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FCC Commissioner Lauds DRM, ISP Filtering

snydeq writes "Ars Technica's Nate Anderson and InfoWorld's Paul Venezia provide worthwhile commentary on a recent speech by FCC Commissioner Deborah Taylor Tate (PDF), in which she praised DRM as 'very effective' and raised a flag in favor of ISP filtering. Anderson: 'Having commissioners who feel that the government has a duty to partner with and back educational classroom content from the RIAA; who really believe that ISP filtering is so unproblematic we can stop considering objections; and who think that universities worry about file-swapping because tuition might be raised to pay for the needed "expansion of storage capabilities" (huh?) isn't good for the FCC and isn't good for America.' Venezia: 'Leave the ISPs out of it — it's not their job to protect a failing business model, and a movement toward a tiered and filtered Internet will do nothing to stem the tide of piracy, but will result in great restrictions on innovation, freedoms, and the general use of the Internet. There's nothing to be gained down that path other than possibly to expand the wallets of a few companies.'"

6 of 217 comments (clear)

  1. DRM is effective by Anthony_Cargile · · Score: 5, Insightful

    pshyeah, tell that to the pirate bay!

  2. In other news... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Former FCC Commissioner Deborah Taylor Tate has announced she is retiring in 2009 and is looking forward to serving on the board of the RIAA as their new "Token Ex-Government Paid Mouthpiece" Director.

  3. Hitting the Nail Headwise by DynaSoar · · Score: 5, Insightful

    "...There's nothing to be gained down that path other than possibly to expand the wallets of a few companies."

    That's precisely the reason the government would back it. Governments have created corporations and have conducted wars for exactly that reason.

    --
    "I may be synthetic, but I'm not stupid." -- Bishop 341-B
  4. It's almost as if by sleeponthemic · · Score: 5, Insightful

    We're entering some sort of technological dark ages - the honeymoon period is now over.

    The mainstream regulation committees have taken interest in these type of subjects and as usual, the ignorance/commercial interests is/are beginning to shine through.

    --
    I record my sleeptalking
  5. Re:Maybe another K-Street restriction needed by syzler · · Score: 5, Insightful

    So you want people who know nothing about the internal workings of the Internet to decide whether or not to regulate parts of the internet? How exactly does this help the US people? My experience from working at an ISP/Telecommunications company is that the actual engineer types usually are against regulations, filtering, DRM, etc; and it is the bean MBA types that push this type of thing down our throats. By forbidding the engineering types from working for the FCC until their knowledge is horribly out of date, you would be effectively making the FCC rely on outside "expert" witnesses put forth by the MBA types of the companies with agendas.

  6. Re:Her email address by thePowerOfGrayskull · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Great, because after reading the tags on the story, I am /positive/ that she'll get plenty of insightful, well-thought-out email from the slashdot crowd.