DMCA Comments Posted At Copyright.gov 101
Ascaroth writes "The DMCA comments on 'Rulemaking on Exemptions from Prohibition on Circumvention of Technological Measures that Control Access to Copyrighted
Works' have been posted."
Life is cheap, but the accessories can kill you.
Hmm (Score:1)
Try all of them (e.g. classes of works) (Score:2, Insightful)
All classes of work would be "adversly affected"...the idiots dont realize that yet though.
Re:Try all of them (e.g. classes of works) (Score:2)
These "idiots", as you call them, are just doing the job that Congress set for them. They are not legally allowed to do otherwise.
Don't shoot the messenger.
Librarian of Congress conclusions (Score:5, Funny)
as ever, there were many good points made by representatives of the media corporations and fair use advicacy groups. However, two comments were outstanding in their clarity and eloquence - one was a comment from a Mr. J. Valenti which said "Fair use is a myth spread by a bunchof unwashed hippes, and there should be no exceptions. I'm a member of a public, so I know what the public wants" which had $100 000 in used notes. stapled to it.
The other was from a Ms Hilary Rosen. This one was delivered in a Ferrari, and stated "If you make some exceptions, they'll just wnat more, so don't bother and save yourself the hassle. P.S. Keep the keys"
Clearly, the rest of them were just written by a bunch of pirates and unwashed hippies, so I spat on them, and then used them as firelighters.
Re:Librarian of Congress conclusions (Score:1, Funny)
Re:Librarian of Congress conclusions (Score:2)
Erm...were you really able to use them as a firestarter after you spat on them? Did you not at least wait for the spittle to dry? I wouldn't think it would burn well with a big wet loogie spattered all over it.
try making -that- an acronym! (Score:1)
Next thing I know it'll be the comments on sally selling seashells by the seashore; who comes up with these names that are six mouth-fulls long?
Re:try making -that- an acronym! (Score:5, Insightful)
When you're making a law against your citizens, there are two options
Either you want to make 'communication' to let people change their minds / unleash their instincts. Then you give it a neat name like 'Patriot Act'.
Or else it's better that the public does not think about it, because if he does not, he'll not notice the effects of the law. Then you give it an ugly name that no newspaper is going to make a big title of. Examples : CBDTPA, SSSCA.... (these are DMCA-like laws).
Re:try making -that- an acronym! (Score:5, Interesting)
Has anyone noticed that there only 50 comments there? That out of all that were submitted, those were the only ones ACCEPTED? (who know what the real count is.)
Well, I try not to be too, but I couldn't help get the feeling that this whole comment thing was made to be way more complicated that necessary. First off, the format requirment: in order to figure out what exactly these requirments were, you had to read through most of the 19 page Notice of Inquiry to figure it out. And if you weren't good at reading between the lines, forget it. One simple step - numbering your classes, appeared as just one little blip in the middle of a very legal jargon paragraph. Later, the requirment that a name be on the attachment.
I submitted, and noticed the little warning "Most of the comments submitted thus far do not comply....Comments that do not comply with ALL of the requirements will not be considered." When you click the submit button, up pops a reminder (which I think should have been right out front in the beginning) which reminded of the 5 requirements (name, idenify class, number each class, summary of each class, provide facts). Anyway, mine got rejected. In defense of the LOC, I will say that they did call me at home to let me know of the rejection and that I could re-submit to a different email. Basically, my summary was off, in that I did not start out the ending with "In summary,". I told the guy that I thought their requirments were too steep, and that anyone who took the time to submit should be heard regardless. I mean, how stupid to go through all that effort and not have your voice be heard because you didn't number a paragraph or use the word summary? Again, there are only 50 comments there and that bothers me. Last round 270something were submitted, mostly in essay form which I am sure drove them crazy. But whatever, it is their job to figure out what ails the public, not the publics job to become mini-lawyers just to be able to participate.
