EFF Goes To Court To Fight The Broadcast Flag
Silwenae writes "The Electronic Frontier Foundation and nine other organizations including Public Knowledge (PK) and the American Library Association (ALA) have gone to court to fight the Broadcast Flag. The press release sums it up: The brief argues that the FCC has no authority to regulate digital TV sets and other digital devices unless specifically instructed to do so by Congress. While the FCC does have jurisdiction over TV transmissions, transmissions are not at issue here. The broadcast flag limits the way digital material can be used after the broadcast has already been received."
What I want to know, is what are the odds of defeating the bill? It is great to see people and respected institutions standing up and saying this is wrong, a betrayal of our rights-- but can they make a difference?
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"The broadcast flag limits the way digital material can be used after the broadcast has already been received."
Does it? Or does the flag just say that the sender set the broadcast flag? The receiver limits the use of the data, or not.
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make install -not war
at least top ten....
Once again - this "flag" will be a problem for the Common Ordinary copy maker, but all it takes is a nice little Time Base Corrector to strip the digital crap out to clean up the signal, and then route that signal into your recorder of choice. Done.
RS
Shoes for Industry. Shoes for the Dead.
They will not be able to export their technology as other countries are protecting the right of their citizens to make private copies.
Expect the EU to adopt another HDTV standard.
I dontate to the EFF every year about this time, and you shoudl too! Is this not exactly the kind of issue that is near and dear to most every Slashdot reader?
So dontate whatever you can! Is some small portion of your salary too much to fight for digital rights?
"There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
I find it highly unlikely that it will be. The Federal Government has been usurping more and more power over the past 100 years (Dems and Repubs) in ways that clearly go against the intent of the Constitution.
Consider if you will this Supreme Court case:
The Court's 1942 decision in Wickard vs. Filburn gave Congress the power to regulate anything. In that case, the Court remarkably held that the interstate commerce clause could be used to regulate an individual farmer's wheat production or his family's consumption. The reasoning was that since the farmer grew his own wheat, he affected interstate commerce; otherwise, he might have purchased wheat that had moved in interstate commerce.
So, in this case, even though the television sets are not engaging in interstate communication, they are receiving a signal that very likely is, and therefore, the government's resposibility to regulate cannot end at reception... or some other similar crap.
Now I'm depressed...
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Was it the sheep climbing onto the altar, or the cattle lowing to be slain,
or the Son of God hanging dead and bloodied on a cross that told me this was a world condemned, but loved and bought with blood.
Well, the FCC clearly does have some authority over end-user devices: notice the FCC logo on the back of every monitor/TV in the US? There's a reason it's there. Now, their authority (to my understanding, feel free to correct me if I'm full of it) is limited to controlling what the devices *broadcast*, not how they recieve things, but still...if the entire argument hinges on the FCC not being able to regulate TV sets at all (which the press release implies), then they're wrong. If they can make the subtle distinction that the FCC can only regulate what the TV/card *emits*, then they have a hope.
How long will it take for someone to figure out how to strip this flag out using a piece of software on a PC (or hardware or firmware mod on a standalone unit) and then be able to record it without caring if this flag is set?
I'd bet within days, the first option, and maybe weeks or months on the second. This is not going to help anyone in the long run, same as Macrovision doesn't help anymore when it comes right down to it.
They probably will get a court to agree and stop the FCC. Temporarily. Does anyone find it curious that Congress hasn't been yelling about the FCC overstepping their bounds? Well, that's because if the FCC is prevented from enforcing the broadcast flag due to lack of authority, most likely the Disney-aligned Congress will give them that authority. It's for our own good, you know, because without those protections the content providers will never let their precious content be broacast in HD and we'll all be looking at blank screens.
When the FCC mandates by law that every receiver must comply, then yes it DOES rather limit things!
Without FCC certification how are you going to sell a receiver?
And of course building anything that does not honr the flag is disallowed by the DMCA. It's basically a form of prohibition all over again.
"There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
For a government group that is losing its relevancy (airwave TV and radio are being trounced by cable/internet/sat. radio), they need to try and branch out into areas seemingly not of their control.
Why does the FCC have any jurisdiction over speech in the first place? "Congress shall make no law...abridging the freedom of speech..."
