Judge In RIAA Test Case Calls DMCA Unclear 222
otisaardvark writes "BBC News has an interesting article about how the judge has chided Congress for being inept and unclear. There are repercussions for both sides; primarily that the initial verdict will take far, far longer."
Stating the obvious (Score:1, Flamebait)
wow (Score:1, Insightful)
the dmca is pointless. take it to court. see who wins. of course, most people will require a pro bono lawyer... but we need more tests of this law so that it can be ruled unconstitutional.
Re:wow (Score:2, Informative)
This doesn't mean that the judge agrees with it or disagrees with it. Just that the judge doesn't like the way it's worded and would find it hard to rule either way while evaluating it the way judges are supposed to evaluate cases.
-Sara
Too ambiguous? (Re:wow) (Score:3, Insightful)
The flip-side to this is that some laws which are good get tossed because of the same reason. In particular this often seems to be in old laws which don't fully apply to new situations. For awhile we had the child-pornography laws knocked down on a similar basis about interpreting them to material on the internet. I think this case is still going through the wheels, in fact.
Does America have a similar process? Could the DCMA be struck down on the basis of ambiguity or does this just mean that the judge has to sort through what it means himself?
Ironic (Score:4, Interesting)
Damn those Brits. (Score:1)
Re:Damn those Brits. (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Damn those Brits. (Score:2)
BTW, don't you know the status quo? When in doubt, blame Canada [southparkhell.co.uk]!
Report Plus Case Histroy in Wall Street Journal (Score:4, Interesting)
I've seen alot of these, "why isn't the USA media reporting this" type comments, and all I can say is try reading a REAL newspaper, like the Wall Street Journal, which not only has the article but also list a RIAAvsVerizon FAQ [wsj.com] , a PDF of the Recording Industry Association of America's July 24 motion [wsj.com], and a link to the Electronic Frontier Foundation's court filings [eff.org] page for the case!
The link for this article is here. [wsj.com]
And by the way, if you want quality news coverage, typically you've got to pay for it.
Music Companies Try to Force
Verizon to Identify Subscriber
Associated Press
WASHINGTON -- Music companies tried to persuade a judge on Friday to let them obtain names of Internet file-swappers without going to court first, a move that could dictate how copyright holders deal with Internet piracy in the future.
Internet service provider Verizon Communications [wsj.com] Inc. is resisting the music industry's subpoena, saying that it could turn Internet providers into a turnstile for piracy suits and put innocent customers at risk.
U.S. District Judge John D. Bates, who heard the case, lamented ambiguities in the Digital Millennium Copyright Act, which was enacted to uphold copyright laws on the Internet while shielding technology companies from direct liability.
Congress "could have made this statute clearer," Judge Bates said. "This statute is not organized as being consistent with the argument for either side." Judge Bates said he would try to rule quickly, but lawyers for both sides had no guess of when a decision might arrive.
The subpoena hearing, which is normally a tame affair, was contentious because the music industry sees it as a test case. If it succeeds, it plans to send reams of cease-and-desist letters to scare file-swappers into taking their collections offline.
Until now, copyright holders have relied on requests sent to Internet providers to take action on their own against suspected pirates. Almost all Internet providers forbid sharing copyrighted material without permission. But that can take a lot of time, and makes copyright holders reliant on Internet providers to enforce the law. Internet providers don't always respond as well or as quickly as music and movie publishers would prefer. They think individual letters from the maker itself might work better.
"Wouldn't that be a lot easier way to let people know that they are in fact not anonymous and there could be consequences?" asked Cary Sherman, the Recording Industry Association of America's general counsel.
Verizon said that since the hundreds of songs up for trade by the anonymous Verizon customer at the center of the case sit on the person's computer rather than Verizon's network, it isn't required to automatically give up the subscriber's name.
"Verizon was a passive conduit at most," said Eric Holder, a former Justice Department prosecutor who represented Verizon. Mr. Holder said the music industry's strategy could create a contentious relationship between Verizon and its customers and put the Internet provider in the position of handing over names to the music companies without a judicial determination of piracy. "We also don't want to be the policeman in this process," he said.
Lawyers for the recording industry rejected Verizon's arguments that it had little obligations in the process. Industry lawyer Donald Verrilli said no type of service provider is exempt from having to identify a potential music pirate, no matter where the songs sit.
Mr. Verrilli also dismissed Verizon's position that its customers have a right to privacy. "You don't have a First Amendment right to steal copyright works," he said.
The judge disagreed with Mr. Verrilli's assumption that the works were stolen. "Here, there's only an allegation of infringement," Judge Bates said.
Judge Bates gave few hints as to how he might rule. He asked many detailed questions of both sides. He called some Verizon positions vague, but showed little patience with other arguments advanced by the music industry and movie studios, which also argued on behalf of music publishers.
