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Judge In RIAA Test Case Calls DMCA Unclear

otisaardvark writes "BBC News has an interesting article about how the judge has chided Congress for being inept and unclear. There are repercussions for both sides; primarily that the initial verdict will take far, far longer."

22 of 206 comments (clear)

  1. Ironic by Fembot · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Does anyone else here find it ironic that the artical is being run by the British Broadcasting Corporation, and not msnbc/reuters/yahoo etc???

  2. Recording Inquisition Association of America by BonThomme · · Score: 5, Insightful

    "Verizon says it would be unfair to cancel users accounts unless the music companies concerned filed formal legal proceedings that would give the users a chance to fight back.

    But the music industry says that would take too long."


    That's just super. Now if they could just dispense with this habeas corpus nonsense, they could put all their customers in jail.

    1. Re:Recording Inquisition Association of America by NumberSyx · · Score: 5, Informative

      Now if they could just dispense with this habeas corpus nonsense

      I take it you haven't heard, The Bush administration claims the power to detain "enemy combatants" indefinitely without trial, an effective suspension of Habeas Corpus. All they have to do is label you a terrorist and you disappear in the night never to be heard from again.

      --

      "Our products just aren't engineered for security,"
      -Brian Valentine,VP in charge of MS Windows Development

    2. Re:Recording Inquisition Association of America by NumberSyx · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Legally done in accordance with the laws of the US

      Done in accordance with what US law ? Are you talking about the Patriot Act ? The same Patriot act that allows the government to monitor religious and political groups without evidence of criminal activity, to jail Americans without being charged or being able to confront witnesses against them, allows The government to search and seize Americans' papers and effects without probable cause to aid terrorism investigation, Allows the government to prosecute librarians, telecommunication company officials and anyone else who reveals they have received a subpoena for records related to the terrorism investigation, Allows the government to monitor penal communications between attorneys and clients, and deny lawyers to Americans accused of crimes, Allows the government to jail Americans indefinitely without a trial. Allows the government to close once-public immigration hearings, secretly detain hundreds of people without charges, and has encouraged bureaucrats to resist requests for public records under the Freedom of Information Act. You mean that Patriot Act ?

      There are precedents for what Bush has done.

      Yes there are precedents, but that does not make it right or just and I hardly consider imprisioning thousands of innocent Americans during WWII a shining moment in our history.

      Why don't you read a little before mouthing off your talk-show soundbites.

      I have to mouth off now, because I will not likely be able to do so in the future.

      --

      "Our products just aren't engineered for security,"
      -Brian Valentine,VP in charge of MS Windows Development

  3. It's sad. . . by PhxBlue · · Score: 5, Insightful

    . . .that American citizens who're interested in the progress of American case law have to turn to British news corporations to hear it; while all Fox, CNN, MSNBC, etc., can be bothered to report is Bush's latest wag-the-dog blather or Britney Spears' latest bra size.

    It's no surprise to me that the media doesn't want the public educated about the ins and outs of the DMCA, but it is disappointing.

    --
    !#@%*)anks for hanging up the phone, dear.
    1. Re:It's sad. . . by PhxBlue · · Score: 4, Interesting

      It's not the media to educate them, they should educate themselves first.

      I agree, on both points you mention. But consider: at what point in his education does the average American learn how to educate himself? Maybe, maybe in college. . . certainly not in public school, nor I suspect in most parochial schools. People are taught not how to think, but what to think. And then, because they have zero critical-thinking skills, they're lead around by the nose for the rest of their lives.

      A responsible media apparatus could counteract this by leaving its bias on the editorial pages. Of course, I'd be the last one to accuse Fox and their kin of being responsible. But even American newspapers--whom you'd think would be the first to go for the cartoid here--can't be bothered to mention the DMCA's goings-on in court.

      --
      !#@%*)anks for hanging up the phone, dear.
    2. Re:It's sad. . . by Henry+V+.009 · · Score: 5, Funny

      I thought you were exagerating until I clicked to www.nytimes.com, and found this article on the front page.

