One of the major fallacies of working with forward-looking i.e
into-the-future legal issues is that sometimes it throws up more
complications than the existing legal framework is equipped to handle. The
excerpt from an article on Computerworld [full text available at
www.computerworld.com] shows that more often than not semantics can take a
matter just too far..

"For example, if someone develops the means to crack a copyright-protected
CD
and makes the technology for doing so available to others, the DMCA allows
civil
and legal sanctions. That makes sense.
But it caused a problem for Edward Felten, a leading security researcher at
Princeton University, and his team when they circumvented the proposed
Secure
Digital Music Initiative (SDMI) watermarking technology standard for music.
SDMI's
creators had invited researchers to crack the technology, but when Felten
sought to
publish the results, he was threatened with a lawsuit from SDMI's recording
industry
backers.Felten fought back. The Electronic Freedom Foundation filed a
lawsuit challenging
the prohibitions. But it never evolved into a test case because the research
was
conducted before the DMCA's prohibition on acts of circumvention took effect
in
2000. The suit was dismissed.
Felten says researchers are worried that their work will lead to lawsuits.
"There is a
very strong sentiment in the research community that doing research in
[content
protection] is dangerous," he says.
The DMCA has survived one important test. The Motion Picture Association of
America (MPAA) sued Eric Corely, the publisher of 2600: The Hacker Quarterly
when the magazine sought to post De-Content Scrambling System code that
circumvented DVD anticopying technology, arguing that First Amendment
protection applied.
New York District Judge Lewis Kaplan found for the MPAA but saw legitimate
arguments on both sides. "In our society, however, clashes of competing
interests
like this are resolved by Congress," wrote Kaplan.
For now, at least, the courts have resolved this clash in the DMCA's and
plaintiffs'
favor.
For the motion picture industry and content providers in general, Kaplan's
decision
was critical.
If the publisher had prevailed, "the protection that Congress afforded
content
owners under the DMCA would have been eliminated," says Charles Sims, the
New
York attorney representing the MPAA.
"By defeating that challenge and establishing that the anticircumvention
provisions
are constitutional, we preserved the security for copyrighted works that the
DMCA
afforded," he says.
But the Corely case is hardly the end of legal challenges to this complex
law or new
efforts in Congress to revise it. There will be battles for years to come."

"The DMCA also raises issues that can affect the sharing and copying of data
in the
workplace. Suppose, for instance, that an employee copies several paragraphs
of an article off
the Web and disseminates it. The DMCA requires that those excerpts include
copyright management information such as title, author, and terms and
conditions of use, says Michael Overly, an attorney at Foley & Lardner in
Los Angeles. He advises companies to review their content-sharing practices
in light of the DMCA. Another problem raised by the DMCA is fair use of
electronic data. If a copyright includes an anticircumvention clause that
prevents copying, then anyone who breaks that provision could be liable
under the DMCA. If the same material appears in paper, the reader is free to
copy it for personal use. The law creates different rules for the same
material, depending on the medium, says Overly. "


---
Outgoing mail is certified Virus Free.
Checked by AVG anti-virus system (http://www.grisoft.com).
Version: 6.0.426 / Virus Database: 239 - Release Date: 12/2/02


--
To unsubscribe, send mail to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with the body
"unsubscribe ilug-cal" and an empty subject line.
FAQ: http://www.ilug-cal.org/node.php?id=3

Reply via email to