Through programs like Kazaa, Morpheus and Gnutella, a person can find virtually any song or movie -- sometimes even before it's released in stores --- and download it for free. On a typical afternoon, about three million people are connected on the Kazaa network and sharing more than 500 million files.
-- Copyright (c) 2002 Associated Press
Updated October 4, 2002 9:43 p.m. EDT
Recording Inquisition Association of America (Score:5, Insightful)
But the music industry says that would take too long."
That's just super. Now if they could just dispense with this habeas corpus nonsense, they could put all their customers in jail.
Re:Recording Inquisition Association of America (Score:3, Insightful)
Due process is a bitch, but it's a reality, a necessity, and it's part of the reason people founded this damned country. (refering to the US) The RIAA wants to have super-rights that no one else has, and so far the DMCA has given them those rights. Hopefully the 'masses' will realize that it's not in their best interest, and convince the gov't to rule the DMCA unconstitutional.
Although... Isn't there a catch-22 here? The DMCA is a copyright protection device, ruling it unconstitutional would be circumventing a copyright protection device, thus illegal under the DMCA.
-Sara
Re:Recording Inquisition Association of America (Score:3, Funny)
Even if the scenerio you described was true, remember that the Constitution trumps all other laws The only thing that trumps the Constitution is a Constituitional Amendment.
Re:Recording Inquisition Association of America (Score:5, Informative)
Now if they could just dispense with this habeas corpus nonsense
I take it you haven't heard, The Bush administration claims the power to detain "enemy combatants" indefinitely without trial, an effective suspension of Habeas Corpus. All they have to do is label you a terrorist and you disappear in the night never to be heard from again.
In case you haven't heard (Score:5, Interesting)
The courts haven't been uncritical of this practice and have not exactly been... cooperative...
Now what has been scary has been Ashcrofts earlier statements that they would continue to detain people even if a court ordered them not to. In that case, why not just dispense with the court system and let the FBI and INS take over that role....
Now, you may think this is off-topic, but dispensing with the court system is exactly the path that the RIAA and MPAA are trying to take in this case (RIAA v Verizon) and in lobbying for the bill that gives them the right to use "P2P Warfare."
Re:In case you haven't heard (Score:2)
Re:In case you haven't heard (Score:2)
Detaining people without trial and ignoring the courts is a time honored practice in the US. Lincoln did it during the Civil War to secessionist politicians from Maryland.
The only problem is, Lincoln was a REAL War Time President. The Civil War was legally declared by Congress as set forth by the Constitution. The War on Terrorism was illegally declared by GW Bush and the FoxNews Channel.
Re:In case you haven't heard (Score:2, Insightful)
The only problem is, Lincoln was a REAL War Time President. The Civil War was legally declared by Congress as set forth by the Constitution.
Actually, the War Between the States (that conflict's official name as designated by the US Congress) was in no way legal or appropriate. In 1865, Lincoln, the first Republican president, used force to deny a "distinctly legal and constitutional secession", to use the wording of a recent Vox Day column.
In addition to recognizing the Southern states' rights under the Constitution to secede, Lincoln violated the Constitution in myriad other ways - anything was permissable so long as it preserved the Union, thhus establishing the precedent that the US government no longer relied or acknowledged the consent of the governed as necessary or proper.
Here is just a partial list of the ways Lincoln savaged the US Constitution:
Lincoln was a bad president, and a worse man. His actions ensured that the US could never again be free, and enshrined total central control as a fundamental principle of government in the incorporatoin clause of the 14th amendment. The game was over back then, but some yankees are just now figuring out what the rest of us have known for a nearly a century and a half: this goverment has no respect for freedom or rights of any kind.
Re:In case you haven't heard (Score:3, Insightful)
No offense to the State of Maryland, but the U.S. Constitution [cornell.edu] provides for suspension of habeas corpus in cases of "in cases of rebellion or invasion."
That said, the illegitimate son of George I has exceeded his constitutional authority in this case.
Re:In case you haven't heard (Score:2)
Where, exactly? I did a quick skim through the Presidential and Judicial Articles, and saw nothing of the sort. The best I could find in the Legislative article (Article I, Section 8) stated that Congress shall have the power "To provide for calling forth the Militia to execute the Laws of the Union, suppress Insurrections and repel Invasions". Didn't see anything there about suspending rights, simply using "the Militia" (and what does that mean? Army, or National Guard?") to "execute the Laws" (which might mean be judge, jury, and executioner, or simply might mean they're empowered as policemen).
From what I've read (check out FindLaw for past court decisions), almost every time a president has tried to suspend civil liberties in "times of war", it's been later struck down as unconstitutional.
