EFF Reviews 5 Years Under The DMCA 241
briaydemir writes "The Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF) has a new report, Unintended Consequences:
Five Years under the DMCA, detailing how the DMCA has stiffled competition, innovation, scientific research, and fair use. The original news release is here, and the report is also available as a PDF. Check it out if you want a good summary of all the DMCA cases over the past five years."
Time to go. (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Time to go. (Score:5, Insightful)
This is also the reason that gun manufacturers can't be held responsible for crimes commited with guns. If the intended use is hunting or self protection, then they cannot be held responsible for any other use. However, if there is reasonable evidence to suggest that the guns have a forseealbe intended use to commit crimes, the manufacturer can be held responsible. This is why the more powerful assault rifles and machine guns are illegal to be sold to civilians.
The same law should apply to digital technology. A hacking tool like a port scanner should be legal as it can have an intended use to check your own network for security holes. However, a trojan horse program is obviously intended for illegal remote access to a computer, and should be illegal.
Re:Time to go. (Score:5, Informative)
This is why the more powerful assault rifles and machine guns are illegal to be sold to civilians.
Untrue on its face.
Re:Time to go. (Score:3, Informative)
In military formalisms, a rifle is an assault rifle if and only if it (a) is a rifle which (b) fires an intermediate-power cartridge (c) selectively (d) from a magazine.
Rifles which fire full-power cartridges, like the M-14 and G3, are correctly termed "battle rifles", as are intermediate-caliber weapons which only fire semiautomatically.
Re:Did not do this. (Score:2)
LOL "made-up religion" like there's any other type.
You're dumb AC.
Re:Time to go. (Score:4, Insightful)
I can foresee killing somebody by cramming 20 twinkies down their throat. Should we hold the manufacturer reponsible?
Really, I was almost tempted to not bother sending this because it's so obvious. Quite frankly there are too many people using that weak argument to make lots of money out of frivolous lawsuits. That's basically the reasoning being used to sue games developers, i.e GTA3.
Re:Time to go. (Score:2)
Yeah. Right. Meanwhile, back in the real world...
Re:Time to go. (Score:5, Insightful)
A civillian can purchase a fully automatic firearm provided he undergoes an FBI background check, gets fingerprinted, and pays the $250 per year license fee. It is perfectly legal (in the US) for any law abiding civillian to own a machine gun. It's been this way since 1934.
Even more to the point, the VAST majority of the firearms used to commit crimes are 6 shot revolvers. They were churned out like hoola hoops for about 60 years and are still plentiful and cheap on the black market. Banning firearms is no more about controlling crime than the DMCA is about stopping malicious copyright infringement.
A hacking tool like a port scanner should be legal as it can have an intended use to check your own network for security holes. However, a trojan horse program is obviously intended for illegal remote access to a computer, and should be illegal.
No program in and of itself should be illegal. It shuold only be illegal if one uses them in a manner that is, well illegal. You should be able to create any virus, trojan or system hijacker you wish, as soon as you use them on someone else's system is when you cross the line.
LK
Re:Time to go. (Score:2, Insightful)
Or you'd toss out winVNC with it... and consequently put a halt to any kind of decent remote administration of windows, non-M$. Unless you tossed th
Re:Time to go. (Score:3)
Seriously, BO2K isn't a 'remote administration tool', since it lacks any kind if real usefullnes to actually administrate the remote PC.
You can run/close programs, upload/download files, echo keystrokes (but you can't see what you're doing unless you type one key then take another snapshot), move the mouse but not click (see echo keystrkes), display dialog boxes, and reboot. None of that is par
Re:Time to go. (Score:2)
difference in the general case, in abstract,
and know that you'd gotten it right for all
concrete cases? a person could go on a case
by case basis for what they consider valid
or not, and even if everyone else in the
world agreed with them, it would make no
difference...
you still couldn't codify
the difference as law, without explicitly
stating what precise differences make
BO2k invalid... and even once that was done,
what if BO2k added just those features,
and no more? is it n
Re:Time to go. (Score:2)
"However, a trojan horse program is obviously intended for illegal remote access to a computer, and should be illegal."
Is it that obvious? Let me give you an easy hypothetical. I install a t
Re:Time to go. (Score:2)
Re:Time to go. (Score:2)
I think it is ludicrous that the penalties for "computer hacking" now appear to be as stiff as thiose for v
Re:Time to go. (Score:2)
Ever heard of using modified Trojans as remote management tools? Hell, the difference between BO/Netbus and Remote Desktop/VNC/SSH is pretty slim. Sometimes, in a pinch, a trojan is actually a helpful, useful tool.
