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trancaholic
Danish Prophet of Doom



Registered: Oct 2000
Location: Aalborg
New absurd (US) law proposal

Link for the sceptics and the full text for the lazy:

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."


------------------------
It seems to me that guns - since their potential effect is lethal in addition to being illegal - would be a more fit candidate for being outlawed.

Old Post Jun-19-2004 16:21  Denmark
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NYCTrancefan
Destination Everywhere!



Registered: Jul 2003
Location: New York City in a Café del Mar mood

This reeks of the hands of the RIAA and the Hollywood moguls, thankfully much of the production today is shit anyway so I can care less about downloading Music, I have never downloaded movies. I use to download music and much of it was garbage so I am more selective now. I don't mind paying for my music online, just can't stand that DRM bullshit that is locked away in your files.


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Old Post Jun-19-2004 16:37  United States
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igottaknow
PerfectTeeth R4 Dinosaurs



Registered: Feb 2001
Location: The Future

I can see in a few years will have a cop show devoted to apprehending copyright violaters.

[music starts]
*"bad boys bad boys what u goin to do when the RIAA comes after you"*

*cops kick down residents door and drags a 14 year old out of the house.


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Old Post Jun-19-2004 17:14 
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zag2me
1st rule of ***club



Registered: Jan 2001
Location: uk

Iv really gone past the point in caring about these stupid american laws. If they want to make criminals out of you then let them. Im going to keep on sharing the music I love until they make it cheap, easy and high quality, no drm available on the internet to buy.

Eventually someone is going to fight back, its just a matter of time.


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Last edited by zag2me on Jun-19-2004 at 21:13

Old Post Jun-19-2004 21:07  England
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smokeape
Lowland Trance Addict



Registered: Jul 2003
Location: Heart of Dixie

quote:
Originally posted by igottaknow
I can see in a few years will have a cop show devoted to apprehending copyright violaters.

[music starts]
*"bad boys bad boys what u goin to do when the RIAA comes after you"*

*cops kick down residents door and drags a 14 year old out of the house.


Igottaknow sums it up pretty good. WTF are our elected officials thinking? The other day when I took a look at Kaz** there were over a billion files out there. A friggin billion!

Entertainers earn tons of money on tour because people like their music and want to hear them perform. Throwing the kibosh on those who want to listen to their music won't help that attendance. Ticket prices are more than the cost of their albums, let alone the singles.


[[[smoke]]]

Old Post Jun-21-2004 02:29 
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nic01445
Was guckst du?



Registered: Mar 2003
Location: HERE AND NOW

quote:
Originally posted by smokeape
Igottaknow sums it up pretty good. WTF are our elected officials thinking? The other day when I took a look at Kaz** there were over a billion files out there. A friggin billion!

Entertainers earn tons of money on tour because people like their music and want to hear them perform. Throwing the kibosh on those who want to listen to their music won't help that attendance. Ticket prices are more than the cost of their albums, let alone the singles.


[[[smoke]]]


Exactly, and people would actually buy albums if they weren't 16-20 bucks new. I know I would buy them...

Old Post Jun-21-2004 02:35  Antigua
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nialsjd
Suspended User



Registered: Apr 2004
Location: San Diego, USA

i heard that some people at school cheat at spelling tests. The only possible way to cheat is to have a pencil write those cheated words on the test. ban pencils

Old Post Jun-21-2004 03:20  United States
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Johan (DJ Irish)
dj bum



Registered: Aug 2000
Location: Malmööööö!

Yeah, Finally a law that will outlaw the road network! Damn those roads, induces smuggling and bootlegging and all sorts of henious crimes! They must go away along with those evil cars & trucks!

Oh, might as well ban that pesky internet while they are at it....


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Old Post Jun-21-2004 07:50 
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TranceAddict Forums > Other > Political Discussion / Debate > New absurd (US) law proposal
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