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Berman Retreats, But Only To Regroup

thefinite writes "It looks like the P2P vigilante bill sponsored by Berman is going to have to be rewritten even just to be considered. A ZDNet story talks about the likelihood that the bill will get anywhere as currently written. Hopefully, the second time around will make it clear that the idea is flawed, not just the text."

43 of 231 comments (clear)

  1. Regroup to fight terrorists.... by MosesJones · · Score: 5, Funny

    You can imagine the wording now "Terrorists could use a P2P network to share information, or to co-ordinate attacks."

    Same shit different spin. I doubt they'll be watering it down, just making it more of a general threat than being specific on copyright.

    --
    An Eye for an Eye will make the whole world blind - Gandhi
    1. Re:Regroup to fight terrorists.... by the_other_one · · Score: 5, Funny

      Terrorists could beat out messages on drums and other musical instruments. They could even use this method to co-ordinate attacks.

      Music should be banned.

      This would also solve all our problems with the RIAA.

      --
      134340: I am not a number. I am a free planet!
    2. Re:Regroup to fight terrorists.... by DSL-Admin · · Score: 4, Insightful

      They could also just talk to each other, so language should be outlawed... They could call each other up on the phone, so Telephones should be banned. They could use hand gestures, so arms should be amputated at birth. Soon we will be nothing more than mindless zombies with no vocal cords, eyes, ears, arms, legs, or brains... we will site around and starve because people could possibly send messages through food..... when will it all end, just nukem and it get it over with.... Are you saved? I know I just saved my stuff to tape, hope that's good enough.

  2. I'm getting cynical. by iplayfast · · Score: 5, Interesting

    The problem with this type of thing, is that they get several tries at it. The first one is almost always outragous. They use that as a measuring stick. Then they start adjusting down and eventually they get a bill that passes.

    It doesn't matter if the idea is flawed or not. What matters is that the congressman get's his way or not. There are egos involved, and big money, and the responsibilites to the citizens. (Guess which of the three is most important to the congressman).

    1. Re:I'm getting cynical. by iplayfast · · Score: 5, Funny

      Even worse. I'm a Canadian, so I am not affected by this stuff....

      NOT!

      The crappy US legislation always seems to find it's way into Canada sooner or later. Worse I can't even vote the people out who are making this stuff up.

      Sometimes it truly is like sleeping next to an Elephant. (with bad gas!)

    2. Re:I'm getting cynical. by Faggot · · Score: 4, Funny

      Wow, Man! This Is Totally A Refreshingly Insightful And Insightfully Refreshing Indictment Of The Practices Of Elected Officials In Modern America!

      Gag me with a taser.

      p.s. iplayfasterthanyou

      --

      But what do I know. I'm just looking for anonymous gay sex.

    3. Re:I'm getting cynical. by uncoveror · · Score: 5, Insightful

      All the slashdotters in Berman's district need to mobilize, and get out the vote for his opponent. November 5, the election, is a week from tuesday.

      --
      The Uncoveror: It's the real news.
  3. This is a good thing for everyone by MCMLXXVI · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Think about how slow the whole internet would get from this. Not only would the "good" hackers be using a ton of bandwidth but the "bad" hackers would be using even more trying to get even.
    * Note the good and bad hacker referance are in the eyes of the bill writers.

  4. How do they figure this stuff out? by pheph · · Score: 4, Interesting
    "Peer-to-peer networks are primarily used today for the unauthorized public distribution and reproduction of copyrighted works." -Alec French

    I'd be interested where/how they figured this. A p2p network should disperse very little information about actual distribution of copyrighted works.

    Alec French: Also, see Freenet

    1. Re:How do they figure this stuff out? by iSwitched · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I doubt they have any real statistics at all.

      A while back I worked for a software company that specialized in data-gathering tools. The issue of copyright infringement came up alot. Our lawyers explained that the test was whether the system in question had "substantial non-infringing uses". Since a lot of post-Napster P2P networks allow generic sharing (news, chat, media of all types) one could argue that many of them meet that test.

