DMCA Open For Public Comment
plaxion writes "Beginning tomorrow (Nov 19), the U.S. Copyright Office will begin accepting suggestions for new exemptions to the DMCA. From what I've read, it appears they're seeking specific examples on how the law restricts research or inhibits the marketplace. In other words, they won't be considering issues of inconvenience or hypothetical problems. The comment period ends Dec 18."
Send them as many emails as you can. Use spamming/flooding software if necessary. You need to make sure that they get the message that the DMCA is wrong, even if you may have to make it look like you are more than one person.
--sdem
What about specific examples about how the law restricts or inhibits freedom? Or do only the marketplaces (i.e. MPAA/MIAA) count here? I hope they make a new forum, because I don't give a damn that the DMCA 'cripples' the marketplaces when I think about what it does to freedom!
Slashdot: Where people pretend to be twice as smart as they really are by behaving like children.
If they won't be considering issues of inconvenience or hypothetical problems, then what other issues do we have to throw them? Doesn't "I can't play DVDs legally on my Linux box" go under that convenience category? Are there enough exemptions we could seek that would make the law completely useless?
It's probably fitting, you guys have never contributed your two cents to any kind of government comment process. Why start now?
The most obvious example of how it would negatively interfere with commerce is that it would instantly turn most of the nation's best and brightest into criminals. How much would it cost to arrest and prosecute everyone here?
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A pity that those of you behind foul-language filters wouldn't be able to read them.
What inconvenience, when it's "inconvenient" to market content that publishers cannot completely control? When this inconvenience comes before constitutional freedoms I sincerely hope they reject this inconvenience.
Inconvenience cuts both ways, and I say that with a large amount of lattitude.
If it's actually happened to you then it's not hypothetical. Send your problems away.
Doesn't "I can't play DVDs legally on my Linux box" go under that convenience category?
I think it could also come under "inhibiting the marketplace", as the DVD CCA can currently control who enters the marketplace producing DVD players, by chosing who it gives CSS licences to.
They want an example... plant a copy of DeCSS on their machine, and call the MPAA. :)
1) Copyrighted works exist. 2) Technological measures that control access to copyrighted works exist. 3) Circumvention of those technological measures exist. 4) Prohibitions against those circumventions exist. 5) Certain classes of works that are exempt from those prohibitions may exist.
1) Manuscripts. 2) Books. 3) Photocopiers. 4) "Fair use". 5) Research.
Thus I contend that any class of work that constitutes Research should be considered a class of work that should be considered an exemption to the DMCA. I further define Research as that class of work used to comprehend or understand a copyrighted item without the intention of distributing a full and complete copy of the copyrighted item.
See a nice example below. Understand?
DNA is a Turing machine. You, however, being dynamic and emergent, are not.
Isn't this hilarious ?
...
.)
--- dmca-comment-readmefirst-thingy ---
example, in the last rulemaking, although many
users claimed that the technological measures on
motion pictures contained on Digital Versatile
Disks (DVDs) restricted noninfringing uses of
works, a balancing consideration was that the
vast majority of these works were also available
in analog format on VHS tapes. Final Reg., 65 FR
64554, 64568. Such availability is a factor to
consider in assessing the need for an exemption to
the prohibition on circumvention.
--- ---
Translation:
You can walk, so obviously you have no need
for a car and thus you can't have one.
Btw, i'm not from the US. but i hope that the US.
geeks make sure to post a lot of comments
regarding DMCA effect on protocols. As far as i
understand the DMCA wording, it suffices to claim
that a work is protected to make it unlawful to
even investigate if it's protected. I think i
don't even have to mention the problems this can
lead to for both the open-source and the
traditional software industry. Since if you claim
that a protocol is used to enforce a DRM
system it immediately becomes impossible
to make interoperating software without coughing
up some licensing fee or similar since all kinds
of reverse-engineering of such a protocol would
be unlawful. And this even if the protocol have
multiple uses except DRM management.
And thus you're placed at the hands of
I really hope i got this part of DMCA wrong. After
all, this is not my native tongue
AC
I got about half way through the terms of posting before getting a headache. But one thing that did strike me, was that they make a point about DVD protection schemes being protected. They claim that since you can get the works on VHS tape, you have no need to be able to de-scramble a DVD disk. Nice, they pretty much shoot down any arguments for DeCSS before they are even made.
Though I still wonder if it would be worth arguing that I should be able to buy a DVD player with region coding disabled. Afterall, I would like to have the Futurama DVD, but live in the US. Since it was not released in any region 1 country I'm pretty much screwed. Not to mention that it interferes with international commerce.
Necessity is the mother of invention.
Laziness is the father.
For example, would it be "research" if I published a book with a chapter of your book in it? IMO, even though I didn't use your whole book, you should still have a say in whether or not I get to use your chapter.
Or did I misunderstand you? Anyway, if I had mod points, I would have modded you up.
Making trouble today for a better tomorrow...