Public Hearing On Copyright Circumvention 17
TimButterfield writes "PUBLIC HEARING SCHEDULE AMENDED (68 FR 19966)
The Copyright Office of the Library of Congress is scheduling two new days of public hearings in Washington, D.C., on the possible exemptions to the prohibition against circumvention of technological measures that control access to copyrighted works. In addition, the Copyright Office has cancelled two previously scheduled dates. Public hearings will now be held in Washington, D.C., on Thursday, May 1, 2003, beginning at 2:00 p.m. and on Friday, May 9, 2003, beginning at 9:30 a.m. The Washington, D.C., public hearings will be held at the Postal Rate Commission, 1333 H Street, N.W., Third Floor, Washington, D.C. The public hearings previously scheduled for April 15 and April 30, 2003, have been cancelled. The public hearing scheduled for May 2, 2003, will be conducted at the Postal Rate Commission at 9:30 a.m. As previously announced, hearings will also take place on May 14 and 15 at the UCLA Law School in Los Angeles, Calif. For more information, see the Copyright Office website."
Issues Websites? (Score:3, Insightful)
However, it'd be nice to be pointed to some specific websites that discuss the issues, specific legislation or regulations under review.
For instance, if I were to go to the hearing, what questions can I/should I ask? Will I be able to present any opinions or viewpoints, and what should they be on? I myself am tired of being one of the ones who moans and complains about these issues but then doesn't do anything about it. I'd like to be informed so I can act.
Thanks.
Re:Issues Websites? (Score:2)
You are not paying attention (Score:2)
EFF [eff.org]
Lawrence Lessig [stanford.edu]
EPIC [epic.org]
Consumer's Union [64.224.99.117]
Forbes [forbes.com] (search for articles on copyright, patents, or intellectual property
Eldred [eldred.cc]
So Who's Going, Huh? (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:So Who's Going, Huh? (Score:1)
Because No One Ever Visits the Website (Score:4, Informative)
Exemption for literary works/eBooks for persons with disabilities
And on the 2nd:
Motion pictures and audiovisual works:
DVD tethering/alternative platforms
DVD backups/noninfringing uses
DVD/Video Game Region Coding
Literary works:
Damaged, malfunctioning, obsolete
Other noninfringing uses
Of all of the issues, I think the DVD issues would be of highest interest to Slashdotters, right? Sounds like issues might include viewing DVDs on Linux (ie, DeCSS) and, of course, region encoding is always an issue.
If no one else can make the May 2nd hearing, I suppose I'd be willing to make the trip (2+ hours), but if there's anyone who already lives in DC, and, better yet, gets Fridays off, that'd be even better.
Since it seems this public hearing isn't open to public comment/participation (some are), it may be that we can just keep our eyes glued on the site and look for transcripts/summaries of the hearings to get further insight.
Re:Because No One Ever Visits the Website (Score:4, Informative)
I'll be testifying at the May 2nd hearing, regarding playback of media on operating systems such as Linux.
Re:Because No One Ever Visits the Website (Score:1)
By locking down exactly what you can do with a media, you close off the possibilities for future innovation.
Copyright is a necessity (Score:1)
Do you think patents stiffile inovation? Imagine a world where if you invent something really cool, all the major hardware companies will mass-produce cheap knockoffs within weeks. You have no incentive to design at all. Companies will grow ever larger.
IP
Re:Copyright is a necessity (Score:2, Insightful)
I don't think that this true. A lot of people believe that copyright gives legal 'rights' that copyright holders ought not to exercise universally, or that action taken to prevent or punish copyright violations is inappropriate. I think that the complaint is not about patents themselves, but about incompetence and about abuse of the legal process.
Of course, some people really do believe that patents and copyrights are
Re:Copyright is a necessity (Score:2)
There already was a world like that: it's called "Earth before 1709". Quite a few innovators lived there, so I've heard....
We have a loop hole gentlemen. (Score:1)
"Turkey" Drug.
In the state I live in there is a turkey drug law. If you try and sell asprin, and say it's acid. You can go to jail for the exact same amount of time as if it were acid.
So thinking along these lines, if record companies are posting files on these p2p networks and distributing them as if it were the real thing, shouldn't they get fined too?
Just a thought.