      This completely ignores the argument that specific tools don't perform illegal acts, people do. But I guess it's oh so much harder to actually prosecute people according to real laws, when we can just make up a law du jour to go after the hardware and infrastructure. So, correct me if I'm wrong, but if their claim is accepted, and since P2P networks operate over TCP/IP, therefore TCP/IP should be illegal as well, and all DDOS attacks are hereby rendered legal and in support of the legal disruption of P2P traffic!

      --
      "That naive cube! How long must I suffer this!" --Sheldon J. Plankton
    2. Re:How do they figure this stuff out? by Have+Blue · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I'm guessing he ran Kazaa for a few minutes.

      Seriously, get real. You can claim that P2P networks have legitimate uses all you want, but trying to flat-out deny that they are used for piracy is stupid.

  5. This is like... by MCMLXXVI · · Score: 4, Funny

    Saying kids are using illeagal fireworks so we are going to use flamethrowers on the kids to disable the fireworks.

  6. Wait for the movie by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    The MPAA and RIAA are creating and marketing a bold, new superhero, The P2P Vigilante

    Press relase: "We hope to educate the youth and public of America about the dangers of P2P file sharing- in the fine tradition of propaganda through the ages, the P2P Vigliante, a young, hip, midriff-baring female superhero will deal out justice and vengance to those who would use a P2P network for evil. Which is everyone who uses a P2P network. It's, like, evil and stuff. Anyway, it's on every Tuesday night at 8 (7 Central) on the WB! Excuse me, I have to go do a few lines of coke."

  7. What would get passed? by Palos · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Since he admits that in its current form there is no way the bill would be passed, what would have to be changed to be passed?
    The article hints that one of the problems might be lack of clearly defined techniques could be used to fight a p2p node.
    Are there any "valid" techniques, at least valid as far as congress would be concerned to fight individual nodes, or the p2p networks themselves that could be used to fight against supposed violations of this bill.
    Also, does this bill specify what proof if any has to exist before these attacks could take place? Could you sue someone excerising the powers give by this if it did get passed?

    1. Re:What would get passed? by JordoCrouse · · Score: 4, Funny

      Since he admits that in its current form there is no way the bill would be passed, what would have to be changed to be passed?

      He probably had to take out the part that said "constitution, smonstitution...."

      --
      Do you have Linux and a DotPal? Click here now!
    2. Re:What would get passed? by Otter · · Score: 4, Interesting
      Beyond what would get it passed, would you guys consider acceptable countermeasures?

      Would DOS attacks, but not intrusions, be OK? Crapflooding P2P networks with bad files? Or is the bottom line here the mindset of the Ask Slashdot questioners with problems like, "My college limits Kazaa bandwidth. What can I do about it? Isn't that the whole point of college? This is a violation of my civil rights!"

      To my mind, any active attacks on sharers should be illegal, but I have no problem with poisoning P2P networks. I'd also guess that that's a legislation that would go through.

  8. The real reason is... by LordHunter317 · · Score: 4, Funny

    I think the real reason it isn't happening is because Berman learned from here that his Musical Car horn on his nice shiny Cadallic would be outlawed. The new law will probably be ... "All devices which play digital copyrighted stuff must be regulated, except for my musical car horn."

  9. It is dead. by Prince_Ali · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Getting a bill even considered for voting is extremely difficult. A setback this earlier is probably a death sentence. If money is greasing the wheels it can only grease so much.

  10. Hey, Mr. Infringer... by Eric_Cartman_South_P · · Score: 5, Funny
    ...it's "Terrorists(TM)". Get it right, God(C) damnit!