Re:try making -that- an acronym! (Score:1)
REPCTMCACW
:(
Let's put this myth to bed (Score:3, Insightful)
The summary of Klawans' comments runs as follows:
In his comments, Klawans makes reference to old Jazz 78 rpm records that he has transfered to CD, AND which he says record companies will not reissue because they are not profitable.This argument is strongly flawed. First, the preservation of art form has little to do with profitability and everything to do with art lover's willingness to preserve those forms. History is full of examples of obscure books, art, and music that have been preserved while more popular (profitable) works fell by the wayside.
Furthermore, the proper way to preserve musical recordings like 78 rpm records is to preserve the means of playing those records. For example. 78 rpm record players are still readily available, they just take some work to find. Putting these recordings on P2P networks for anyone to download just denies descendants of the original artists of those recordings their rightful royalties.
I'm in favor of fair use, but no progress will be made against the DMCA's overly restrictive policies by using bad logic.
That's not bad logic (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Let's put this myth to bed (Score:1)
Preserving the method of playing the original media, while important, would do very little good in preserving the media itself. I'm not sure how familiar with records you are, but they are not a very reliable archival medium. The very act of playing them wears them out a considerable amount. What good is archiving an album if you cannot play it back? Making a digital backup of such a medium only makes sense for long time archival and enjoyment of the content.
Now I'm confused as to what making a digital backup of a record has to do with circumvention of anti-piracy devices.. as as far as I can remember records don't have anything like that built into them. With that and the mention of p2p I'd dare say things got a little off topic... my main point was just the fact that records wear out quickly with repeated use...
Re:Let's put this myth to bed (Score:3, Insightful)
Copyrights should always expire, thou lawmakers seem to go crazy with life+20 years of the creator.
Then the combo of copyright+dmca, older music thats not being sold, plus electronic media formats, makes it impossible to legally listen in a modern format.
Of course, in 100 years, there will be a large collection of music/movies/books open to the public. Interesting to see what laws are passed to prevent this from happening.
Re:Let's put this myth to bed (Score:3, Insightful)
There's no myth to be put to bed (Score:5, Insightful)
Many of these works have been saved by individuals who were not the original producers or copyright holders of the material. When CD players that support a particular flavor of DRM become rare, it will be illegal for me, as an individual to use a device to convert the files to a new format that I can listen to.
Furthermore, the proper way to preserve musical recordings like 78 rpm records is to preserve the means of playing those records. For example. 78 rpm record players are still readily available, they just take some work to find.
If I had a collection of rare audio recordings that happened to be stored on betamax or old 8" floppy disks, I shouldn't have to keep searching for working beta and floppy drives to be able to listen to my recordings over the next 50 years. As an individual, I should be allowed to make copies for my personal use (under Fair Use statutes) so that I can continue to listen to them after the format dies.
As another example, Circuit City's DiVX users had an option that allowed them to "purchase" a DiVX disc -- that is, they could pay a price for unlimited use of a disc. However, in 1999 or 2000 (I don't remember the exact date) a year or so after the service was terminated, the servers that were in charge of permissions were turned off. That means that any DiVX discs that you "purchased" were compeletely unusable. It wouldn't matter if you had 100 working DiVX players, you still can't access the content. Now, imagine that you had some rare, unprofitable music recording that had been made using a similar, failed technology...
Also, while it may be best to listen to analog 78s using 78rpm turntables (as a non-audiophile I'm not as wedded to this, but I'll take your word for it), digitally encoded data won't lose their quality if they are converted, in a lossless manner from technology X to technology Y.
Putting these recordings on P2P networks for anyone to download just denies descendants of the original artists of those recordings their rightful royalties.
That argument is a bit disingenuous in this context. Klawan's comments [loc.gov] don't say anything about
DiVX (Score:1)
And even if there isn't a DRM server involved, it should still be legal for people to do format changes and backups. I shouldn't have to rely on working DVD players being available in 40 years and the media not getting scratched in order to play a Chinese version of Iron Monkey for my future grandchildren.
Re:Let's put this myth to bed (Score:5, Insightful)
In my opinion, it is your response which is poorly thought out and unpersuasive.