Apparently, however, it's okay for Congress to make an agency to do it...
Of course, we accept it as though it's the most natural thing in the world for someone else to be responsible for our speech.
Now, I realize that the FCC does more than censor free speech. However, a lot of what they do is not un-Constitutional. Did they simply regulate access to the airwaves (not based on content of speech), I wouldn't have a problem with them. I do, however, have a large problem with some bureaucrat passing judgement on my words.
Note: I am not opposed to censorship, only government-backed censorship. Network owners should be free to censor whatever they wish. I should be able to censor my own publications. However, the government has no right to do so.
http://xkcd.com/386/
The MPAA. If you want a CSS license to sell DVD players, you have to include Macrovision and region locking, etc.
Hitachi can put whatever "features" they want in their TVs, the EFF is saying the government can't mandate what goes in and doesn't.
Ie; V-Chip is optional, TV and Movie ratings are all completely voluntary, there are no US laws that have to do with PG-13.
I don't need no instructions to know how to rock!!!!
The broadcast flag is my only chance to gather up the resolve to stop watching TV. Cold turkey. Please don't take that away.
This is a perfect example of the FCC overstepping its original charter. Its sole purpose was originally to regulate radio spectrum to prevent interference. Now it wants to regulate VoIP, nasty words and whether or not one should be able to use their VCR. This is just getting completely out of hand. I'm sure its one of those govt departments that has an obscenely huge budget.
You suck Michael Powell.
I don't believe the FCC was responsible for the region codes on DVD's and in DVD players. (See FAQ here.) That was a decision by the movie industry to take copy pretection into their own hands, and they managed to pressure most hardware manufacturers into making DVD players with embedded regions. With the FCC's help or not, there's a good chance the MPAA et. al. will manage the same thing here. If the industry can influence the production of DVD players, the industry can influence the production of TV's. If the MPAA blocks their movies from broadcast on any station that transmits a digital signal without a broadcast flag, it won't take long for all digital channels (think HDNet Movies) to adopt the broadcast flag.
all i gotta say is thank god we have the EFF. Without them, i think the internet and largely the USA in many ways would have become a corporate police state LONG ago.....
While we are at it, how about a challege to the existance of the RIAA and MPAA under antitrust law??? Everybody knows they use these organizations for price-fixing.....defeats the purpose of capitalism....
sometimes, i wonder if i'm the only conservative on teh intarweb. ah well, back to mah hogs and warmongerin'....
If I can hear or watch it, I can record it. So what if its not digital? Other than instant fast forwarding, I'm not really impressed with DVDs over VHS. If it gets ridiculous, people will just sample off movie screens or TVs, the Gubmint won't be able to stop that. All you've done is created newer, more interesting types of piracy.
I want to delete my account but Slashdot doesn't allow it.
You misunderstand the reasoning for the wording.
Let's look at the 2 parts in the context of your TV.
This device may not cause harmful interference
This says that your TV cannot interfer with anything else - if it does and somebody complains, you have to turn your TV off. No if, ands, or buts. So if your TV is throwing out a spurious emission at 146.52 MHz and thereby is interfering with my ability to talk on my 2 meter radio, upon my informing you of the interference you have to turn your TV off until you get it fixed. If you cannot get it fixed, you cannot use it. Equally, if your TV is interfering with MY TV, and I so inform you, the same thing happens.
OK, now let's look at the second part:
this device must accept any interference received, including interference that may cause undesired operation.
Why is this here? OK, let's look at a scenario. Your TV has a badly designed front-end, and is interfered with by my transmissions on 146.52 MHz. You complain to me. I check my equipment, and determine that I am not generating any spurious emissions outside of the 2 meter amateur band. Your TV is at fault here, in that it is not correctly rejecting my signal.
You can *ask* me to stop transmitting. You cannot *order* me to stop transmitting, even though I am interfering with you - my part 97 amateur gear, operating properly in band, trumps your part 15 TV. (in reality, I am going to do everyting I can to help you resolve the problem, but I am not under any legal obligation to do so).
In short, the second part is to clarify where part 15 stands on the totem pole - at the very bottom.
www.eFax.com are spammers
Come on people! Just turn the monster off, tv that is. This is our chance to reclaim our minds, lives, families, communities and country.