And you forget that there are TONS of situations where spying on/remotely accessing another person's machine without perm
Re:Partial birth abortion (Score:3, Interesting)
The fetuses that die have some horrifying birth defects and have no viable life support systems of their own. Once out of the womb they will not live, no matter what. Even when born "naturally."
However, this is where the problem comes in. Read on.
The reason they have to suck the brains out is because the fetus's head has swollen to such an extent that it can be as large as 50cm across.
By outlawing "partial birth abortion" you are sentencing women to torture an
Time to revise the DMCA (Score:4, Insightful)
1) Remove the current DMCA and amend it such that only specific uses of media are prohibited. Allow for the use of back-engineering tools with HARSH punishments for people who knowingly use them to break copyrighted material with intent to distribute. This leaves the burden of proof with a prosecutors instead of the "guilty-til-proven- innocent" tactics of the RIAA et. al.
2) Make a specific statement for "loser pays": anyone suing under using this legislation who loses the case pays for the legal costs of both parties. Settlements don't count, and this will outright favor the bigger players, but in the American climate of "legal attrition" as a business strategy I see no other effective means of trying to relieve this aspect of the DMCA problem.
3) Allow publications on computer security to be done freely and thoroughly if tied to legitimate academic or corporate entities. Hold computer manufacturers liable if one of their components has a security flaw that causes eggregious commercial/monetary damage but which could have been fixed by repair of one of these published flaws.
4) Ensure that American laws apply only to American citizens with the express wording that products purchased in other parts of the world which belong to the consumer are theirs to do with as they please. A clause allowing rightful action to take whatever steps necessary to use that product would be nice (mod chips et. al)
Pointing fingers makes us feel good, but unless we propose alternatives and compromises, are we really doing anything but venting? Does anyone else have potential solutions/thoughts on how to resolve this issue?
Re:Time to revise the DMCA (Score:2)
Re:Time to revise the DMCA (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Time to revise the DMCA (Score:4, Insightful)
What loopholes?
It is illegal to distribute copies of works protected by copyright without the copyright holder's permission.
Nice and simple. It doesn't matter if you're distributing photocopies on the street corner and sharing them over a peer-to-peer client. It's still illegal. No loopholes.
But it's already illegal to distribute works protected by copyright. What will adding a another rule do to help? This is just hyper-criminalization, an amazingly bad idea.
Perhaps we need a law with additional penalties for disabling a home security system. Sure, it's already illegal to break into my home, but I don't feel safe enough. Surely a criminal who has decided to break and enter will be thwarted when he discovers that disabling my alarm system is illegal.
Lots of important security work is being done by loosely associated individuals. What's magic about working for an academic or corporate entity that makes the research more valid?
Yes, there are potential solutions. Repeal the law, it does way more harm than good. The benefits are miniscule and unworthy of protection. We already protect the rights of copyright holders.
Re:Time to revise the DMCA (Score:2)
All copyright should be reduced to 20 years.
Re:Time to revise the DMCA (Score:2)
How about TORT reform to where anyone that brings a lawsuit without merit has to pay the loser's bills and limits damages. Yeah,
Re:McDonald's frivolous coffee lawsuit (Score:2)
McDonalds not only *knowingly* produced coffee that was TOO HOT. They refused to compensate the victim for 3RD DEGREE BURNS to her crotch that caused her gros deformity and physical pain in the later part of her life.
http://lawandhelp.com/q298-2.htm
Re:McDonald's frivolous coffee lawsuit (Score:2)
You should really and truly read the facts. The case is on line.
Re:Time to go. (Score:2)
Maybe they should pass a law that "anyone who happens to create any sort of law that someone figures out a way to use it to stifle innovation or restrict freedom of expression can be sued for damages."
Thank you, I definitely will keep dreaming.
Laws not thought out... (Score:5, Insightful)
Another problem is that Congress makes some of these laws so vague as to leave too much interpretation up to the judges who try cases under these laws. Unfortunately, organizations such as the EFF don't have the clout or the resources that the corps do.
I have to stop now before I go on a rant ;-)
Re:Laws not thought out... (Score:5, Insightful)
When I want to donate... (Score:2)
Re:When I want to donate... (Score:3, Insightful)
Are you not aware of what a self-fulfilling prophecy that is? You won't donate to an organization that explicitly fights to protect your privacy, because you're afraid that they won't protect your privacy?
