Anti-Piracy Labeling Bill in Works 303
Rinisari writes "Just posted on news.com.com is an article with more on the bill that could make all digital consumer products be required to be labeled with information regarding any anti-piracy technology within the device. Senator Ron Wyden, D-OR, will be the primary sponser of the bill (he's also got a text-only site)."
Actually.. (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Actually.. (Score:3, Informative)
Maybe Wyden will rub off on Smith...until then, bombard Smith with anti-MPAA/RIAA mail and informed information. Perhaps we can get a convert in the form of the Senior Senator from the state of Oregon.
Re:Actually.. (Score:5, Insightful)
How about You just leave out the anti-whatever E-mail?
And dont bombard him, bombarding someone just ensures that they take shelter from your bombardment.
Instead, try and educate the man. present an UNBIASED viewpoint and use FACTS.
if you flood the man with propoganda, he's just going to run to the MPAA/RIAA money even faster.
Tell His constituents what he's doing, and EDUCATE THEM!
Take an inteligent aproach, and he MIGHT listen to you.
And for you residents of Oregon, Call His office, send him mail (NOT E-mail), Tell him what you think of his actions, and be sure your vote reflects your opinion the next time he comes up for election.
Act like a freak/fanatic, and he will respond to you accordingly.
Act like an inteligent person, and he might actually listen to you.
Re:Actually.. (Score:4, Insightful)
Politicians who are focused and supportive of certain industries are generally ruled by hype and money...if you only have considered opinions and no capital, you are welcome to express yourself and will in no way influence these folks.
On other issues the Senior Senator is considered and thoughtful, even erudite and reasonable. In this place, he has been won over by the RIAA/MPAA twins to believe that if he doesn't protect their content, then he will compromise all intellectual property derived in the US. It is an argument that will not be won except by the voice of his constituents.
As a citizen of Oregon, I can tell you I've seen far more responsive government representatives from Arizona (still have the letter from John McCain where he corrected my beliefs about his encryption legislation) than from Oregon.
I won't recommend voting against a candidate for a single issue, but I do believe that we must make it clear to him the nature of his misinformation, and if that includes sending him snail mail and discussing these at town meetings at every opportunity, then I will...
Never suggested being a freak/fanatic, but I can see how I mis-communicated my thoughts.
Re:Actually.. (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Actually.. (Score:3, Funny)
Never thought Oregon was heaven on earth, unless of course, He has opened branch offices all over the world.
Labeling (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Labeling (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Labeling (example for parent post): (Score:2)
For those that are going to use my journal:
--gal
Re:Labeling (Score:4, Insightful)
Take off the tin-foil hat!
This is more of a consumer-protection law than anything else. It's reasonable to expect the dealer/manufacturer notify you (and discount appropriately) when he tries to sell you known broken goods. Wouldn't you be a bit ticked if the CD burner you bought was used as a hammer by the store manager's kid, without any notice about it?
Copy-protection is making a product broken the moment it comes out of the factory. Note it as damage.
Re:Labeling (Score:2)
I wonder if more than 50% of the people reading this know what a cj-7 is. I think you should have gone for something a little more obscure like say and FJ40.
Re:Labeling (Score:3, Insightful)
>Nobody expects a Yugo, the zenith of Communist >cosumer goods, to be able to keep up with a tricked >out CJ-7 in a hill climb
However, when you offer the Yugo as the next-generation replacement to said CJ-7 (equivalent strategy: let's replace your perfectly good CD player with our NeuteredDisc(tm) players!), and your target market wouldn't be able to tell a Yugo from a CJ-7 at the dealership without two tries (the discs and players look, are packaged and priced similarly, and advertising rarely mentions crippling), you need to make it abundantly clear that you're not selling the same set of expectations.