This is true, but this if course is precisely what 'Digital Rights Management' makes impossible. If the jazz recordings had originally been released on Digital Rights Management media, set to be played only a specific number of times or for a specific period (tachnologies which the DMCA and equivalents in other countries explicitly protect), the performances would now be permanently unavailable.
Some myth (Score:5, Interesting)
500 year old books can be read and can last for another 500 years. 200 year old pictures can be seen and will probably last that much longer. 100 year old films have deteriorated to the point where most are unviewable and need to be TRANSFERRED to be viewed and preserved. The same will deterioration will happen to CD's eventually. If you couldn't make copies of your CD's, how will your children listen to them if they didn't have any working CD players? What if they didn't know the format that the CD's are in? What if it were illegal for them to fix CD players, figure out how CD players work, and if the CD format were a "trade secret?". The DMCA makes all of that legal for media companies to do.
Unsanctioned distribution of works under copyright is illegal and not neccessary to exercise fair use. Can you say straw man. [nizkor.org]?
As long as you mention descendants, let me rant on that subject for a short moment: <rant>just because the decendants of Edgar Rice Burroughs et al, are still making millions off of what their grandparents created, doesn't mean that that is what our founding fathers had in mind when they wrote the "promote the Progress of Science and useful Arts, by securing for limited Times to Authors and Inventors the exclusive Right to their respective Writings and Discoveries;" clause into Article I of the Constitution. Note that it says "limited Times" and "Authors and Inventors" and not "forever" and "Authors, Inventors, their heirs and their investors"</rant>
EnkiduEOT
Re:Some myth (Score:1)
Many Edgar Rice Burroughs books are out of copyright, and are available for free download from Project Gutenberg [promo.net].
Perhaps this is a good counter-example to the DMCA, the "rights" of heirs, and "forever".
Re:Some myth (Score:1)
Of course, there are better examples, I just couldn't think of them at the time. How about these: the somewhat recent Gone With The Wind vs. The Wind Done Gone controversy, or just the more recent Cage "silence" composition crapola.
EnkiduEOT
Re:Let's put this myth to bed (Score:4, Insightful)
no, in the case you mentioned it does not. First the 78's are not available for sale, what is pressed on the 78 is all there will ever be, no more sales == no more roalities. Thus once all the 78's are worn out (record do wear out you know, maybe you aren't old enough to remeber) the music will be gone forever - unless a master is saved (probably not, not profitable) or someone has "illegally" recorded said music to CD.
this issue has absolutely nothing to do with P2P networks. After a reasonable period of time copyright runs out, this is one of the examples that it is meant to preserve. This is a perfect example of unlimited copyright (or very long copyright) and inability to make fair use copies destroying forever someones artistic works.
Re:Let's put this myth to bed (Score:4, Insightful)
This is part of the problem. "Descendants of the original artists" need to get off their butts and contribute themselves. Not ride on the coat tails of their ancestors. Where does it end? Does anyone 1000 years down the line with a trace of DNA from the artist participate in the gravy train? We are just bringing back the concept of inherited privilege. What's next "Devine right of Kings"?
Re:Let's put this myth to bed (Score:5, Insightful)
$DEITY forbid they should have to earn their own livings.
Re:Let's put this myth to bed (Score:3, Insightful)
Minor point, but copyrights are supposed to live for limited times to encourage creators to create so they can profit from their work. If the artist is dead, they can't be encouraged to create any more. Why should the decendants get anything for something their parent, or grandparent, etc. created? What valuable creative service have they provided short of being born?
I'd argue that this actually hurts the creative process because of the numbers of decendants getting money while artists (the creators) get an ever-smaller slice.
Re:Let's put this myth to bed (Score:2)
People are often motivated by what they may pass down to their children. If the copyright is creating a property with a finite life, that property should be controlled, after death, the same way other property of the deceased is controlled.
Re:Let's put this myth to bed (Score:1)
That depends. Who, ultimately, "owns" the work? The artist has the copyright, but a good case can be made that it belongs to society as a whole. Ownership of ideas is not like ownership of physical objects, which is why copyright law exists in the first place.
