Bush Signs a New Fair-Use Bill 134
BostonGunNut writes "Today President Bush signed a bill that gives legal protection to companies that provide software that can automatically filter specific content from DVDs for personal use. This bill, called the Family Entertainment and Copyright Act, allows companies to provide filtering software without being sued into oblivion by Hollywood. The legislation also allows the Library of Congress to save and protect old movies and home videos that might otherwise be lost."
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Re:Wish these were rights I want, or could agree w (Score:1)
Re:Wish these were rights I want, or could agree w (Score:2)
2) George W. Bush is an important historical figure. Will we see every little thing he produced in the LoC? I doubt it. If we ever see any of it, it will be what GWB wishes us to see at the GWB Presidential Library. The LoC won't see any of his personal, private stuff. Given that, why should it be allowed to possess anyone else's, then?
Re:Wish these were rights I want, or could agree w (Score:1)
From the article, which I know you didn't read:
The legislation also reauthorizes a Library of Congress program dedicated to saving rare, culturally significant works, such as home movies, silent-era films and other works that are unlikely to be protected by the big studios.
The videos of you egging your neighbor's house on Hallowee
Re:Wish these were rights I want, or could agree w (Score:1, Flamebait)
Seriously, you say this is for "culturally significant works." Who decides if my home movies are or are not culturally significant? More to the point, how can they make this decision without first seeing my home movies? I'll bet this law gives them the right to accquire anything they want, then later decide what to keep.
Re:Wish these were rights I want, or could agree w (Score:3, Funny)
Like the Paris Hilton video?
I think that qualifies as a "home movie"...
Re:Wish these were rights I want, or could agree w (Score:2)
Re:Wish these were rights I want, or could agree w (Score:2)
Basically if you were to change a GPL'd work you would still have to adibe by the license, you are redistributing it - not changing the license.
The folks who edit a movie and resell it (ignoring DMCA / encryption breaking laws) are realistically no different to selling old CD's (or buying them) from a CD exc
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Re:Wish these were rights I want, or could agree w (Score:4, Insightful)
The day that historians found useful and interesting material in things like diaries and letters, that's when.
As for "deliberately unpublished", well, I would imagine that most people just never really thought about it one way or the other.
Picture this: you find an 8mm movie in the attic of an old house. None of the people are identified, and the previous owners, who bought the house in 1965, don't know anything about it. The movies show interesting glimpses of life on the home front during WW II -- Rosie the Riveter at the company picnic, recruits doing the Lindy Hop before they ship out. At the time, this wasn't history, it was just life, and seemed interesting only to those involved, and even they put it away and forgot about it. Now it might be fascinating, but wait -- who holds copyright? Under the Sonny Bono Copyright Term Extension Act , the answer was, of course, Walt Disney, but now perhaps that's changed, and for the better.
Of course, now that I've actually read the article, it looks like all it does is fund the LoC's efforts to preserve and restore old images, a good thing but not a copyright issue at all.
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Re:Wish these were rights I want, or could agree w (Score:3, Informative)
No, and IIRC, it actually takes care to avoid such a possibility arising. I'd have to poke around with the effects on federal trademark law and preemption of state laws. It hasn't been the part of
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Re:Wish these were rights I want, or could agree w (Score:4, Insightful)
So would you object to it, so long as it was clear that the edits were Alice's Edits of Bob's Movie? Just because Alice has made an EDL doesn't totally divorce it from Bob. Now they're both involved. So long as everyone is clear and up front about it, I don't see a big problem. Alice is not putting it forward as entirely her own work, and Bob is not having it put forward as entirely his either. Frankly, for Bob to disassociate himself from it would be misleading -- he is associated with it to some degree.
Importantly though, I don't give a crap about artistic integrity. I just don't want the audience to be confused or misled about what it is that they're buying or watching. If they're fully informed, I'm happy.
And looking through the relevant part of the law, it appears that 1) there are no federal trademark remedies against the 110 editors, 2) they do have to include a conspicious notice as to the fact that it's edited, 3) I'd still have to investigate as to state causes of action, but I think that Congress' intent is fairly clear.