Finally, the louder and more obnoxious the warning label is, the stronger its impact on discouraging manufacturers to adopt an unpopular technology. Would you put a big "We Screw Our Customers" label on every box, assuming you didn't work at MSFT? The principle here is somewhat similar, I suppose, to the stigma against NC/17-rated films shaping the supply side of the market: you can make them if you want, but good luck getting the consumer to look behind the scarlet letters.
Re:Labeling (Score:2)
Hmm... I would liken this more to a label that warns you, 'yes, this car has an air bar', or 'no, this car does not have air bags.' Or maybe, 'yes, this VCR has the ability to record'... anyway, it's not subjective. It is a boolean value... yes or no, true or false, etc... something you could find out by looking at the package, in this case, they just want to make it very obvious.
Whew.. (Score:5, Funny)
Not a bad idea (Score:5, Insightful)
Unfortunately, it probably won't stop most of the unwashed masses from buying the latest [fill in the name of the flavor du 'jour] CD.
Re:Not a bad idea (Score:5, Informative)
Of course, had there been no copy protection sticker/warning, I would probably have ended up with 100th Window (it was cheaper!). It's good to know, certainly - I don't want a crippled CD that may or may not play in my computer, cd player, dvd player, whatever; let's hope all recording labels follow suit.
Re:Not a bad idea (Score:2, Insightful)
BUT we can't "sample" them.
Hypocrites!
...and don't give me that "Its the record company doing it" bullshit.
Re:Not a bad idea (Score:2)
Maybe now (Score:2)
Re:Not a bad idea (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Not a bad idea (Score:2)
Re:new massive attack album? (Score:3)
It's not protected everywhere. (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Not a bad idea (Score:4, Interesting)
Just to add to that, I think it'd force companies to charge less money for restricted (I hate the word protection in this context) materials. I won't buy a Music CD that won't work in my computer. But if the restricted CD were say $5 less, well then I'd consider it.
It's a pity, these corps have a wonderful opportunity here to gain user acceptance of crippled CD's.
"We're doing this to thwart piracy in order to make our business more profitable. As a pre-emptive reward, we're lowering the price of our products. Support anti-piracy steps, and we'll pass some of the savings on to you."
Yeah, I know, it's not likely to happen. But a price drop for those particular materials would let people vote with their wallets. "So... we lowered the price of CD's and made more money, weird. But, this album isn't restricted and it made a greater profit, wow."
Re:Not a bad idea (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Not a bad idea (Score:3, Insightful)
You are going to force them to charge LESS for a product that costs them MORE to produce? They have spent a fortune developing, licening, and implementing these restriction systems.
Has it dawned on you that it also implies that you are forcing them to charge MORE for normal CD's?
Even if we assume they initially started by reducing the cost of crippled content they will quickly apply "inflation" and set the price of crippled disks however they want and you are unforcing a surcharge for normal products.
-
Re:Not a bad idea (Score:2)
So? Crippled CD's aren't going to be pay per play like DivX DVD's were.
Re:Not a bad idea (Score:2)
Well, considering how well labeling cigarettes has worked to prevent people from giving themselves cancer, just because it's cool, I'm guessing that labels on crippled anti-piracy will have about as much of an effect.
Of course, if we could get a lawsuit going against companies that cripple their products, win many millions and have some of that money mandated to be used against the companies we just won it from we could be just like the anti-tobacco people. However, I'm not sure the big tobacco companies have done anything to prevent cancerous side-effects of smoking, either. So maybe that isn't the best plan in the world.
About time! (Score:5, Insightful)
Good luck on this bill!
Re:About time! (Score:3, Interesting)
No Big Deal (Score:5, Insightful)
And further, as the technology becomes more and more popular, eventually, won't EVERY product have one of these labels on it?
Although this act seems like it could be a step in the right direction, I think it should be cut down before it wastes (American) tax-payers dollars.
Kind of like Magic Gate tech from Sony (Score:5, Insightful)
Labels like these are not the solution and only restrict manufacturer's rights and put a crimp on their profits for no reason whatsoever. Of course, Wyden is from Oregon and may have a small stake in the paper manufacturing increase that will necessarily occur if such a bill is passed.