  11. Stupid question... by PontifexPrimus · · Score: 4, Insightful
    Hmm... to quote from the article:
    Berman represents California's San Fernando Valley, adjacent to Los Angeles and Hollywood's cluster of entertainment firms, and is viewed as likely to keep his job in next month's elections.
    I'm just a stupid European, but can't you guys just vote him off or something? If not, why not? Just curious...
    --
    -- Language is a virus from outer space.
    1. Re:Stupid question... by Meat+Blaster · · Score: 5, Informative
      Theoretically, yes, he can be voted out. He is in the House of Representatives (which, along with the Senate, makes up our Legislative branch of government). While the Senate consists of two people from every state (50 states = 100 members), with each set of two people being voted upon by the entire state they represent, the House is made up of varying numbers from each state depending on the population of each state. The state is divided into districts, and each district has one member in the House that it elects.

      So, if the people in Berman's district (a relatively tiny spot of California) don't have a problem with him, or the people who run against him aren't fantastic choices, he gets back in. He's been in for twenty years (no term limits on the House or the Senate) and inertia is on his side because of things like voter apathy and lack of knowledge about the issues. Then again, Berman could be a perfectly good representative for his electorate, given the locale.

      It would be hypocritical for most people to call you a stupid European, given the fact that only around a third actually bother to vote on average here in the states (and hypocritical for me because I know next to nothing about the European system -- aren't you ruled by a queen or something? :)

    2. Re:Stupid question... by mikeee · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Us guys, no. Congressional representation is based on winner-take-all votes for relatively small districts, rather than a proportinal system over larger areas.

      And Berman's district is essentially Hollywood. :p

  12. I think it's a great idea by FuzzyDaddy · · Score: 5, Interesting
    In fact, let's expand on it: I'd like a bill passed that would let me slash people's tires if they speed on my street.

    What's the difference? It's just me damaging someone else's property because I feel they are violating my rights. Having the government mediate in disputes is so inefficient.

    --
    It's not wasting time, I'm educating myself.
  13. Now I understand .... by taniwha · · Score: 5, Insightful
    "Berman represents California's San Fernando Valley..."

    Which of course isn't so much Hollywood as it is porn .... he's not really worried so much about the Lord of the Rings 4" as he is "Debbie does Dallas #76" ... which is probabloy much more likely to be on some p2p network anyway ....

  14. Bad precident. by jsav40 · · Score: 4, Interesting

    ""Unfortunately, theft of copyrighted works is the predominant use of peer-to-peer networks today," French said. "Peer-to-peer networks are primarily used today for the unauthorized public distribution and reproduction of copyrighted works."

    If this legislation does go through imagine the potential impact on the open source movement...

    It will be all to easy to apply the same logic to Open Source developers/providers adding another avenue of attack to corporations that feel threatened by open source...

  15. well, what exactly is flawed? by tps12 · · Score: 4, Interesting

    This legislation served an important purpose in pointing some things out to those of us who go through our lives wearing pink-tinted glasses (I mean optimists, not gay people).

    What it boils down to is that we anti-copyright crusaders have always maintained that digital "media" is just a bunch of 1's and 0's. A file is no more than a certain number, and how can one person or corporation own a number? To me, this has always been an extremely pursuasive argument. So now let's look at hacking over a network. What is it? Well, really it's just 1's and 0's being sent to your computer on the network. Some specific number, or series of numbers, is going to break your computer or make it impossible to use (DOS attack), but is the solution to outlaw that number altogether? In my opinion, the record industry shouldn't need this law, because all computer hacking should be legal.

    How could this work, though? Well, first of all, TCP/IP has got to go. It doesn't have any authentication or security built in to it, and it's obvious that it's flawed. We need to redesign the Internet and the protocol it uses, not just to increase the address space as is being done in IP2, but to make hacking technically impossible. Then, legislation or no, we will finally all be safe.

    --

    Karma: Good (despite my invention of the Karma: sig)
  16. Re:Finally... by phil+reed · · Score: 4, Insightful

    "Not doing something bad" is not the same as "doing something good".

    --

    ...phil
    "For a list of the ways which technology has failed to improve our quality of life, press 3."
  17. Out of touch... by lynx_user_abroad · · Score: 5, Insightful
    Here's one of the more poignant quotes, showing just how far out of touch these people are:

    Unfortunately, theft of copyrighted works is the predominant use of peer-to-peer networks today," French said. "Peer-to-peer networks are primarily used today for the unauthorized public distribution and reproduction of copyrighted works.