  4. History Repeats by Rebel+Patriot · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Is it just me, or does anyone else see any similarities between the DMCA and the Sherman Anti-Trust Act? Both are very broad, very indecisive, and ultimately are as powerful or as weak as the body enforcing them.

    For example, the Sherman Anti-Trust Act gave the power to the government to break up trusts 9a.k.a.) monopolies, but never specified any regulations for determining what is and is not a monopoly. The DMCA outlaws the use of circumvention devices, but never really nails down exactly what a circumvention device is.

    Both laws give God-like power to the person enforcing the law, if they wish to do so. The Sherman Anti-Trust Act allowed President Theodore Roosevelt to break up many monopolies in the early 1900s. The DMCA gives the government the ability to throw you under the jail for infringing on some one's copyright in a minor way, even for "fair use".

    The Sherman Anti-Trust Act has long been criticized for its failures by historians and political scientists. Perhaps someday soon they'll see the DMCA in that same light?

    --
    Slackware forever. Honestly, what else would you trust when it absolutely positively has to be stable, secure, and easy
  5. Hopefully by mao+che+minh · · Score: 4, Insightful
    Hopefully decisions like these will help steer progress towards the creation of a clear and fair set of laws concerning intellectual integrity, rights, et cetera. The large companies have all of the money and do all of the whining, so regardless of what form it finally takes (as I have no doubt that much of what is in the DMCA will be changed/over ruled/whatever), there will be some broad DMCA like set of laws that will restrict the way data is distributed and used.

    In other words, the RIAA and MPAA will get a bone thrown their way, but hopefully common sense will win out over greed and we will have a fair and concise set of rules to abide by.

  6. One Crucial Difference: by PhxBlue · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The Sherman AntiTrust Act harnesses government power and focuses it against corporations to protect voting citizens. The DMCA harnesses government power and focuses it against voting citizens to protect corporations.

    You may as well compare the Voting Rights Act with a Jim Crow voting law: yeah, they each used government to determine who could vote; but the latter oppressed Americans, and was therefore morally wrong.

    --
    !#@%*)anks for hanging up the phone, dear.
  7. Re:Judicial Activism by giminy · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Actually the Supreme Court's jobs are really two: 1) interpret current laws wrt some current case, and 2) decide whether a current law is constitutional. If the law is not constitutional, it is revoked by the Supreme Court. So if the Supreme Court sees the DMCA as unconstitutional, they can make it no longer exist, essentially. This *is* the system of checks of balances. This prevents Congress from being retarded and passing a law that, for example, infringes on Freedom of Speech (say, like the DMCA is a good example...)

    You might want to take a better a look at the way the Judicial branch interacts with the legislative....

    --
    The Right Reverend K. Reid Wightman,
  8. Not Really. There are more important things here. by Ted_Green · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The BBC is reporting that the Judge said the DMCA is ambiguous. This is not a ruling and hasn't set a precedent.

    It's typical of the media to blow things out of proportion. And this happens to be one of those things.

    Either way, what's really important here is whether or not the RIAA can demand a given user's name, phone number from an ISP *without* any form of a warrant or any form of legal proceeding.

    This is something that not even the US government was allowed to do until recent legislation. (The patriot act tends to make things more ambiguous now, and the government can away with a lot more than before, but not as much as the RIAA wants.)

    And don't look at that ambiguity as something necessarily good. It could be the nail in the coffin that lets the RIAA and others get away with such reprehensible violations of civil liberty if the courts eventually set the wrong precedents.

  9. Re:Judicial Activism by BonThomme · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I agree that the judicial branch should not be legislating. The real problem, however, is that over the past decade, the legislature basically gave up on law-making. The DMCA is not the only vaguely (i.e. poorly) worded statute to issue from the bowels of Congress. The legislature is quite happy to crank out ambiguous laws under the rubric of "getting things done" and doesn't worry about being called on the carpet by the electorate since they can easily twist the meaning of whatever nonsense became law on their watch (looks at us, we outlawed starving children! woohoo!). The legislature is quite content to leave the heavy lifting to the judiciary since the actual pronouncement of a blank and white judgment tends to get you voted out of office.

