KaZaA? Not if Congress has anything to say about it..
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KaZaA? Not if Congress has anything to say about it..
CNET
A forthcoming bill in the U.S. Senate would, if passed, dramatically reshape copyright law by prohibiting file-trading networks and some consumer electronics devices on the grounds that they could be used for unlawful purposes.
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The proposal, called the Induce Act, says "whoever intentionally induces any violation" of copyright law would be legally liable for those violations, a prohibition that would effectively ban file-swapping networks like Kazaa and Morpheus. In the draft bill seen by CNET News.com, inducement is defined as "aids, abets, induces, counsels, or procures" and can be punished with civil fines and, in some circumstances, lengthy prison terms.
The bill represents the latest legislative attempt by influential copyright holders to address what they view as the growing threat of peer-to-peer networks rife with pirated music, movies and software. As file-swapping networks grow in popularity, copyright lobbyists are becoming increasingly creative in their legal responses, which include proposals for Justice Department lawsuits against infringers and action at the state level.
Originally, the Induce Act was scheduled to be introduced Thursday by Sen. Orrin Hatch, R-Utah, but the Senate Judiciary Committee confirmed at the end of the day that the bill had been delayed. A representative of Senate Majority Leader Bill Frist, a probable co-sponsor of the legislation, said the Induce Act would be introduced "sometime next week," a delay that one technology lobbyist attributed to opposition to the measure.
Though the Induce Act is not yet public, critics are already attacking it as an unjustified expansion of copyright law that seeks to regulate new technologies out of existence.
"They're trying to make it legally risky to introduce technologies that could be used for copyright infringement," said Jessica Litman, a professor at Wayne State University who specializes in copyright law. "That's why it's worded so broadly."
Litman said that under the Induce Act, products like ReplayTV, peer-to-peer networks and even the humble VCR could be outlawed because they can potentially be used to infringe copyrights. Web sites such as Tucows that host peer-to-peer clients like the Morpheus software are also at risk for "inducing" infringement, Litman warned.
Jonathan Lamy, a spokesman for the Recording Industry Association of America, declined to comment until the proposal was officially introduced.
"It's simple and it's deadly," said Philip Corwin, a lobbyist for Sharman Networks, which distributes the Kazaa client. "If you make a product that has dual uses, infringing and not infringing, and you know there's infringement, you're liable."
The Induce Act stands for "Inducement Devolves into Unlawful Child Exploitation Act," a reference to Capitol Hill's frequently stated concern that file-trading networks are a source of unlawful pornography. Hatch is a conservative Mormon who has denounced pornography in the past and who suggested last year that copyright holders should be allowed to remotely destroy the computers of music pirates.
Foes of the Induce Act said that it would effectively overturn the Supreme Court's 1984 decision in the Sony Corp. v. Universal City Studios case, often referred to as the "Betamax" lawsuit. In that 5-4 opinion, the majority said VCRs were legal to sell because they were "capable of substantial noninfringing uses." But the majority stressed that Congress had the power to enact a law that would lead to a different outcome.
"At a minimum (the Induce Act) invites a re-examination of Betamax," said Jeff Joseph, vice president for communications at the Consumer Electronics Association. "It's designed to have this fuzzy feel around protecting children from pornography, but it's pretty clearly a backdoor way to eliminate and make illegal peer-to-peer services. Our concern is that you're attacking the technology."
A forthcoming bill in the U.S. Senate would, if passed, dramatically reshape copyright law by prohibiting file-trading networks and some consumer electronics devices on the grounds that they could be used for unlawful purposes.
--
The proposal, called the Induce Act, says "whoever intentionally induces any violation" of copyright law would be legally liable for those violations, a prohibition that would effectively ban file-swapping networks like Kazaa and Morpheus. In the draft bill seen by CNET News.com, inducement is defined as "aids, abets, induces, counsels, or procures" and can be punished with civil fines and, in some circumstances, lengthy prison terms.
The bill represents the latest legislative attempt by influential copyright holders to address what they view as the growing threat of peer-to-peer networks rife with pirated music, movies and software. As file-swapping networks grow in popularity, copyright lobbyists are becoming increasingly creative in their legal responses, which include proposals for Justice Department lawsuits against infringers and action at the state level.
