Linux geeks play Hollywood politics
By  Lisa M. Bowman

Staff Writer, CNET News.com
April 12, 2002, 12:30 PM PT
Spooked by Hollywood-backed legislation that seeks to regulate technology, Linux geeks 
plan to
launch a political-action committee that fights back.
Jeff Gerhardt, host of "The Linux Show," and Doc Searls, senior editor of the Linux 
Journal, are
forming a lobbying group called GeekPAC that would try to convince lawmakers to 
consider developers
when they draft laws concerning technology.
The goal is to ensure that legislative attempts to protect the interests of companies 
such as Walt
Disney and the Baby Bells don't stifle technological development.
"We have witnessed a slow and steady erosion of the ability of Internet and IT 
developers to freely
develop innovative products," states a draft document proposing the formation of 
GeekPAC.
In recent years, attempts to crack down on illegal copying by outlawing some 
technologies have
outraged developers, but few technologists have had the time or political wherewithal 
to challenge
proposed legislation. The most high-profile law so far has been the 1998 Digital 
Millennium
Copyright Act, which has landed one developer in jail and led to countless threats of 
enforcement
against other programmers.
Most recently, Sen. Ernest "Fritz" Hollings, D-S.C., introduced legislation that would 
require
government-mandated copy-protection technology in consumer devices. The bill, a 
Hollywood-sponsored
attempt to thwart piracy, has alarmed many technology companies and executives, who 
are rushing to
stop it.
Earlier this week, PC maker Gateway began airing commercials protesting the bill. And 
a few weeks
ago a bevy of high-profile Silicon Valley executives and venture capitalists launched
DigitalConsumer.org, a group designed to represent consumers' interests in the battle 
between
Hollywood and technology companies.
What's more, several tech executives, including Intel Chief Executive Andy Grove and
DigitalConsumer.org head and Excite founder Joe Kraus, have testified before Congress, 
urging
lawmakers to steer clear of new laws that would insert government-authorized 
technology in upcoming
products.
Now Linux enthusiasts--long known for their grassroots marches and colorful 
demonstrations against
corporate entities including Microsoft--are entering the fray.
The backers of GeekPAC say simply protesting efforts to regulate technology won't 
work. They're
calling on developers and tech supporters to open their wallets to fight the colossal 
lobbying
attempts of companies such as Disney.
"It has become apparent...regardless of the efforts that people in the various and 
diverse
technology communities have attempted to use to influence the outcome of political 
events, that the
real impact that the mixed group of communities has exerted has been minimal, and that 
those efforts
have failed," the GeekPAC document states.
The tension between Silicon Valley and Hollywood stems from new technology that makes 
it easier than
ever to make and distribute perfect copies of digital material, products ranging from 
the Napster
network to the Rio player, both of which have been targets of entertainment industry 
lawsuits.
The entertainment industry has argued (successfully in the case of Napster) that such 
products
promote copyright infringement. However, GeekPAC founders say legislative crackdowns 
are interfering
with technology.
"The greater evil is that these oppressive regulations go too far and generally stifle 
the
development of new, better technologies in an effort to preserve old technologies and 
business
models," the GeekPAC proposal said.
GeekPAC founders hope to assemble an "all-star" team of technology experts to lead 
their charge,
and--proving that they're getting into the politico spirit--plan to sponsor a 
"whistle-stop
campaign" to educate people about their cause.
It wouldn't be the first time technology advocates have tested political waters inside 
the beltway,
but it may be the most grassroots effort so far.
A few years ago venture capitalists including Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers partner 
John Doerr
formed TechNet in response to a California initiative to make shareholders' lawsuits 
easier to file.
The group has since taken up issues such as improving education and spurring broadband 
adoption.
And back when tech stocks were flying high, some young Silicon Valley bigwigs launched 
Pac.com, a
Democratic lobbying group that accepts stock donations.


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