Courts question anti-piracy rule

Story from BBC NEWS:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/-/1/hi/technology/4290315.stm

The US broadcast regulator has been told by appeal judges it has "crossed
the line" with an anti-piracy tag which stops programmes being copied.

The "broadcast flag" is a small bit of data attached to US digital
broadcasts. It tells devices that receive digital signals the level of copy
protection.

>From 1 July, any device that cannot read the flag will be illegal to make.

But the panel of appeal judges said the Federal Communications Commission
(FCC) should not dictate how devices work.

"You crossed the line," Judge Harry Edwards told a FCC lawyer during
arguments before a three-judge panel of the US Court of Appeals for the DC
Circuit.

Supporters of the flag say it will help combat piracy by preventing people
copying digital TV programmes and distributing them over the net.

The mandate was brought in after pressure from the US entertainment industry
which is keen to protect high-quality broadcasts.

TV piracy is a growing concern for broadcasters, particuarly as
next-generation high-definition devices and programmes become more popular.

Endangering gadgets

Downloads of TV programmes have increased by 150% in the last year,
according to a recent report, with a typical episode of the popular TV
series 24 downloaded by about 100,000 people globally.

But critics say the flag also stops people from making legitimate personal
copies of shows, or copies for educational or teaching purposes.

They are also concerned that the rule would mean the FCC has the right to
say how TVs, computers, and other devices capable of receiving digital
signals, are built and used.

It could also mean, they say, next-generation TVs and other receiver
technologies are more expensive.

The judges said that the rule could set a precedent for other wide-ranging
FCC regulations on future innovations.

The flag is one of the technologies that was identified by the net rights
group, the Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF), as one of the biggest
threats to the survival of certain devices, like high-definition PC tuner
cards.

EFF lawyer Wendy Seltzer told the BBC News website that the judges comments
on the FCC's authority were welcome.

"The judges' questioning of the FCC's authority was right on target," she
said.

"The broadcast flag bears about as much relation to the FCC's mandate as
dishwashers.

"We're encouraged by the reports we've heard. Of course we're still keeping
the HDTV tuner cards on our 'endangered' list."

The Endangered Gizmos list is designed to draw attention to the laws and
regulations advocated by the entertainment industry that may threaten the
future development of certain gadgets and technologies.

The appeals panel now has to decide whether consumer groups which are
criticising the rule should have the right to contest the FCC's
requirements.

The case could be thrown out of the appeals court if it decides they do not
have the right to lawfully challenge the FCC decision. A decision by the
court is expected within months.

The FCC ruling only applies to receiver equipment compatible with the US
digital terrestrial TV system, a spokeswoman from the UK broadcast watchdog
Ofcom told the BBC News website.

The UK digital terrestrial platform, Freeview, and other receivers do not
employ a copy protection technology.

Individual European Union member states are not allowed to mandate receiver
requirements and any copy protection system would need to be agreed at a
European level.



Published: 2005/02/23 12:17:37 GMT

� BBC MMV



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