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Re:Wish these were rights I want, or could agree w (Score:2)
Not necessarily. As I said, it's a fact. If I buy a car, rice it out, and sell it, the fact that it's been modified doesn't change that consumers are best informed knowing what it orig
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Re:Wish these were rights I want, or could agree w (Score:5, Funny)
We can finally watch Episode 1 without Jar Jar in it!
Re:Wish these were rights I want, or could agree w (Score:2)
Re:Wish these were rights I want, or could agree w (Score:4, Informative)
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Re:Wish these were rights I want, or could agree w (Score:1)
Is this a poor write-up by the article submitter?
Why don't you RTFA and find out?
Perfect! (Score:2)
Re:Perfect! (Score:1)
Does it also allow one to sell "juicy additions"? (Score:2)
Paul B.
Re:Does it also allow one to sell "juicy additions (Score:2)
This is a good point. What about editing the film so _only_ the nudity, sex, and violence are left? In "preserving" "fair use" rights, do they preserve equal rights?
Re:Does it also allow one to sell "juicy additions (Score:2)
Re:Does it also allow one to sell "juicy additions (Score:1)
No, this is about _editing_, not just renaming the same thing...
Re:Perfect! (Score:2)
It only allows making portions of an authorized copy imperceptable, without fixing the imperceptabilities.
So you can't this exemption to create a new disc. Only to black out the screen or something, when playing an otherwise ordinary commercially released disc.
There's a great idea... (Score:5, Insightful)
Here's a crazy idea, and it'll save you the hassle of learning how to set the DVD-player's clock: teach them right from wrong, y'know, as parents are supposed to do.
Yes, it sounds crazy, but it just might be crazy enough to work.
Re:There's a great idea... (Score:2)
Re:There's a great idea... (Score:3, Insightful)
My kids are small (under 6) and I have hand edited music files to remove curse words, so they can listen to decent music without growing their vocabularies in unsavory ways (hint: not damn or hell). They should be exposed to great music, not Kidz Bop Volume 37. If
Re:There's a great idea... (Score:1)
Family Entertainment and Copyright Act Legislation (Score:5, Funny)
"family values" (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:"family values" (Score:1)
I'm pretty sure that after Moses came down from the mountain and read The Ten Commandments, he verbally granted everyone a license to redistribute the text. He must have or else everyone violated the one about stealing his ideas.
Re:"family values" (Score:2)
Re:"family values" (Score:1)
Pretty easy to multiply music files, right?
Re:"family values" (Score:2)
The first part sounds like endorsement of gay marriage to me. But I guess it only applies to gay mathematicians.
Re:"family values" (Score:3, Insightful)
Feeding of the five thousand.
Your man Jesus has attracted a massive crowd of fans, admirers, hangers-on, bystanders, people with nothing better to do, and general riff-raff, none of whom have apparently bothered to bring lunch. He finds a kid who has brought some food, a small quantity of fish and bread. He proceeds to copy the fish and bread and redistribute it to all these thousands of people.
I'm sure the local bakers, fishermen, hot dog
Questions, Please (Score:5, Interesting)
allows companies to provide filtering software
So of course this was done to permit commercial entities to provide filtering software to slice out "objectionable" parts of a copyrighted work before it gets passed to a viewer.
Will it protect individual citizens from doing the same thing - that is, providing filtering software - supposing that my criterion for obscenity includes what others call "advertisements"?
Re:Questions, Please (Score:3, Informative)
It does refer to 'limited portions' but given recent caselaw, presumably that can apply to a lot.
Odd bedfellows--pro and anti-nudity unite. (Score:3, Interesting)
nice (Score:2, Interesting)
No blood for oil, right guys?
I totally have no problem posting this, but the crack-abusing mods will mod me down within minutes for daring to suggest that perhaps Bush is, you know, not evil. Anonymous it is, then.
DeCSS (Score:2)
Loopholes and the DMCA (Score:2)
Re:DeCSS (Score:2, Insightful)
Now we just need a buzzterm for it. Mining, Datamining, ????mining?
Re:DeCSS (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:DeCSS (Score:1)
Re:DeCSS (Score:1)
Re:DeCSS (Score:2)
People do have a right to control what they watch. But it's kind of sad that this kind of self-censorship gets expedited treatment, while you can still be prosecuted for circumventing the Region protection on a movie that hasn't been released in your area.