Don't underestimate the "masses". (Score:5, Insightful)
And part of that is because nobody TOLD them there are consequences.
But as soon as warning labels start showing up, some of 'em will start to wonder what they're being warned about
So some will ask, or look around on the net, and maybe find out. Then they'll be able to make an informed decision about whether it matters to them enough to affect their purchase decision.
And others will just avoid products with the warning label in favor of those without - which will create pressure on the providers to stop using technologies which require a warning label. B-)
Don't underestimate joe sixpack. Just because he isn't an expert on the things YOU'RE expert on doesn't mean he's dumb or lazy. He may be quite the genius, and just focussed on other interests.
Re:Don't underestimate the "masses". (Score:4, Insightful)
Especially when the warning reads: Secured for your protection.
The industry always likes to reverse the meaning of all important words to make something bad sound good. Remember SDMI or "Secure" media. All warnings that the product is so secure that you can't even use it!
Where am I? What planet is this? (Score:5, Funny)
[spit take]
say what? am I still reading Slashdot? what kind of comment is this? not a flamer, not a troll... some sort of new entity never before seen.
I think I need to lie down.
sweatyb
Re:Where am I? What planet is this? (Score:2)
say what? am I still reading Slashdot? what kind of comment is this? not a flamer, not a troll... some sort of new entity never before seen.
Naw. Just a midwestern redneck with "Karma Excellent". B-)
If you're interested you can read some of my other posts [slashdot.org]
Fool me once (Score:2, Insightful)
Re: (Score:2, Funny)
Sounds good to me... (Score:4, Insightful)
I hate ever so much switching CDs.
Just as offensive as "explicit lyrics" (Score:4, Insightful)
It will also help sell "forward thinking artists" and labels who don't have the label.
Re:Just as offensive as "explicit lyrics" (Score:3, Insightful)
I like it (Score:5, Insightful)
Yes, I am aware of the irony of using that case for DRM, for the information people may need to use for good judgement can be hidden using DRM. I believe it is a weak arguement though.
Re:I like it (Score:4, Insightful)
I completely agree. I also think that laws shouldn't be passed regarding this issue. It shouldn't be illegal to break DRM, but it also shouldn't be illegal to put DRM on a disk. When the companies get too greedy and the functionality of their products is lost, they'll feel it in their pocketbook.
Let the consumer decide.
Re:I like it (Score:3, Informative)
But I don't see anyone passing laws to make DRM illegal. Manufacturers are free to use any form of DRM that they desire. Problem is, 1) they can lie and pass it off as non-DRM product 2) It is is already illegal to break DRM in many cases (at least when DRM owner has enough lawyers).
Lessing is wrong and will be used. (Score:4, Interesting)
"Never in our history have fewer been in a position to control more of the creative potential of our society than now," Lessig said. "We have to buy them off, so they don't break the Internet in the interim."
Because the first statement is true, the plan will fail. Every major record label, and there are only five in the world, is putting in Digital Rights Denial. If you want to sell a non-major record in your store, the majors cut you off. So, what choice do you have? You look left, DRM, you look right, DRM. Now that internet radio has been shut down, Napster is dead, and the FBI will soon visit you for running P2P, you won't hear of anything but crappy major music. Not even the mighty Google can lead you to reasonable music can it? No, these lables will only dull you to the rights you have lost, make your kids think that it's right and waste time and money in general. The lables are going to be used for propaganda purposes. I can just imagine one now, "Copy Controled to feed our starving artist's hungry babies - Sharing is Stealing!". Every artists out there is going to love it when their five cent cut per sold CD is reduced to two cents to cover the cost of applying the lables.
You can't buy these bastards off, you can only avoid them. Buy used recodings, support local acts and turn the radio off. Oh yeah, that's what people have already started doing.
