DMCA Open For Public Comment 25
plaxion writes "Beginning tomorrow (Nov 19), the U.S. Copyright Office will begin accepting suggestions for new exemptions to the DMCA. From what I've read, it appears they're seeking specific examples on how the law restricts research or inhibits the marketplace. In other words, they won't be considering issues of inconvenience or hypothetical problems. The comment period ends Dec 18."
Re:My suggestion: (Score:1)
Uh oh, folks (Score:5, Insightful)
What about specific examples about how the law restricts or inhibits freedom? Or do only the marketplaces (i.e. MPAA/MIAA) count here? I hope they make a new forum, because I don't give a damn that the DMCA 'cripples' the marketplaces when I think about what it does to freedom!
Re:Uh oh, folks (Score:2)
(I've got a horrible flu, and I'm bitter, and I didn't RTFA, so nyeah. (And yeah, this comment will probably go +5 as a result, but I think it emotionally sums up what quite a few people feel)).
--
Evan (you can tell I'm a geek (I closed the nested parens))
Re:Uh oh, folks (Score:4, Insightful)
In the Brave New World we've been slowly creeping towards, the trend is that the wants of the Consumer should be shaped around the demands of the market, rather than vice versa.
Re:Uh oh, folks (Score:2)
Exactly! No one's interested in my CD's anymore? Go to Congress and force people back to a crappy, overpriced alternative. People not buying broadband? Let's (the government) make the deal more...appealing...to folks out there!
Re:Uh oh, folks (Score:1)
Maybe that's the great failing of capitalism, everything is for sale, including the law. I still trust in its great strength, that everything must eventually yield to the will of the market. But sometimes I wonder. Fortunately, the media executives keep thinking up new incentives to make stealing more worthwhile while simultaniously providing ever more motivation for others to make said stealing, ever faster and simpler. Given all those efforts, which have been so spectacularly successful, one wonders where they could have possibly found the time to both make hundreds of billions of dollars, and ruin radio. We're I faced with so many stunning achivements, I might well consider a move into the political arena. But I digress. My ten year plan to become King of America is a whole other topic.
issues of inconvenience or hypothetical problems (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:issues of inconvenience or hypothetical problem (Score:1)
I think it could also come under "inhibiting the marketplace", as the DVD CCA [dvdcca.org] can currently control who enters the marketplace producing DVD players, by chosing who it gives CSS licences to.
My little pipe dream (Score:3, Insightful)
I've got a few comments on the DMCA. (Score:4, Funny)
Inconvenience Indeed (Score:2)
Inconvenience cuts both ways, and I say that with a large amount of lattitude.
I know! (Score:1)
Re:I know! (Score:1)
Cutting through the legalese (Score:4, Insightful)
1) Copyrighted works exist. 2) Technological measures that control access to copyrighted works exist. 3) Circumvention of those technological measures exist. 4) Prohibitions against those circumventions exist. 5) Certain classes of works that are exempt from those prohibitions may exist.
1) Manuscripts. 2) Books. 3) Photocopiers. 4) "Fair use". 5) Research.
Thus I contend that any class of work that constitutes Research should be considered a class of work that should be considered an exemption to the DMCA. I further define Research as that class of work used to comprehend or understand a copyrighted item without the intention of distributing a full and complete copy of the copyrighted item.
See a nice example below. Understand?
That is a great summary! (Score:2)
For example, would it be "research" if I published a book with a chapter of your book in it? IMO, even though I didn't use your whole book, you should still have a say in whether or not I get to use your chapter.
Or did I misunderstand you? Anyway, if I had mod points, I would have modded you up.
Re:That is a great summary! (Score:2)
For example, would it be "research" if I published a book with a chapter of your book in it?
As long as you didn't distribute it. 8^D
I see your point, however: a chapter of the book is not the whole book. However, it is still a coherent chapter, and thus a substantial portion of the book itself. The answer swings upon the thorny issue of what constitutes "Fair Use": some people might argue that my use of a single Bradbury sentence in a World-Wide Web forum constitutes "a distribution of a full and complete copy of a copyrighted item" (although obviously *I* don't, and don't believe that he would either! I used the quote because I found an ironic depth in quoting from a book that explores the concept of the abolition of reading for the good of society. I hope that the quote leads to more exposure of the book itself -- and thus more reading!)
Some courts have held that deriving some benefit from a distribution of copyrighted material constitutes an infringement of copyright (witness Negativeland's problems with U2), but even when there is no *direct* benefit, it has been held there is a unlawful taking (some college professors have been found guilty of copyright violation for something similar to what you mentioned in your post: compiling a collection of chapters from books for use in their classes.)
I was merely trying to establish that there is a "class of work" (i.e. Research) for which people *ought not be punished* under the DMCA.
Another example: let's say that you reverse-engineered MicroSoft Excel for the mere purpose of seeing how it worked, with no intention of then creating and selling something similar to it. Under the DMCA as it now stands, that constitutes an offense: reverse engineering of a copyrighted item with the intention of circumventing the display protocol (i.e. the closed-source software) is forbidden. My rationale is "That's just research!" since you don't have the intention of then distributing what you have learned. The DMCA does not make that distinction about intention. (Intention is important in law because it enables a jury to tell the difference between manslaughter -- killing a person by accident -- and murder -- killing a person deliberately.) The DMCA baldly treats all circumvention as unlawful; that difference, to my mind is unconstitutional , since it appears to limit the 'progress of science and useful arts', for which very purpose the doctrine of copyright was established!
I hope that my further exposition increased your understanding: "Enlightenment rushes in where ignorance fears to tread."
DVD protection... (Score:2)
Though I still wonder if it would be worth arguing that I should be able to buy a DVD player with region coding disabled. Afterall, I would like to have the Futurama DVD, but live in the US. Since it was not released in any region 1 country I'm pretty much screwed. Not to mention that it interferes with international commerce.