The most telling case, if I recall correctly, was in the territory of Hawaii in 1942. We'd just been attacked, and the territorial governer imposed some kind of martial law (including, for one, suspending the normal judicial system in favor of a military panel). Okay, so you've got a clear "time of war" (Pearl Harbor), and you've got a territory that isn't even a state. If there was ever a time that martial law could reasonably be introduced, this would be it. And the Supreme Court later struck it all down, saying it was unconstitutional.
Of course, the ruling came years after it was all over.
I challenge anyone out there to prove that such suspensions of civil liberties is authorized, and has been allowed to stand. Then, I'd like to see what a definition of "war" is, and whether we're actually in it (the Congress very specifically did NOT declare war on Afghanistan / The Taliban / Al Qaeda).
I may be wrong (after all, I Am Not A Constitutional Scholar), but I've simply never been able to find anything that supports any of these assertions about suspension of civil liberties....
That said, the illegitimate son of George I has exceeded his constitutional authority in this case.
I'll most heartily agree with this -- if the power to suspend habeous corpus (and other rights) exists, it lies with Congress, not with the President or the Attorney General. At least, that's how it appears to me. It's frustrating that the Judicial system takes so long to figure these things out, but I'm confident that, eventually, people's rights will be upheld. I just wish that we didn't have to go through this every time there's a national emergency, and live with 2-5 years of diminished rights before the courts step in and set things straight (or not).
Re:Recording Inquisition Association of America (Score:5, Interesting)
Legally done in accordance with the laws of the US
Done in accordance with what US law ? Are you talking about the Patriot Act ? The same Patriot act that allows the government to monitor religious and political groups without evidence of criminal activity, to jail Americans without being charged or being able to confront witnesses against them, allows The government to search and seize Americans' papers and effects without probable cause to aid terrorism investigation, Allows the government to prosecute librarians, telecommunication company officials and anyone else who reveals they have received a subpoena for records related to the terrorism investigation, Allows the government to monitor penal communications between attorneys and clients, and deny lawyers to Americans accused of crimes, Allows the government to jail Americans indefinitely without a trial. Allows the government to close once-public immigration hearings, secretly detain hundreds of people without charges, and has encouraged bureaucrats to resist requests for public records under the Freedom of Information Act. You mean that Patriot Act ?
There are precedents for what Bush has done.
Yes there are precedents, but that does not make it right or just and I hardly consider imprisioning thousands of innocent Americans during WWII a shining moment in our history.
Why don't you read a little before mouthing off your talk-show soundbites.
I have to mouth off now, because I will not likely be able to do so in the future.
Re:Recording Inquisition Association of America (Score:2)
If this had been pro-Bush, he would've been modded down to -1 as a Troll.
Perhaps you are right, it was offtopic, but I don't neccessarily feel it was a troll, it was more like karma whoring. I also feel my post was more anti-government than anit-Bush. After all the liberals in the Senate voted for the US Patriot Act too.
Re:Recording Inquisition Association of America (Score:3, Insightful)
If a person is here on visa, here illegally or not a natural born citizen, then it is possible that they could have come to the states solely for combative purposes and as such, I feel they can rightly be held as enemy combatants.
A natural born American, no matter how vile, should be given the full rights of the Constitution, including legal counsel, speedy trial and criminal - not military - proceedings.
Except Constitutional protections apply to anyone in the US, not just 'natural born citizens.' In addition, many citizens were not 'natural born,' and they enjoy all the rights and privelages of citizenship (expect for being able to be elected President, but then again not all natural born citizens can be elected President either.)
That's why Gitmo is being used to hold prisoners, not US jails - it helps prevent the prisiners from asserting Constitutional protections.
Re:Recording Inquisition Association of America (Score:2)
Except when the "enemy combatant" is a natural born American citizen.
There of course is the problem, the Bush Administration is claiming the right to hold American Citizens without trial. Jose Padilla was arrested on 8 May and as of yet has not had access to a Lawyer or his family. I don't care what GW thinks he was going to do, this man deserves, like all Americans, the right to a fair trial. If they can do it to him, they can do it to anyone.
Re:Recording Inquisition Association of America (Score:2)
It's sad. . . (Score:5, Insightful)
. . .that American citizens who're interested in the progress of American case law have to turn to British news corporations to hear it; while all Fox, CNN, MSNBC, etc., can be bothered to report is Bush's latest wag-the-dog blather or Britney Spears' latest bra size.
It's no surprise to me that the media doesn't want the public educated about the ins and outs of the DMCA, but it is disappointing.
Re:It's sad. . . (Score:2, Interesting)
I'm just curious, what's she up to nowadays? C? D? DD??
Re:It's sad. . . (Score:2, Insightful)
I read about this last week on Salon.com. Unlike Britain, news is not disseminated from one source.
This site has become so boring and predictable.
