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6.18.2004
 H.R 107: Further Request for Enlightenment 
A couple of days ago, I commented that I could not understand why the telecom companies supported H.R. 107.

Further study has increased my perplexity. The bill would add to the copyright law provisions that "it is not a violation . . . to circumvent a technological measure in connection with access to, or the use of, a work if such circumvention does not result in an infringement of the copyright in the work" and that "it shall not be a violation . . . to manufacture, distribute, or make noninfringing use of a hardware or software product capable of enabling significant noninfringing use of a copyrighted work."

It seems to me that this language would legalize the unlimited distribution of tools for people to use to take many of the services of the telecom companies without paying for them (a.k.a. "theft of service"). After all, the material transmitted is protected by copyright, and there are many "fair uses" I could make of it. Ergo, if someone wants to sell me a tool that allows me to tap into a cable or telephone line and capture this material so that I can write parodies about it -- H.R. 107 says, "Amen." And the legality of a tool to access premium cable content if I subscribe to basic is a slam dunk.

Or is there some subtlety here that I am missing?

posted by James DeLong : 6/18/2004 11:03:20 AM

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H.R. 107 & the Bells: What the Devil is Going On Here?
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Home Page
6.18.2004
 H.R 107: Further Request for Enlightenment 
A couple of days ago, I commented that I could not understand why the telecom companies supported H.R. 107.

Further study has increased my perplexity. The bill would add to the copyright law provisions that "it is not a violation . . . to circumvent a technological measure in connection with access to, or the use of, a work if such circumvention does not result in an infringement of the copyright in the work" and that "it shall not be a violation . . . to manufacture, distribute, or make noninfringing use of a hardware or software product capable of enabling significant noninfringing use of a copyrighted work."

It seems to me that this language would legalize the unlimited distribution of tools for people to use to take many of the services of the telecom companies without paying for them (a.k.a. "theft of service"). After all, the material transmitted is protected by copyright, and there are many "fair uses" I could make of it. Ergo, if someone wants to sell me a tool that allows me to tap into a cable or telephone line and capture this material so that I can write parodies about it -- H.R. 107 says, "Amen." And the legality of a tool to access premium cable content if I subscribe to basic is a slam dunk.

Or is there some subtlety here that I am missing?

posted by James DeLong : 6/18/2004 11:03:20 AM

This page is powered by Blogger. Isn't yours?

 

IPcentral WebLog
Blog Main
Recent Posts
  "Shorter patent lives mean shorter lives"
Conference Reminder
New IP Website from the Centre for a New Europe
H.R. 107 & the Bells: What the Devil is Going On Here?
The Morality of Markets
Margin of Error
Patents & Nonobviousness: The Miniseries (Part IV)
Patents & Nonobviousness (Cont.)
More Patent Wisdom
Publishing's Turn
Archives by Month
  December 2003
January 2004
February 2004
March 2004
April 2004
May 2004
June 2004
July 2004
August 2004
September 2004
October 2004
November 2004
December 2004
Links
  PFF Blog
Atom.xml Site Feed
   
 
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