Directors rights and contracts (Score:4, Interesting)
I wonder how the courts will view legislation that essentially overrules these clauses; and what the MPAA, Hollywood and the Directors Guild are going to do.
Re:Directors rights and contracts (Score:1)
Contracts with whom? The customer? The electronics manufacturer? I don't think so. When I bought the DVD, I don't remember signing a contract that said I had to watch the whole thing from start to finish, and neither did the electronics manufacturer.
I'm glad this law was passed, but I have a hard time understanding why it was even necessary. As far as I'm concerned, this
Re:Directors rights and contracts (Score:2)
Ask ReplayTV, who were sued into oblivion because of their automatic commercial skip.
Re:Directors rights and contracts (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Directors rights and contracts (Score:2)
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Re:Directors rights and contracts (Score:2)
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Re:Directors rights and contracts (Score:3, Insightful)
Indeed the end user has ultimate control (Score:1)
Volume, balance, mute, color, brightness, contrast, pause, FF, REW, and finally... EJECT!
Misleading headline (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Misleading headline (Score:2)
Why? Because there may be latent images inside that hardware, so to destroy all copies, one must destroy the evil technology tainted with it too?
So if you're to risk a three-year sentence, better also use cheap-ass equipment, because you ain't gettin' it back.
(I can't wait until the first person to undergo successful reconstructive brain surgery gets his implants seized and destr
Great idea... (Score:4, Funny)
Software: HELLO, WHAT WOULD YOU LIKE TO FILTER?
[ ] Sexual Content
[ ] Violence
[ ] Adult Language
[X] FBI Copyright Warning
Me: Perfect! Just the way I want it. Anyone have a blank DVD?
How to pass a bill (Score:3, Informative)
2: name bill Family values & (for this example) Biological warfare program
3: Pay other freinds in congress to acuse people who do not support the bill of "Being Unamerican" and "not caring about the children"
4: pay off ramainder / lobby
5: celebrate your multi billion dollar contract
This bill may have some usefull atributes that could help you lot over in the states be allowed to crack the CSS restrictions which is no doubt good (if it ends up being ruled as such).
Though i do worry about how they can tack the magic "family values" on to everything and magicaly pass it with little trouble...
Interesting (Score:1)
Fuck. (Score:5, Informative)
But this comes with significant new civil and criminal penalties that are just apalling.
Oh, and this has nothing whatsoever to do with fair use. The new 110 exemption is a statutory exemption. It applies regardless of fairness, if the criteria it sets forth are satisfied. The title of the
You can read it here [govtrack.us].
The breakdown is basically:
Title I -- very very bad
Title II -- good, but not as good as it could be.
Title III -- meh
Title IV -- good for rather limited uses, but also not as good as it could be
Re:Fuck. (Score:2)
If I read this bill correctly, I may be given 3 year in jail for bringing a digital camera (yay 30 secs of crappy quicktime) into a theater, even if I am not using it, but it is visible?
Is that right?
Re:Fuck. (Score:5, Insightful)
The new 18 USC 2319B makes it an offense to, in pertinent part, knowingly use or attempt to use, a camera. Possession of one is a factor that can be looked at, but the statute actually says that mere possession of a camera isn't enough to support a conviction.
So if you bring one in, with the intent to use it, that's enough. But if you bring one in, and don't use or attempt to use it, that's not enough.
The trick is in how we determine your intent, if you get caught at an early stage. It's easy if you've set it up on a tripod, patched it into the sound system, and have your finger on the record button. It's harder earlier, but still possible.
This is unnecessary (Score:1)
If GWB and the Republican Party really cared about the Constitution and restricted government/lower taxes, why do they keep passing bills that fit the needs of special interests--i.e., their interests?
For completeness, the Democrats are no better.
Re:This is unnecessary (Score:2)
The "Republicans" are supposed to be the party leaning toward "less government". GWB blows that out of the water: record deficits, religion-motivated legislation (wanting to re-write the Constitution, no less), complicating social security, tighter federal control of our schools, the "war on terror" game, etc.