Re:It's sad. . . (Score:2, Insightful)
And yet, for some reason, you keep coming back... slashdot must offer you some value.
Re: It's sad. . . (Score:2, Funny)
> This site has become so boring and predictable.
Bet nobody saw that coming.
baaaa (Score:2)
That's right, we have no other source of information anywhere at all other than that kindly provided by the Bristish Broadcasting Corporation.
Re:It's sad. . . (Score:2)
not_cub
Re:It's sad. . . (Score:2)
Re:It's sad. . . (Score:2)
Re:It's sad. . . (Score:2)
Well I've said it before on
So, I think paying about 10 quid a month for 9 or 10 (or more I guess, I'm not counting the regional channels) channels, NO adverts, mostly original programming and a pretty much unbiased news service (their website has a lot more depth than you might initially think, BTW) is not a bad deal.
Oh yeah, we also get all the non commercial radio stations thrown in too - I'd hate to be forced to listen to the radio in any country where all the playlists were controlled and designed by the record companies. There must be like 20 tracks on rotation across the US?!
Re:It's sad. . . (Score:2)
Probably it is not a bad deal. However, I want 10 MTV channels and as much primetime Simpsons and Star Trek as I can get my hands on. So being forced to pay 100 quid a month for some other channels I don't even use doesn't seem like such a great deal. If *you* want to watch BBC TV, and listen to BBC radio, and look at the BBC website, then *you* can pay for it. Seems like a better deal to me. You'll notice that I am not saying that the BBC does not provide a quality service (and with millions of pounds being poured into it every year, it had better be). I am saying I resent not being able to opt out of it. If the BBC is such a desirable service, then surely everyone would pony up were it to be made optional?
not_cub
Re:It's sad. . . (Score:5, Funny)
Re:It's sad. . . (Score:2)
Re:It's sad. . . (Score:2)
Re:It's sad. . . (Score:2)
Its no surprise that there isn't an "after a single day of trial - nothing happened" article, because well... nothing happened. The BBC didn't have a "one day before the trial started" article so wasn't repeating itself saying nothing new one day later.
Re:It's sad. . . (Score:2)
Re:It's sad. . . (Score:4, Interesting)
It's not the media to educate them, they should educate themselves first.
I agree, on both points you mention. But consider: at what point in his education does the average American learn how to educate himself? Maybe, maybe in college. . . certainly not in public school, nor I suspect in most parochial schools. People are taught not how to think, but what to think. And then, because they have zero critical-thinking skills, they're lead around by the nose for the rest of their lives.
A responsible media apparatus could counteract this by leaving its bias on the editorial pages. Of course, I'd be the last one to accuse Fox and their kin of being responsible. But even American newspapers--whom you'd think would be the first to go for the cartoid here--can't be bothered to mention the DMCA's goings-on in court.
Re:It's sad. . . (Score:2, Insightful)
It's the same reason a Senator from South Carolina, a state with no movie or recording industry to speak of, is fighting so hard for DRM. Do you honestly think anyone in South Carolina gives a shit about DRM?
It's how they get paid.
Re:It's sad. . . (Score:2)
The second he/she is born (and probably even before then actually). School then helpfully teaches you how to be stupid as you yourself point out.
Re:It's sad. . . (Score:2)
Think about it. Cui Bono? Who benefits when the public is ignorant of the DMCA? THE MEDIA COMPANIES! That's why there's so little media coverage.
History Repeats (Score:4, Interesting)
For example, the Sherman Anti-Trust Act gave the power to the government to break up trusts 9a.k.a.) monopolies, but never specified any regulations for determining what is and is not a monopoly. The DMCA outlaws the use of circumvention devices, but never really nails down exactly what a circumvention device is.
Both laws give God-like power to the person enforcing the law, if they wish to do so. The Sherman Anti-Trust Act allowed President Theodore Roosevelt to break up many monopolies in the early 1900s. The DMCA gives the government the ability to throw you under the jail for infringing on some one's copyright in a minor way, even for "fair use".
The Sherman Anti-Trust Act has long been criticized for its failures by historians and political scientists. Perhaps someday soon they'll see the DMCA in that same light?
One Crucial Difference: (Score:5, Insightful)
The Sherman AntiTrust Act harnesses government power and focuses it against corporations to protect voting citizens. The DMCA harnesses government power and focuses it against voting citizens to protect corporations.
You may as well compare the Voting Rights Act with a Jim Crow voting law: yeah, they each used government to determine who could vote; but the latter oppressed Americans, and was therefore morally wrong.