Originally, the Induce Act was scheduled to be introduced Thursday by Sen. Orrin Hatch, R-Utah, but the Senate Judiciary Committee confirmed at the end of the day that the bill had been delayed. A representative of Senate Majority Leader Bill Frist, a probable co-sponsor of the legislation, said the Induce Act would be introduced "sometime next week," a delay that one technology lobbyist attributed to opposition to the measure.
Though the Induce Act is not yet public, critics are already attacking it as an unjustified expansion of copyright law that seeks to regulate new technologies out of existence.
"They're trying to make it legally risky to introduce technologies that could be used for copyright infringement," said Jessica Litman, a professor at Wayne State University who specializes in copyright law. "That's why it's worded so broadly."
Litman said that under the Induce Act, products like ReplayTV, peer-to-peer networks and even the humble VCR could be outlawed because they can potentially be used to infringe copyrights. Web sites such as Tucows that host peer-to-peer clients like the Morpheus software are also at risk for "inducing" infringement, Litman warned.
Jonathan Lamy, a spokesman for the Recording Industry Association of America, declined to comment until the proposal was officially introduced.
"It's simple and it's deadly," said Philip Corwin, a lobbyist for Sharman Networks, which distributes the Kazaa client. "If you make a product that has dual uses, infringing and not infringing, and you know there's infringement, you're liable."
The Induce Act stands for "Inducement Devolves into Unlawful Child Exploitation Act," a reference to Capitol Hill's frequently stated concern that file-trading networks are a source of unlawful pornography. Hatch is a conservative Mormon who has denounced pornography in the past and who suggested last year that copyright holders should be allowed to remotely destroy the computers of music pirates.
Foes of the Induce Act said that it would effectively overturn the Supreme Court's 1984 decision in the Sony Corp. v. Universal City Studios case, often referred to as the "Betamax" lawsuit. In that 5-4 opinion, the majority said VCRs were legal to sell because they were "capable of substantial noninfringing uses." But the majority stressed that Congress had the power to enact a law that would lead to a different outcome.
"At a minimum (the Induce Act) invites a re-examination of Betamax," said Jeff Joseph, vice president for communications at the Consumer Electronics Association. "It's designed to have this fuzzy feel around protecting children from pornography, but it's pretty clearly a backdoor way to eliminate and make illegal peer-to-peer services. Our concern is that you're attacking the technology."
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Oh look it's Orrin Hatch, the whore of the RIAA
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This has gone too fucking far. Paper can be used to violate copyrights of books, we should ban trees now.
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God, Sen. Hatch is pissing me off...
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Re: KaZaA? Not if Congress has anything to say about it..
When will they start banning guns because "they could be used for unlawful purposes"?kojikun wrote:A forthcoming bill in the U.S. Senate would, if passed, dramatically reshape copyright law by prohibiting file-trading networks and some consumer electronics devices on the grounds that they could be used for unlawful purposes.
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Re: KaZaA? Not if Congress has anything to say about it..
They've done that in the past. Thank god that that stupid bill expiresGySgt. Hartman wrote: When will they start banning guns because "they could be used for unlawful purposes"?
in about 90 days and we can have our AK-47s with evil bayonet lugs
and folding stocks back
"If scientists and inventors who develop disease cures and useful technologies don't get lifetime royalties, I'd like to know what fucking rationale you have for some guy getting lifetime royalties for writing an episode of Full House." - Mike Wong
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Re: KaZaA? Not if Congress has anything to say about it..
Last time I checked, they've been doing that for a while now. See the Assault Weapons Ban.GySgt. Hartman wrote:When will they start banning guns because "they could be used for unlawful purposes"?
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Re: KaZaA? Not if Congress has anything to say about it..
Haven't you heard? They've been trying for quite some time, now.GySgt. Hartman wrote:When will they start banning guns because "they could be used for unlawful purposes"?kojikun wrote:A forthcoming bill in the U.S. Senate would, if passed, dramatically reshape copyright law by prohibiting file-trading networks and some consumer electronics devices on the grounds that they could be used for unlawful purposes.
Have a very nice day.
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Fuck those morons. By their logic cars should be banned because they could be used for unlawful purposes. Or how about pens because you might poke someone's eye out? Or pretzels, because someone could make an attempt on the president's life with one. . .
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Shame that BitTorrent is inferior to the current P2P systems, ey? BT is more a throwback to the original Napster, minus the single convenient centralized database for locations. Now you have to rely on small operations like SuprNova which can easilly get shut down (tho, that's what the flects are for). There's also the problem of BT not being anonymous.