The "Democrats" appear better, but they're not a ton better in the end: the "war on drugs" game, who knows how many more "feel good" programs they can create, nationalized health care makes me nervo
Cleaned up DVD (Score:2)
How will this affect Archive.org? (Score:2)
Unintended consequences? (Score:1)
Then there will be no limit to the amount of pornography and violence in the average film. Unfiltered it will be XXX. Push the appropriate button to tone it down to X, R, PG-13, G - whatever you want.
I have - and LIKE - ClearPlay (Score:5, Interesting)
My 2nd biggest complaint with ClearPlay is that you can't see a list of what was removed, i.e. "f*** at 23:20, brief nudity at 25:41" etc. My biggest complaint is that I can't make/modify my own filters, such as removing Hogarth's "guns are bad" speech from The Iron Giant. I love that movie (even though it's more a kids' movie), and I like to watch it with my kids, so I just hit the chapter skip button and poof - no more Hogarth railing about the evils of gun ownership. (And if guns are so bad, why did he take his BB gun with him when he went looking for the giant early in the movie?)
To sum it up, there's nothing wrong with ClearPlay. They're not forcing you to buy it, nor forcing you to use it. Much like proprietary vs. open-source, the issue is choice, or more specifically, do I have a choice at all?
-paul
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Re:I have - and LIKE - ClearPlay (Score:2)
You just answered your own question. Because ClearPlay doesn't publish anything but "cut lists." It's the high-tech and highly-precise equivalent of giving the parents ta printed document that says, "at 23 minutes and 20 seconds into the film, hit Mute. Un-mute two seconds later."
the real question is whether ClearPlay has a right to create a derivative work from a copyri
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Re:I have - and LIKE - ClearPlay (Score:2)
The ClearPlay system leaves the viewer unable to discern whether a movie he/she just saw was confusing, lacked emotional impact, etc. because the director lacked talent or because the ClearPlay butchery "damaged" the movie.
Did you read my comment before you replied? That's my #2 complaint, that I can't tell what is missing.
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Re:I have - and LIKE - ClearPlay (Score:2)
OK, so let's instead call it an "encrypted delta for a known set of data." The data is not exactly clear, some binary format that I have yet to decipher, and it is a delta, or change-set, to be applied against the play list contained on the DVD. The deltas are matched to the DVD by disc catalog number, so the ClearPlay folks can pretty much count on "if the catalog number is 12345, these are the changes we apply." It's a cut-list, but it's
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Re:I have - and LIKE - ClearPlay (Score:2)
It's mutual.
Want to buy a delta between the Windows XP Pro ISO and the Mandriva Linux ISO? It certainly wouldn't be an infringement since it's just a list of differences.
And now we get into all the nuances of copyright, like the "20% rule" or "how many notes in sequence constitute infringement?" and all that cal. The ClearPlay data files for something like 300 movies runs about 2.5 MB. That's off the top of my head, so don't
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Re:I have - and LIKE - ClearPlay (Score:2)
No, due to right-of-first-sale. I paid for it, I can do whatever I want with it, including a horrifically clumsy edit that makes Spielberg look like a complete hack. And after seeing what he did to E.T.'s re-release (swapping walkie-talkie's for guns) I'm not sure that it's really all that difficult to make him look like a hack anyway.
When I watch a "butchered" film in
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Re:I have - and LIKE - ClearPlay (Score:2)
What you do in your own home i
Re:I have - and LIKE - ClearPlay (Score:2)
As I pointed out in another reply, [slashdot.org] that's the crux of the issue: I bought the DVD, I own it, and I will watch it in the way I see fit. If that means plopping in "Gladiator," "The Matrix," "We Were Soldiers," or "Black Hawk Down" and using the chapter skip to watch only the fight scenes, then that is my right as the owner of the disc. Some movies will still be
Re:Won't Please Somebody Think of the Children? (Score:1)
Apparently SpongeBob is polluting the mind of my nephew...
Thematic Elements and Related Content in Movie:
Revealing Clothing
Threatening Dialogue
Comical Fighting/Action
Non-Graphic Injury/Wound
Bar/Club Environment
You get that just by flicking through the commercials on TV.