    If you want to limit judicial activism, make sure your legislature is passing clear and concise legislation. The judicial responsiblity is to interpret the law. The amount of interpretation they get to do is inversely proportional to the legal precision employed by the legislature.

  10. Letters by tsg · · Score: 5, Insightful

    "One of the things we're discovering is that people are not aware that that they are engaging in conduct which is clearly illegal," said RIAA lawyer Cary Sherman.

    "clearly illegal". This from an industry that says not watching commercials on television is stealing and that making a cassette copy of a CD (that I own) for my car is "tolerated but not legal" behavior.

    "If you got a letter from the RIAA saying we know that you're doing this, I'd say there's a good chance that you would stop."

    In other words, they want to be able to threaten people with C&D's regardless of whether they have any proof of wrong-doing.

    Verizon says it would be unfair to cancel users accounts unless the music companies concerned filed formal legal proceedings that would give the users a chance to fight back.

    But the music industry says that would take too long.


    Tough shit. It's called due process and is guaranteed by the Constitution. Deal with it.

    --
    People's desire to believe they are right is much stronger than their desire to be right.
    1. Re:Letters by daniel2000 · · Score: 5, Funny

      "One of the things we're discovering is that people are not aware that that they are engaging in conduct which is clearly illegal," said RIAA lawyer Cary Sherman.

      I like the clearly illegal comment which comes directly after saying that people are not aware that it is illegal.
      That sounds like it was clear to me!

  11. POINTLESS LIMERICKS YOU WILL ENJOY YES! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    There once was an organization,
    known to geeks by its abbreviation,
    that's R-I-double-A,
    they'll take freedom away,
    as soon as Congress gets that "donation"!

    There once was a woman named Rosen,
    trying so hard to get her laws in.
    She's lobbying Congress
    to put an end to Progress,
    but more copying is all that she's causin'.

    There once was a gent named Valenti,
    who sued movie swappers a-plenty.
    But one day he died,
    only his lawyers cried,
    and on Slashdot the cheers were modded +20!

    There once was a Senator named Hollings
    Whose passion for Disney was apalling,
    He accepted their money,
    Called Eisner his "honey",
    And you should see the Mickey-shaped hottub he's installing!

  12. Re:Unclear? by NortWind · · Score: 4, Informative
    not everyone who supports copyrights, etc, are rich. whould you work for free?

    You seem to be implying that copyrights ensure that the people who did the "work" would get paid. This is cerainly not true. In many cases, the people who did the work are long dead. I'd be delighted to work for free after I'm dead. Some are even copyrighting things which have already been placed into the public domain. The whole thing has become a mockery of the original intent.

  13. Consumers' Rights by HeghmoH · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I'm not a Consumer, I'm a Citizen! Please keep the two terms straight.

    --
    Mod down posts with a "Free Mac Mini/iPod" sig, they're spam!
  14. In case you haven't heard by einhverfr · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I take it you haven't heard, The Bush administration claims the power to detain "enemy combatants" indefinitely without trial, an effective suspension of Habeas Corpus. All they have to do is label you a terrorist and you disappear in the night never to be heard from again.

    The courts haven't been uncritical of this practice and have not exactly been... cooperative...

    Now what has been scary has been Ashcrofts earlier statements that they would continue to detain people even if a court ordered them not to. In that case, why not just dispense with the court system and let the FBI and INS take over that role....

    Now, you may think this is off-topic, but dispensing with the court system is exactly the path that the RIAA and MPAA are trying to take in this case (RIAA v Verizon) and in lobbying for the bill that gives them the right to use "P2P Warfare."

    --

    LedgerSMB: Open source Accounting/ERP
  15. wow by Raven42rac · · Score: 4, Insightful

    how surprisingly refreshing to see a judge doing his damn job, rather than caving to the political winds of whatever the current administration advocates

    --
    I hate sigs.
  16. Re:Judicial Activism by commodoresloat · · Score: 4, Insightful
    Judicial activism is the term used to define judges acting as lawmakers. In 1803, the U.S. Supreme Court defined its role as accurately defining what the law is.