    In one sense, every communication between two systems is peer-to-peer, including everything from getting email to browsing the web. Unless you want to call one of the systems a "server", and then I guess it's okay.

    It seems to me that a peer-to-peer network exists whenever one system talks to another. Are VOIP telephones part of a p2p net? Do I own a peer-to-peer network when I print to my printer? What if I print to the parallel port?

    So, when my computer sync's my calendar with my PDA, I guess I'm doing something bad?

    --

    The thing about things we don't know is we often don't know we don't know them.

  18. Be Very Afraid... by Dr.+Bent · · Score: 5, Insightful
    From the article:
    "All fair use is not piracy, but neither is all piracy fair use," Mehlman said.
    NO fair use is piracy, that's why it's called FAIR use! The two are mutually exclusive...either you're breaking the law, or you aren't. This is not a good sign. If assistant Secretary of Commerce doesn't understand this, what hope do we have for the general public?
    1. Re:Be Very Afraid... by Daniel+Dvorkin · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Oh, I suspect Melman understands the difference perfectly well; he, Berman, Valenti, Rosen, et bloody al are hoping that everyone else won't. If they can start blurring the distinction in people's minds (which is kind of like blurring the distinction between war and peace, freedom and slavery, or up and down -- but those have never been too hard to sell either) then Berman's bill and other repulsive pieces of legislation will become more acceptable. These people are smart. Never forget that. Evil, worthless, useless -- but smart.

      --
      The correlation between ignorance of statistics and using "correlation is not causation" as an argument is close to 1.
  19. Re:What what what? by BabyDave · · Score: 4, Funny
    I'd criticise you, but I read the last sentence of the article as
    Hopefully, the second time around will make it clear that the idiot is flawed, not just the text."
    so who am I to judge?
  20. Constitution? by jaybird144 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I may be wrong, but isn't this some form of "unreasonable search and seizure"? I don't think that any music company should be allowed to practice vigilante justice, no matter how many of their copyrighted works are in jeopardy - especially if it violates my fourth amendment rights.

  21. Has Anyone Ever Noticed.... by Tsali · · Score: 4, Insightful

    ... that whenever someone brings one of these types of articles up regarding fair use that you never hear anyone on the other side of the debate?

    No one. I can't find it, unless they are modded down to oblivion.

    Maybe no one really likes it and the big corporate types don't visit Slashdot.

    (ponder)

    --
    This space for rent.
    1. Re:Has Anyone Ever Noticed.... by jimsum · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Who is going to argue against fair use?

      Who thinks it isn't OK to record a CD you own onto a cassette so you can listen to it in your car? Or onto an MP3 player so you can listen on the bus?

      Who thinks they shouldn't be able to make a backup copy? That it would be better if you had to buy a new copy if you lose the original?

      I find it hard to believe that anyone would think that they would be better off giving up their rights so that a big company can make more profits at their expense.

      Now, there are those that argue that PIRACY is bad, or even that piracy is so bad that eliminating fair use is a reasonable solution. I think the reason you don't see more people arguing these points is that there is no evidence that they are true -- quite the contrary.

      --
      -- Pot is safer than Beer
  22. I think it sounds like a lot of fun by Error27 · · Score: 5, Funny

    A Wild West aproach to internet justice would be great.

    Instead of throwing lawsuits around just bring in the programmers and attack the networks with technology. This way if you want to create a network all you need is a few great ideas and some determination... As it is p2p programmers must compete against corporations based on how much they can pay a lawyer.

    Unfortunately, I suspect doubt p2p programmers will not be allowed to automate counter attacks against attackers...

    So basically the idea is crap until that gets changed.

    PS. One idea that's related to this is that we could solve minor disagreements between parties by giant robot battles. This would save millions in tax payer dollars.

  23. Why is one industry's problem another's? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I'm confused. I'm not big on corporations or industry groupings, but even from pro-corporate types, this calls into some fundamental questions on the fairness within a marketplace.

