Amendment To Kill Broadcast and Audio Flags
Bruce Perens writes "Senator John Sununu is proposing an amendment, H.R.5252, to strike both the broadcast flag and the radio flag from this year's U.S. telecommunications bill.
If the amendment does not pass, we will be faced with mandatory DRM in video and audio devices, and with a prohibition on the use of Open Source software for such devices (because it can be modified to remove DRM). Time is short, the committee markup of the telecommunication bill is proceeding now in Washington and it's important to show your Congressperson that there is constituent support to remove the broadcast and audio flags. Please see the alert and please use the information there to call your Congressperson today."
If the amendment does not pass, we will be faced with mandatory DRM in video and audio devices, and with a prohibition on the use of Open Source software for such devices (because it can be modified to remove DRM). Time is short, the committee markup of the telecommunication bill is proceeding now in Washington and it's important to show your Congressperson that there is constituent support to remove the broadcast and audio flags. Please see the alert and please use the information there to call your Congressperson today."
If you are a US Citizen, if you want to influence your Congresscritter,
it's probably best to write if you can rather then call.
As snail mail takes a long time to get to DC and must be scanned and disinfected, etc,
I find that writing a letter and faxing it to the Congresscritter's office is the best
way to proceed.
Of course, if you can't get the fax off right away, a call is better then nothing.
Senator Barbara Boxer of California's fax# is 213-894-5042
Of course, your mileage may vary.
Have a good Field Day
73 de Peter
Peter AI6PG
I really hope there's somebody with a lot of money that can buy this bill through.
;) Our politicians aren't even hiding this anymore, they're in the pockets of corporations, and that's that, get bent, if you don't consume you're obviously a terrorist, or a left-wing nutjob.
The broadcast flag has zero use to the average american, and is nothing but a means of control as to what can be done with broadcast signals in favour of the media corporations. We've acheived a Marxian nightmare, a truly capitalistic soceity
To quote Lewis Black, "politicians and corporations have been in bed together our whole lives, they've just stopped hiding it."
Bah, I think I woke up on the wrong side of this democracy. >={
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I have already spoken with two members of Parliament and raised this issue with people I work with. But I feel helpless to stop the numbnuts running the show south of the border, and once it passes there, the rest of the world will be pressured to "harmonize" or we will be stuck with US-legal crippled consumer electronics in our stores.
My rights don't need management.
It boggles my mind how persistent RIAA & the MPAA are in trying to get this put into law. I understand how much of an advantage it would give them but grief there is this thing called 'fair use'. I explained the broadcast flag to my mom once, what it would mean and it's implications. She looked up at me, and said 'thats the dumbest thing I've ever heard, you mean to tell me that they would be able to prevent me from recording stuff that I'm unable to watch at the time they show it at?!' and promptly wrote her representatives lambasting the thing. It's a pity no one will introduce a law to outright ban the idea of the broadcast flag.
Sununu is a SENATOR, therefore it's highly unlikely that ANY ammendment he proposes will be "H.R."-ANYTHING. Senate legislation is preceded by an "S." in almost all cases, while House Resolutions get the H.R. moniker.
Unless the submitter was just using poor grammar and was saying that Sununu was proposing an ammendment to the combined bill that will be worked on by both Houses of Congress.
I wish I had a kryptonite cross, because then you could keep Dracula and Superman away.
We are never going to be done with copyright holders trying to hijack the legal system to lock up content. Look at how they screamed bloody murder about piano rolls, radio, tv, tape, cassettes, vcrs, etc etc etc. They will never stop. Compare that to the world before they got all legalistic; content was still produced, and by people who wanted to produce it, not factory clones.
What we need to do is let them have their locked down sandbox, build a concrete fence around it, a concrete roof, and concrete underneath to. Padlocks, hell yea, let them lock up their content as tight as they want.
They will be inside, snug as a bug in a rug. We will be outside where they can't get. Outside is a lot bigger than inside. Inside can't expand and will in fact suffocate.
Then we can do what we want with our non-copyright content, mix and share to our hearts' content, and their copyright lockdown will prevent them from using it. They are welcome to their corporate factory culture, and good riddance.
Infuriate left and right
According to the article, if the Amendment DOES PASS WE'RE IN TOUBLE. Quite a suspicious mistake.
Wonder if Sununu's fired now ?
(think about that sentance)
Is there going to be a "First palindrome" trend on Slashdot now ?
Doc, note I dissent. A fast never prevents a fatness. I diet on cod.
You eliminate one amendment with another, don't you?
The bad amendment is already there. Thus we need to pass an amendment to get rid of it.
SATOR
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SATOR
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Under palindromes the Encyclopedia Brittanica has the following to say about the above:
This Latin palindromic square found on a Roman wall in Cirencester Eng., and in Pompeii may be translated: "Arepo the sower holds the wheels with care." As late as the 19th century it was graven on amulets and charms and laid upon pregnant women to ensure safe delivery. Like the sign of the fish (an acrostic: Greek ichthys,"fish," happens to have the first letters of the Greek words for Jesus Christ, God's son, Saviour), the square may have been used to identify fellow Christians in the days of persecution.
H.R. 5252 is the House telecom bill, sponsored by Rep. Barton. It's been passed by the House and referred to the Senate Commerce Committee for consideration. The Senate Commerce Committee is marking up the Barton bill ... sort of. It's common practice in Congress to take a bill from the other bodt, strike everything after the enacting clause, and insert new text. This is important because the House and Senate can only go to conference to resolve differences on a piece of legislation that both have passed.
... Sununu has an amendment to the substitute that would strike the flag language. His amendment is NOT H.R. 5252.