Re:One Crucial Difference: (Score:2, Interesting)
If you think someone broke into your home and stole from you do you break into their home and steal from them? Not with the protection of the courts you don't. But the RIAA wants that power granted to them through legislation they purchased from congressional representatives and senators
Re:One Crucial Difference: (Score:2)
Re:One Crucial Difference: (Score:3, Insightful)
I like the analogy, since Congress thought they were protecting the little guy (little artist, that is) with the DMCA. That's why it passed so overwhelmingly -- if representatives had seen it as a tool to entrench big business against consumers, researchers, and programmers, there would have been more opposition. It still probably would have passed, but perhaps with a few amendments to satisfy other interests besides those of copyright holders.
Re:One Crucial Difference: (Score:2)
I'm a little confused... (Score:3, Interesting)
"This statute is not organised as being consistent with the argument for either side."
The judge said he would try to rule quickly, but lawyers on both sides could not estimate when a decision might arrive."
The only way that I can think of that a Judge could rule quickly in a case where the laws are convoluted and unclear is to rule that the law is ambiguous. This would essentially throw the case out of court.
However from the tone of his statement it looks like he is going to make an honest effort to interpret the law. If so I don't see how a fair and speedy decision is possible.
Re:I'm a little confused... (Score:2)
Not at all - to rule that the law is vague and unclear usually means the Court overturns the law. Laws can be Constitutionally "void for vagueness" esp. when First Amendment values are at stake. In the case of the DMCA, such a decision would be welcome, but seems unlikely.
Judicial Activism (Score:1, Flamebait)
Judicial activism is the term used to define judges acting as lawmakers. In 1803, the U.S. Supreme Court defined its role as accurately defining what the law is. This means that judges act as interpreters of the law, if and when the law, or its application, is confusing. In recent years, judges have left this traditional understanding of judicial review and have begun legislating from the bench.
Judicial activism violates the balance of powers laid out in the state and federal Constitutions. It takes authority away from the elected legislature, and puts judges in the position of both lawmaker and judge. When this happens, people lose their right to representation.
A good example of judicial activism is right on the page. In this case, the judge is dictating copyright policy in direct opposition to laws passed by Congress.
We should fight the DMCA in the halls of Congress, not in the courtroom, as the system of checks and balances must be preserved!
Re:Judicial Activism (Score:5, Interesting)
You might want to take a better a look at the way the Judicial branch interacts with the legislative....
Re:Judicial Activism (Score:3)
The responsibility of resolving questions of law would seem to me to certainly include determing which sets of laws to apply to a given case. The supreme court is well within it's pervue to say that a law that the government passed is in direct conflict with a right granted by the constitution. The constitution doesn't explicitly grant them the right to strike down laws passed by the legislature, but they have this right in effect because they can simply rule against the government every time the issue is brought before them. As a timesaver, almost everyone acknowledges this and lets them declare laws unconstitutional.
Re:Judicial Activism (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Judicial Activism (Score:4, Insightful)
If you want to limit judicial activism, make sure your legislature is passing clear and concise legislation. The judicial responsiblity is to interpret the law. The amount of interpretation they get to do is inversely proportional to the legal precision employed by the legislature.
LSAT (Score:2)
The LSAT is standardized test you take to get into law school. One of the sections of the test is to measure "critical reasoning". I recently took a practice LSAT and came across this question:
Care to guess the correct answer?
Re:Judicial Activism (Score:3, Insightful)
But I digress. If the Supreme Court oversteps its bounds by making law, then there are two main checks to that overstep. First, congress can pass a law that fits within the court's holdings but that still accomplishes the same end. Remember, sometimes it isn't the end that the Supreme Court objects to, it is the means. And we should all understand why the ends don't justify the means. The second main check to an overreaching court is an amendment to the constitution. If the Supreme Court says that there is no consitutional right to share music, then get an amendment passed to make sharing music a constitutional right.
So there are checks and balances, they just aren't the main ones that people learn in civics class.
Re:Judicial Activism (Score:4, Insightful)
In 1803 they also articulated the doctrine of judicial review which holds that a statute ruled offensive to the Constitution cannot become law. This is not judicial activism; the judge is not "dictating copyright policy in direct opposition to laws passed by Congress." Rather, the judge is raising significant Constitutional questions about the law as passed by Congress. This is well within the role of the judiciary, and the claim of judicial activism here is either a mistake or a red herring.
Hopefully (Score:4, Insightful)
In other words, the RIAA and MPAA will get a bone thrown their way, but hopefully common sense will win out over greed and we will have a fair and concise set of rules to abide by.
Letters (Score:5, Insightful)
"clearly illegal". This from an industry that says not watching commercials on television is stealing and that making a cassette copy of a CD (that I own) for my car is "tolerated but not legal" behavior.
"If you got a letter from the RIAA saying we know that you're doing this, I'd say there's a good chance that you would stop."
In other words, they want to be able to threaten people with C&D's regardless of whether they have any proof of wrong-doing.
