoria, Illinois, RIAA lawyer Russel Frackman found himself challenged by one of the students:
More here:
http://www.ridiculopathy.com/index.php?display=20
An Odd Idea (Score:2)
And since the DMCA allows us to change the EULA without notice, we can force them to retro-actively make these changes in their products.
Re:An Odd Idea (Score:3, Interesting)
This isn't such a whacked out idea - Microsoft want to change from EULA (End User License Agreements) to a kind of EUUA (End User Usage Agreements), to prohibit people from using (e.g.) Frontpage to create anti-Microsoft content.
Using that precedent, if you can find an OS license that doesn't prohibit adding this kind of licensing restriction, then feel free to go for it. It should be an interesting experiment.
Re:An Odd Idea (Score:2)
Let's examine the bill for a minute.
The bill would bar the sale of any "interactive digital device" that did not have the anti-piracy technology built in.
If you notice, they mean any hardware or software capable of storing, retrieving, processing, performing, transmitting, receiving or copying information in digital form. This pretty much means every piece of software you or I write. Even a very simple program that takes any form of input at least temporarily stores, processes and copies information in a digital form. So, if you write a program, even something very simple like an ftp client, you've got to put this special copy protection in there -- not copy protection against your software, but copy protection against copying other stuff. What do you want to bet this stuff isn't going to be free? What do you want to bet it's not going to be easy to obtain either, because if you hold the keys and the locks, cracking becomes a very trivial matter.
Basically, this kills all free software, all small software shops, all independent developers, all students of computer science -- bascially brings the tech sector to a hault, except for a few very large and very rich companies.
We won't have to worry about stopping them from using Open Source, they won't be able to use it at all -- especially if the new computers won't allow you to run any software that doesn't have the SSSCA stuff in it.
This is a bad, bad law, and will force components to carry the copying protection where it's absolutely not nessessary -- like in the OBD (emissions) computer in your car, as it stores, processes and transmits digital data. Somehow, I don't think anyone's going to be putting their MP3s or Divx's there.
Luddite legislation (Score:3, Interesting)
The weavers were obviously distraught and there were riots with the Luddites as they were known attempting to destroy the machines that put them out of business.
Over the last 200 years, technology has made many people redundant, from riveters to bank clerks. It's the media businesses turn now. It's just progress.
Anybody can replicate information, large media corporations with top heavy management structures and CD/DVD pressing factories are no longer required. They are doomed, redundant, as were the Luddites. All the legislation in the world won't change that.
The survivors will be small fast media companies who can take advantage of the digital media such as MPEGs and MP3s.
Re:Luddite legislation (Score:2)
Red more carefully (Score:2)
Re:Red more carefully (Score:2)
However it only applies to things in the future. ...They will have to cease manufacture of all non-secure hardwares and softwares.
Like, say, the next release of Linux? So linux 2.4.12-ac3 is grandfathered in. But nobody can release any security patched versions without putting in SSSCA controls. This is not a very wide loophole you mention here.
Even Linux aside, look at the computer industry. How much hardware and software which was released even a few years ago is still relevant? This is a fast moving industry. Start right now requiring that everything have copy controls, and in less than a decade, it will be impossible to find or use a computer anywhere that doesn't have it. If the law at all resembles the SSSCA, it will also be impossible to find or use any open source software in this country, at least legally.
Everyrime I read these articles (Score:2)
Why these companies don't like it... (Score:2)
Because if they agreed to this law, then they probably would have to agree that the government could be justified in stepping in at any time to tell them how to design their hardware and software products. Wouldn't do to appear two-faced now would it.
Of, course, the MPAA doesn't like the proposed law because it doesn't go far enough.
RIAA claiming to be "villified" (Score:2)
The only problem I see is what they claim not to have done is pretty close to what they agree that they did do.