Let's put Flopsy to bed, instead (Score:3, Insightful)
In the few moments it took me to read his posting on alterslash, I was appalled at the idea that this thing was rated 5-insightful, considering how many instances of bad logic it exhibits: Art lovers cannot preserve anything under Bono or DMCA, since they are not creators of that content. This RIGHT has been denied, despite constitutional language that puts forth this right. And pointing to one artifact from the past and declaring that it is proof that all worthwhile art has been preserved is just silly. Every historian I've met says old documents are rife with references to other stuff that they'd kill to see, but which has disappeared. That's an opinion. Considering the fallibility of media and the fact that this prevents anyone but an obsessive or enthusiast from experiencing anything created solely on 78's, I say it's a pretty poor opinion. I like old jazz, but not enough to build/maintain an old Victrola (sp?). Do you hear how intellectually elitist you sound? Telling us that we're not worthy of early jazz recordings unless we suffer a bit? Rightful. That's when I lost it. YOU DO NOT HAVE A RIGHT FOR PREVENTING COPIES. WE HAVE A RIGHT TO COPY. YOU HAVE BEEN GIVEN A PRIVILEGE TO CONTROL THE COPYING FOR A CERTAIN AMOUNT OF TIME.
Besides, nobody deserves anything they didn't earn directly. I don't like royalty (as in kings), I am not sure I like huge inheritances, and I sure as hell don't think that anyone's great-grandkids deserve anything special. Based on all the rest of the bad logic, this is when I decided you're a shill. Because that seems so trite. A half dozen of Atwater-esque Big Lies, wrapped up nicely with a 'and I'm on your side.' If you're so for fair use, let's see you argue for it, rather than using tricks and poor logic to try to pollute the pool.
Re:Let's put this myth to bed (Score:1)
Re:Let's put this myth to bed (Score:3, Insightful)
You're not thinking of the long long *long* term.
There will still be people on the planet interested in hearing it 1000 years from now. You're record will long since have worn into dust, and not only that, but since you only have N copies of the record, very few people get to hear it despite the copyright having run out 900 years ago.
Imagine how many of the *old* old works from civilizations millenia past would be with us if making translations had been illegal.
.
Re:Let's put this myth to bed (Score:2)
Re:Let's put this myth to bed (Score:1)
For example. 78 rpm record players are still readily available, they just take some work to find. Putting these recordings on P2P
networks for anyone to download just denies descendants of the original artists of those recordings their rightful royalties.
Well unfortuneatly playing records on an old 78 turntable, degrades the media. I don't think that this degredation was an integral part of the sale of the music. I would assume that the music is what was sold, it was just sold on a particular media, as we can buy the same song on record, cd, mp3
"If you are talking about preservation then the proper way to preserve musical recordings like 78 rpm records is to preserve the means of playing those records."
Then this is preservation of the antique experience more than preservation of the music.
And where is copyright lifetime in all of this? Aren't some things in the public domain? Bono legislation aside.
Re:Let's put this myth to bed (Score:1)
First, I DO NOT share those files on a P2P network, or any network at all. I keep them for personal use only. Even if I did share them, I do not believe I would be violating any copyright laws. All of those recordings were originally purchased by my father in the 30s, and many have been unavailable for over 50 years. I believe that such works are considered in the public domain.
Second, it is true that you can purchase a turntable capable of playing a 78 rpm record today. Good ones are not cheap, and cheap ones do not have the proper stylus to play a 78. Using the wrong stylus both damages the 78 and sounds like crap.
Third, the fact that I can purchase a turntable that plays 78 today does not weaken my original argument. What if I had said I had a collection of Edison cylinders - would you agree then? Will I still be able to purchase such a turntable in 10 years? 50 years? It is the future that I am worried about, not the present. What if a future medium contains a protection schemes require a keyserver to play back, and that server gets shut down? No amount of money will enable owners to material encoded on that medium to recover the material they thought they owned.