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Yes but that is beside the point... The stuff I download, I eventually buy almost 100% of the time.Stormbringer wrote:I'm just curious, but isn't the massive and overwhelming use of filesharing networks simply to break copyright laws?
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Copyright laws are sketchy on the subject tho. And overall, yes, they can. But the laws exist to prevent harm to a companies temporary monopoly granted because it put effort and money into the product. No such harm has been shown to exist. Hell, CD sales in 2003 were the best ever, and every year since Napster first came out sales have gone up.Stormbringer wrote:I'm just curious, but isn't the massive and overwhelming use of filesharing networks simply to break copyright laws?
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Frankly, copying stuff you don't own is breaking them. That much is pretty clear.kojikun wrote:Copyright laws are sketchy on the subject tho. And overall, yes, they can.Stormbringer wrote:I'm just curious, but isn't the massive and overwhelming use of filesharing networks simply to break copyright laws?
And I'm not talking about can, so much as what they are. Because I don't know a single file sharing service that isn't used primarly for copyrighted stuff or porn, or both. So I'd be curious to know how much legitimate use there is for things like Kazaa.
I don't really care if it hurts record sales or not. I'm just curious to know if the file sharing services are really being put to primarly legal purposes as their defenders claim.kojikun wrote:But the laws exist to prevent harm to a companies temporary monopoly granted because it put effort and money into the product. No such harm has been shown to exist. Hell, CD sales in 2003 were the best ever, and every year since Napster first came out sales have gone up.
Well KaZaA's maker, Sharman, has repeatedly gone to the industries to make it legal, but they got turned down.
Now, I can tell you that I personally do indeed use it to download stuff I otherwise shouldn't be downloading, I won't lie about that. I won't say whether it's LEGAL or not for me to do it, but I generally shouldn't be doing it for certain reasons which you can guess. That said, I support it in full; it's the best tactic to fight the less-than-trustworthy companies and get fun stuff to play with at the same time. And porn is, as always, fun.
Now, I can tell you that I personally do indeed use it to download stuff I otherwise shouldn't be downloading, I won't lie about that. I won't say whether it's LEGAL or not for me to do it, but I generally shouldn't be doing it for certain reasons which you can guess. That said, I support it in full; it's the best tactic to fight the less-than-trustworthy companies and get fun stuff to play with at the same time. And porn is, as always, fun.
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Yes, but its funny. Recent studies have proven that such massive breaking of the copyright laws actualy improve sales of almost everything being downloaded. For every 150 downloads of a specific song, 1 more album is sold then normal. The same (though to different rates) applies to movies and software. I heard this while listening to XM Radio.Stormbringer wrote:I'm just curious, but isn't the massive and overwhelming use of filesharing networks simply to break copyright laws?
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Studies also showed that it took a couple thousand downloads to reduce sales by a single CD among the most serious downloaders (meaning people that download shitloads of songs all the time). So, either way, the impact is thoroughly insignificant. Even if we pretend that downloads only hurt sales, at 1 cd per thousand songs downloaded, theres only, what, 10 million people in the US at most downloading? And lets say each person is downloading an average of 2 songs at any given moment, so thats 20 million songs, or 20,000 cds. thats about 300,000 dollars. Insignificant in the grand scheme of things, when you consider the number of CDs sold. And then you have to consider that most peope dont download entire albums, so they're not using downloading as a replacement for purchasing CDs but rather as a supplement so they can get individual songs. Tho my arguement there is probably fucked.
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I was going to say, "Good luck shutting down Gnutella and Freenet."Admiral Valdemar wrote:Good luck enforcing this, Amerika. Another war to go with the amazingly successful War on Drugs and War on Terror. They must like collecting them.
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Ok, those more knowledgable than I in such things...The Induce Act stands for "Inducement Devolves into Unlawful Child Exploitation Act," a reference to Capitol Hill's frequently stated concern that file-trading networks are a source of unlawful pornography.
Does the friggin' title itself sound like a slippery slope to anyone?
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I like the way they make it illegal to "counsel" copyright violations. Why don't they just have a little honesty and repeal the fucking First Amendment entirely?
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Some examples of non-infringing uses:
OverClocked ReMix has their first 1,000 remixes available for download.
Blizzard is experimenting with BitTorrent downloads as well.
And, of course, some software companies have ftp sites.
OverClocked ReMix has their first 1,000 remixes available for download.
Blizzard is experimenting with BitTorrent downloads as well.
And, of course, some software companies have ftp sites.