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8.11.2004
 S. 2560 (The Inducing Infringement of Copyrights Act) and the Tech Industry 
The Computer Systems Policy Project (CSPP), now Executive Directed by former Commerce Department Assistant Sec Bruce Mehlman, is about as close as one can come to an official Voice of Big Tech on policy matters. It is composed of the CEOs of Applied Materials; Dell; EMC; HP; Intel; IBM; Motorola; NCR; and Unisys..

Thus the July 22 CSPP letter on S. 2560 is important. It opposes the bill in its present form, suggesting a number of modifications designed to insure that the proposal would not stifle innovation or smother the tech industry in a fog of legal aggression. But it supports the objective of "confirming that bad actors that intentionally cause others to infringe the rights of others are also liable under the copyright law."

And its list of concerns does not seem to include anything that the content providers who are pushing the bill would not be willing to buy into, or have not already said. For example, the CSPP thinks the bill should state that the Sony decision is not affected by the law. The MPAA Talking Points agree that Sony does and should remain untouched; the difference between the two groups would seem to be over whether this principle should be clarified in the legislation itself or in the legislative history.

There are some minor substantive differences, but nothing that looks unreasonable, and nothing that looks like a deal breaker.

posted by James DeLong : 8/11/2004 01:27:00 PM

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Home Page
8.11.2004
 S. 2560 (The Inducing Infringement of Copyrights Act) and the Tech Industry 
The Computer Systems Policy Project (CSPP), now Executive Directed by former Commerce Department Assistant Sec Bruce Mehlman, is about as close as one can come to an official Voice of Big Tech on policy matters. It is composed of the CEOs of Applied Materials; Dell; EMC; HP; Intel; IBM; Motorola; NCR; and Unisys..

Thus the July 22 CSPP letter on S. 2560 is important. It opposes the bill in its present form, suggesting a number of modifications designed to insure that the proposal would not stifle innovation or smother the tech industry in a fog of legal aggression. But it supports the objective of "confirming that bad actors that intentionally cause others to infringe the rights of others are also liable under the copyright law."

And its list of concerns does not seem to include anything that the content providers who are pushing the bill would not be willing to buy into, or have not already said. For example, the CSPP thinks the bill should state that the Sony decision is not affected by the law. The MPAA Talking Points agree that Sony does and should remain untouched; the difference between the two groups would seem to be over whether this principle should be clarified in the legislation itself or in the legislative history.

There are some minor substantive differences, but nothing that looks unreasonable, and nothing that looks like a deal breaker.

posted by James DeLong : 8/11/2004 01:27:00 PM

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

 

IPcentral WebLog
Blog Main
Recent Posts
  New CBO Paper
The New Lessig (for a Week)
Converging Software Models
Aspen Summit--Register Now
Not So Strange Bedfellows
Pricing Software and Pills
Holiday
iPod and RealNetworks: Apple's Right
More JibJab
This Song is My Song
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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