Are you also afraid to vote for anybody other than Bush because Ashcroft might find out and come gitcha?
You might as well be afraid to go to a restaurant during your lunch hour because you might not have enough time l
Re:Laws not thought out... (Score:2)
You know, I would donate that $10, but I just spent my last $16.99 on "InSync With Britny's Backstreet, Boy".
It's got a great track of fiddle music to play while the Bill of Rights, and Rome, burns.
It's all about your priorities, I guess.
WTF?! (Score:2, Interesting)
Are you suggesting that the American congress might have done something rash? Something wrong?
Do you understand the implications of that allegation? Have you any idea how many lives are ended or ruined every year, due to decisions made in the US congress?
Please moderate yourself. If the US congress were prone to "error", thousands, or hundred of thousands of people have died in wain.
Re:Laws not thought out... (Score:3, Insightful)
As was explained to me by a Lawyer who worked for Congress at one time, most laws are the result of knee-jerk reactions to public/corporate demand. Unfortunately, not much thought goes into the consequences of these laws. They just want to keep their jobs.
I think that the Patriot Act is a great example of why knee-jerk reactions are bad. When the law was being pushed through congress in the aftermath of 9/11, people who were conerned, even bothered, by many of the provisions in the law were afraid to sp
What I'd like to know... (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:What I'd like to know... (Score:2)
EFF is being polite (Score:2)
Excessive punishments (Score:5, Insightful)
For example, the DMCA makes it a felony to circumvent a copy protection device. And, similarly, the NET act makes it a felony to share copyrighted materials via a service like Kazaa with a possible 5 year prison term.
Regardless of whether the things out lawed by legislation like this really should be out lawed or not, the punishments really need to be adjusted to fit the crime. Neither getting your dvd player to play dvd's from europe, nor sharing the latest Eminem song should even carry the possiblity of landing you several months little less several years in the slammer. Okay, the Eminem case is iffy, but otherwise...
Re:Excessive punishments (Score:1)
What are you in for?
Re:Excessive punishments (Score:2)
Re:Excessive punishments (Score:1, Funny)
Litterin'... and creatin' a public nuisance.
Re:Excessive punishments (Score:2)
Deja Vu Anyone? (Score:5, Informative)
They do make several good points, and I would go into more specifics but I really don't have time to read the new version (I read the older editions a year ago when I was investigating impacts of the DMCA for a research paper). An actual evaluation of the entire DMCA document is difficult especially due to the nature of Copyright law, Fair Use, et al, but the EFF does a good job, albeit a mildly biased one.
On a related note for those of you that have 30 seconds: support the EFF's newest petition -> "Take a Stand Against the Madness; Stop the RIAA!" [eff.org] Its a useful free alternative to being even more useful and donating to the cause [eff.org].
Steinway left Germany and came to America (Score:5, Insightful)
Steinway said, "Fuck this shit" (Well, the German equivilent actually), and came to America. In the process making America the center of a cultural technology that had previously been a European monopoly.
America is making such inovative freedom illegal. It will reap the consecquences, just as did Europe.
The DMCA was written entirely to protect existing vested interests. When you do so you automatically restrict (even if that wasn't your intent) development of other interests that spur economic growth.
The end result is stagnation with all power and wealth gradually making its way into a few hands.
Welcome to the economic algae pond, Brother.
KFG
Re:Steinway left Germany and came to America (Score:2, Redundant)
no the "B" isn't a typo, /. doesn't support such things as a scharfes, but in translation it makes a double s ("ss") sound
You'd think better of the EFF (Score:5, Insightful)
The DMCA has nothing to do with maritime law. It was not enacted to protect cargo ships or the spanish armarda. "Pirate" is a propaganda term used by copyright owners to imply that unauthorized copying is the equivilent of murder and theft on the high seas. The message is clear: only a vicious enemy of the people would do unauthorized copying. To a lesser degree the term "protection" is also a propaganda term to describe what copyright owners do in restricting our freedom. These terms are an important weapon of people who support the DMCA and other stifling laws as they encourage informers to rat people out to the non-official police forces the copyright owners fund.
All in all, you'd think the EFF would be too smart to play their game.
Re:You'd think better of the EFF (Score:3, Insightful)
Using the industrys' own terms they show that the laws are being exploited to prosecute people who clearly are not "pirates". They're using DMCA supporters' own propaganda against them to demonstrate how ludicr
MOD PARENT UP (Score:2)
Re:You'd think better of the EFF (Score:2)
Language changes, and the definitions of words change as well. The report was written well, and was geared towards anyone reading it, so that they would understand it. 99% of the people will understand what the word pirate means in this document.