Be careful out there - it's a villifying world these days.
sPh
Re:RIAA claiming to be "villified" (Score:2)
I read somewhere that RIAA staffers won't wear logo t-shirts in DC because they get harassed on the streets - good! They deserve everything they get.
I have a suggestion... (Score:2)
Also Include a DVD from a region other than the United States(US is region 1, correct?).
Included In the envelope, fedex package or hand delivery a "voucher" from their district for a $50K "contribution" with the stipulation they only get said contribution provided the do not run afowl of the law by playing both disks on a computer of their choosing.
And if you really wanted to be cruel, provide the documentation electronically as an "e-book" that only allows *one* viewing and no printing.
It has been stated here on
This can only help, I think, to make it perfectly clear the kind of frustrating, draconian, unconstitutional and consumer unfriendly path we are headed down with this kind of nonsense.
If you really think about it, how long *before* the corporations buying this legislation start doing something similar?
Vendor lock-in is one thing, "legislative career lock-in to a corporation" is another.
Re:Why are we only reactive? (Score:2)
Re:What about parties? (Score:2)
"Giving them to friends for gifts", if your friends don't own legal copies of the individual tracks of their own, IS a violation of existing copyright law, not just the newer, unreasonable laws and proposed laws. (Personally, I don't think this aspect of copyright law is actually "unreasonable", as much as at the same time I don't think giving a track or two would really HARM the copyright holder...) On the other hand, making copies of tracks you legally own for YOUR OWN use is not SUPPOSED to be illegal, as far as I know, this INCLUDES 'private' parties (if you're inviting the general public, then it's a "public performance" and you have to pay royalties and such, I believe). THIS is the part that the newer, unreasonable (in my opinion) laws and proposals would criminalize (e.g. the DMCA's attempt to criminalize 'unsanctioned' DVD decoders which might be usable to make 'space-shifted' copies of DVD movies).
Interesting question about the speakers, though - especially if digital devices start popping up to take the niche formerly occupied by microcassette recorders. If the SSSCA passed, then the recorder has to have copy-prevention in it. But if it's recording from speakers, as you say, the digital copy-prevention part of the signal is gone...as well as your example of taking speaker output from one device through the line-in on another.
(Sort of like using a video capture card connected to a standalone DVD player to capture a DVD movie to a different format, which the MPAA surely would love to criminalize somehow, regardless of the intended use of such a "space-shifted" copy...)
(As always, I Am Not A Lawyer(tm), so don't assume I know what I'm talking about...)
Re:let me guess... (Score:2)
Interesting analogy, though it's not illegal for YOU to rip that tag off of a mattress YOU'VE purchased, really. It's illegal for, say, the furniture store to remove the tag before selling it to you (Last time I checked, the language on the tags now said "not to be removed except by the consumer" or some variant thereof
What makes this interesting is the fact that aspects of the DMCA, and Hollings' pet law, and such, is that they are LIKE making it illegal to remove tags from your own mattresses.
As I understand it, the "tag law" (whatever it's officially called) is there to protect the consumer from being ripped off, but the consumer is supposed to be able to do whatever they want with it once they've legally obtained ownership of the physical mattress (EXCEPT, I suppose, resell the mattress to someone else without the tags).
Pre-DMCA copyright law (in general) seemed to be a reasonable matter of "you may do whatever you want with the physical copy you've legally aquired, except resell or distribute it to other people without permission from the copyright holder". Post-DMCA copyright laws seem to be a lot like a "real" version of the common perception of the tag laws - imagine that they said "You may not remove this tag under penalty of law, even if you are the consumer, because you MIGHT resell the mattress to someone later". Sound analogous to the justification for the ridiculous copyright laws being pushed these days...
(Another analogy - as far as I know, it's illegal to run away from the police if they try to detain you, yet criminals insist on doing to anyway. OBVIOUSLY we need to outlaw shoes which make it easier for criminals to escape. Sure, this means a bit of inconvenience for non-criminals, but isn't it a small price to pay to be protected from dangerous criminals?)