The internet has been broken already too. That's why "so few" people have so much control and I can't serve out of my house over the public network that being used by the local cable company. After all, if everyone could sever, word of mouth and Google would work for everyone including the artists who mostly would earn more money than they do now.
It's really needed. (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:It's really needed. (Score:5, Interesting)
iPod and similar devices are really the only way to go. You mount the unit like a file system, and just drag the files over. No re-encoding, no checking the files out. No DRM. Just ease of use and great performance. Sony realizes this, but because of their music devison holding them back, they are stuck with the crappy DRM hassleware.
Also, my Pioneer car deck plays MP3s without any crap. Burn the files onto a regular ISO9660 disc, and you're done. No special software. No proprietary formats. No hassles. I know Sony makes decks that play MP3s, but because of all thier DRM pushing, I would be very skeptical about buying one.
In short, because of Sony Music pushing for DRM, I am probably not going to buy Sony audio electronics again. At one time they were the best, because of Sony Music being scared of their own customers and forcing this lockdown, I'm not even taking a chance with Sony stuff.
But they are so tiny (Score:2)
Re:It's really needed. (Score:5, Insightful)
Nice, but... (Score:3, Interesting)
Wait, aren't they on "our side"? (Score:5, Insightful)
So, they aren't trying to pass a law to require digital copyright protection on devices, they are trying to legislate disclosure of "anti-piracy" technology that might otherwise silently sit on that new CD player you are ready to buy from Circuit City.
Why are we bitching at the Democrats? Oh, because it was on slashdot and the genius editor posted it "from the compromising-freedom dept", so we don't have to actually read the the article before kicking into full knee-jerk mode.
"I want people to walk into every store in America and see that the product they're about to buy has restrictions," Wyden said. "Let's take this to the marketplace."
Uh, that's what we want, isn't it? (well, short of making the whole copyright BS go away, I mean).
Re:Wait, aren't they on "our side"? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Wait, aren't they on "our side"? (Score:2)
Um... it is a compromise. The legislation says "thou shalt label thy copy protection schemes," not "thou shalt not use copy protection schemes that deprive consumers of their fair use rights."
Re:Wait, aren't they on "our side"? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Wait, aren't they on "our side"? (Score:2)
Apparently you eat your media, otherwise you would not mistake this with a health issue. Folks like you are why ladders have so many nonsensical labels.
As for the second half of your analogy, I'm not even sure where to begin. Labeling people for their religous and sexual preferences and then beginning a government campaign to exterminate the entire group does not even begin to compare to product labeling.
Now what the hell are you talking about? I was obviously speaking as to labeling being bad, you, apparently, have the same problems as those that wish to label everything at the point of a gun.
Re: (Score:2)
Re:Wait, aren't they on "our side"? (Score:2)
Re:Wait, aren't they on "our side"? (Score:3, Informative)
So, you don't think I would be doing anything wrong if I sold ordinary tap water as "Dr. Steve's Muscle-Making, Brain-Building, Potency-Pumping Elixir"? After all, the tap water isn't unhealthy or unsafe (not even by diverting people from trying other more promising techniques toward those ends -- that merely results in them staying the same, not becoming any worse off).
As pointed out upthread, products ordinarily come with a "warranty of implied fitness" (i.e. the expectation that if used for their intended purpose by a reasonable and prudent person, they'll work as expected). A 5 1/2" silver disk with copy prevention that looks like a CD and is not clearly labeled as a non-CD is fraudulent, for the same reason that counterfeit machine parts are fraudulent -- they just don't do what a reasonable purchaser would expect of them.
Re:Wait, aren't they on "our side"? (Score:2)
There's a fine line between "warning" and "declaration." The products you mentioned that had genuine warning labels had real detrimental side effects.