...well someone had to say this... right?
It is the medium used to controll us, numb us and turn us into the machines the "man" wants.
Haven't you figured it out by now? The RIAA/MPAA doesn't really care if a few geeks know how to open up a TV/PC and disable the broadcast protection. They only care when it becomes easy for the average user.
Think about it, news groups are still out there, because you have to know how they work, how to unRAR a file, burn an image file, or just mount it with Daemon tools.
Napster was easy and it's gone. Kazaa is easy so they are trying to sue it out of existence and flood it with spoofs.
They want the average user to only be allowded to do what they choose with content.
In this case I think they have gone too far. This is basically saying you can't use a VCR to record Digital tv broadcast over public airwaves (yes Public, we own them not they FCC, they only manage them).
If they need to be protected then DONT BROADCAST OVER PUBLIC AIRWAVES IN THE FIRST PLACE!
So the signal route would be:
digital receiver -> monitor -> output -> TBC -> digital recorder.
Yeah - there will be a little loss, but you'll still get a pretty damn good copy. So, no, I was not being flamebait, nor was I off topic. I was just trying to point out that there are ways around all that crap.
If I'm going to flame someone for something, you'll know... and I NEVER post anything as an AC, unlike some AC's here, because I believe what I post is true. When I'm wrong, I appreciate being corrected - it's a little thing called "learning".
RS
Shoes for Industry. Shoes for the Dead.
That's where your getting the issue confused. MPAA has a relationship with the stations because they sell them content. They have no relationship with TV makers. Just because the broadcast flag is sent doesn't mean the TV has to use it. That's why they pushed the FCC for the flag.
Just like they are going to push congress for a law after the EFF wins. However, it's a much harder sell, and we can speak up about it to our represenatives.
From the FCC's V-chip page:
Of course, it's up to you whether you want to use the V-chip that the gov't forces you to buy.
Give me Classic Slashdot or give me death!
Like it or not, it's also the medium by which the populace at large gets most information to base decisions for things like voting on. There is some fear (though I admit it seem farfetched) that a broadcast flag could be used to limit what is reocrded... imagine not being able to record and analyse the state of the union, or debates for example.
In reality it will mostly be used for football and broadcast movies to start with (both of which I can do without), but it is a slippery slope.
I only watch a few hours of TV a week, but I am still trying to help fight this. If the technical people who do not undrestand the dangers now do not, then it will be much worse for everyone later!
"There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
===== Murphy's Law is recursive. =====
I think you are mistaken, have a look at the list of EFF victories for reference.
I find it funny that the copyright issue is forced usage not applied usage. The angle everyone attacks the copyright issue is from the "Copyright holder" not the public.
The copyright holder has the right not to put his copyrighted work on our public airwaves without the broadcast flag. But under a free market, someone else will step up and fill that role.
We let the content providers dictate what usage we must agree too, when in reality we should force them to our regulations. If they don't like the regulations, they can still protect their copyrights and not release. But its a true free market, someone else will step up and do business. Copyright is the smokescreen to total control of distribution.
You can have 100% open distribution and protect Copyrights, the copyright owner just doesn't participate.
Example.
Sony: We won't show our new movie on HDTV if it doesn't support the broadcast flag.
Cable CO: You have that right, we will go with someone else's movie then.
And you just opened the market and have no regulation, in fact that's de-regulation, and people still have copyrights over their content.
Our society has it backwards, we allow businesses to dictate the ways and means of how they do business with the public. This is what creates mono or duopolies. We over-regulate the protection of the businesses, and the consumers pay for it. Why should business's have special interests? It's a free market, well, in theory.
BTW, FCC Chairman Michael K. Powell wants the market de-regulated, he understands it. He showed it in the non-regulation on WiFi, he should use it for HDTV also. Wish I could ask him, humm.
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DAT has the same kind of no-copy flag, and I think there were devices produced that would strip this flag from the digital stream.
It was congress that passed that law, with an exception for 'professional grade' equipment, which started showing up shortly after. The no-copy flag is believed to be largely responsible for the minimal penetration of audio DAT in the US.
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