    From the aticle:

    'Striking a middle-of-the-road tone, Mehlman urged Hollywood and Silicon Valley "to cooperate" over finding technological solutions to protect copyrighted content without additional government intervention. "All fair use is not piracy, but neither is all piracy fair use," Mehlman said.'

    This hints at a threat, however small. DRM or else.

    How did one industry's problem become the other? CDs are inherently hackable. They are released by the copyright/media trade associations. Some of them are protected under trade secrets or licensed. DVDs were released with flaws that were cracked by teenagers (not that teenagers are not brilliant, just that they were not privy to industry secrets when they did this).

    Normally, if you put out a flawed product, that's the originator's problem and liability to handle.

    The technology companies did not release these flaws products. So why is it their responsibility to bear the weight, both financial and legal, to fix the flaws or find solutions to get around flaws that another group introduced (some knowingly)?

    While I understand laws like these is the nature of politics, but this is utterly fucked up. If the law passes, marketplace accountability goes out the door (again). One industry gets hammered by another bigger industry.

    ERISA was to protect employee benefits yet yielded a nasty turn with HMOs. Luxury taxes wanted to stick it to the rich yet destroyed the yachting industry, which the US has never recovered. Isn't this another law of unintended consequences which is going to really benefit no one? (even the RIAA, because people just won't want music anymore if they can't play it on what they want to; I don't use P2P networks, but I haven't bought a CD for like nearly 2 years because I'm watching them fight over this crap)

  24. Witch Hunt? by DSL-Admin · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Am I the only one who sees the similarity to the modern Anti-Terrorism Plan and the old Salem Witch Hunts? Now they have hotlines and numbers to call in if you suspect some one is involved in Terrorist Activities, or other likewise mischief. So, how are we, the supposed great nation, going to fall back to the Witch Hunts by fingering somebody a Terrorist.... Hey!, I saw that guy wearing a white robe, he's a terrorist.. I saw that lady acting suspicous,, she's an Al-Qaida member.... We were all tought of the attrocities in Salem and other locations for supposed Witches, and now we are doing the same thing again.. How many innocent people have been killed by Terrorism this year, last year, all years?.. How many innocents will be killed, or imprisoned for life because of Anti-Terrorism?? Hopefully our elected officials will be wise enough to see what's going on, and to stop accusing everything of being a "Terrorist" network or activitiy.

  25. That's just standard negotiation by shreak · · Score: 4, Informative

    That's not corruption or ego or anything else.

    Him: I'll sell you this car for $1000000
    Me: That's outrageous! I'll take it for $1
    Him: That's nuts!
    Me: Maybe we should find a middle ground.

    For the current topic:

    Their congressman: If we think someone is pirating, we get to burn down their house and roast their children over the embers!
    Our congressman: You're loopy. Anyone can copy, modify, distribute and profit from anything anywhere anytime for any reason and needs no permission whatsoever from anyone.
    Their congressman: Gak! Anarchist!
    Our congressman: Maybe we should find a middle ground.

    1. Re:That's just standard negotiation by gentlewizard · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Elegantly put. Wish I had mod points today.

      The technique of introducing "straw man" legislation to see how it plays is not a bug, it's a feature. It's how the system is designed to operate, in a dialog of discovering what's important to each of the constituencies involved. At best, creative win-win solutions emerge. At worst, watered down compromises. In the middle, no action is taken and we try again next year.

      Politics isn't evil, it's life.

      Unfortunately, it's only taken me 40 years or so to figure this out...

  26. Bug report for US government version 1.0 by lazlo · · Score: 5, Insightful

    In general, I'd have to say we've got a fairly cool system of government. The constitution is really clever in many ways, and the ideas that the US were founded on were definitely revolutionary. But, like any complex-but-good idea, there are problems in the first few drafts. One of those is this:

    The Constitution of the United States of America is, by its own declaration, the supreme law of the land. It defines, among other things, the Supreme Court to be the highest court in the land. So one would suspect that if a person were to be found by the highest court in the land to have violated, beyond a shadow of a doubt, with willful premeditation, that supreme law of the land, that the punishment they would be sentenced to would be severe in the extreme.