-Barry Klawans
Wow. (Score:5, Insightful)
Now, time to sit back and see just how intellectually dishonest the courts can be. They'll have to write some really creative stuff to put big money interests ahead of reason this time. Fortunately, they have an army of recent lawschool graduates dedicated to that very cause.
Re:Wow. (Score:2)
DMCA clearly violates both the letter and spirit of the Constitution in this regard; therefore, when it's brought up before the courts, they're obligated to invalidate it.
Of course, that's not to say we shouldn't let our Congresspeople know they've done a Very Bad Thing(tm), but just in case they or their successors don't get the message, we have other recourse and we should avail ourselves of it. Our obligation as US citizens is to take every possible measure to see that unconstitutional and unjust laws are shown the door, and this includes making sure that DMCA comes up before the courts ASAP.
In addition, acting through the courts will not only invalidate the law itself, but make it clear what aspects of it are unconstitutional. Otherwise, the Congress could very easily repeal DMCA, then turn right around and pass something else that does the same thing. There are times when the legislature needs to instructed in unambiguous terms: "You can't make laws that do X because laws that do so violate the Constitution, and here's why...".
Good AP article summarizing (Score:5, Interesting)
choice quote -- With copyright holders wanting stronger protections and users seeking greater freedom to copy, Congress "looked at those extremes and struck a balance," said Robert Holleyman, chief executive of the Business Software Alliance.
Re:Good AP article summarizing (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Good AP article summarizing (Score:2)
If you ever appear before a court to support the death penalty, just say that everyone even accused of a crime should be killed immediately.
Does anyone suppose the court would "meet them half-way" on that?
Is a video camera good enough for fair use? (Score:3, Insightful)
The "degradation in quality" would be quite severe. If you just point a video camera at a television, you will get massive flickering. To stop the flickering, you need to attach a device to manipulate the video signal. For that device to work, you need to circumvent Macrovision (a violation of the very law in question).
Some day, the camera won't even work. Hollywood is already working with camera manufactures so cameras won't record anything with Hollywood's watermark on it.
Re:Goatse Guy's LArge Friend, The Giver (Score:2)
If your feeble mind can't grasp the possibility of a direct statement ending in a question mark, perhaps you should restrict yourself to less sophisticated literature, dumbass.
OMG (Score:2, Redundant)
but will anything happen? (Score:2)
Re:but will anything happen? (Score:1)
None of this matters (Score:3, Interesting)
In other words, it looks to me like all this effort is completely irrelevant and merely a way of wasting the dissenters' time. The Library of Congress can decide anything they want about the DMCA and where the limits on its power should be: it won't make a damned bit of difference out here in the real world.
Re:None of this matters (Score:3, Insightful)
The last time they took comments, they implemented two exceptions to the DMCA anti-circumvention statute. Based on comments in 2000, they decide [copyright.gov] to allow the circumvention of content protection in two cases:
1. Compilations consisting of lists of websites blocked by filtering software applications; and
2. Literary works, including computer programs and databases, protected by access control mechanisms that fail to permit access because of malfunction, damage or obsolescence.
These exemptions are in effect from October 28, 2000 to October 28, 2003.
In other words, this is relevant, and not a waste of dissenter's time. However, it is not a replacement for judicial or legislative attempts to overcome a bad law.
Re:None of this matters (Score:3, Informative)
Re:None of this matters (Score:2, Informative)
Two points:
An interesting twist (Score:5, Interesting)
Discriminatory laws! (Score:1)
"""
Music that is used by natural-born persons in the United States and other nations which we have treaties with should be exempted for all
"""
What about people born via C-section - don't they have rights too?
THL.
Definition of "natural-born" (Score:1)
What about people born via C-section - don't they have rights too?