Verizon says it would be unfair to cancel users accounts unless the music companies concerned filed formal legal proceedings that would give the users a chance to fight back.
But the music industry says that would take too long.
Tough shit. It's called due process and is guaranteed by the Constitution. Deal with it.
Re:Letters (Score:5, Funny)
I like the clearly illegal comment which comes directly after saying that people are not aware that it is illegal.
That sounds like it was clear to me!
Re:Letters (Score:2)
That sounds like the scientific use of clearly.
Conclusion to my thesis -- "It is trivial to show that it is clearly obvious that this is not woofly."
Re:Letters (Score:2, Informative)
You mean like the very recent price-fixing case the RIAA lost to the tune of $143 million? [usatoday.com] This is their *2nd* price fixing settlement in 2 years, the first one happened in 2000. [ftc.gov]
Peace.
Re:Letters (Score:2)
IANAL, but IIRC there's a whole body of law which says what personal information ANY company can and cannot share with a third party, without a court order. Companies in regulated industries like banking and telecommunications have even more restrictions placed on them
Due process applies just as much to civil law as it does to criminal law. If you want to use the law to bitchslap somebody, you have to (gasp!) actually follow the law yourself.
So the Beeb item (Score:3, Funny)
"The judge decided what was already known: The DMCA is unclear. Suddenly, not much happened. Then, nobody made a decision. Finally, nobody knows when somebody will."
Big frickin' deal. Please go back over yesterday's submissions editors. I gave you something much more interesting to post.
POINTLESS LIMERICKS YOU WILL ENJOY YES! (Score:5, Funny)
known to geeks by its abbreviation,
that's R-I-double-A,
they'll take freedom away,
as soon as Congress gets that "donation"!
There once was a woman named Rosen,
trying so hard to get her laws in.
She's lobbying Congress
to put an end to Progress,
but more copying is all that she's causin'.
There once was a gent named Valenti,
who sued movie swappers a-plenty.
But one day he died,
only his lawyers cried,
and on Slashdot the cheers were modded +20!
There once was a Senator named Hollings
Whose passion for Disney was apalling,
He accepted their money,
Called Eisner his "honey",
And you should see the Mickey-shaped hottub he's installing!
somewhat dodgy arguments (Score:2)
"One of the things we're discovering is that people are not aware that that they are engaging in conduct which is clearly illegal," said RIAA lawyer Cary Sherman.
Yeah right.
This is not about the RIAA or DMCA (Score:5, Insightful)
I think the current arguments are all irrevelant. Long term we're going to decide if people can own ideas, and if so for how long. I believe it is in our best interest to make the exclusive period as short as possible, but that's my own opinion.
As far as I can tell, at the same time one persion has an opinion it's likely several others have the same idea. That is, humanity is evolving at a fairly constant rate. Giving the first person to have the idea a huge advantage seems silly.
Re:This is not about the RIAA or DMCA (Score:2)
Six months before the referendum, take out a patent on "a process and method for voting NO on proposition 846"
Re:This is not about the RIAA or DMCA (Score:2)
That same "we" need to stop referring to consititutionally granted intellectual rights as "property". That's what's causing this whole mess in the first place.
As soon as something becomes "property", then it is ownable and the owner has all rights over it's control. Copyright, patents and trademarks are not property. They are rights we, the people, grant through the Constitution and appropriately constitutional laws.
As long as we allow vested interests to call it property without pulling their pants down in public, they will win the argument. People understand that property owners control their property. We have to make the public aware that these things are NOT property, they are the public commons and belong to all of us. We simply grant temporary, exlusive rights to the creators to motivate them to give us more.
Once people understand that all this "content" is already legally thiers; That all they have to do is wait for a limited time to get it for free; then the public will demand that such "limited times" be "reasonable".
come again? (Score:3, Insightful)
If it's so clear that it's illegal, wouldn't they already know about it. Or is it just that the RIAA can't admit that it's not giving people what they want.
As someone else once said, the record industry created Napster by leaving a void for Napster to fill...
file sharing subconcious? (Score:2)
So, they are aware it is illegal but not aware that they are engaging in it.
Now that's some neat spyware. I have 10Gb of sweet mp3s on my drive and I didn't even know they were there!
First step (Score:2)
The the DMCA is foggy and ambiguous
Hope this is a start for the desmise of the worst copyright law ever seen. Sincerly this document is more a resemblence of a medieval mind, much more worried that everyone pays the bridge pass or the tea tax rather than making some profit of a due work.
Well, if things will go on, hope you Americans will not forget to add one more face to Mount Rushmore. Sincerly, that judge will fully deserve it, if his move starts to dig up the DMCA's grave.