Really, it's people just like you that made the DMCA possible in the first place.
Re:You'd think better of the EFF (Score:2)
Re:You'd think better of the EFF (Score:2)
No.. Someone somewhere sat down and designed a campaign of mud slinging and chose the word "pirate" to describe an otherwise socially acceptable act. They then popularised the usage and insti
Re:You'd think better of the EFF (Score:2)
First of all, this is not some modern mudslinging campaign as you imply. The usage of piracy to imply theft/reproduction of another's work without permission goes back over three hundred.
Secondly, as far as can tell (and please, feel free to correct me if you decide to actually read about this stuff on your own) piracy was a term coined by the ones doing the pirating.
Secondly, reproducing anothrs work and selling it
Re:You'd think better of the EFF (Score:2)
Re:You'd think better of the EFF (Score:2)
"1706 DE FOE Jure Div. Pref. 42 Gentlemen-Booksellers, that threatned to Pyrate it, as they call it, viz. Reprint it, and Sell it for half a Crown."
Now, this also isn't necessarily the very first usage of the word pirate, but I gather from this example that early on it was a slang word used by the ones doing the pirating. Could be wrong
Re:You'd think better of the EFF (Score:2)
Re:You'd think better of the EFF (Score:2)
Copying someone else's work will not questioned in any university, IF you properly cite it. If all you did was copy others' works but properly cited and attributed them, you may not get a good grade, but you won't be expelled. If you claim it as your own work, that is when you will be expelled.
Copying someone else's wo
Re:You'd think better of the EFF (Score:2)
Again, the only real difference is that it is faster and easier than ever before.
I don't quite agree with that. If you lend out a book (as say, libraries) do, there is no conceivable way that they are going to reproduce the book--ie, cover, art, proper page layout, format, size, binding, etc. It's basically impossible. If you share an mp3, anyone with a computer can instantly get an EXACT copy of music being shared. Yes, it's faster and easier, but perhaps most importantly it's higher quality. Sha
Re:You'd think better of the EFF (Score:2)
Regarding books, if I wanted to go to the expense and effort, I could make an exact copy of a book. It wouldn't be worth the effort to me, and in fact would be considera
e:You'd think better of the EFF (Score:2)
Secondly, there is a huge, huge difference between theoretically for ots and lots of money, time, and effort being able to duplicate a book, vs typing the name of a song and clicking twice to download it in several m
Re:e:You'd think better of the EFF (Score:2)
Re:e:You'd think better of the EFF (Score:2)
How does the increasing ability to do copy something make it increasingly less acceptable to do so?
It doesn't, at all. But, given the difficulties to pirating books that I talked about earlier, there's not too big a market for it--ie, if I want the latest George RR Martin novel (whock ROCKS btw;), I'm not going to photocopy a friends copy and put it in a 3-ring binder--that would suck. And most people agree with me, as this just very very rarely happens.
Mp3s pirating on the other hand, we know is r
Re:You'd think better of the EFF (Score:4, Interesting)
The first recorded use of the word 'pirate' in regards to people who made copies of books without permission dates back to 1668. When there were the other kind of pirates as well. And decades before copyright laws came into being. Take a look in your convenient pocket-sized unabridged OED.
It _is_ a propaganda term -- if someone were trying to achieve the same effect today, they'd call infringers 'terrorists.' But it's such an ancient one that I don't think that there's much point in bitching about it now.
Re:You'd think better of the EFF (Score:2)
"Real" piracy is not a thing of the past [iccwbo.org]. It has been on the rise in the last years, actually (370 reported cases in 2002, 335 in 2001).
Back on topic, this makes for even better (worse?) propaganda and makes copyright enfringers who call themselves pirates because it sounds so romantic/cool even more childish.
Re:You'd think better of the EFF (Score:2)
Re:You'd think better of the EFF (Score:2)
Re:You'd think better of the EFF (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:You'd think better of the EFF (Score:2)
I'm well aware of the definition of the word "piracy" to mean unauthorized reproduction.. in fact, it's
Re:You'd think better of the EFF (Score:2)
As for my town, I apologize, and you are correct that I wouldn't address someone I just met walking down the street that way. But if I was in some sort of debate--absolutely I would use the facts to my advantage. But, I do take your point, and I apologize again for my overly combative tone.
