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Re: [ARSCLIST] Copyright Alert



Well, it's just my personal opinion, but I think sending someone to
federal prison for videotaping a movie in a theater is a little harsh.

Matt

Aaron Luis Levinson wrote:

What was the obnoxious legislation that was NOT stripped out?

aaron
On Nov 22, 2004, at 1:26 PM, Matt Bailey wrote:

Alas, the bill already passed this weekend. Thankfully, most of the
really obnoxious legislation was stripped out:

http://www.publicknowledge.org/pressroom/pressrelease.2004-11
-22.6500991518

November 22, 2004

For Immediate Release
Contact Info

Art Brodsky
Communications Director
Public Knowledge
abrodsky@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
office: (202) 518-0020 x103
cell: (301) 908-7715

Background: The Senate late in its weekend session passed by unanimous
consent S 3021, a shorter version of the omnibus copyright legislation
(HR 2391) that had been introduced earlier in the session.

Statement of Gigi B. Sohn, president of Public Knowledge:

Consumers won a major victory when the Senate passed legislation
removing the most egregious elements of the omnibus copyright bill that
had previously been under consideration. We strongly support the  version
of the Family Movie Act, included in the bill, which gives families  more
control over how they watch movies and television, preserving the right
to skip over commercials. The bill will benefit consumers, both in  their
entertainment choices now, and from the innovation in technology that
will result in coming years.

We are also pleased that HR 4077 was dropped from the bill that passed.
That legislation would have lowered the standard for copyright
infringement. The Senate also wisely removed the PIRATE Act, which  would
have made the government the entertainment industry’s private law firm
at taxpayer expense.

The Senate should also be commended for including in the bill
legislation helping to preserve orphan works and reauthorizing the
National Film Preservation Board. These features of the bill are
important steps in preserving our nation’s culture. We look forward to
working with Congress in coming sessions to make further progress in
advancing consumer interests and preserving copyright balance.

A copy of the bill is available at:
http://www.publicknowledge.org/pdf/S3021.pdf.

Matt
--
Matt Bailey
Audiovisual Archivist



Tim Brooks wrote:

Copyright Alert

Everyone should know about three pieces of legislation which copyright
holders are trying to push through the lame duck session of the
current U.S.
congress before it adjourns for the holidays.

The "Database and Collections of Information Misappropriation Act"
(HR 3261)
would for the first time grant copyright protection to facts
contained in
databases.  It is being pushed by some large directory publishers.
This would put
a lot of discographers out of business, not to mention comparison
shopping
sites, and fact-gathering aids of all kinds.  The "Induce Act"
(S.2560) would
make it a crime to "induce" someone to violate copyright, even if
that person
was not under your control or the violation was unknown to you. This
might well
shut down this chat list.  Fortunately there is significant
opposition to both
acts.

A bill given a much better chance of passing is the "Intellectual
Property
Protection Act" (HR 2391), an omnibus bill that gathers in once place  a
Christmas tree of goodies for media companies.  It would limit how
libraries can  make
available copyrighted material, restrict fair use, and even make it
illegal
to skip commercials on video recordings!  There is a lot of good
information on
these bills at www.publicknowledge.org , which I highly recommend,
including
a suggested letter you can send to your congressman (see below).  If
politicians don't hear from us when these kinds of bills come up
they  stand a much
better chance of passing.  I'm told the 1998 Copyright Term
Extension  Act (which
keeps old recordings out of the public domain until 2067) was passed
by voice
vote at midnight!

Here's their proposed letter:

I write to you today to ask that you oppose the omnibus "Intellectual
Property Protection Act," both as a whole and in its parts, and ask
that you not
allow it to come to the floor for a vote.

I believe that intellectual property plays a critical role in the
United
States as a means of fostering both artistic expression and
technological
innovation.  However, the IPPA, which is comprised of a number of
individual bills,
contains provisions that may harm my long-established rights as a
legal user of
content.  Additionally, the bill may harm the development of new
technologies.

There are a number of sections of the bill that particularly concern
me:

Title II:

The Piracy Deterrence in Education Act (formerly H.R. 4077):  This
section
establishes "offering for distribution" as basis for criminal  copyright
violation and "making available" for civil violation, regardless of
whether there is
any distribution or copying, let alone infringement.  This bill
drastically
lowers the standards for what constitutes a criminal copyright
violation.  The
standards are far too vague and could include as targets for
prosecution
material passively stored on computers or shared on networks.

The ART Act (formerly S. 1932):  This is a bill that prohibits the
unauthorized use of a video camera in a movie theatre.  While I do
not support movie
bootlegging, I believe that under some limited circumstances the
public needs the
fair use protections granted under traditional copyright law, which
this bill
would eliminate.

The Family Movie Act (formerly H.R. 4586): This bill was originally
intended
to protect the my right to use technology to skip-over and mute
parts  of a
movie that my family may find objectionable-- a proposition which I
fully
support.  Unfortunately, the broadcasting industry and Hollywood
added a section to
take away my right of skipping over ads in DVDs and recorded
broadcasts with a
TiVo like device.

Title III:

The PIRATE Act (formerly S. 2237):  This bill would allow the Justice
Department to file civil suits against copyright infringers.
Especially with the
record profits that the media industry is making, it doesn't seem
appropriate
that I as a tax payer should have to fund a corporation's private
right of
action.  The Justice Department has even said it did not want this
authority.

There is too much in "The Intellectual Property Protection Act" that
harms
market innovation and my rights as a consumer.  For the reasons
above, I
respectfully ask that you oppose H.R. 2391.




-- Matt Bailey Audiovisual Archivist


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