On the other hand, labels on food that say "genetically modified" or "irradiated" are not warnings because there are no real detrimental side-effects to using these foods (or at least no claims of side-effects that can hold water). Forcing these groups to put declarations on their products only serves one purpose: to breed unfounded prejudice against those labeled products.
Now, I don't feel that folks who sell genetically modified and/or irradiated food should be able to hide what they do to their food, because there are people who want to make a political choice (or, in the case of irradiated food, they're just stupid*). However, public disclosure is a far way away from putting a neon label that's essentially designed to bias those that would not otherwise care.
*You know you're just going to take it home and microwave it anyway!
A happy medium (Score:5, Interesting)
But, simply by putting a label on the product that says "Restricts blah blah" people who wouldn't have had a clue will now at least have heard of copyright protection and digital restrictions. The more it's talked about, the more people will be judicious with their purchases, and hopefully we can see a happy medium balance itself out.
Sure, Mom and Pop won't know what the hell that tag means, but when us college students figure realize "hey, I can't download my music anymore?! WTF!!" sales of young-person-targeted devices (PDAs, MP3 players, sleek laptops, etc.) will drop if the restrictions are too high.
Now, if only we can get this through, fix the DMCA, and repeal the PATRIOT act...
Don't you mean.. (Score:2)
Trojan horse? (Score:3, Funny)
To quote Ackbar, "It's a trap!"
Consumer notification is a good thing. (Score:2)
A review of Sen. Wyden's site does not reveal any draft of the bill in question. However, based on comments in the article, it sounds like a good idea.
This is the same Sen. Wyden who has sponsored a Senate resolution on consumer's rights to use digital content. A link to the PDF here. [senate.gov]
The advantage of mandatory labelling for consumer devices that have anti-copy technology installed is that the consumer can know, at a glance, whether the device in question will allow him or her to make fair use of digital content he or she has purchased.
Obviously, the Hollywood crowd would prefer such a bill never see the light of day, since it would make devices with anti-copying technology potentially very unpopular. I can imagine that Sony wouldn't be thrilled.
At the same time, I can foresee that this is the kind of domestic issue that could easily get buried under the current foreign policy and economic crises.
Re:Consumer notification is a good thing. (Score:2)
ANOTHER WARNING (Score:4, Funny)
lot of good that one does. what if this one isn't different?
Re:ANOTHER WARNING (Score:3, Insightful)
Yes, they are different.
Re:ANOTHER WARNING (Score:2, Interesting)
The idea of dying slowly from lung cancer in a couple of decades is a difficult thing to imagine. It's pretty hard to imagine yourself weak and frail and dying. Copying restrictions have a much more immediate effect. They run counter to our learned desire for 'convenience'.
'Hmm this cigarette is probably taking another hour off of my life. Oh well.' as opposed to 'Why the fsck won't this cd play on my pc? I've wasted a fscking hour trying to rip an mp3 from this damn thing.'
It's a nuisance, and people react much more to the small things they can immediately feel the effect of than the larger things they need to think about.
Not specific enough (Score:3, Funny)
lot of good that one does. what if this one isn't different?
What the warning really needs to say is:
SURGEON GENERAL'S WARNING: Smoking Cigarettes Causes Impotence
I'm sure a lot more guys would pay attention.
Re:ANOTHER WARNING (Score:2)
I would guess more people might smoke if not for the warning. This bill is not meant as a solution to the problem. But it certainly is a minimal first step. You don't think these smoking warnings should be abolished, do you?
Why isn't this guy running for president? (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:because he doesnt have the money (Score:3, Insightful)
File under UNLIKELY (Score:4, Insightful)
the urgent need to abolish DRM and copy protection . (Don't get me wrong, I would prefer lack of copyright and copyprotection, I'm trying out for Fox News with all this wild speculation)
Re:File under UNLIKELY (Score:2)
Don't call it anti-piracy! (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Don't call it anti-piracy! (Score:2)
This is a mutant Tipper Gore PMRC measure at it's best.
