Valenti of MPAA vs. Lessig of Stanford Law 17
RazzleDazzle writes: "There is a free and open debate between Jack Valenti of the MPAA vs Larry Lessig of Stanford Law about the DMCA. Following the disappointing loss of the Felton case this might be a good place to spread literature and show support for freedom if you can make it. ... This evening at the University of Southern California in Los Angeles. For info on the live webcast click here. 2600 has more information."
Forum for questions (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Forum for questions (Score:1)
"Mr. Valenti, is it true that you and Hilary Rosen were caught in flagranto delecti in a menage-a-trois with a sheep?"
(I don't care if he was or not. I just wanna hear him deny it!)
Re:Forum for questions (Score:2)
"In your opinion, what should be the right time for copyright expiration? And, in case you think the current time is just about right, will you be against an extension when Steamboat Wille is about to go to the public domain? (Let's suppose for the sake of argument that you're going to live that long)"
By the way... (Score:3, Interesting)
Valenti's position (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Valenti's position (Score:2)
Uhhhh.... (Score:2)
arooo, where's the digital archive (Score:1, Insightful)
THE DIGITAL ARCHIVE (Score:1)
Interesting debate (Score:3, Interesting)
For those who haven't seen all 90 minutes of it, here's some of the high points:
The wierdest thing was his argument about how simply because Congress has the power to make far-reaching and restrictive copyright laws anything they do is certain to be just and proper. A real 'might makes right' argument, right down to the "The EU is doing it too, so it must be correct".
Then there was Lessig's response to "How does overprotective copyright inhibit creativity?" (a parallel novel to Gone With the Wind, The Wind Done Gone, was hit with an injunction immediately after publication) which Valenti dismissed a trivial example. I really wonder what universe he lives in where having to pay $150,000 in legal fees just to write a book is 'trivial'. He also completely ignored the DMCA horror stories (Aibo hacking, Felton, Dmitri, and DeCSS) Lessig put forth.
Oh yeah, and Valenti actually claims that he's been proven correct in regards to his 1982 statement to the court about the VCR being the death of the entertainment industry. "We're losing $3 billion every year to pirated cassettes!". This guy just cracks me up.
Debate now online (Score:3, Informative)
The Debate was named Creativity, Commerce, & Culture: Lessig vs. Valenti and occured on November 29, 2001 at USC Annenberg School.
Watch the archived webcast (1.35 h) with Real Video under: http://annenberg.usc.edu/events/011129LessigValent i/debate.smil [usc.edu]
Best regards
Mikael