The very first thing the committee did at markup was strike everything and insert text derived from S. 2686, a bill introduced by Senators Stevens and Inouye (the chair and ranking on the committee, respectively) earlier this year. The text they're working from isn't identical to S. 2686, because the members and their various staffers negotiated changes after that bill was introduced, but it is much more closely relatved to the Senate bill than the House bill that they're supposedly amending.
So
Anyone crazy enough to want to listen to the Senators do their thing can hop onto the committe website and read Sen. Stevens' opening statement, or listen to the markup. It's a realplayer video stream captured from internal Senate TV, but is actually audio only (no cameras were in the room). The markup starts near the 23 minute mark. Opening statements from the various members last until an hour and 20 minutes in, at which point the markup starts in earnest.
--- "DNA helicase kicks more ass than a barrel of highly trained ninja monkeys. Never forget that." - N. Howard
I read the article. It said this was going to be done "tomorrow." Since tomorrow is a Saturday, I checked the date.
June 21st. Two days ago.
So "tomorrow" would appear to have been yesteday--no Star Trek reference intended.
seriously, are there any alaskans in the house? is ted steven's blatant chasing of pork the only thing that keeps him in the senate? how the fuck do you guys keep voting for him? the dude has been in office since '68!
i hope when he's up again in 2010, alaska has the good sense to send the drama queen packing. (hulk ties so you know he means business? come on....).
The IRS is the one organization that you don't want to fuck with. Remember, these are the guys who took down Al Capone.
There should be a size limit on legislation.
W ERKBAUUNTERBEAMTENGESELLSCHAFT
If you can't say it in less than a thousand words, it should be broken into seperate bills.
Of coarse, then they would adopt german-style words...
Indistinguishable, Internationalization, Incomprehensibilities are nothing compared to DONAUDAMPFSCHIFFAHRTSELEKTRIZITAETENHAUPTBETRIEBS
Bruce
Bruce Perens.
Also, you fucktards will never stop me!
My god, you're right! I guess the general Slashdot population will just have to ignore you.
I'll always read you, though. I love the spewings of the anonymous masses. Reminds me how smart I actually am.
Slashdot - where whining about luck is the new way to make the world you want.
As my friends always tell me -- "someone needs to get laid"
In your case I think they would also say "and a life."
A computer once beat me at chess, but it was no match for me at kick boxing.
Just let the broadcast flag be mandatory, and then say in the court that even binary code is not a sufficiently tamper-resistant way to implement DRM (see the "Copy protection" section on http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/DVD_Audio for the past history) and thus should not be allowed. This will surely kill the entire DRM industry, because they will be left with no tools to implement their wishes legally.
I've been saying this, too, for a long time.
It's time to move the classic "locked automobile hood" DRM analogy to a better analogy, one about supermarkets.
Let them have their freaking DRM. All it is is a fence they are building around their own content. The more they can distance their infected content from my sources of content, the easier it will be for me to acquire content that is not infected.
The content world has become like a string of interconnected weekend supermarkets. In the past, before connectivity, you could stop at your local supermarket on a weekend and get a free sample or two of some food that some company was hosting. Nah, it wasn't all that much food, just a niblet or something to munch on while you shopped, but it was a small tasty free morsel.
With the Internet, now you can sample free niblets simultaneously from every supermarket in the world. You can fully sustain yourself on free samples (free content), nibbling all day long, and never need to buy any groceries ever again.
That's what has changed. And with DRM, they can't win. The more they infect their product with DRM, the more valuable the uninfected stuff becomes. Sure, I enjoyed the Star Wars movies in English more than the Star Wreck Pirkinning movie in Finnish. But I didn't enjoy the Star Wars movies that much more. I could easily learn to live with a world of Pirkinnings.
So DRM no longer scares me.
The scarier thing is this Net non-neutrality stuff. I think the powers that be finally "get it", they realize that DRM by definition won't work so they want to cripple our access to all of those free supermarket samples so we will begrudingly accept their DRM-infected product. DRM is a fence they are building around themselves. Who cares, really? But Net non-neutrality is a fence they can still build around other stuff. That's a problem.
Republicans
Ted Stevens (Chair)
John McCain
Conrad Burns
Trent Lott
Kay Bailey Hutchison
Olympia J. Snowe
Gordon H. Smith
John Ensign
George Allen
John E. Sununu
Jim DeMint
David Vitter
Democrats
Daniel K. Inouye
(Ranking Member)
John D. Rockefeller
John F. Kerry
Byron L. Dorgan
Barbara Boxer
Bill Nelson
Maria Cantwell
Frank R. Lautenberg
E. Benjamin Nelson
Mark Pryor
Does anyone know how this might affect people in the rest of the world?
Just point me (us) in the direction of an information source.
I have to say that I have worked in the US*; I *like* the USA and its people, and it saddens me to see even your basic freedoms being eroded. In the theatre of human affairs, this is trivial, I suppose. But still.
*In the 1980's when you were still free - and more free than anyone in Europe. (No, I'm not trolling, I really feel that)
(Just echoing this point as a way to give it a complement.)
Yeah, I can see how smart you are, not very smart. In fact, if you want to raise you IQ lever 100 points to reach mine, the process is simple. Go find a cliff or a bridge somewhere, then take your entire fucktarded family. Have all of them jump off to their death, after that jump to yours.
I live in DC. Fucked again.
It's not wasting time, I'm educating myself.
If you stop fighting, who will fight for you?
You really believe you are here to drink Mountaindew, stare in a PC-screen, then a TV-screen and then a movie-screen and have some beers in town?
If you're going to let a bad idea win without fight, you better have a good retort when they improve and make DRM better and better, and people are content because they get doped down.
It is always easier to kill a bad sprout, than having to redo the whole garden later.
I'm lazy, that's why I'm active NOW.
http://www.debunkingskeptics.com/