My point is simply that you (and many others on slashdot) seem to assume that piracy is some kind of new term--a propag
Re:You'd think better of the EFF (Score:2)
Piracy (Score:2)
Piracy isn't just a Naval Term (Score:2)
[RANT]
The press rightly continues to use the word 'piracy' for illicit copying and distribution of original materials. Some think it's a new phenomenon, and hard to square with the traditional image of the Jolly Roger and swashbuckling robbers-at-sea. The use of the word 'piracy' as signifying an unauthorized copy of a manuscript is hundreds of years old, long before modern Copyright doctrine was developed. From http://www.ninch.org/forum/ [ninch.org]
Why "piracy" is a bad word. (Score:2)
There are several posts pointing out that "pirate" and "piracy" has been used to describe copyright infringement for quite a long time.
That's very nice.
It's also not relevant.
Various copyright industries are waging a propoganda war. They're attempting to sway public opinion; not through reasoned argument, but through deception and misdirection. (No matter what you might like to believe, downloading a song off a peer-to-peer network is not identical to shoplifting a CD.)
These industries really like
Alternate interpretations of DMCA (Score:3, Redundant)
Re:Alternate interpretations of DMCA (Score:2)
Lets look at the positive side of DMCA (Score:4, Funny)
Create a boy band called DMCA then plit them up giving them all losing solo careers
Create a rap group RunDMC is taken but JogDMCA is available
Take the paper it was written on and donate it to public toilets
Team with R. Kelly and continue going after minors and morons
Give it to Blair or Cheney (forged of course) so they could start a war with China
Give it to Bush and tell him it's this year's economic stimulus package (he'll believe it)
Give it to Ashcroft so he could make a DMCA color coded warning system no one listens to
See there is more to the DMCA than you thought. And all along everyone was protesting... pffffft
Re:Lets look at the positive side of DMCA (Score:1)
Re:Lets look at the positive side of DMCA (Score:2, Funny)
Create a band named Pillage People singing "DMCA!"
The points EFF is trying to make... (Score:3, Insightful)
The law written by marketing idiots (Score:5, Interesting)
Digital - Now whats the point of calling it digital? its just a bandwagon jumping buzzword, well back in the late 90's it was all the rage digital this digital that always with the digital it just means fucking numbers! so by calling it digital they've restricted it to only digital systems. Macrovision on VHS is not digital, therefore it doesn't count, whoops. Now as much as i like that little mistake it doesn't mean its not stupid.
Millennium - WHY!??!?! WHY!??! WTF! WHY!? it wasn't even the millennium when the law was passed! What does it mean? What possible relevance does the millennium of 2000 have to do with copy-right law and circumnavigation of digital devices? Is it just another bandwagon buzzword?? At least digital was slightly relevant!
Copy-right Act - This isn't a copy-right act, its an anti-reverse engineering act, its an anti-industrial espionage act, its an anti-freedom-of-speech-if-it-might-hurt-a-company act. A copy-right act would use the phrase "You may not copy copy-righted work that you dont own" the only thing this says your not allowed to copy is circumnavigation software from other people.
This is the sort of naming i would expect by marketing people. Marketing people have no place in politics and legislation.
Re:The law written by marketing idiots (Score:2)
Re:The law written by marketing idiots (Score:2)
Congress also allowed something to be named the "USA PATRIOT Act".
It's just a matter of time before someone introduces the "Anyone Who Votes Against This Molests Puppies Act".
Re:The law written by marketing idiots (Score:2)
Re:The law written by marketing idiots (Score:2)
Of course. Only pirates would need circumnavigation software
Daniel
Remember, this was created by *Clinton*, mmmkay? (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Remember, this was created by *Clinton*, mmmkay (Score:2)
Cinton did sign it, but it was also congress that passed in the middle of the night by a voice vote. Everybody was so busy with the stain on Lewinsky's dress that I think he signed it into law because he didn't want to create a stir. Also, he was ignorant of its true implications.
Re:Remember, this was created by *Clinton*, mmmkay (Score:2)
Re:Remember, this was created by *Clinton*, mmmkay (Score:2)
I'm a liberal. I'm even a "free speech as long as it doesn't offend" liberal, if you like. As long as it doesn't offend me. I don't give a damn if it offends you.
Clinton was never my boy. Clinton was never a liberal. No liberal ever described him as liberal, that was the
So how can I use the DMCA? (Score:2, Interesting)
Can I use it against adware companies that take data from my computer without my permission?