There should be a LAW! (Score:2, Interesting)
Most laws, like this one, restrict freedom by requiring an entity either to do something (like file taxes or put labels on products), or not do something (murder, rape, pillage, etc). Many of these laws are good and neccessary, specifically the ones that are against one person directly harming another, or limiting their freedom. I'm glad murder is illegal.
But forcing people to put labels on things for this reason is going too far. It doesn't matter whether it's for explicit lyrics, or a particular copy-protection scheme, or whatever. Just because I personally think that "explicit lyrics" are okay and copy-protection schemes are bad doesn't make this law better than the other. They are both reducing freedoms further than neccessary, and the WRONG way to go about solving problems. Sure, it's the record companies' freedoms, not the consumers', but you can't have a double standard about these things, otherwise you look like a hypocrite.
This isn't nutritional information, it's not like people have allergies and could die if they don't have this information. This is like the helmet and seat-belt laws... Yes, it's a good idea to wear helmets and seat belts and not to smoke pot, but No the government shouldn't try to make everyone comply with their idea of good, especially since there's no clear way it hurts other people. You generally can return something if it's defective, or it offends you.
If you want to legislate something that will help, make a law that creates a allocates resources to increase awareness of these issues. Create a "COPY PROTECTION FREE" sticker that they can voluntairly put on their CDs, and an ad campaign that informs people about the crappiness of copy protection. These things are non-invasive, they don't force people to do or not to do anything, and they educate people, which is the RIGHT way to go about doing things. And this doesn't even require legislation, anyone could form an organization to do this.
-If
Re:Don't call it anti-piracy! (Score:2, Funny)
Dammit, I want real anti-piracy technology! Where's my revenue cutter? I want my deck gun!
Re:Don't call it anti-piracy! (Score:2)
Re:Don't call it anti-piracy! (Score:5, Interesting)
While it does stop some fair use (depending on the technology), I think calling it "anti-piracy technology" is completely appropriate. That is what it is designed for, and the major task it accomplishes. Saying it isn't descriptive enough is like saying the alarm system on a car shouldn't be called an "anti-theft device" because it also stops the rightful owner of breaking in when he loses his keys. Nit-picking at terminology isn't going to help the actual battle.
Re:Don't call it anti-piracy! (Score:4, Interesting)
Names are very important. Few politicians are brave enough to not vote for a bill titled something like "Special schooling spending for Kids at risk", while they would not vote for the same bill if it was called "Tax increase to spend more money on disruptive delinquent students than the entire rest of the class combined". In this case, if the name anti-piracy is attached to the technology, it makes it sound like anyone who opposes it is in favor of theft of intellectual property. That hardly the case and most Slashdot readers know this technology stops more legitimate uses that it stops any real piracy. Slashdot should not call such technology by a name that encourages it's legal support and enforcement.
Re:Don't call it anti-piracy! (Score:2)
I don't concede this assertion. IMO, one of the design goals is to establish standards that enforce controls on usage, not just copying. Anyone who cares to prove me wrong is welcome to market a DVD player in the US that is infinitely region-resettable and ignores fast-forward lockouts.
Please, let's call it "Anti-Fair Use" (Score:5, Insightful)
-dameron
Unfortunate, but understandeable (Score:2)
I sent my support along even though I don't live in Oregon, but I'm left wondering what this "Senate e-mail system" is and why it restricts him from replying to any out-of-state emails. It's perfectly understandable (and admirable) that he puts his constituents first, but is he forbidden to correspond with citizens that he doesn't directly represent?
--K.
Re:Unfortunate, but understandeable (Score:3, Interesting)
The translation of his message is:
There's nothing inherent in the Senate email system that's going to keep him from responding if you're not from his state. He just doesn't want to hear from anyone who isn't in a position to vote for him.Would Xerox agree on this? (Score:2)
I dunno... (Score:2)
Re:I dunno... (Score:3, Insightful)
Software/Games already have copy protection all over them, disabling means to copy, also without any indications of protection. If that's on music CDs, shouldn't be a problem at all. But if I have to buy new DRM drives. That's a problem.