    In 1803 they also articulated the doctrine of judicial review which holds that a statute ruled offensive to the Constitution cannot become law. This is not judicial activism; the judge is not "dictating copyright policy in direct opposition to laws passed by Congress." Rather, the judge is raising significant Constitutional questions about the law as passed by Congress. This is well within the role of the judiciary, and the claim of judicial activism here is either a mistake or a red herring.

  17. Report Plus Case Histroy in Wall Street Journal by SailorBob · · Score: 4, Interesting
    Does anyone else here find it ironic that the artical is being run by the British Broadcasting Corporation, and not msnbc/reuters/yahoo etc???

    I've seen alot of these, "why isn't the USA media reporting this" type comments, and all I can say is try reading a REAL newspaper, like the Wall Street Journal, which not only has the article but also list a RIAAvsVerizon FAQ , a PDF of the Recording Industry Association of America's July 24 motion, and a link to the Electronic Frontier Foundation's court filings page for the case!

    The link for this article is here.

    And by the way, if you want quality news coverage, typically you've got to pay for it.

    Music Companies Try to Force
    Verizon to Identify Subscriber

    Associated Press

    WASHINGTON -- Music companies tried to persuade a judge on Friday to let them obtain names of Internet file-swappers without going to court first, a move that could dictate how copyright holders deal with Internet piracy in the future.

    Internet service provider Verizon Communications Inc. is resisting the music industry's subpoena, saying that it could turn Internet providers into a turnstile for piracy suits and put innocent customers at risk.

    U.S. District Judge John D. Bates, who heard the case, lamented ambiguities in the Digital Millennium Copyright Act, which was enacted to uphold copyright laws on the Internet while shielding technology companies from direct liability.

    Congress "could have made this statute clearer," Judge Bates said. "This statute is not organized as being consistent with the argument for either side." Judge Bates said he would try to rule quickly, but lawyers for both sides had no guess of when a decision might arrive.

    The subpoena hearing, which is normally a tame affair, was contentious because the music industry sees it as a test case. If it succeeds, it plans to send reams of cease-and-desist letters to scare file-swappers into taking their collections offline.

    Until now, copyright holders have relied on requests sent to Internet providers to take action on their own against suspected pirates. Almost all Internet providers forbid sharing copyrighted material without permission. But that can take a lot of time, and makes copyright holders reliant on Internet providers to enforce the law. Internet providers don't always respond as well or as quickly as music and movie publishers would prefer. They think individual letters from the maker itself might work better.

    "Wouldn't that be a lot easier way to let people know that they are in fact not anonymous and there could be consequences?" asked Cary Sherman, the Recording Industry Association of America's general counsel.

    Verizon said that since the hundreds of songs up for trade by the anonymous Verizon customer at the center of the case sit on the person's computer rather than Verizon's network, it isn't required to automatically give up the subscriber's name.

    "Verizon was a passive conduit at most," said Eric Holder, a former Justice Department prosecutor who represented Verizon. Mr. Holder said the music industry's strategy could create a contentious relationship between Verizon and its customers and put the Internet provider in the position of handing over names to the music companies without a judicial determination of piracy. "We also don't want to be the policeman in this process," he said.

    Lawyers for the recording industry rejected Verizon's arguments that it had little obligations in the process. Industry lawyer Donald Verrilli said no type of service provider is exempt from having to identify a potential music pirate, no matter where the songs sit.

    Mr. Verrilli also dismissed Verizon's position that its customers have a right to privacy. "You don't have a First Amendment right to steal copyright works," he said.

    The judge disagreed with Mr. Verrilli's assumption that the works were stolen. "Here, there's only an allegation of infringement," Judge Bates said.

    Judge Bates gave few hints as to how he might rule. He asked many detailed questions of both sides. He called some Verizon positions vague, but showed little patience with other arguments advanced by the music industry and movie studios, which also argued on behalf of music publishers.

    Through programs like Kazaa, Morpheus and Gnutella, a person can find virtually any song or movie -- sometimes even before it's released in stores --- and download it for free. On a typical afternoon, about three million people are connected on the Kazaa network and sharing more than 500 million files.

    -- Copyright (c) 2002 Associated Press

    Updated October 4, 2002 9:43 p.m. EDT

    --

    Woopty Doo Basil, what does it all mean?!