Judicial Branch taking on too much (Score:2, Insightful)
the judicial branch is assuming too much of the resposibility of the legislative branch, in deciding what the laws are. congress are the "law-MAKERS" while judges, lawers et. all should be in the position of applying the law.
I am happy that in this instance a judge is fighting an unjust law, but this is not a long term solution for democracy. These kinds of laws have to be repealed by the congress. Consider the consequence, the 'chilling' effect of laws that are unjust but never make it to the courts in the first place. In this situation especially we cannot depend on the judicial branch to fix up the mistakes of congress.
Re:Judicial Branch taking on too much (Score:3, Insightful)
Sorry, wrong. While it is Congress's job to make laws, it is the judicial branch's job to interpret those laws. The executive branch is charged with applying and enforcing those laws.
Re:Judicial Branch taking on too much (Score:2)
The courts have the unenviable task of attempting to reconcile conflicting law. Inevitably, this means that whenever a court decides in favour of one law and against another - this usually means in favour of some interpretation of the constitution - the courts assume the onus of being seen as "activist" by some special interest group.
When laws address something as nebulous and stupid as idea of "intellectual property," the situation is worsened profoundly. You can validly argue that logically any idea, song, book, or what not, remains "intellectual" property only as long as it exists soley in an originator's mind. Jefferson for instance seems to have thought this way, but reluctantly went along with time-limited patents as a temporary means of supporting inventors until they could move newer "intellectual" property from the idea state to useable products or knowledge. Copyrights have the same kinds of logical problems.
Futhermore.. (Score:2)
Furthermore, and I think more broadly, the Congress isn't doing what the framers intended; ie, bringing interests together to find compromises that actually provide political settlement of divisive issues. The controlling majority passes absolutist laws (or none at all) and the courts are being forced into a position of providing compromises. This fails to work because courts decide up/down/yes/no matters of law, and when they wade into "maybe" situations they are rightly rapped for acting in a legislative manner.
Abortion is the clearest example I can think of. Polls *consistantly* show Americans favor some kind of right to abortion, especially in cases of rape, incest, threats to the mother's health and so on. But what does congress give us? One side wants to outright ban abortion in all cases, which can never pass, the other side wants it to be perfectly acceptable for 13 year old girls to get abortions without their parents knowledge.
Neither side can win because neither side is willing to compromise primarily because both sides are driven by special interests not majority interest or compromise interest. It is no more political folly for a Republican to back reasonable aspects of abortion on demand than it is for a Democrat to oppose reasonable restrictions on abortion.
Until special interests' stranglehold on the political process is eliminated we'll be forced to continue going to the courts to find the compromise, and continue to be unsatisfied about it.
What's kind of funny in a sad, get-drunk-and-cry about it way is that our political process is no different than our business environment; those involved aren't satisfied with *leading* the field, they feel the need to *own* the field. It's not enough to have 95% of the desktop market, you have to have *all* of it and will tolerate NO competition, even if that competition services niche markets you can't. It's not enough that your view prevails over 90% of an issue, you have to have ABSOLUTE control over it.
Re:Futhermore.. (Score:2)
I agree with this completely - the rest of the post as well. My own issue, that I just want to reiterate is that the courts, and the Supremes in particular are saddled with a task that goes far beyond the original job description. Nor do they have the choice of declining the matter since the Constitution exists far more to protect individual rights than it does to enforce majority tastes. Yet many of these new "absolutist" laws you mention are in conflict with both earlier law and the Constitution which must override in any conflict with newer legislation.
News for Felons. Stuff that's illegal. (Score:3, Funny)
You folks are as bad as those gun crazies who think they should be allowed to own guns. Bzzt! Nope, sorry, only the government needs guns. Anyone else who has them is a criminal. The same goes for your hacking tools and your "p2p" or as I like to call it, Pirate to Pirate.
Time Change? (Score:3, Funny)
I guess it must be the time change from here to BBC-world, right?
So... (Score:3, Funny)
the third way (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:the third way (Score:2)
Re:the third way (Score:2)
Either that, or they have to file suit against "John Doe" AND Verizon in order to get subpoena power to discover the identity of their target, but Verizon, by 'cooperating' as a conduit for the cease and desist letter, has gained immunity from suit by the very terms of the DMCA.
The judge is right. It is a badly-crafted law. I'm not sure whether it is, in fact, vague and over-broad enough to be unconstitutional for that reason alone, but there are plenty of other reasons I consider it (and the new Berman bill) to be unconstitutional and, frankly, just plain BAD public policy.
I support the concept of intellectual property. I think American culture and industry would not have developed as it has without the protections afforded by patents and copyrights. That being said, patents and copyrights arise because of a SOCIAL CONTRACT which, in essence says, "you make the fruits of your creativity available to the general public and you will enjoy a marketplace free from competition for a period of time sufficient to compensate you for your work."
