Taking Down the DMCA
Proponents of fair use have found 20 congresspersons willing to sponsor a bill to repeal the DMCA and make CD and DVD copying for noncommercial purposes possible again.
"Congress crafted fair use to be case-by-case," said Fred Von Lohmann, senior staff attorney at the Electronic Frontier Foundation, which has sent Congress about 30,000 letters and faxes from Americans supporting HR107. "The problem with the DMCA is that those debates are never going to happen."
Von Lohmann said the DMCA treats all unauthorized copying as a crime, rather than letting courts decide what constitutes fair use -- in a nutshell, a legal concept that allows people to copy other people's creative works if they intend to use it for noncommercial purposes, like teaching, criticism or journalism. Congress tried to codify these concepts with the 1976 Copyright Act.
"The DMCA has supplanted the balance of the Copyright Act over the last century," Von Lohmann said.
The bill isn't expected to pass this year, but at least there's some momentum out there.
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Been waiting all day for someone to leave a comment here...curious that no one has! Interesting topic and great news.
Let's not give Hanah a complex. As far as I'm concerned that's two great posts from her in two days. Way to go!
chris,
I was also wondering when someone would post, but don't worry about Hanah. Her last post generated quite a bit of response. The DMCA is not the easiest thing on which to form an opinion and I have a feeling most people don't even know what it contains. I am an intellectual property attorney and don't know much about it (OK, I am a patent attorney and the only thing in copyright law I know much about is copyrightability of building codes.). I still expected a good response, though, because of the strong emotions many have on IP laws in general - especially copyright laws.
LOL - Thanks, guys.
"Been waiting all day for someone to leave a comment here...curious that no one has! Interesting topic and great news.
Let's not give Hanah a complex."
Ok, I'll do my part- this is great news, and thanks for bringing it to our attention. Repealing the DMCA would be fantastic on many fronts.
I knew it was only a matter of time before someone got excited about this topic.
Well, I'm all for the repeal. The way they have it now, if I have a portable DVD player and want to copy a DVD that I purchased so that if something happens I don't lose the original, I can't because it isn't legal to break the encryption on the purchased one to make a copy. Doesn't matter that I want to do it only for my own use.
I realize that some people only want to copy so they can sell illegal copies, but a lot of people want to copy so if their car/van whatever is broken into they don't lose $X in original CD's or DVD's. I have a friend that didn't copy his CD's and lost > $500 in CD's some of which were out of print and not easily replaced because his car was broken into.
The folks who supported the DMCA were of the ilk who told us skipping television commercials was stealing content.
For his part Valenti urges Congress to let the industry use "market forces" to avoid that oddball family film act (makes it legal to put out watered down derivative works for family consumption...man what a difference a tit makes). But when it comes to protecting his bottom line and his Bentley, he'd rather help the RIAA sue 13 year olds.
I hope this brings big fat tears to his eyes.
Nice to see some momentum in the other direction. I'd have expected something more along these lines:
Senator Hatch Introduces Bill to Burn People's Eyes Out
z
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