A note from Mnemonic:

   Here it comes...

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 From Wired News, available online at:
http://www.wired.com/news/print/0,1294,51400,00.html

Another Punch for Copy Protection  
By Declan McCullagh  

12:00 p.m. March 28, 2002 PST 
WASHINGTON -- A political brawl over mandatory copy protection is
about to spread to the U.S. House of Representatives.  

A Democratic legislator from the home of the Walt Disney and Warner
Bros. studios is drafting a bill to reduce online piracy by implanting strict 
copy controls in digital devices.   
See also:  -
What Hollings' Bill Would Do  -
Anti-Copy Bill Slams Coders  -
Cal Senator: Hollywood Over Tech  -
Howling Mad Over Hollings' Bill  -
Everybody's got issues in Politics



Rep. Adam Schiff of Burbank, California, said in an interview Thursday
that his bill would take a similar approach as the Consumer Broadband and 
Digital Television Promotion Act (CBDTPA) that already has been introduced in 
the Senate.  

"The piracy of intellectual property has reached such enormous and
staggering porportions," Schiff said, "we have to take action. We can't wait 
any longer. And also we threaten the future creative potential of the country 
if people can't protect their own property."  

On Wednesday, Rep. Adam Schiff circulated a letter on Capitol Hill
seeking co-sponsors for his plan, which he said would be introduced in April.  

"I plan to introduce legislation that would safeguard digital content
by spurring the rapid development of copyright protection technology," Schiff's 
"Dear Colleague" letter said. "Similar legislation, S. 2048, has been 
introduced in the Senate.... I believe this is a necessary step and I encourage 
you to join me in this effort.  

By introducing his measure in the House, Schiff hopes to accelerate
the passage of digital rights management legislation: The House can move 
forward on it without waiting for the Senate to act first.  

The Senate CBDTPA bill, introduced this month by Commerce chairman
Fritz Hollings (D-South Carolina), is the entertainment industry's boldest 
attempt yet to compel the computer industry to adopt software and hardware 
standards aimed at reducing illicit copying.  

Jack Valenti of the Motion Picture Association of America hailed it as
a welcome measure that will bring about "the goal of a digital environment that 
is respectful of copyrighted creative works."  

But the computer industry and the programming community loathe the
CBDTPA precisely as much as Valenti adores it. Technology lobbyists have 
denounced it, fax-your-congress-critters sites have sprouted to oppose it, and 
some of the more agitated opponents have already been talking about a Million 
Geek March on Washington.   

"The whole high-tech industry will be disappointed with Adam Schiff
for jumping ahead and introducing this bill," said Brian Adkins, director of 
government relations for the Information Technology Industry Council. 
"Especially for doing it just the way that Hollings did."  

Because the CBDTPA regulates "any hardware or software" that could be
used to copy digital content, it would roil the PC and consumer electronics 
industries, as well as limit the distribution of source code that does not 
sport copy-protection standards to be devised by the Federal Communications 
Commission.  

It's not clear what kind of future Schiff's proposal will encounter.
House Republicans said in recent interviews that they would oppose mandatory 
copy protection -- which is viewed as more of a Democratic initiative.  

But Schiff is a member of the House Judiciary committee, which
oversees copyright laws. And even though he's a freshman congressman, he's a 
veteran at political infighting: He once headed the California State Senate's 
Judiciary committee.  

Schiff represents the 27th district of California, an area near Los
Angeles that the local chamber of commerce has dubbed the "Media Capital of the 
World." Among the studios: Disney, Warner Bros., NBC and ABC studios, 
Nickelodeon Animation Studios, Black Entertainment Television and DreamWorks 
SKG animation studios.  

When asked about Silicon Valley firms, Schiff replied: "We're
soliciting their input as well. My guess is that the technology comnpanies 
don't like the approach generally of any government mandate. But there's also 
less sense of the urgency of the matter."  

Schiff said that Disney supported his proposal, but AOL Time Warner
did not. Disney's Washington lobby office referred inquiries to its corporate 
headquarters, which did not immediately return phone calls.  

A spokesman for House Majority Leader Dick Armeny (R-Texas), who has
criticized similar proposals in the past, denounced Schiff's approach.  

"That's not something we support," Armey spokesman Greg Crist said.
"You're essentially putting bureaucrats in the driver's seat to decide what the 
standards will be in protecting intellectual propoerty.... Armey has a general 
disagreement with government interferring."  

In an interview last Friday, the top Democrat on the House Judiciary
copyright subcommittee said through a spokesman that he had not taken a 
position on mandatory copyproofing technology.  

The spokesman for Rep. Howard Berman (D-California) said, "it's always
better for the industries to set technology standards." But he acknowledged 
that "pressure is building in Congress" for new legislation.  

In the 2000 election cycle, the entertainment industry handed
Democrats a whopping $24.2 million in contributions compared to $13.3 million 
to Republicans, according to opensecrets.org.  

In the Senate, joining Hollings as co-sponsors of the CBDTPA are one
Republican and four Democrats: Ted Stevens (R-Alaska), Daniel Inouye 
(D-Hawaii), John Breaux (D-Louisana) and Dianne Feinstein (D-California). At a 
hearing this month, Feinstein showed her colleagues a pirated movie that she 
said an aide had downloaded from a file-trading service.  Robert Zarate 
contributed to this report.  

Related Wired Links:  

Howling Mad Over Hollings' Bill  
March 28, 2002 

Anti-Copy Bill Slams Coders  
March 22, 2002 

What Hollings' Bill Would Do  
March 22, 2002 

Anti-Copy Bill Hits D.C.  
March 22, 2002 

Cal Senator: Hollywood Over Tech  
March 15, 2002 

Copyright (C) 1994-2002 Wired Digital Inc. All rights reserved. 



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