Congress, acting at the behest of the RIAA/MPAA seems to be tilting the terms of the contract in the direction of "you allow us to have access to the product of your work and you will own your ideas FOREVER." Since almost every new creation is, to some extent, founded on prior creations, eventually all ideas, plot devices, story lines, melodies and scientific concepts wind up being owned and there is no pool of prior art remaining from which to draw.
The public domain is the fountain from which all creativity flows. The destruction of the public domain is the evil inherent in the current trend in intellectual property law. The MPAA/RIAA demonstrate their collective corporate stupidity by failing to realize that they are eating their seed corn.
wow (Score:4, Insightful)
Be clear what we are talking about here . . . (Score:2)
This case, and hence the Judge's comments, deals with neither. It address the specific provisions governing when and under what circumstances an ISP may be required to provide information responsive to a subpoena.
Not a defense of the bill or the Congress -- I just saw enough comments indicating a general misunderstanding of to what the judge was referring to think that these comments might be helpful.
Re:Great precident! (Score:2)
Re:Great precident! (Score:3, Informative)
RTFA (Read the Fsckin' Article!
The judge said he would try to rule quickly, but lawyers on both sides could not estimate when a decision might arrive.
No ruling has been reached yet. The judge doesn't even really seem to be leaning one way or the other.
Not Really. There are more important things here. (Score:5, Insightful)
It's typical of the media to blow things out of proportion. And this happens to be one of those things.
Either way, what's really important here is whether or not the RIAA can demand a given user's name, phone number from an ISP *without* any form of a warrant or any form of legal proceeding.
This is something that not even the US government was allowed to do until recent legislation. (The patriot act tends to make things more ambiguous now, and the government can away with a lot more than before, but not as much as the RIAA wants.)
And don't look at that ambiguity as something necessarily good. It could be the nail in the coffin that lets the RIAA and others get away with such reprehensible violations of civil liberty if the courts eventually set the wrong precedents.
Re:Unclear? (Score:2)
But I think that your point is pretty well taken that certain lawmakers are essentially selling their integrity to Hollywood, the MPAA, and the RIAA..... I think that the access control clauses of the DMCA is a good example...
Re:Unclear? (Score:4, Informative)
You seem to be implying that copyrights ensure that the people who did the "work" would get paid. This is cerainly not true. In many cases, the people who did the work are long dead [colossus.net]. I'd be delighted to work for free after I'm dead. Some are even copyrighting things which have already been placed into the public domain [cni.org]. The whole thing has become a mockery of the original intent.
Re:Unclear? (Score:3, Insightful)
It is worded ambiguously, gives nearly unlimited power to the holders of copyright, and takes away certain civil liberties that USAians have had virtually since the founding of the country.
I'm all for copyright... The DMCA is overboard, though.
-Sara
A better way (Score:3, Informative)
Not that all corporations are evil. But some ov the most vocal give everyone else a bad name...
Re:A better way (Score:2)
Re:A better way (Score:2)
You really think there isn't one
Not that violence is the answer, mind. Just keep replacing your leaders until the people who want to lead learn that the only way to stay a leader is by actually listening to their voters. And that's pretty tough to do, because that "actually listening" part is so hard to get a good grasp on.
Re:A better way (Score:2)
I remember hearing a speach by one of my senators on the Iraq resolution and realizing that her tone seemed to be trying to take into account the letters I had sent her even though she ultimately did not vote the way I would have liked.
Every single congressman of mine *has* been responsive to my letters, whether or not they have been ultimately in agreement with me. And I hardly think I am alone. Sure on every issue there may be a *few* politicians who are in the pockets of industries, but there are a lot of interests and if we stay involved, that influence will be mitigated.
Another hint-- if you have a problem with a federal agency, write your congressman. They will send it to the agency and tell them to deal with it, and that carries more clout than your action alone.
Our system provides for very direct involvement. If you fail to use that opportunity, don't complain too loudly when unfavorable legislation passes...
Re:First post! (Score:3, Interesting)
Also, at this point the user in question might sill be quite unaware of what is hanging over his head.
With only 600 mp3s, it the user does not even have to be that net savvy as well.
Imagine having your door kicked in at 5am in the morning. 6 cops rushing into your house, your sister is standing there in her nightgown, and your comp gets confiscated. Yourself? You don't even have a clue what it's all about...
A phantastic story? Not really, it happened to a friend of mine... and, it wasn't even in the US, the scene as I described it took place about a year ago in Germany... 200 subscribers from the same ISP got their comps confiscated on hunt for childpornography.
He got his box back eventually, but think about it, how much illegal software is on your HDDs. The more or less accurate percentage on my comp lies around 95%...
How about yours?
Consumers' Rights (Score:5, Insightful)