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RIAA President Decries Fair Use

triskaidekaphile writes, "Cary Sherman, president of the RIAA, has an editorial on CNet responding to the Consumer Electronics Association's support of the Digital Freedom campaign for fair use. Sherman proclaims, 'The fair use doctrine is in danger of losing its meaning and value.' Like a true spinner, he indicates that fair use is indeed important, then states 'Let's be clear. The CEA's primary concern is not consumers, but technology companies — often large, multinational corporations which, like us, strive to make a profit... But to seize the mantra of "consumer rights" to advance that business interest is simply disingenuous.' Slashdotters, trollers, and pollsters one and all, what say you? Disingenuous or dissembling?"

6 of 486 comments (clear)

  1. Of equal interest is Gary Shapiro's response. by CyberLord+Seven · · Score: 5, Interesting
    Gary Shapiro, the CEO of the Consumer Electronics Association has an intersting response. Below are some paragraphs from his response that I thought were intersting.
    Maybe it's because the RIAA's own attorneys argued in the Grokster case two years ago before the Supreme Court that consumers can legally make copies of their CDs that Mr. Sherman feels he needs to rewrite the history of fair use here. To say that the RIAA has moved away from the position they outlined for the Court is an understatement. They have attempted to turn the concept of fair use into a flaccid technical defense used only by journalists and obscure authors and creators.

    Mr. Sherman also takes great pains to incorrectly and deceptively quote from a speech I gave five years ago prior to the Supreme Court's Grokster decision, and in the process seeks to paint us as money grubbing extremists. Yet, the RIAA won the Supreme Court case and yet still wants more from Congress. This should come as no surprise. When technology companies agreed to limit technology by agreeing to pay royalties directly for each recording device and by restricting how those devices were built, they promised to end their costly and frivolous lawsuits against our companies. Yet, they still want more. We kept our half of the bargain and they sued XM for selling a recording device which can't even send a signal over the internet.

    Why shouldn't a student be able to use lawfully acquired music in a school project? Why can't my wife use the song she bought on ITunes on a DvD she is making of our photos? Why can't I make a favorite hits CD with music I lawfully acquired.

    Mr. Sherman paints us as downloading thieves. But the RIAA litigation machine, which has extracted millions of dollars in settlements from over 10,000 Americans, wants bigger tools and new laws.

    Enough already. Americans have rights to use lawfully acquired music for non-commercial purposes and the effort by the RIAA to paint them as pirates is unfortunate. That's why the Digital Freedom campaign is a movement whose time has come.

    --
    We have always been at war with Eurasia!
  2. Fair Use vs. Limited Times by PackMan97 · · Score: 5, Interesting
    We'll give you fair use, if you give us limited times.
    To promote the Progress of Science and useful Arts, by securing for limited Times to Authors and Inventors the exclusive Right to their respective Writings and Discoveries;
    You see, ever since the late 1920's Congress has been retroactively extending all copyrights every time they are close to expiring. The length of a copyright is currently at 95 years, which is far longer than the average author's life expectancy even if we assume they penned their work at the age of 1. Well past the lifetime of any human being if we assume they created their work after their teenage years. Every time copyrights are about to expire, congress extends them making them effectively unlimited. So, how about a compromise here? We'll grant that not everything we do is fair use (such as posting to youtube.com and file sharing sites) and you grant us a copyright term of around 50 years?
  3. Bottom line: I should be able to record anything! by maillemaker · · Score: 5, Interesting

    The bottom line for fair use is this:

    I should be able to make a copy, for personal use, of any content that I can receive, whether it is broadcast for free or (especially) if paid for.

    This is what Fair Use has always been understood to mean, in addition to being able to use small excerpts for review or educational purposes.

    It was about us popping a tape in our VCR or radio and making a recording.

    Now that the recordings are equal quality to the original, the RIAA and company want to renig on the deal. It's as simple as that.

    If you've paid to receive the content, or it is freely given away, you should be able to make a copy for personal use. Period.

    --
    A work that expires before its copyright never enters the public domain and thus enjoys eternal copyright protection.
  4. He did lie.... by krell · · Score: 5, Interesting

    "Reading the whole article, I think his point was to mislead"

    He did lie about a couple of situations being theft, when in fact no theft was ever involved.

    "For me, fair use is being able to backup my cds onto my harddrive and encode them in any format I please for my mp3 player."

    That about does it for me, too. Add to this DVD/video content (including anything I download or view online) and being able to view such content on my DVD player.

    --
    Where were you when the voynix came?
  5. Social Contract by AK+Marc · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Copyright is a social contract. The government agrees to protect a monopoly for a limited time in exchange for an idea being released into the Public Domain. The Fair Use clause is a reminder that the materials copyrighted will become Public Domain and is an exclusion to benefit everyone for the limited time where the monopoly is in place. Of course they don't want Fair Use. For one, it is an excuse for users to be able to access the idea they bought in a convenient manner. The content providers want you to re-buy for you DVD/TV, DVD/computer, DVD/PSP, car, iPod, etc. Fair Use explicitly states that you do not need to buy multiple copies of the same thing. Additionally, Fair Use is a reminder of the contract. The Limited Time portion has already been forgotten by Congress. The more the content middlemen can get people to think that their ownership of copyright is a right, the more they can separate themselves and their tactics from the intention of copyright.

    I ask myself one question. Do the laws surrounding copyright encourage innovation? My answer is "no, they do not." With that answer, it means that I must necessarily think that the laws regarding copyright are unconstitutional. Innovation is not when Velcro's replacement is held back from public consumption until after the patent on Velcro has expired. Innovation would be releasing it when it is discovered. Many companies hold back the next generation of products until the previous generation patents have or soon will expire. Companies use patents to prevent competitors from making obvious enhancements to their own products. Copyright law is being used to prevent Fair Use and extending the copyright every time it get close to expiring indicates that it is not a limited time. Author's life + 10 or 25 years, whichever is shorter would be more than sufficient for protecting the creator for profit to encourage creation of new content.

    Oh, and "Science and useful Arts" does not include business processes.

  6. seriously, more mod up for parent by Mateo_LeFou · · Score: 5, Interesting

    "Fair use" does not define a certain limited amount of copying that you have permission to do. It defines copying that you do *not have to ask permission for. You can try to prevent "fair use" technologically, but there is nothing in copyright law that prevents my circumventing that technical measure. Now I defer to a smarter man:

    (Moglen on the DMCA): "You never read a case, because there never was a case, in which under the copyright law, somebody was charged with a federal legal offence of any kind for writing a book about how photocopiers work or for distributing blue prints of photocopiers or for manufacturing and selling photocopiers. When you see a legal regime that is engaged in trying to charge people for doing those things, you can be pretty sure it's not the copyright law, it's something else. The fact that they put the word copyright in the title doesn't make it a copyright law folks"

    --
    My turnips listen for the soft cry of your love