This seems like a (Score:2, Funny)
FINALLY (Score:3, Insightful)
"Anti-piracy" a misnomer (Score:3, Insightful)
Apple's Answer (Score:2)
Just one more step... (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Fucking Democrats (Score:4, Insightful)
Opponents of Hollywood's drive to strengthen copyright law are mounting a new strategy: Require anything that has antipiracy technology built in to be clearly labeled and let consumers decide at the cash register.
So, they aren't trying to pass a law to require digital copyright protection on devices, they are trying to legislate disclosure of "anti-piracy" technology that might otherwise silently sit on that new CD player you are ready to buy from Circuit City.
Why are we bitching at the Democrats? Oh, because it was on slashdot and the genius editor posted it "from the compromising-freedom dept", so we don't have to actually read the the article before shouting profanities at the "Fucking Democrats".
Re:F***ing Democrats (Score:2)
Re:F***ing Democrats (Score:4, Insightful)
I wish that were true, but not a lot of Democrats support the 2nd Amendment. Many Democrats are as rabid on the War of Drugs as any Republican, and the WoD is probably the greatest threat to the Constitution in the last 100 years or so. It's completely destroyed the 4th Amendment, and it's making inroads on several other important elements of the Bill of Rights.
The sad fact is that neither the Republicans or the Democrats have any great respect for the Constitution. Both parties seem to view the Constitution as an inconvenient obstacle to whatever goofy social agenda their constituents like at the moment.
Truth-in-labelling is really a libertarian idea. In other words, buy copy-protected music if you like, but you should at least be allowed to know what you're buying. No force, no fraud, the holy duality.
(Disclaimer) I'm not a doctrinaire libertarian-- for example, I don't think we should sell the National Parks to Disney. But the major parties need to start being just a little more concerned with liberty, or pretty soon there won't be any left.
Re:Taken too far. (Score:3, Funny)
psh (Score:2)
Re:this topic keep coming up (Score:2, Informative)
What is "Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet..." ??? (Score:3, Informative)
It is garbage, originally derived from an ancient latin text, but now generated by clever programs to approximate the look and feel of english text for formatters and page rendering. The idea is that you can't actually read it, so your monkey-mind won't get sucked into the content when you are supposed to be meditating on the layout/rendering.
A more authoritative (seeming) answer [lipsum.com] for the bayesian filter people.
Re:Gotta love this quote (Score:5, Insightful)
First, art does not exist in a vacuum. Rather, it draws on previous experience and the public domain. Renaissance artists admiried Greek art; Disney borrows fairy tales. Countless classical composers wrote fantasies on folk songs. The erosion of the public domain harms all artists by eliminating the ability to borrow from the past.
Second, the zealous defense of copyright has the ability to unreasonably restrict what an artist may use in the course of their work. Say, for example, that you want to make a short film of a play you wrote. Hope you made the costumes yourself; the storebought dress your lead actress is wearing is probably a copyrighted design. Does she sit down in a chair in one scene? Better clear it with the furniture designer before you distribute your film.
Noone's saying, of course, that you can't make a home movie to send to grandma. But what about, say, a group of high school students who just want to put their rendition of a Shakespeare play on the web? Or a computer-programmer-by-day who's itching to share a monologue he wrote? The promise of the Internet (and cheap electronics) was that now _anyone_ could try their hand at being creative, and possibly be heard.
The main harm of this concentration of copyright is not to a "mainstream" artist with the backing of a studio and corporate lawyer. It is, rather, to the individual who wants to go out and make something new - just because. And that's just sad.
Anyway, that's my understanding of (that part of) Lessig's book. It's good, go read it. (though I'm not sure I agree with his proposal for radio spectrum...)