Can I use it against Microsoft when their software allows a virus to copy the contents of my address book around the internet?
Re:So how can I use the DMCA? (Score:2, Funny)
Step aside.
T.
civil disobedience (Score:3, Insightful)
The DCMA, with it's idea that I can purchase a piece of equipment and then not do it as I wish, or that I cannot make copies of books or music for personal use, is just immoral. It is immoral because it allows contracts in which the end user has to agree to terms that are unknown until the end user either cannot return the product of inadvertently breaks the contract. It is immoral because it prevents the necessary innovation that encourages the free market. It is immoral because it circumvents due process.
And we cannot allow immoral acts to continue. The best defense is peaceful civil disobedience. For instance, don't buy music from RIAA labels. If they have no income, they have no money to fight legal battles. The same goes for the MPAA, game vendors, and anyone else that uses the DMCA. It won't be possible to totally shut them out, but we can at least make an effort.
I believe a lot of what goes on P2P networks is copyright infringement, but what choice do we have. The music and movies are sold in packages that violates our traditional fair use rights under the law. If i can't make a copy of the CD for my car, and the manufacturer won't give me another CD when the original get stolen or damaged, then why should I buy the CD. The manufacturer obviously has no respect for me as a customer, so I might as well return the disrespect the manufacturer and copy the music off the net.
The same goes for movies. If movies are increasingly downloaded from the net, it won't be because people don't want to buy movies. It will be because the movies we can buy are illegally packaged to prevent out fair use rights. Why should I buy a movie that is crippled when I can download a copy that honors my fair use rights. The manufacturer may hid behind a license, but it makes no difference. A contract that removes legal rights, especially when the rights are not itemized, should not be honored.
Re:civil disobedience (Score:2)
Re:civil disobedience (Score:2)
When someone speaks of morals, I take it as an implicit reference to religious doctrine or laws, not laws of the state. Due process is a constitutional guarantee, and circumventing it would be unconstitutional, and very bad, certainly, but not exactly immoral. At least not in the US, where state and church are supposed to be separate.
Doing 70 in a 65 speed zone is illegal, fucking your neighbor's wife is immoral.
Do you really think Congress cares? (Score:5, Interesting)
The irony is that all it would take is a couple of these clowns to be thrown out on their ever-widening asses because they put out a: "for sale" sign and the rest wuld be so scared shit about the gravy train pulling into the station they'd likely capitulate. But we know that just isn't going to happen. People have become so apathetic that they don't even bother to vote. Even Arnold who would be governor of CA doesn't!
I guess we do get the government we deserve though. Do nothing, and get nothing in return.
All the cases? (Score:5, Informative)
Umm... EFF has skipped over all the $cientology cases,
What unintended consequences? (Score:2)
When you're on top of the system, almost any change is seen as dangerous.
Re:What unintended consequences? (Score:2)
IIRC, several of the big media companies testified before Congressional committees, under oath, that they would never use the law to do things like stifle competition or scientific research. This seems to be fairly common practice these days; companies take a particular position in their testimony, and do exactly the opposite at the first opportunity. I, for one, would like to see them called back to explain to the committees how they reconcile their words and their actions. And do some jail time for perju
We shouldnt remove the DMCA... (Score:2)
Basicly, the 5 things that will fix the DMCA are:
1.removal of the "people can get info on who is using ISP accounts without going through the courts by alleging copyright infringment" clause
2.a change in the anti-circumvention provisions to make it clearer. (so it cant be used for crap, as we have seen in the past, particularly it should better cover things like DeCSS that have substantial non-infringing use and clearly spell out how it should be applied in these cases)
3.clearer wording of the
This is what its *supposed* to do! (Score:2)
And so this will amount to nothing. I think the DMCA will hit home if/when people finally get their new HDTV plasma screen, their new HDTV VCR, and they press "RECORD" and it doesn't work.
Then they'll care.
But for now, to the public, this is all about "stopping those hackers who started that virus a few months ago"
DMCA (Score:3, Insightful)
Photocopiers (Score:2)
Write some sort of copyrighted work on a computer. Since copying files on the computer is easy, use the following method as a copyright protection: make a hardcopy. That is, your copyright protection method is to print out a copy, and even put some copyright notice on the printed copy. Then, sue manufacturers of scanners because they create and distribute "tools" that c
Pissed off at the RIAA (Score:2)
Re:I wanted to read the pdf... (Score:1)