They have rights too. Heck, I was almost a C-section baby. But your definition of "natural-born" is not the real definition used in law:
Music that is used by natural-born persons in the United States
Aside from the joke made in the parent comment, the "natural" in "natural-born" means the same as it does in "naturalized". The term "natural-born" describes individual persons born on United States soil who, by the 14th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution, become U.S. citizens approximately nine months into their life, at the moment of birth.
but you wait in jail (Score:2, Insightful)
You will probably plead guilty to a lesser charge with a guaranteed fine and community service rather than risk going to jail when the only lawyer you can afford will tell you that if you lose you're looking at 10 years.
At thought, (Score:3, Interesting)
Having the work in a library would not count as reasonably available.
"In print" requirement won't fly under Berne (Score:2)
Why not have a limit on the copyright that says that the copyright holder must keep the work available to the public for a reasonable fee or the copyright is void?
Requiring works to remain in print or lose their copyright would violate international treaties such as the Berne Convention, which requires that contracting nations recognize copyright on a work regardless of whether or not the work is still in print.
So where do content owners go? (Score:5, Insightful)
When the content industry-envisioned "DRM world" comes about (where everything is DRM enabled) what do YOU think the default state of the "do not copy bit" is going to be? If your answer is "off", pass me some of what you've been smoking. The only way that DRM would *ever* be effective is if it banned all copying of everything, whether or not you are the owner.
Take video cameras. Sure you could be recording your own smash hit motion picture (in which case the MPAA wants to stop YOU). But what if that DV you're encoding on your computer is actually the latest MPAA-made smash hit, filmed from under your jacket?
How will mommy send her "Baby's First Steps" video to her family then? Simple, she has to prove to someone (an MPAA rep, probably) that the material she wants copyable really does belong to her. Of course, the MPAA representative's time IS money, so they will have to be fairly compensated for the time they spend reviewing the video.
Of course, once its in the hands of the MPAA, all bets are off. Don't be suprised if you get arrested because your independent smash hit was actually a complete copy of a work by an MPAA-subsidiary studio, made 3 hours after they received your video... err, I mean which has been in the works for 3 years.
If you think all of this is bullshit, just take a look at the behavior of the *IAA's now. They're willing to lie (no matter HOW fast, 1 burner is ONE BURNER) to whatever ends they want to get, and they want to get your money.
Re:So where do content owners go? (Score:2)
Go to creative commons [creativecommons.org].
hows this (Score:2, Insightful)
The standard copyright can be 10 years, for example. And those who wish to continue to profit from their ancient creations can apply for an extension and pay the US Gov't a %age of the profits, ie, be taxed.
Why does the entire intellectual pool need be harmed just because the mouse stood up. Turn it around, and they could be huge contributors to society (through taxes).
What is most disturbing, is it is not the artists who are losing out and complaining. It is the people selling other people's work. Sure, they are filthy rich meaning they are quite successful at it, in which case it is even more important not to confuse the issue.
In most cases, artists would LOVE for their work to be heard. Especially if no record company sells their work anymore. The only artists complaining are those who already are filthy rich and are convinced by their record companies their income is being threatened.
If artists were in it for money, they wouldn't be artists to begin with.
Companies selling art are in it for the money, and they were in it for the money to begin with.
Doing it only in one country wouldn't work (Score:2)
Why don't they just make "extensions" for copyrights.
Treating the copyright term like the trademark registration term, renewable every ten years, would not work because countries other than the one that allows term renewals would be free not to recognize any copyright term extensions beyond the life plus 50 years that the Berne Convention guarantees. Even Sonny Bono [pineight.com] never got to Canada (a tree got in the way [pineight.com]).
Copying of DVDs (Score:1)
DMCA hard at work, I get error trying to decrypt (Score:1)
They ingored me (Score:1)
Re:They ingored me (Score:2)
Re:What this shows about slashdot posters (Score:2)
No, we don't know how many were received - it's only 50 that were ACCEPTED. On the last round 270+ were received, and I believe most of those will show up again during the Reply deadline which is in Feb. With all the buzz on here, EFF, ChillingEffects, etc., I doubt very much the number is anywhere near 50, and probably closer to the hundreds somewhere. I think anyone who took the effort to send in and didn't get accepted should forward their comments to their local Congress and insist they be heard.