Alternatives To The INDUCE Act
Iphtashu Fitz writes "The 'Don't Induce Act' proposes that only someone who distributes a commercial computer program that is 'specifically designed' for wide-scale piracy on digital networks could be held liable for copyright violations. The proposal includes three requirements that must be met before a software distributor can be found liable: The 'predominant' use of the program must be the mass, indiscriminate infringing redistribution of copyrighted works; the 'commercial viability of the computer program' must depend on revenue derived from piracy; and the software distributor must have 'undertaken conscious, recurring, persistent and deliberate acts' to encourage copyright infringement. No surprise that the MPAA and RIAA are opposed to this 'watered down' bill. MPAA vice president Fritz Attaway showed his organizations true colors by stating that the Don't Induce Act was so narrowly drafted it would be impossible to use it to shutter even operators of peer-to-peer networks."
Who. Fucking. Cares. Besides, you're grossly offtopic.
only someone who distributes a commercial computer program
So if I make software with the intend to copy and distribute copyrighted stuff, I am homefree as long as I do not make money from the software (or the copies).
I hope this will not confuse people into thinking that making copies from copyrighted material without a profit is suddenly OK, because it is not.
Don't fight for your country, if your country does not fight for you.