    One would be wrong.

    Take, as an excellent example, the first ten amendments to the Constitution, often referred to as the Bill of Rights. They are powerfully and clearly worded. They say such things as "Congress shall make no law which..." and "The Right of the People [...] shall not be infringed." But what if congress does make such a law? What if the rights of the people are infringed? It happens all too often. There are laws passed by congress that clearly and blatantly ignore these amendments. In many ways, it's much like civil disobedience, but somewhat different. I shall call it federal disobedience. Sometimes these violations are so obvious that they are seen to be so not only by me and every other citizen, but by the Supreme Court itself. And the people who originally perpetrated this crime, the senators and congressmen who proposed, supported, amended, and ultimately voted to accept these laws are not held accountable. They are not fined. They are not imprisoned. They are not prevented in any way from committing the same crime again. They are left in the position that they started in, with the full means, motive, and opportunity to become repeat offenders. If I were to break a local parking ordinance, I might have to pay $50 or so. If, on the other hand, I get myself elected to public office, and once in that public office, if I blatantly disobey the supreme law of the land, the fine that I face is exactly nothing. That is horribly, horribly wrong.

    --
    Pound! Bang! Bin! Bash! is this a shell script or a Batman comic?
  27. It's just a job... by dcavanaugh · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Berman works for his employers (the entertainment industry), who have him stationed in Washington, almost like a consultant/outsourcing kind of deal.

    His job is to push custom-designed legislation, as designated by his employer. He may realize it's dead-on-arrival. He scores brownie points for making the sales pitch, even if he can't "close the deal".

    Think of your job. Haven't we all been involved in some sort of management-led initiative that we were less-than-thrilled about? I can think of a handful of instances, and I shed no tears when such things crash and burn.

    Berman, Fritz, and others are paid to push these "suicide bomber" initiatives, in search of a "compromise" that is pretty much the real target to begin with.

    Personally, I can't wait for the first wave of P2P vigilantes. The reprisals ought to be spectacular. The whole concept of a technologically-challenged industry battling against the world's top hackers is like Saddam Hussein sending the Iraqi navy to invade New York City. The RIAA battleship will be on the ocean floor, US law regarding the Internet will be as meaningless as a UN resolution, the net result being freedom through anarchy.

  28. You've stolen my TV, so I'll burn your house! by albat0r · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Why should they be allowed to make justice themself?
    Am I allowed to burn your house if you've stolen something from me?
    Even if you kill my wife & kids & parents I'm not allowed to do anything against you!

    I thought that the great justice system exist exactly for that.

    So some peoples are stealing their property? Sue them! Bring them to court! But please don't start shooting at them!

    If they can have the right to make their own justice, I want that right too!

  29. Slashdotter from District 28 of CA in the house... by MsGeek · · Score: 5, Informative
    The trouble is, Berman might as well be running unopposed. His Republican opponent, David Hernandez, would rather be Mayor of the new City of the San Fernando Valley, and is spending most of his money on the race. His Libertarian opponent, Kelley Ross, doesn't stand a chance.

    I'm going to be voting for Hernandez only because I have met with him, he seems like a decent enough bloke, he's a "McCain Republican" who also cut his political teeth with Cesar Chavez, and he's also against the Berman Bill. But I do not hold much hope out for him to have any effect. Just look at the tale of the tape, courtesy of Opensecrets.Org. Hernandez has exactly zero in his war chest, Berman has almost $1 Million left. And guess where most of that comes from? Well take a wild flying guess, folks. Viacom and Walt Disney are his two biggest contributors.

    No matter what we do at this late date, Berman will be back, just like the freakin' Terminator, next Congress. And after the election, he won't be as kindly bent to take outside input on his precious P2P hax0r bill.

    --
    Knowledge is power. Knowledge shared is power multiplied.